HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017129.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
4.2.12
WC: 191694
John Marshall and others. When Abe Goldstein called on each of these men, he did it
nonchalantly without mentioning their heritage. But when he came to my name, he paused and
said, “Dershowitz, from the famous Dershowitz family?” The class burst out laughing. For a
moment I thought he was mocking me, but he explained that in Williamsburg, the Dershowitz
name was quite well known.
Yale Law School was an institution of meritocracy, where one could rise to the top, regardless of
name or lack of heritage. I was first in my class, and became editor-in-chief of the law journal.
That wasn’t enough for the fancy white shoe Wall Street firms. During my second year, I applied
to about thirty such firms, and was turned down by every one of them. The hiring partner of
Sullivan and Cromwell, looked at my transcript and saw all A’s, except for one C in Contracts. (I
was so angry with my Contracts professor that I immediately enrolled in Advanced Contracts with
the same teacher, and got an A). The hiring partner looked at my transcript and brushed me away
and said, “We don’t take C students at Sullivan and Cromwell.” Years later he approached me at
a Yale reunion function and told me that he had saved me from a bad experience. He disclosed
that he was a closet Jew and realized that I would never fit into the culture of that firm. Within
several years however, that firm along with most other Wall Street firms, had significant numbers
of Jewish associates and partners. (In the late 1960s, I sued one of the firms that didn’t hire me
for refusing to promote an Italian-American to partnership and won a ruling that discrimination in
promotion was prohibited by the law).
I got two job offers, both with Jewish firms, but even one of them discriminated against me on
account of my religion. Paul, Weiss, Rifkin, Wharton, and Garrison offered me a summer job at
$100 a week. (I still have the letter!) I immediately accepted and wrote to them that I could not
work on Saturday. I did not give the reason, namely that I was an observant orthodox Jew. I
was told to come and meet some of the partners when I was next in New York. I was introduced
to Adlai Stevenson and several other partners and finally taken in to see the firm’s major
“rammaker,” Simon Rifkin, a prominent Jew who was active in numerous Jewish organizations.
He told me how pleased he was that I would be working with the firm, but asked me why I would
not be available on Saturdays. When I told him it was because I was Sabbath observant, he
replied, “Oh no, we can’t have that here. I thought it was just a restriction on your availability
this summer. I need associates who are available seven days a week.” I took a job with the other
Jewish firm, Kaye, Scholer, Feirman, Hays, and Handler. They were perfectly comfortable with
my being Sabbath-observant. The big “rainmaker” at that firm was Milton Handler, who was so
busy seeing clients, that he would make time for associates only when he could not fit in a client.
He would ask associates to drive home with him, or to go with him to Columbia when he was
going to teach. One day his secretary called and said Mr. Handler wants you to meet him at a
particular address. She gave me the address; I proceeded to walk up Park Avenue not knowing
where I would find him or in what setting. When I got there, his private barber was cutting his
hair. I was seated next to him while he got his haircut, and he dictated notes to me. It wasn’t as
bad as what Lyndon Johnson would do, requiring aides to join him in the bathroom.
While working at Kay, Scholer, I had the first fancy restaurant meal of my life. I was asked to
join two of the partners at an elegant Park Avenue establishment. Though I was twenty-two
years old, I had never eaten out except at delis. When the waiter put a napkin on my lap, I didn’t
42
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017129