S A V E $ SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $ O D AL. Metro Detroit's Volume Honda Dealer SAYS S A V E WHY BUY HERE? S S 1993 HONDA ACCORD LX 4 DR. A A Full pwr., drivers air bag V V Lease $ E E per For mo. 9 9 * 1) Saturday Sales & Service 2) Free Loaner Cars" 3) We will not be undersold. S A V E S A V E ERNDAL .1EICIATDZkiiM S A 21350 WOODWARD • FERNDALE V (3 Blks N. of 8 Mile Rd.) 548-6300 E *60 mos. closed-ond leas*, 1st payment $206.96 & $255 soc. dop., & lianas & MI• & $500 cap cost, reduction due st signing. 15,000 ml. per. yr., and 150 per ml., over. Total of payments 612,417.60. Customer responsible for excess wear & tsar. P.O.P. is $7 ,069•60 " Some restrictions may apply. o Si dealer for dotal's. S A V E $ SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $ Corner of Pontiac Trail & S Commerce Rds . WALLED LAKE ( DRAPERIES CUSTOM MADE THE DETRO • Clinical Teaching • Testing/Evaluation • Therapeutic Tutoring 545-6677 • 433-3323 LYNNE MASTER, M.Ed Owner, Director 25201 Coolidge, Oak Park 4036 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills -fda.61444e DECORATIVE FABRIC & WALLPAPER 750 S. Woodward Birmingham 644-6505 } Yitzhak Rabin Faces New Coalition Crisis Jerusalem (JTA) — The controversy over Education Minister Shulamit Aloni, whose secular perspective raises the hackles of the re- ligious parties, has escalated into the first full-fledged co- alition crisis of Yitzhak Rabin's new government. The prime minister met with Ms. Aloni in Tel Aviv as the Shas party warned it would pull out of the government if she remained in the education post. The fervently Orthodox Sephardic party is threaten- ing to vote against the government in no-confidence motions on the Aloni issue, submitted to the Knesset by opposition religious. Ms. Aloni's colleagues at the helm of left-wing Meretz bloc said they would rather quit the government than allow their leader to be com- promised by being forced out of her post. In an effort to ease the crisis and shore up his majority, Mr. Rabin was in- volved in intensive contacts with two parties on the right, seeking to woo one or both of them into the government. To Rafael Eitan, leader of the right-wing Tsomet, the prime minister sent a written proposal on the basis of which he hopes to resume negotiations broken off when the government coali- tion of Labor, Meretz and Shas was sworn in mid-July. According to officials in the Prime Minister's Office, the paper represents no new development in the premier's policy thinking. But they would neither- confirm nor deny media reports that Mr. Rabin had expressed willingness to hold a referendum before any territorial deal on the Golan Heights. Tsomet op- poses territorial concessions. According to media speculation, Mr. Eitan is be- ing offered the Police Min- istry, currently headed by Communications Minister Moshe Shahal of Labor, and an economic ministry — possibly the Ministry of Labor and Welfare, current- ly held by the premier himself in anticipation of co- alition changes. The prior "tenant" at Labor and Welfare was Agudat Yisrael, now part of the United Torah Judaism party. Mr. Rabin would presumably be happy to see a United Torah man return to this post. A meeting bet- ween the premier and the party's Knesset members last week was inconclusive, with both sides insisting it had not focused on coalition politics. An obstacle to United Torah joining the coalition is the presence of Ms. Aloni at Education. Sources in the haredi community say the rabbis of the Agudah Coun- cil of Sages would not con- template entering the government unless Aloni were shifted out of that slot, and perhaps not even then. And the leader of United Torah's other component, Degel HaTorah sage Rabbi Eliezer Shach, is said to be opposed to joining the pre- sent government on any terms as long as Meretz is a part of it. Observers question, however, whether Shach can call the shots in United Torah, given that only one of They would rather quit the government than allow their leader to be compromised by being forced out of her post. its four Knesset members, Avraham Ravitz, is a Degel man. The other three are Agudah politicians. Meanwhile, the key figure around whom the crisis swirls is Shas' spiritual leader, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef. Rabbi Yosef is scheduled to chair a session of the Shas Council of Sages after the Sukkot holiday ends, at which the party's final posi- tion regarding the coalition and the upcoming confidence votes will be determined. The motions of no con- fidence, submitted by the National Religious Party and United Torah Judaism, are to be heard when the parliamentary winter term starts at the end of the mon- th. They criticize controver- sial statements by Aloni on religious issues.