This Week SUBURBAN ACURA'S News Digest Director Of `E.T.' Becomes British Knight • 51,035.84 due at signing 20013.5 RI Leather, Auto, FWD, V6, CD Changer 2001 3.2 TL Leather, ROOF, ABS, Bose, CD 5869.09 due at signing *All payments plus tax, title, license due. 12,000 miles To 1.96 To 1-696 C _ D SUBURBAN (TO ACURA Nazi Collaborator Seeks Release 248-4719200 25000 HAGGERTY • FARMINGTON Just North of Grand River Ave. London — Filmmaker Steven Spielberg has been named a Knight Commander of the British Empire in Queen Elizabeth's annual New Year's Honors List, for his "extraordinary contribution to the enter- tainment industry and the British film industry over the last 25 years." The 53-year old director of Schindler's List, Saving Private Ryan and E. T. will accept the Honorary Insignia of a Knight Commander of the Civil Division of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire during a Jan. 29 ceremony at the British Embassy in Washington, D.C. As an American admitted to a British Order of Chivalry, Spielberg is not enti- tled to the appellation "Sir," but he can place the initials KBE — Knight of the British Empire — after his name. TEN MILE Mon & Thurs 9-9, Tues, Wed, Fri 9-6 Be smart. Look great. Spend less. 50% to 70% off at Maxwell. Right now at Maxwe'!, sale items are 50% to 70% off. Smart shoppers will find significant reductions throughout the store. This includes discounts on names like Hugo Boss, Vestimenta, Donald Pliner and more, so you'll look great. We only do this twice a year, so hurry in and spend (less!) MAXWELL Paris/JTA — The European Court of Human Rights agreed to consider a plea for release by convicted war crim- inal Maurice Papon. Papon, who was found guilty by a French court of helping deport some 1,500 Jews to Nazi death camps during World War II, made the appeal on the grounds that keeping a 90-year-old in jail is inhumane.• It could take until the middle of next year before the court rules whether incarceration at his age violates European rights conventions against inhumane and degrading treat- ment. The court can advise but not order France to free him. Iranian 10 Stay Jailed Teheren/JTA — The Iranian courts rejected an appeal by 10 Iranian Jews imprisoned on charges of spying, accord- ing to the French news service AFP. U.S. advocates for the 10 have not been able to confirm the reports, but said the denial was expected. The next step for the 10 may be an appeal for clemency from Iran's supreme ruler, Ayatollah Khamenei. Birmingham's Most Preferred Men's Clothier (248) 642-1965 116 North Old Woodward Avenue Birmingham, MI 48009 Daily 10-6 Thursday 10-8 Sunday 12-5 Temple Mount Digging Criticized Jefusalem/JTA — Israeli archaeologists calkd for greater supervision of work 1/26 2001 32 authorized by the Wakf Islamic Trust on Jerusalem's Temple Mount. The call followed reports that bulldoz- ers had dug a deep ditch near the Dome of the Rock, causing damage to a floor dating from the Second Temple period. However, Public Security Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami said only approved work was being done at the site. Russia Gives Wallenberg Papers Moscow/JTA — Russia gave Sweden documents concerning Moscow's recent clearing of Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg on spy charges. The move came after a joint Russian-Swedish panel was unable to agree on the fate of Wallenberg, who saved tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during World War II and then disappeared after he was arrested by Soviet agents in 1945. In a related development, a monu- ment to Wallenberg was unveiled in the courtyard of a Moscow library. Change Suggested In Organ Giving London/JTA — The office of Britain's Orthodox chief rabbi suggested a change to the way organ donations are approved. At a special conference on organ removal, an adviser to Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks proposed that authoriza- tion forms recommend that relatives of people who have died consult a religious adviser before making a decision about donating their organs. Many Orthodox authorities object to organ donation and autopsies on religious grounds. Official Resigns Amid Scandal New York/JTA — The Orthodox Union's executive vice president resigned in the wake of a commission report that confirmed abusive behavior toward children by a senior rabbi in the movement's youth group. Rabbi Raphael Butler, a former head of the National Council of Synagogue Youth, was accused of knowing of the alleged abuse by Rabbi Baruch Lanner, but not acting on the information. Rabbi Butler said the commission's recommendation must be implement- ed. He added that his resignation is an attempt to prevent divisiveness within the O.U.