survivor who takes the law into his own hands. Some 50 years after his family was murdered in the forests of Lithuania, Max Menuchen, a Harvard University religion professor, encounters the man responsible. But that man has a fatal ill- ness and is not expected to live long enough for the legal system to do its work. Menuchen decides to mete out his own punish- ment, and it is up to talented trial lawyer and fellow professor Abe Ringel to defend him. Like Ringel, Dershowitz has been criticized for defending guilty people. In answer, he reminded the Book Fair audience that the United States is a place where the legal system does its best to investigate crimes before filing charges. "Would anybody want to live in a world where the vast majority of the people accused of crimes are innocent?" he asked. In the question-and-answer period, Dershowitz called the case against the 13 Iranian Jews accused of spying for the United States and Israel "a total sham." "None of these people have had any contact with American or Israeli intelligence," he said. Instead, the 13 have been caught in a battle between Iranian centrists and fundamentalists. Dershowitz said he is ready to go to Iran "at any moment" with a team of lawyers from countries including Canada and France. Their strategy is one of carrots and sticks. And, if the Iranian clerics were to bring the 13 Jews to trial and inflict punishment, the clerics would be subject to trial should they leave Iran, Dershowitz vowed. As a lawyer, he gave advice to an audience member who, as a Holocaust survivor, was seek- ing restitution for property seized during the war. However, he said, it would be wrong if the hor- rors perpetrated during that era boiled down to a series of financial lawsuits. Dershowitz also had vitriolic criticism for political candidate Patrick Buchanan, warning that he must be taken very seriously as a threat to the Jewish peo- ple. Like Hitler, Buchanan conceivably could be pro- pelled into office by an economic downturn, he said. Characterizing Buchanan as "a classic, old-fash- ioned anti-Semite," he said the presidential con- tender is not just a Jewish problem. He has never stood up for a downtrodden person in this country. The only ones he's stood up for are Nazis." Audience members surveyed were unanimous in praise of Dershowitz both as a person and as a speaker. "He has the great gift of being passionate about everything he's concerned with," said Cynthia Mandelbaum of West Bloomfield. Audience member Howard Malzberg of Detroit said Dershowitz had talked about topics that should have been raised 40-50 years ago. Phyllis Salter of Royal Oak said the talk was "very provocative and informational." "He held the bragging down and let the facts speak for themselves," Salter said. "I don't know how one person can be involved in so many things." Her opinion was echoed by Selma Tenenbaum of Farmington Hills, who said Dershowitz "evokes competence that someone is on guard for us and capable of taking action." 1-1 Ready, Set, Read Opening Day at the 48th annual Jewish Book Fair features local author event. T SHELLI DORFMAN Staff Writer here were enough books to house a small b library. But the sound level proved it was anything but, as the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit opened the first full day of the 48th annual Jewish Book Fair on Sunday. The' Nov. 7 event, at the JCC's D. Dan & Betty Kahn Building in West Bloomfield, was the site of intent shoppers and book browsers, students, fami- lies and serious book collectors. In their own section, in the midst of the Janice Charach Epstein Museum/Gallery's current exhibit about book art, sat 17 Detroit-area authors, most new to the field of writing, many self-published and all there for their connection with the Jewish corn- munity. Different from the overall fair, with its lectures and shelved books, the Local Author Fair is a place for writers and readers to interact on a personal level. Authors have an opportunity to display their works, enthusi- astically discuss their stories and maybe sign their first auto- graphs. For the sec- ond year, Marilyn Weiss teamed up with Irene Winkler Brian Golden to co-chair the Local Author Fair. In its fourth year, Weiss says the event has become a familiar addition to the overall book fair, with "word of mouth" bringing the writers and their works. One author participated after his mother, Ruth Brownstein, mentioned to Weiss that her "son the doctor" had written a book. Intrigued, she brought it to her committee, who entered David Brownstein's The Miracle of Natural Hormones, 2nd READY, SET, READ on page 12 The Price Of Success s Crowd overwhelms capacity. uccess breeds success, it is often said. Organizers of the 48th annual Jewish Book Fair discovered success also can breed a whole slew of disgruntled people. So many peo- ple turned out to hear Alan Dershowitz, the Nov. 6 opening night speaker, that they over- flowed the Marion and David Handleman Hall and Auditorium as well as the overflow room. At its peak, the crowd reached about 1,500, said David Sorkin, executive director of the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit. Handlernan Hall's legal seating capacity is about 650. Room 332, the only room at the D. Dan & Betty Kahn Building with closed-circuit television capability, can accommodate another 400 or so. "Another couple hundred were beyond our capacity," Sorkin said. Realizing the situation, event co-chairs Carrie Kushner and Sylvia Gotlib, their families and about 75 volunteers and Center employees — includiiig Sorkin --- gave up their seats. Although Zachary Davies of Oak Park got a seat and was pleased with the speaker, he was critical of the way the event was handled. "A huge crowd should have been easily anticipat- ed for a speaker of the stature of Alan Dershowitz," Davies wrote in a letter. He suggested that for future opening night events, admission be by ticket only, with free tickets available in advance. "As it happened, I am sure many people went home with a poor impression of the Jewish Book Fair and the Jewish Community Center," Davies wrote. His suggestion likely will be considered at the Book Fair post mortem, said Sorkin and JCC president Larry Wolfe. "It's a good news/bad news cenario," Wolfe said. "A number of people have en me suggestions, and we will look into them ust as soon as Book Fair is over." Expanding the JCC's closed-circuit capabili- ties to additional rooms at the. Kahn Building and/or to the Jimmy Prentis Morris Building of the JCC in Oak Park would enable more people to see and hear the speaker, although not in per- son. Cost-effectiveness is a factor in considering this option, Wolfe said, especially if it was need- ed only a handful of times each year. Another idea is moving the forum to the JCC gym, the building's largest room, for an extreme- ly popular speaker such as Dershowitz. However, Wolfe pointed out, the gym has terrible acoustics and uncomfortable, hard-to-access bleachers. And giving out free tickets in advance still may result in shutting out some people wanting to attend. "We are desirous of correcting any problem that comes up," Sorkin said. "But when you have this kind of event, either you are too successful and have too many people or you have no one and people say, Why can't you turn out a crowd?' "Our intention is to make everybody happy." ❑ — Diana Lieberman Staff Writer