96 Friday, May 4, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS few years ago, Alan Dershowitz, a bright young lawyer trained at Yale and teaching at Harvard; met in Madrid with the head of the Russian delegation to the Helsinki accords on human rights. Armed with anti-Semitic diatribes published in the Soviet Union, he threw them on the table and asked, "Comrad, how can you justify this under the Soviet constitution ? How can you justify this under the teachings of Lenin, who said that anti-Semitism was an abomination?" Dershowitz's not-too-comradely Russian was also well prepared. He slid some Nazi propaganda printed in the United States out of a folder. He threw them on the table. "Professor Dershowitz, tell me," he said. "Look at the material from the Soviet Union. Look at the Nazi material from the United States. Which is worse?" Dershowitz — the descendant of Eastern European Jews who came to the United States in the late nineteenth century, a graduate of Talmudic elementary and high schools, a lawyer who has turned down only very few cases, and those because they would have involved defending rabid, virulent anti-Semites — carefully scanned the tracts before him. "Comrade," he finally said, "you're absolutely right. The material circulating in the United States is worse. But take a look at the brochures. Tell me if something doesn't catch your eye." The good comrade, Dershowitz recalls, "looked. And he smirked. And he smiled. And he growled. Because he understood what I meant." The Russian material all bore the official stamp of the Soviet censors. It had been approved — endorsed — by the Soviet Union. There was no corresponding insigna on the Nazi material from the United States because no such imprimatur exists. That's the difference between the Russian and American systems, Dershowitz says. When you disapprove, you also approve. When you act as censor, you also act as approver. And in this country, we do not need a censor. Nor do we need an approver. We simply tolerate." "I don't want the government to tell me what I can think, what I can pray, what I can read. If you allow censorship for some, you allow censorship for all of us. In the marketplace of ideas, you don't shut down the shop by government if you don't like the ideas being proposed. You simply don't buy the product. For over a decade, Dershowitz has been working to keep the shop open. He is not a bargain basement emporium that occasionally lets a little shrinking of the Bill of Rights LAVVYE OF LAST RESOR Lawyer for Anatoly Scharansky, Patty Hearst and porno stars, Alan Dershowitz defends the Bill of Rights and assails the U.S. judicial system. BY ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News get by in the wash.. A few lost clauses of the First Amendment here, a bleached phrase or two of the Fifth Amendment there. Dershowitz's shop is for fine goods, embroidered with the theories of civil libertarians and brocaded with legal precedents that belie those who say it can't happen here. Dershowitz is a member of the board of directors of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and has been a consultant to foundation studies on human rights and the media, incarceration, and sentencing. When a recodification of federal criminal law was introduced in Congress a few years ago, Dershowitz criticized its "repressive" tone. So Senator Edward M. Kennedy invited him to help redraft a bill that would be acceptable to civil libertarians. The new version, which passed the Senate in 1978, still had some features which galled Dershowitz, such as permissive wiretapping and gag orders on the press. "But," he said at the time, "there is not a single provision that is worse than the existing law." The bill also contained the Dershowitz theory of presumptive sentencing." To avoid the wide discrepancy in sentences given by different judges for the same crimes, it set specific sentencing boundaries and allows judges to violate them only in exceptional circumstances. Kennedy said that Dershowitz's . advice was "invaluable." While Dershowitz tags himself a liberal in the Kennedy-Humphrey-Mondale tradition, he dons political blinders when the first ten amendments of the Constitution are at stake. His clients range from one end of the political spectrum to the other; some just about fall off at the far ends. At almost the same time a few years ago, for instance, he defended two Stanford University professors of sharply contrasting ideologies: Bruce J. Franklin, who was fired for alleged left-wing activism, and Nobel laureate William Shockley, who was barred from teaching a course postulating the genetic inferiority of blacks. He has defended "Deep Throat" star Harry Rheems, who later gave Dershowitz a photo with the inscription, You taught me everything I know." He has gone to the bar for nude sunbathers on Cape Cod, nude performers on Broadway and for the producer of the Swedish soft-porn film "I Am Curious Yellow," for which, despite its boffo box office and soporific cinematic pace, Dershowitz climbed the long steps up the Supreme Court. This is one of 11. journeys he ha made to the high court since 1967. Then he was 29. One year earlier, he had earned tenure at Harvard as a full professor of law, the youngest individual to have achieved that distinction. In one of his more controversial — and, probably, less understood moves, Dershowitz publicly defended the rights of the members of the Nazi Party to march through Skokie, Ill., " . Craig Ter)touritz Continued on. Page 25