NEWS I Tired of all those fees on your bank statement? A business checking account option at Franklin Savings Bank means no fee for deposits and checks written, and a minimal charge for account statements. Most major financial institutions in metro Detroit wouldn't dream of such a thing. Compare for yourself. You'll see what we mean when we say that at Franklin Savings Bank, our business is to help your business. Commercial Checking Accounts 3 Per Check Drawn Per Deposit Slip Per Account Statement Per Deposit Item NBD .2 20 .800 $15.00 .100 Manufacturers .210 .750 $13.00 . Mich. National .2 30 .750 $14.00 .8 1/20 Comerica .220 .600 $13.50 91/2 0 Franklin Bank SAVINGS For more information call 35 8.5170 SOUTHFIELD ■ BIRMINGHAM GROSSE POINTE WOODS [-plc In.ured With the Volatility in Today's Stock Market, isn't it Time to Consider the Stability of Rare Coin Investing? MICHAEL ZIPSER Rare Coin Investment Specialist Zip's Investment Pick of the Week: 1866 SAN FRANCISCO $10 GOLD PIECE PSGS Graded Very Fine 35. This very rare coronet-type gold coin is one of only four pieces ever graded. This coin is expected to double in value within the next three years. Current price $6,800. IC Richard Charles Rare Coin Galleries Michigan's Only Fully-Accredited Coin Dealer Southfield, Michigan 48075 4000 Prudential Town Center (313) 356-5252 64 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1990 Look, Up In The Sky! It's A Bird, It's A Plane, It's A... Levy! ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News avid Levy, an ama- teur astronomer in Tucson, Ariz., has found and named a comet, which can be seen with an unaided eye in the skies over Detroit for the next two weeks. Streaking across the heavens at 50,000 to 60,000 miles an hour, Comet Levy has a tail about 100,000 miles long. Three weeks ago, the comet was about 40 mill- ion miles from earth — the closest that its parabolic or- bit will ever take it to this planet. Near the end of September, Comet Levy will move out of the visible range as it enters the southern hemispheric skies. In the meantime, it can be seen right after sunset in the southern sky, where it is moving westward with the constellation Sagittarius. While the comet is dim, its 8.0 magnitude does make it visible to the naked eye. The comet can best be seen by go- ing to a spot away from the glare of city lights. A small telescope or binoculars will improve chances of spotting the comet. Levy discovered the comet on May 20 while using a 16- inch telescope near Tucson. It is the sixth comet he has discovered in the last four years and the first that bears only his name. Last year, for instance, Levy and two other astronomers, one in Japan and the other in Massachusetts, all in- dependently discovered a comet that now carries the name Okazaki-Levy- Rudenko. Amateur astronomers notify the International Astronomical Union's Cen- tral Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams upon sighting a new comet. The Bureau then telegrams details of the sightings to major observatories around the world, which confirm that the comet was previous- ly unknown. If so, the heavenly body is named after its discoverer. One comet can be named for up to three discoverers. Comet Levy is one of billions of comets in the solar system. According to Geoff Chester of the Nation- al Air and Space Museum's planetarium in Washington, D.C., the comet is expected to leave the solar system in about 18 months. ❑ Exhibit Shows Life In The Warsaw Ghetto New York (JTA) — The latest exhibit at the New York Jewish Museum, "A Birthday Trip To Hell," ex- plores an "ordinary" day in the Warsaw Ghetto, filled with the pictures of the daily life of the ghetto's in- habitants. The 129 pictures were taken by a German soldier on a birthday outing. Heinz Jost, an innkeeper from the town of Langelensheim, was serving in the German Army in September 1941 near Warsaw on the east bank of the Vistula. His curiosity was raised by the stacks of bodies he saw outside the ghetto walls, so Mr. Jost spent his birthday walking the streets of the ghetto, snapping pictures of every- thing he saw. Mr. Jost kept the photographs to himself until the early 1980s, when he gave his images of life in the Warsaw Ghetto to the editors of the German periodical Der Stern. He died shortly after. Israel Excluded From Advisory Amsterdam (JTA) — The Dutch government has issued a travel advisory against visiting most. Middle Eastern countries, including Iraq, Jordan, Syria, the eastern part of Saudi Arabia, Yemen and the Gulf states except Oman. However, as of now, no re- strictions have been placed on travel to Israel, Egypt, the North African nations of Morocco or Tunisia, or to Greece. Cancellations of trips to Israel from Holland have been made mainly by those who were to visit Israel for the first time and as mem- bers of groups, but not by those who visit Israel regularly and individually.