26 Friday, June 13, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS *LIBERTY'S PROMISE* The Fate of Ellis Island A conference center, an ethnic Williamsburg or a fence splitting the island in two? Those are the options for the Golden Door. ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News . hirty-two years after it was closed to new immigrants, the future of Ellis Island is still undecided, the debate over its future is bitter and the public, caught between battling egos and conflicting plans, is confused. At stake is not only the integrity of the island that was the Gateway to America, but also the prestige of the two leading actors in the controversy —. Interior Secretary Donald Hodel and auto whiz Lee Iacocca. Attention was drawn to Ellis Island in February when Hodel fired Iacocca as head of an advisory commission on the restoration of Ellis Island. . Hodel cited a "potential conflict of interest" because Iacocca also chaired the foundation that was raising money to restore the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. Iacocca insisted that Hodel was sore that he was backing a rival plan for the island. . But frequently lost amid the name- calling was the fact that Hodel and Iacocca agreed on blueprints for the island's northern end. Their dispute centered on the island's southern 17 acres. To many people, this is the less historic — and less sacrosanct — section of Ellis Island. Now the site of an abandoned hospital and more than 20 crumbling contagious disease wards, a small proportion of immigrants who passed through Ellis Island never stepped foot on this part of the property. On the island's northern six acres are the Main Building, with its cathe-dral-like Great Hall. Also in the Main Building are the Baggage Rooms, the Registry Room, and the two dozen or so Inquiry Rooms where physicians and psychologists examined newcomers. By 1992, about $140 million will have been spent to restore these northern buildings-and install a museum of immigration. - These funds have come from the Statue of Liberty- Ellis Island Foundation, which is authorized by the Interior Department to restore the Statue and only Ellis Island's northern end. The 50 proposals that have been made for'Ellis Island since 1954 range from the frivolous to the earnestly • pragmatic: A . hospital for chronic alcoholics, a re-creation of colonial- era lower Manhattan, a Biblical center, a "romantic ruin," a sports camp for the handicapped. Serious proposals for the southern end of the island have now been whittled down to handful. A decision on which will prevail is not expected until December. For several years, the Interior Department has backed a plan for a international conference center on the island. In 1983, for example, James Watt, then Secretary of the Interior, designated the plan the winner : of a competition among developers for Ellis Island. But as a staff counsel on the House of Representatives Interior Committee said, "Iacocca has been stonewalling the conference center plan since he found Out about it." The Great Hall Hospital and Quarantine Area Interior Department is leaning toward high-priced conference center for southern end of Ellis Island (shaded area above.) Drawing courtesy of Center for Housing Partnerships. Iacocca has charged that the plan would "commercialize" Ellis Island and offer "tax shelters to the rich." He has backed a plan for mounting exhibitions on the history of immigration and selling ethnic foods and crafts. Critfcs, in turn, have slammed Iacocca's idea as "arrethnic Williamsburg" and "Iacoccaland." Originally, Iacocca's proposal, . ,designed by architect John Burgee, would have razed most of the existing buildings and erected a contemporary structure with a 90-foot high glass dome. The current plan would retain all of the historic buildings, as would the proposal for the conference center. Most critics have rallied to the idea of a conference center on Ellis Island. Architectural Record called the plan a "fine concept," the New York Daily News tagged it "a magnet for visitors," and the late New YOrk Senator Jacob Javits claimed it was "the best use of a special island." But the dutifully middle-Of-the-road New York Times has knocked both proposals. In a recent' editorial, the Times called "ethnic Williamsburg" as "tourist plastic" and the conference center "perversely plush."