The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 27, 1985-- Page'3 HEALTH & FITNESS Students, experts dislike sex game By MARY CHRIS JAKLEVIC Doctor Ruth's Game of Good Sex is the latest medium for the much- iheralded sex therapist of the airwaves to dole out her pointblank advice. But despite Westheimer's success on her cable television and radio shows, University students and professionals who were asked their opinion of the game find little to like about it. THE GAME is of the Trivial Pursuit genre, with a few added complexities and a lingo all its own. The object is for couples to gain enough "arousal points" while traveling through a series of ring-shaped tracks to get into the center oval ("The Act") and finally reach the "Mutual Pleasure, circle at the center of the board. Along the way players answer questions from three stacks of cards which ask true/false or multiple choice questions and give arousal points. But despite the alluring com- bination of a hot-property media star and tantalizing subject matter, all packaged in a bright blue box, a group of University students who played the game concluded that it was neither fun nor helpful. The students agreed that the game was unchallenging and tedious, and that the questions are ambiguous and subject to many qualifications. "THE ANSWERS are not based on fact. Instead they ask 'What would this woman's opinion be?'" said Mark Markel, an electrical engineering graduate student who played the game. The students agreed that many of the questions were just plain silly. One card asked what a man should do if his girlfriend's breath turns him off. One of the possible answers given is "Keep a breathmint within reach of the bed and pop it into her mouth . during foreplay." "If you are a couple who has known each other a long time the whole thing is silly; but if you haven't known each other for a long time, you might not feel comfortable playing it together," another player, engineering graduate Jennie Cook, said. THE STUDENTS said that too game." Dr. Marshall Shearer, a psychiatrist and sex therapist who practices in Ann Arbor, said he doesn't like the game. "It seems crass - and that's a per- sonal bias. People who are ill- informed might get something out of it, but it's not a systematic kind of presentation...It's only a question here and a question there." FACTUALLY, Shearer has quibbles with only a few of the questions. "Things that are very specific innature - that information is very valuable, but it's not a rounded presentation - and it doesn't intend to be." Dr. Sylvia Hacker, assistant professor in the schools of nursing and public health, teaches a graduate course in human sexuality and family health. Hacker has mixed feelings about the game. She likes the game in that it legitimizes a variety of sexual behavior, including homosexuality, and it could open up communication between couples. But Hacker also found problems with the game. "I FIND that some of the answers to the questions are too glib and use labels too much.They don't take into account a large variety of normal behavior. They seem to focus only on extremes." One question Hacker didn't like asked if "Most men get wildly excited when looking at a woman's feet." The answer says this is false and that "Some men are attracted to women's feet and develop fetishes, which can interfere with sexual relationships." "A person can be turned on by feet without being a fetishist - that is without it interfering with a normal relationship," Hacker said. Hacker also doesn't like the em- phasis the game places on intercour- se. "THE ASSUMPTION behind this game is that the ultimate in sex equals intercourse... I'm saying that people can enjoy their sexuality without necessarily having inter- course...We should be concentrated more on other pleasures," Hacker said. Hacker agreed with Shearer that many of the questions and answers are not complete in themselves. "Some of (the questions) only need the short answers, and that's good; but some of them need a little discussion, and examples, and training...I do think there should be a person around who can discuss the value issues...Some of these are much larger issues than the answers would indicate." According to Crown House Gifts Manager Carol Homkes, the game has been selling well at the store, which was one of the first in the coun- try to receive the game last month. The price is $24.95. "Most people just pick it up and look at it," Homkes said. "I think the morst prohibitive part is the price, but (Westheimer) is a very recognble character, so they do look at it." The students added that though the game is designed for two to four couples to play in teams, players don't have to play in couples, and it might even be more useful to play with a group of all men or all women. Koch said that Victory Games A is revising the rules of the game for future editions in order to accom- modate play between two partners. RIEL RESTAURANT & DELI We have Canfield Pop - The only place in town! ARIEL RESTAURANT. All You Soup & Can Eat Special: Salad Bar $2.79 .' GROCERY AND HEALTH FOOD STORE Open Mon.- Sat. 8a.m.-12 am. Sundays8am-10pm ARIEL RESTAURANT Open Mon.-Sat. 8am.