Appointments: (734) 422-8040 Mail Order: (800) 511-9769 16311 Middlebelt, Livonia Michigan Heritage Bank Rates Above The Rest. 111.11 \i;i.: 0 APY 4•50% APY 12 Mo. CD Heritage Classic 5.75 Minimum $500 Checking Account Minimum $2,500 Visit our web site: www.MIHeritage.com or call for a CD by mail application. LENDER NOVI: Next to the Novi Hilton 21211 Haggerty Road at 8 Mile TROY: Troy Sports Center 1917 East Big Beaver at John R. 1-800-914-3524 1-248-619-0264 FDIC *Annual Percentage Yield is effective as of September 10, 1999. Penalty for early withdrawal. Business or brokered accounts not eligible. Insured frAGSTA MIsm Our CDs Don't play Music, but could be Music 5.65 k to your Ears BANK Member F.D.I.C. One Year Certificate A.P.Y. 9/17 L 1999 248-338-7700 or 248-352-7700 2600 Telegraph Rd. • Bloomfield Hills • MI 48302 This is a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insured account (FDIC). A minimum opening deposit and balance of $500.00 is required to obtain the stated Annual Percentage Yield. *Annual percentage yield when compounded quarterly. Rate is accurate as of 8/31/99. Penalty for early withdrawal from certificate accounts may be assessed. Israeli scientists found a way around that problem by removing certain impurities. They found they were able to stabilize the batteries in the caustic solution commonly used for primary and metal-hydride batteries. Dr. Licht of Technion told the New York Times, "The caustic solu- tions not only stop the super-iron from decomposing, but are basically the same as that used in alkaline bat- teries and therefore excellent for electrical energy storage." In their quest for an improved bat- tery, the research team had unsuccess- fully tried other materials ranging from sulfur to tin before they made their discovery. The team's super-iron is actually ferrate, an unusual form of iron combined with oxygen. Usually highly unstable, the researchers found that if kept very pure, it remained sta- ble. Meanwhile, the new batteries are still being tested in the laboratories at Technion. Said James Deutchman, chairman of the board of the American Society for Technion East Central Region, which encompasses Detroit, "Stuart Licht is an incredibly inventive scien- tist with an energy level equal to the battery project he has created." Dr. Licht believes the batteries will be easy and affordable to manufacture. Lithium-based batteries, the area where research has previously been focused in search for a long-lasting battery, is 100 times more expensive than iron. Unlike conventional batteries, when the super iron batteries break down, they create "green" iron dust, eliminat- ing the environmental damage caused by the chemicals used in alkaline bat- teries. And the relatively benign new batteries are rechargeable. More than 60 billion batteries are used around the globe each year thanks to the ever-expanding increase in "high-drain electronics." Despite the need for safe, inexpensive, higher- capacity batteries, the market has been dominated by batteries using man- ganese dioxide, a material in use since 1860. Said Nancy Gad-Harp, "Stuart Licht's energy efficient and environ- mentally friendly battery under- scores the importance of the Technion not only to Israel but to the world. By taking a concept and converting it into something with practical application, the Technion and Stuart Licht have had a consid- erable impact." fl