Fall 1994 Calvin Klein Collection Inside Washington What's Christopher Up To? JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT Tuesday, July 19 10:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, July 20 10:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. ADAKIA 722 North Woodward Avenue Birmingham, Michigan 48009 (810) 258-5018 Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit Welcome in the Summer of '94 with The Annual Singles Backyard Bar-B-Q Bash! Wednesday, July 20 7:00 p.m. Maple/Drake Building Outdoor Pool Deck (21 years & older with valid ID) Lu CD 01 • Dinner & Soft Drinks • Music by DJ Eric Harris • Dancing Underneath the Stars • Swimming • Casual Dress i • Cash Bar Tickets may purchased in ADVANCE for $10.00 or on the night of the BASH ($12.00) In the event of inclement weather, the party will be held indoors. Call Bob Richardson for more information 661-7655 0 ne of the best-kept secrets in Washington involves what — if anything— Sec- retary of State Warren Christopher has up his sleeve for next week's scheduled Mideast trip. But on one point, there's no mystery: Israeli officials regard Mr. Christopher's mediation in the stalled Syrian-Israeli talks as increasingly vital as the window of opportunity for progress in the negotiations narrows. Israeli officials have conveyed this message to the Clinton ad- ministration with growing ur- gency. `They're making the case that now is the moment to move, and that it's going to take some new American initiatives to make this happen," said William Quandt, a Mideast expert with the Brook- ings Institution. The secretary's top priority, said Mr. Quandt, will be to make it clear to Syria's president, Hafez Assad, that Israel is ready to talk about "full withdrawal in return for full peace" — but only if the Syrian leader is ready to begin serious, substantive negotiations, without preconditions. Israeli officials hope Mr. Christopher, who will participate in talks between Israel and Jor- dan, will start fleshing out details about how Washington can con- tribute tribute to Israel's security arrangements if the Golan Heights are returned to Syria. The stakes for the trip also are high because Israeli leaders feel the Clinton administration is "ex- hausted" regarding the Mideast peace process. "If Christopher wants to turn around that perception, he has to score on this trip," Mr. Quandt said. "Or, at least, he has to come back with the impression that he's moving in the right direction. An endless series of trips without much to show will just reinforce the impression that nothing much happens when this ad- ministration is engaged." Bill Kristol's Star Is On The Rise Politics, according to the popular view, is more visceral than in- tellectual: A crude manipulation of emotions, not an appeal to rea- son. So what's Bill Kristol doing as chairman of the Project for the Republican Future, knew Wash- ington-based think-tank de- signed to_ co. help' forge a "conservative reform agenda" for the Republican Party? Mr. Kris- tol, son of Jewish neoconserva- tive guru Irving Kristol, and chief of staff to former Vice President Dan Quayle, relishes the ideas behind political clamor. The Project, the Republican counterpart to the Democratic Leadership Conference, was cre- ated to "help avert the disaster of '92, when the Bush adminis- tration was intellectually ex- hausted," Mr. Kristol said recently. He has urged Republicans to focus on substantive issues, not scandals and emotional issues. In a recent memo to GOP lead- ers, he counseled caution in re- sponding to sensational accusations about President Clin- ton's personal life. He also has called for a thorough debate with- in the party on bedrock Republi- can issues, such as abortion. "Clinton's doing a lot of our work for us," he said. "One prob- lem may be an excessive com- placency because of Clinton's failures. We need a credible con- servative reform agenda that lays out ways to cut government and strengthen private institutions — not just a knee-jerk anti-gov- ernment reflex or anti-Washing- ton rhetoric." Such ideas, he said, can get lost in the frenzy of day-to-day politics. "That's why we want to deepen the debate, rather than having a clash of sound bites," said Mr. Kristol. "We might win short-term with that, but it's bad in so far as we want to have a governing Republican agenda that really changes the politics of the country." He rejected the popular per- ception that GOP efforts to win Jewish support have been torpe- doed by the rise of the Christian right. And he claimed that younger Jewish voters are grad- ually shifting in the direction of the GOP. Recent attacks against the Re- publican-Christian right con- nection by such groups as the Anti-Defamation League, he z