DETROIT B'nai Moshe To Hire Building Contractor SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer A fter months of reworking drawings, Congregation B'nai Moshe will begin the search for a contractor to build their new synagogue. in West Bloomfield on March 1. Although the congregation celebrated a ground break- ing for its new building on Drake Road south of Maple Road last September, actual construction has been delayed in part because of last minute changes in the architectural plans, said Sharlene Ungar, synagogue president. be complete by the end of the year. ❑ It wasn't until this past week that final changes in the building's interior were completed and approved by board members, Mrs. Ungar said. The congregation had hoped to be in the new building by the High Holi- days, Mrs. Ungar said. But architectural changes and the four-month battle with West Bloomfield Township officials over site plan ap- proval make moving into the building by September unlikely, she said. Instead she hopes the building will Purim Parcel Project Seeks Sunday Gifts The Jewish News . and Jewish Experiences for Families will facilitate the community-wide Purim Par- cel Project on Feb. 24. Purim-inspired parcels of fruits and kosher sweets will be collected and delivered to Jewish newcomers in the Detroit area, recently arrived Soviet immigrants and senior citizens. Some of the parcels will also be sent to Jewish troops in the Persian Gulf. Between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Feb. 24, parcels can be do- nated at the Jewish Commu- nity Center's Maple-Drake or Jimmy Prentis Morris build- ings, or the Agency for Jewish Education in Southfield. Members of the B'nai B'rith Youth Organization, Michi- gan State Temple Youth, National Conference of Synagogue Youth, Kadima Chapter at Congregation Beth Abraham-Hillel Moses and the National Council of Jewish Women will distribute the parcels. The giving of shalach manot is part of the Purim holiday. Mordechai told the Jews to make and send por- tions to one another and gifts to the poor. Donated parcels can be decorated plates filled with fresh or dried fruit, nuts, wrapped kosher candy or packages of Elite wafers or chocolates. Each plate should be placed in a heavy-duty zip- lock bag. Viktor Astrakhan plays with his son, Senja, at the Jimmy Prentis Morris JCC in Oak Park, just five days after arriving in Detroit from the Soviet Union. Photo by Glenn Triest Orthodox Take Issue With Southfield Deck AMY J. MEHLER Staff Writer R epresentatives of the Orthodox Jewish community came head-to-head with members of the Southfield City Coun- cil last week and blinked. At least that's how coun- cilman Sidney Lantz sees it. His was the only vote against a compromise that reduces the number of park- ing spots to 16 on the hotly contested parking lot planned for the 1-696 over- pass near Lincoln and Greenfield roads. "They were snowed," Mr. Lantz said, referring to Simon Kresch and Rabbis E.B. Freedman and Eli 14 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1991 Kaplan, community leaders who lobbied for months against the city's plan to construct a 22-car parking lot on the deck over 1-696. "This parking lot was never in the city's original plans," he said. "It was always intended to be a passive deck. But faced with an all or nothing situation, they (the rabbis) had little choice but to give in. Mr. Lantz said the com- munity leaders were given an ultimatum: either accept the compromise for the spe- cial landscaping or the city would reject the $1.2 million in federal funds and leave the deck as is. "When public officials start telling the community what is good for them, it's time for the community to wake up," he said. Jeff Farland, director of Parks and Recreation for the city of Southfield, said there was no such ultimatum — only negotiation. He alsp said the lot, which was first designed to accommodate more than 50 cars, was always included in the deck's design. "This is a unique model and one that was deliberate- ly conceived to maintain the integrity and special needs of the Orthodox Jewish community," he said. "And since it's being funded by the federal government and maintained by city money, we want to make it accessi- ble for the entire commun- ity." Joan Seymour, chairper- son of the Southfield Wetlands and Woodlands Preservation Council, said the council was unethical in failing to meet the needs of her group as well as the safe- ty concerns of seniors living in nearby Country Court and Highland Towers apartments. "The city made it clear that it wanted to encourage large groups of people, espe- cially students, to visit the wetlands. We objected be- cause people will stray off the trail and lots of wildlife will be disturbed." "This was no com- promise," she said. "The area is too small to take this kind of impact. Building a parking lot is an invitation for trouble." Ducks, foxes and pheasants are some of the wetlands' indigenous wildlife. Mr. Kresch, of nearby Sherfield, said he viewed the money as com- pensation for the local neighborhood and not some- thing that needed to attract surrounding communities. The 500-foot-wide deck, which was designed by Merrie Carlock, will feature tot lots and playgrounds, as well as landscaped walkways. "I'd rather give the money back to the government than spend about $20,000 a year of tax payers' money for the deck's upkeep," Mr. Lantz said. Mr. Lantz, a former repre-