FOLLOW-UP Work on the Great Hall, or Registry Room, in the main building of Ellis Island includes cleaning of the thousands of Gustavino ceiling tiles, repairing the special plaster on the balcony walls and original tile floors, restoring the heating and lighting systems. Created and protected on the floor of the Great Hall (center) are the original chandeliers which already have been restored. Family Wall When the Ellis Island Museum opens in 1989, one of its most personally gratifying displays will be The American Immigrant Wall of Honor. Approximately one-half mile from the Statue of Liberty, the welcoming beacon for immigrants in New York Harbor, stands Ellis Island, America's major federal immigration station. Photo was taken in 1982 prior to the start of America's largest restoration project which is being carried out by The Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Inc. The final phase of fund- raising and specific exhibit themes, including a new American Immigrant Wall of Honor on which forebears' names can be inscribed, has been announced for Ellis Is- land Museum. Restoration of Ellis Island and the 200,000- square foot historic Main Building is scheduled to be completed by 1989, when the Museum will be open to the public. Located a few hundred yards north of Liberty Island in New York Harbor, Ellis Island was the major federal immigration facility in America. It processed 17 million men, women, and chil- dren who came to the United States from 1892 to 1954, when the facility closed. lb- day, more than 40 percent, or over 100 million, of all living Americans can trace their roots to an ancestor who came through Ellis Island. In 1965, Ellis Island was designated part of the Statue of Liberty National Monu- ment, which is administered by the National Park Service (NPS) of the Department of the Interior. In 1982, President Ronald Reagan asked Lee Iacocca to set up an organization, The Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, that would raise funds and oversee construc- tion for the restoration and preservation of the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island and plan for the centennial cele- brations of each. The restoration of Ellis Island, which began in 1984, will cost $140 million and is the largest restoration project of its kind in American his- tory. Its scope is comparable to the restorations done on the Palace of Versailles and Leningrad's Hermitage. The Ellis Island Museum will be the major institution dedicated to the promotion, advancement, and under- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 67