g4. Advice and Consent A number of Jews are key officials and advisers in the presidential campaign. Most are in the Clinton camp. KIMBERLY LIFTON AND JAMES D. BESSER Jews can be found at all levels of involvement in the presidential campaign. Here's a rundown on Jewish aides and advisers working for Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, President George Bush and Ross Perot. CLINTON'S CORNER oing to work for Bill Clinton's presidential campaign was an easy decision for Sara Ehrman, who drove the former Hillary Rod- ham to her wedding date with the future Arkansas governor and Democratic presi- dential candidate. "This is a critical and defining election for the Amer- ican Jewish community," said Ms. Ehrman, deputy political director and national coordinator for the Jew- ish vote for Clinton/Gore '92. "This (Bush) adminis- tration is a disaster for American Jews." Ms. Ehrman, a former lobbyist for AIPAC (the American Israel Political Action Committee), has a long history of involvement with politics and Jewish causes. She is affiliated with the Labor Zionist move- ment in the United States and serves on the board of Americans for Peace Now. Nor is she unique to the Clinton-Gore campaign. Several top campaign staffers are Jews, and Clin- G Lu (/) UJ CD CC LLJ LLJ 30 Mickey Kantor is a veteran insider in Democratic Presidential campaigns. ton aides estimate the total number of Jewish cam- paign officials may be well over 100. There are also several Jews upon whom Mr. Clinton relies for ad- vice, but who have no official campaign role. "There are so many people who are Jewish at the top of this campaign," says Marc Ginsberg, a D.C. at torney who is advising the media on foreign policy af- fairs. "We had an overflowing crowd in Little Rock at our Rosh Hashanah lunch." The list of these top aides includes campaign man- 1 ager Mickey Kantor, chief of staff Eli Segal, pollster Stanley Greenberg and finance director Raham manuel, 32, who is Israeli. Some notable Jewish political names have also been traveling the nation to campaign for Mr. Clinton. They include Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman and New York Rep. Stephen Solarz. Each reportedly is in line for a job in a Clinton administration. Mr. Clinton also relies heavily upon the advice of Robert Reich, a Harvard University government pro- fessor; Robert Shapiro, vice president of the Progres- sive Policy Institute; Samuel Berger, former deputy director of the State Department policy planning staff, and Michael Mandelbaum, a professor and director of American foreign policy studies at the Johns Hop- kins University School of Advanced International 7-'1 Studies in Washington. Campaign manager Michael "Mickey" Kantor, a Los Angeles lawyer, has known the Clintons since '- 1978, when he served with Mrs. Clinton on the board of directors of the Federal Legal Services Corp. Early in the race, he was a distant adviser. But in the days before the New Hampshire primary, after talk spread of alleged Clinton extramarital affairs and draft dodging, Mr. Kantor came to the rescue. He flew to New England, reorganized the campaign, and got the candidate out before the public and the press as often as possible. He then took on the role of CEO. Mr. Kantor, 52, is a veteran insider in Democratic , presidential campaigns. He headed Jerry Brown's 1976 campaign, worked as state chair for President Jimmy Carter's reelection bid and served as Califor- nia chair for Walter Mondale's 1984 defeat. His pet project is one he helped create — the Los An- geles Conservation Corps, an organization for ur- ban youths. He also serves on the national advisory council for AIPAC and on the executive committee for the American Jewish Committee. Chief of staff Eli Segal comes to the campaign with a myriad of political experience. The president of Bits c and Pieces, Inc., a direct marketing toy company, and publisher of Games magazine, he was the national fi- nance chair for Sen. Gary Hart's quick-lived presi- dential bid and served as Sen. George McGovern's assistant presidential campaign manager. In 1968, he was a campaign organizer for Eugene McCarthy. He also serves on the advisory board for Peace Now. In the world of Democratic research and commer- cial polling, Stanley Greenberg, the Clinton-Gore poll- ster, is a household name. His work is extensive, and