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FOOT SOLDIERS page 39
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A client gets legal advice at the Booth Clinic.
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in leadership here have a great
deal of respect for the Judeo-
Christian ethic. When people kid
with me about what I do here, I
tell them that I'm the one who
sorts the underwear for distribu-
tion."
In the hallway outside his of-
fice; he flips a purple football, a
Christmas present for a child.
am a kid who has never gotten
a present like this football before,
life's a risk, a crapshoot. But there
also are people walking around
out there without shoes. Is this a
Jewish issue? Is this a Christian
issue? Or is it a human issue?"
Mr. Krugel's challenge is the
excitement and interest that
wanes after Christmas and
Thanksgiving.
"I'm happy and excited about
the interest, but it's 40 degrees
out there today, and we know
that it's going to be minus 40 in
February, and I won't get the
type of publicity I get during the
holidays. That money isn't there
all year round."
Running A Legal Clinic
Robert Dickman's dream was
to start a shelter on behalf of the
Jewish community. He had a site
in Redford selected and a name,
the Ner Tamid Shelter, chosen.
The financing for it fell through,
however.
In a meeting with the Salva-
tion Army's Col. Clarence Har-
vey, the idea of a legal clinic came
up. On Sept. 12, the William
Booth Legal Clinic opened at the
Harbor Light Center in the Cass
Corridor. To get to Mr. Dickman's
office, visitors park inside a
fenced-in lot, walk through cor-
ridors where medical treatment
is administered, therapy offered
and pass by the kitchen.
Mr. Dickman supervises a staff
of University of Detroit urban law
students. His wife, Ellen, is the
office manager.
Michigan law permits the stu-
dents to represent clients in court
as long as Mr. Dickman is pre-
sent. Clients need legal help for
almost every imaginable legal dif-
ficulty after living for years with
the complications of substance
abuse.
Mr. Dickman is with the Sal-
vation Army, he says, because of
his own background. Adopted by
a Jewish couple shortly after his
birth to an underprivileged Ital-
ian father and Welsh mother, he
said he's always had a sense of
thankfulness.
"This created a sense of empa-
thy for people in need," he said.
`Tye always felt lucky to be where
I was, and because of my adop-
tion felt a need to reach out to
people."
He hears all the time: how can
a Jew work for an organization
that promotes Christianity? His
response is immediate: "As Jews,
we have a strong visceral reac-
tion to the uniform and to reli-
gions that proselytize. For me,
though, being Jewish here hasn't