-8 pm. Middle East Food Specials Every Day We guarantee you'll LOVE our food-or your money back! , , Daily Photo by DEAN RANDAZZO Students and professional sex therapists aren't excited about Dr. Ruth Westheimer's new sexual trivia game now being sold at local stores. much time is taken up moving the pieces around the gameboard, rather than answering questions. "It was about as entertaining as watching 'Three's Company,' " said Markel. Susan Koch, marketing ad- ministrator of Victory Games, Inc., the New York firm which produced 'the game, said the purpose of the game is "to help educate people in a fun kind of format." Koch said Westheimer "had a lot to do with the game. It was her idea, and she came to us with it." "PEOPLE WHO like Dr. Ruth will like the game. Like Dr. Ruth's show, the game is not confined to any age group or social bracket," Koch said. The students agreed that the game might be useful for younger teenagers to learn about sex, but, Markel said, "For college educated students there is no use for it, even as a fun party 330 Maynard - Directly Across From Nickel's Arcade Whtat's ( Happening . Recreational Sports HAVE A HAPPY THANKSGIVING - but remember - IM Wrestling Meet Weigh-Ins Tuesday, December 3, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., IMSS WRESTLING MEET Tuesday - Thursday, December 3-5 7:00 - 11:00 p.m. Sports Coliseum 'U' dorms breed flu outbreaks By LISA PICK and NANCY DINER Sometimes Health Service must even Feeling a little under the weather call in help from the School of Public lately? If you live in a University Health to handle the holiday flu rush, residence hall, you're probably not says Caesar Briefer, Health Service the only one feeling sick, although director. everyone is prone to illness as flu BUT ACTUALLY, there is little one season hits, say University health can due either to prevent the flu or to officials. combat it once it has struck. Some flu vaccines are available to help Starting in mid-November and con- mitigate the symptoms but these tinuing until the end of December, should only be administered to people students flock to University Health age 65 or older or to those who suffer Service in a desperate attempt to rid from chronic illnesses such as kidney themselves of a hacking cough, runny disorders or diabetes, Briefer says. nose, and other annoying symptoms. However, there is still no cure for HAPPENINGS 0 Highlight Students from the Center for Russian and East European Studies are invited to hear Donna Winkelman, the Coordinator of Career Planning and Placement Services for area studies center students, discuss how her office can help them plan careers in their field. Winkelman will speak at noon in the Commons room, Lane Hall. Films Michigan Theater Foundation - Clockwork Orange, 7 & 9:35 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances Ark - Open mike night, hootenany, 8 p.m., 637 S. Main. School of Music - Organ recital, Ron Fox, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Speakers Biology - Michael Bowers, "Local Bumble Bee Geography," noon, room 1139, Nat. Sci. Bldg. Chemistry - Katherine McGrady, "Polymeric Crown Ethers and Their Applications to Organic Synthesis," 4 p.m., room 1300, Chemistry Bldg. Meetings Dissertation Support Group - 1:30 p.m., room 3100, Union. Ensian Yearbook - 7 p.m., Student Publications Bldg. Michigan Gay Union - 9 p.m., 802 Monroe. Science Fiction Club - Stilyagi Air Corps, 8:15 p.m., League. Student Counseling Services - Adult children of Alcoholic Parents, 10:30 a.m. viral diseases such as the flu, which is usually spread through bodily secretions and through coughing and sneezing, he says. The best thing a roommate or friend can do for a flu victim is to give them plent of "TLC" (Tender Loving Care) and chicken noodle soup, says Briefer. Because of the cramped living situations in dormitories, flu viruses often spread faster than in other populations. TWO WEEKS ago, showing up Nov. 8, an outbreak of stomach flu was reported at West Quad. Bob Spezia, an Adams House resident advisor, reported four sick students on his floor alone. At least five others on different floors of Adams House also contracted the ailment. Most of these students became sick on Friday with headaches, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, and stomach cramps, which lasted from one to two days. Says engineering sophomore John Bradford, an Adams House resident: "I threw up twice an hour from 7 p.m. Friday night until 4 a.m. Saturday morning." Bradford says he drank water and slept but couldn't eat until Saturday afternoon, when the symptoms began to subside. LSA junior Jerry Wolf, an Allen- Rumsey House resident advisor who became ill, says he thought it may have been something other than the flu. "I think it's an awful coincidence that a lot of people got sick when they ate the same thing," he says. But a test of food samples from Nov. 9 to Nov. 15 could prove no evidence of a foodborne illness, according to of- ficials at the University's Oc- cupational Safety and Environmental PALAL TREE RESTAURANT Health department. OUTBREAKS of the flu in dor- mitories are not uncommon, says South Quad Building Director Mary Antieau. She cited an outbreak oc- curring in South Quad in 1978 which resulted in 300 to 400 students repor- ting flu-like symptoms. In the 1978 outbreak, Antieau recalls, food from the cafeteria, and feces and vomit from sick students were tested, along with just about everything in the kitchen. But nothing was found to indicate 'a foodborne illness. "I don't believe it was an outbreak where the food was contaminated," says Antieau. "It was probably food transmitted. Someone may have sneezed on the lettuce." Dormwide epidemics should not be blamed on kitchen workers either, she says. "Our standards of cleanliness and maintaining temperature of the food so that bacteria does not set in is higher than most restaurants." Food service employees mush wash their hands after every coffee break, and, if they are sick, they are not sup- posed to come to work. However, she adds, some come even if they are sick because of the money and a lack of sick days. THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS WHITE MARKET McDonald's Lo Fat %%el/ Milk $1.59 Gal. Oreo Cookies 16oz. $1.89 609 E William 663-4253 Hours: M-F 8-7 Sat. 8-6 MEMW Ann Arbor Contact Lens Clinic We professionally fit all types of contact lenses and offer quick lens replacement. Come see our superb selection of frames for men, women, & children. We are now featuring 500 fashion and designer frames and the new ultra- thin lightweight eyeglass lenses DR. PAUL C. USLAN, O.D. 545 Church St., Ann Arbor da (ON CAMPUS), 769-1222 r 6 ;." 9-