LOCAL NEWS ► ■ DSG's Stag Day To Mark 60th Year To celebrate its 60th birth- day, the Detroit Service Group is planning its biggest Stag Day ever. Set for Sept. 10 at Franklin Hills Country Club, Allied Jewish Campaign workers will have a chance to unwind from the '86 Campaign with a day of golf and tennis, be- fore sitting down to an awards dinner honoring the leadership team of Stanley D. Frankel and Paul D. Borman. Previous Campaign chairmen and Detroit Service Group presidents will also be hon- ored. The Detroit Service Group was founded in 1926 as a permanent, year-round fund- raising organization. Cash collection had been a prob- lem, and it was a struggle to recruit new Campaign work- ers each year. Through the years, the DSG has been responsible for many innovations to the Campaign. To create a more effective solicitation organization, George Stutz, Stag Day foun- der, proposed the establish- ment of the Trade Council in 1936. Seven divisions were formed, each with its own board of directors. In 1951, when Federation moved to its current location at 163 Madison, the DSG moved into the "missions business" as the first group in the country to sponsor a community-wide mission to Israel. A year earlier, the DSG held its first Stag Day. The event became an institution and a way of saying "thank you" to the hundreds of year-round workers who help make Detroit's Campaign the largest in per capita giving among large cities. ( VnLENIE TAYLOR DESIGNS IN DECORATOR LAMINATES For High Quality Formica Always At A Great Discount SPECIALIZING IN Fashion Resale • desks • wall units • bedroom groupings • credenzas • dining rooms now accepting furs and better jewelry ALSO SPECIALIZING IN • woods • glass • metals • lucites for fall. for information call Mon.-Fri. 12 to 6 IT DOESN'T HAVE TO COST A FORTUNE .. ONLY LOOK LIKE IT! 540-9548 CALL LOIS HARON 851-6989 Last year at Stag Day, De- troit received the United Jewish Appeal's Pinchas Sapir Award for outstanding achievement in the 1984 Al- lied Jewish Campaign. The Detroit Service Group's president is Milton Lucow and Harold Berke is director. Chairman of the Sept. 10 event is N. Brewster Broder and the committee includes Milton Y. Zussman, prizes and awards chairman; Robert Slatkin, hospitality; and David Frank, golf. Churches Welcome Jews For Jesus Group A "Jews for Jesus" group called "The Liberated Wail- ing Wall" is scheduled to make appearances at four area churches this week. Jewish Community Council Executive Director Alvin L. Kushner wrote the churches' spiritual leaders that "the Jews for Jesus theology, an admixture of rabbinic Judaism with Christian tenets, negates the unique- ness, and denies the legiti- macy of both faiths. Their misrepresentations and out- right untruths about both Christian and Jewish belief systems should be equally of- fensive to both Christians and Jews." In response to Kushner's advisory, the pastor of Cal- vary Baptist Church in Can- ton Twp., where a perform- ance is to be held Saturday, wrote, "While we desire to be sensitive to your position, we dare not compromise our position of presenting Jesus Christ as the Messiah, the Savior of the world. If we fail to present Him in this way to all people, including the Jewish community, then in- deed we would be guilty of anti-Semitism." The Calvary Church was a replacement for the Far- mington Hills Northwest Christian and Missionary Al- liance, which cancelled the group's appearance. A spokesman for the Northwest Church would not reveal why they had cancelled. Other churches welcoming the "Jews for Jesus" group are the Clarenceville United Methodist Church, in Livonia, the Royal Oak Mis- sionary Church and the Covenant Community Church in Redford. That's Entertainment! Performing apas de deux? Screening a film? Appearing in a play? If so, The Jewish News wants to hear about it in our new entertainment calendar, Going Places, debuting Sept. 5. Send concert, film, dance, comedy, club and other entertainment activity listings to Entertainment Calendar, The Jewish News, 20300 Civic Center Dr., Suite 240, Southfield 48076. Items must be typed, double-spaced and include the time, date, place, admission charge of each event and a name and phone number of someone to call during business hours. Listings must be received at least two weeks prior to publication. Get a little TLC* From the time you enter Linden Medical Supply, until the time you leave, you're treated as a special friend. 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