VOLIF 1 What's it like to be a strange face in Detroit's Jewish community? Zachery von Gonten moved to Farmington Hills from Wisconsin. The 24-year-old mortgage broker doesn't expect his social life to blossom overnight. "Right now," he says, 48 "work comes first." e NOVI, eet Zachery von Gonten. The 24-year-old mortgage broker isn't green to being the new guy. Mr. von Gonten has moved five times in his life, twice during the past two years. Last November, he packed up his black Jeep Grand Cherokee and drove from Madison, Wis., to metro Detroit, site un- seen. His new address: Farmington Hills. "I came for the job," he says. "I really hadn't heard anything about metro De- troit, except that the city was a dump." As southeastern Michigan enters its fifth year of economic recovery, out-of- staters like Mr. von Gonten are moving here with new career prospects. Unem- ployment declined from 7.1 percent in No- vember 1990 to 3.8 percent in November 1994. But new jobs and new beginnings don't guarantee happiness in new environs. Newcomers still face the threat of not finding their way around; not meeting nice people, not fitting in. And there's al- ways the ominous chance of never clicking with some peculiar Michigan traditions: Wrap-around lefthand turns, Pop (not soda), Couch (not sofa), Faygo, bumpy cake, Vernor's (still a Michigan tradition, though the company has moved out West), Maize and blue, Green and white, Devil's Night, East siders, West siders, Eight Mile Road, And a downtown that seems to close when the sun goes down. "It's frightening to come to a new community," says Gail Budin, who moved to West Bloomfield from Delaware about four years ago. Ms. Budin leads a committee called "Shalom De- troit" with her co-chair Joan Chernoff-Epstein, a native of the area. The committee, sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Women's Division, functions as a welcome wagon, offering programs and information for those new to town. "The Jewish community here feels closed until you get inside and find out how much people re- ally do want to include you," says Karen Gordon, director of Federation's Business and Profession- al Women, part of the Women's Division. At her office in the Max M. Fisher Building in Bloomfield Hills, Ms. Gordon each week receives names of three to five newcomers, and the num- bers are increasing. She says more and more fam- ilies and young adults are moving into town. Many of the recent collecre graduates and other profes- sionals have landed jobs with Ford Motor Com- pany. Most are relocating to West Bloomfield and Farmington Hills, though some are settling in Novi and Northville. Shalom Detroit obtains names of newcomers through several sources. Some come from realtors who want to connect clients with the Jewish com- munity. Many come from groups outside of Fed- eration, like National Council of Jewish Women and ORT. Still others come from friends, temples, synagogues and Jew- ish Information Service (JIS), a com- munity hotline. Ms. Gordon holds up a stack of faxes with names of newcomers. "I always joke that JIS must have our number on speed dial," she says. "Every time I turn around, I have another fax about another newcomer. There are so many people coming to town." It doesn't surprise Ms. Gordon. "We're a familial community," she says "and I think we have so much to offer." M r. von Gonten studied English and philosophy at Drake Uni- versity in Iowa. He plays a mean game of tennis, avoids meat-market bars, loves French absur-