16 Friday, November 2, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ELECTION '84 1 Marshall J. Breger: A sophisticated bureaucratic player. the Watergate era? Or just the fact that political cam- paign headquarters are tern- porary entities, too tran- sitory to be listed on an office building directory. Never mind. Democratic campaign headquarters is fairly informal. You don't need the kind of visitor's badge that the Republicans hand out to carefully screen- ed guests, and there's only a receptionist inside to prevent you from barging in. David Ifshin, a thin, dark- complexioned man with dark hair and a close cropped dark beard, is a lawyer with im- pressive credentials and con- tacts that go back to Syracuse, Stanford, Yale, Israel, Morris Amitay and Scoop Jackson. He talks quickly, in flat bursts of thought that run the sound of his words together. At 36, he is the chief legal officer for the campaign, heading a staff of nine lawyers and a corps of volunteer workers. Born in Silver Spring, where he still lives, Ifshin is married to the former Gail Grossman, who works for the Council of Economic Advisors and is reading for a PhD at the University of Maryland. He was graduated from Syracuse University in 1970 with a bachelor's degree in English literature and the in- tention of becoming a pro- fessor of English, but decid- ed to work in Israel for a year. He landed in Kibbutz Gesher. "It was one of the most im- portant experiences of my life," he said. "It was very important from a number of perspectives, both as a Jew and an American. Living abroad, particularly during Watergate, was a profound impression. I was able to define over a year what its significance was to me personally. "When I was young I had a naive view of the world. Life is a lot more complicated and the world is a much more dangerous place than you im- agine. When you live in a country like Israel, where danger is imminent — not just at the border, but right inside — it's easier to understand. "Watergate, seen from out- side the country was incredi- ble. I stopped caring whether Nixon was guilty or not. The process alone became very important. I guess you know that there's a generation of Watergate-inspired lawyers. I'm not sure I'm one of those, but it certainly had an impact on me. I made a decision to go to law school." Ifshin came back to the States and enrolled at Stan- ford, where he met and im- pressed Morris Amitay, the former head of the American Israel Public Affairs Commit- tee. He received his law degree in 1977, went to work for the Washington firm of Steptoe and Johnson, and taught law at Yale in his spare time, commuting one day a week to New Haven. Amitay, who was head of AIPAC at the time, asked Ifshin to be part of his infor- mal advisory group, and from there it was a short step to big time politics. "Mondale had indicated that he did not want to have a Jewish liaison, per se, - said Ifshin. "He didn't want simp- ly to have a Jewish Desk — put a guy at a desk somewhere — so he asked me to join him on his senior staff. "I might add that we don't have a strategy that is developed uniquely for the Jewish constituency. One of the great reluctances that we have is somehow to separate out the Jews in the campaign so that over here can be this little Jewish operation." Ifshin's credentials are im- pressive. In college, he was president of the United States National Student Association (which was revealed to have been CIA- supported), political director of the National Welfare Rights Organization in 1971-72, on the national staff of the Democratic National Committee in 1972, counsel for the campaigns of Senators Frank Lautenberg, Howard Metzenbaum, Chris Dodd and Carl Levin, and member of the law firm of Manatt, Phelps, Rothenberg and Tunny. In some quarters, however, he has a reputation for im- petuousness. For example, Ifshin was allegedly responsi- ble for overlooking the finan- cial ghosts in Geraldine Ferraro's past, an accusation which he denies. He does ad- mit to some involvement with the flub that allowed the anti-anti-Semitism plank to fall between the cracks of the Democratic platform (he says it was such an obvious plank that everyone thought it had been included), and with the formation of political action committees that Walter Mondale disbanded when their legality was questioned early in the campaign. (Ifshin says they were legal, but not worth the fight to keep them.) Ifshin's political coordina- tor, Dick Cohen, is a season- ed public relations profes- sional, and unlikely to com- mit such gaffes. A short, tough, 61-year-old New Yorker who went to DeWitt Clinton High School with playwright Paddy Chayefsky and photographer Richard Avedon, attended CCNY, and worked as public rela- tions director for the Joint Distribution Committee, associate executive director for the American Jewish Con- gress, and PR counsel for a number of Jewish organiza- tions, he functions as the Mondale/Ferraro campaign's PR link with the Jewish community. I prepare material, adver- tisements, briefing notes and statements for the candidate on issues of concern to the Jewish community," explain- ed Cohen. "I contribute to that great body of material from which Mondale's speech 01 4