The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, October 28, 2009 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, October 28, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS KABUL Eight U.S. soldiers killed inAMghanistan Roadside bombs - the biggest killer of U.S. soldiers - claimed eight more American lives yester- day, driving the U.S. death toll to a record level forthethirdtime in four months as President Barack Obama nears adecisiononanewstrategyfor the troubled war. The homemade bombs, also called improvised explosive devices or IEDs, are responsible for between 70 percent and 80 percent of the casual- ties among U.S. and coalition forces 'in Afghanistan and have become a weapon of "strategic influence," said Lt. Gen. Thomas Metz in Washing- ton. The attacks yesterday followed one of the deadliest days for the U.S. mili- tary operation in Afghanistan - grim milestones likely to fuel the debate in the United States over whether the conflictis worththesacrifice. Obamahasnearly finished gather- ing information on whether to send tens of thousands more American forces to quell the deepening insur- gency, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said. A meeting Friday with the Joint Chiefs of Staff will be amongthe last events inthe decision- making process, Gibbs said. VANDERBILT, Mich. Three men die in 2 Mich. plane crashes Two men died after their small plane crash-landed along a northern Michigan freeway yesterday, just hours after a Canadian pilot died when his plane went down at an air- port in southwest Michigan. The victims of the late crash on 'Interstate 75, about 235 miles north of Detroit, were from Gaylord, but Michigan State Police did not release their names or say which of them was piloting the plane. One man was 52, the other 32. Sgt. Jeff Gorno said in a statement that the two-seat plane crashed shortly before 6:30 p.m.yesterday on southbound I-75.Witnesses reported seeing the plane circle the freeway before crashing along the shoulder, the statement said. The victims were taken to Otsego County Memorial Hospital. The Tra- ves* "t~ cord-Edglenrcpnrfc that one man died at the hospital and the other was pronounced dead at Munson Medical Center in Traverse City. Gorno said police aren't sure where the plane was headed, but it was registered to a company based at Gaylord Regional Airport, 10 miles southeast of the crash site. WASHINGTON Long-term care insurance program gains in House House health care legislation expected within days is likely to include a new long-term care insur- ance program to help seniors and disabled people stay out of nursing homes, senior Democrats say. The voluntary program would begin to close agap in the social safety net overlooked in the broader health care debate, but it must overcome objections from insurance companies that sell long-term care coverage and from fiscalconservatives. "I'm pretty confident that it will be in there," Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., a leading sponsor, said of the provision. More than 10 million people cur- rently need long-term care services, a number that's only expected to grow as the baby boom generation ages. But most families whose elders can no longer care for themselves have to scrape to find a solution. TEHRAN, Iran Iran to seek changes to UN uranium plan Iran accepted the general frame- work of a U.N.-draft nuclear deal yesterday, but said it would seek "important changes" that could test the willingness of world powers to make concessions in exchange for a pact to rein in Tehran's ability to make atomic warheads. It was unclear how far Iran would push for those changes.Already, Iran has raised a potential roadblock: It wants a step-by-step approach to send low-enriched uranium stock- pile out of the country rather than the big single shipment called for under U.N. provisions. Western powers say it's critical for Iran to send out at least 70 percent of its uranium store in one load to eliminate - atleast temporarily- its options to make a nuclear weapon. - Compiled from 8aily wire reports Report: Afghan leader's brother on CIA payroll JOHN BEALE/AP Former aide to President George W. Bush, Karl Rove, left, and Howard Dean, former Democratic Governor of Vermont answer a question at a press conference before a debate on the topic of health care at Penn State University yesterday. Health care debate draws Dean, Rove to Penn State Karzai suspected as major player in country's illegal opium trade WASHINGTON (AP) - Ahmed Wali Karzai, the brother of the president of Afghanistan, gets regular payments from the CIA and has for much of the past eight years, The New York Times reported yesterday. The newspaper said that according to current and former American officials, the CIA pays Karzai for a variety of services, including helping to recruit an Afghan paramilitary force that operates at the CIA's direction in and around Kandahar. The CIA's ties to Karzai, who is a suspected player in the coun- try's illegal opium trade, have created deep divisions within the Obama administration, the Times said. Allegations that Karzai is involved in the drug trade have circulated in Kabul for months. He denies them. Critics saythe ties with Karzai complicate the United States' increasingly tense relationship with his older brother, Presi- dent Hamid Karzai. The CIA's practices also suggest that thet United States is not doing every- thing in its power to stamp out the lucrative Afghan drug trade, a major source of revenue for the Taliban. Some American officials argue that the reliance on Ahmed Wali Karzai, a central figure in the south of the country where the Taliban is dominant, undermines the U.S. push to develop an effec- tive central government that can maintain law and order and even- tually allow the United States to withdraw. "If we are going to conduct a population-centric strategy in Afghanistan, and we are per- ceived as backing thugs, then we are just undermining ourselves," Maj. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, the senior American military intelli- gence official in Afghanistan, was quoted by the Times in an article published on its Web site. Ahmed Wali Karzai told the Times that he cooperates with American civilian and military officials but does not engage in the drug trade and does not receive payments from the CIA. STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) - It sounded like the makings of raucous political theater: Former Democratic Party chief Howard Dean and former Bush adminis- tration official Karl Rove sharing a stage to discuss health care. They didn't disappoint, even if the students who brought the political heavyweights to Penn State last night were looking for something a bit more cerebral than a town-hall tussle. The hour-plus event ended up being a primarily lively politi- cal debate complete with good- natured one-liners, with a sprinkling of town hall-like verve provided by a smattering of anti- Rove audience members. "Liar! Liar!," some in a crowd of mainly students yelled at Rove toward the end of the night, when the former deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush brought up the No Child Left Behind edu- cation legislation as an example of an issue that could attract biparti- sanship. "These people must be from Michigan - or they must be from Ohio State, I don't know," Rove quipped, referring to Penn State's biggest football rivals. The verbose pair hammered each other with arguments familiar in the fractured health care fight. Rove lambasted Democratic proposals as being modeled on broken government programs like Medicare, weighed down by stag- geringcosts. Dean implored that it was imperative that all Americans have the option to obtain afford- able health care. "All I want is the option, I don't want to tell people what to do," Dean said. AFTER THEY WALK From Page lA "That was my life," he said. "Get some more money for some more dope." What little money he saved, Bon- hart used for food - cheap conve- nience store products like Little Debbie pastries. He no longer cared about his personal hygiene, bathing once every two months, or when someone told him he smelled. Bonhartwould lie awake at night, he remembered, shivering under his only blanket. As he tried to fall asleep in freezing churches with leaky windows,he dreamed ofgoing back to school to get an education. ~~ "I pr , said. "Please, God, if I could just stop smoking dope ... if I could just get myself back together. "But Ididn't know how." Wendy Rhein did. Known as "Wen" to her friends and family, Wendy Rhein, a 1991 University alum, runs a program for homeless men and women in Lawrenceville, Ga., called NSPIRE. Founded in 2007, the nonprofit organization currently works with 30 former homeless people to teach them the necessary skills and give them the resources to lead a self- sufficient life. Rhein and her coworkers at NSPIRE,simply put, work to change lives. "It could be a wide range of issues, but we work with that indi- vidual specifically - on how they got there in the first place and then what do they need to do to empower themselves so that this won't hap- pen again in their lifetime," Rhein said over the phone from her office in late July. She spoke with confi- dence, and a firm, yet friendly tone. More than 100 people have sought help. from the program in the last two years. Rhein said it's "very intense" and that not every- one graduates. To graduate, participants must pass drug and alcohol screenings, secure a job and a place to live, open and balance a checking account and more. NSPIRE also works witheach individual to set personal goals. Rhein cited Shirley, a 58-year-old woman who had been homeless on and off for the last 15 years. Shirley, whose last name cannot be pub- lished here because of privacy con- cerns,was an alcoholic who couldn't keep a stable job. Since graduating from NSPIRE in July, Shirley now has her own apartment, recently bought herself a car and is starting her own cleaning company, where she is employing other NSPIRE cli- ents to clean houses with her. Last year, Lawanda - a 23-year- old woman six months pregnant - and her partner, Char, sought assistance through NSPIRE. "They had literally been living in a hole in a ditch near a construction site downtown, and they needed a place to live," Rhein said. Both individuals had drug and criminal histories, but needed somewhere to raise their infant. After NSPIRE sorted out their legal situations, the woman gave birth to a healthy, 8-pound baby girl. Rhein attended the birth at the hospital, whereishe coached the woman d - inglabor. night, I might have my two, three Nine months into the program, grams ofcrack in mypocket, $40 to the couple reunited with their fami- $50 - I would go to church," Bon- lies. They are now working and living hart said. "I'd sit there long enough with Lawanda's sister in Alabama. until I just couldn't stand it, and I'd Rhein primarily deals with have to go get me a hit, but I would NSPIRE finances and operations, sit there, and I wanted to hear some- but she said working with people thingdifferent. who have lived on the streets gives "I was tired ofliving like that." her a different prospective on life. . Bonhart first went to SafeHouse "It can be very humbling," she Outreach, a homeless shelter in said. "You take nothing for granted Atlanta where he met Gregg Ken- after you work with this kind of a nard,NSPIRE founderandexecutive population." director. Kennard was interviewing the homeless to join his program, --which was only a few months old at the time. He hadyotrouble convin-- The true impact of Rhein's work ing Bonhart to participate. expands beyond the confines of her "Once I listened to what Gregg office. Besides meeting with cli- had to say - how they would move Off s-she visl - '-nice s less outreach programs once a living in a house and then move to month where she serves meals and an apartment, itwas just like an 'a encourages the homeless to join her ha' moment." program. Bonhart spent the next seven Now40, Rheinhas workedinnon- and a half months in the program profits her whole life. After graduat- and was part of its first graduating ing from the University with degrees class. Now a truck driver for the in Women's Studies and Communi- clothing company that partners cations Studies, she moved to Chi- with NSPIRE, the 47-year-old is cago and worked with the Chicago starting to get his life back togeth- Christian Industrial League - the er. And he said he has Rhein, one largest homeless outreach program of his favorite people, to thank for in the Midwest at that time. that. The CCIL provides short- and -"Wendy is my biggest cheer- long-term shelter for the homeless leader," he said. "She is probably men, women and children in the the reason I have my own apart- Chicago area. It was her first job out ment, a job and I've got money in of college, and Rhein worked as a the bank." donor services person, writingthank Bonhart said Rhein was pres- you notes and tracking financial con- ent when he signed the lease on his tributions. Although she was doing apartment, and she has helped him behind-the-scenes work, Rhein said work through his self-esteem issues. the job gave her the opportunity to "I just listened to Wendy ... tell- see how a nonprofit functions. ing me 'yeah, you are worth it. You As it was her first experience do deserve a good life,' "he said. working with the homeless, she said In August, he was accepted the job gave hera different perspec- to Georgia State University's tive of people living on the streets. Andrew Young School of Policy "It was a great eye-opener Studies, where he is working because some people have this pic- toward a Ph.D. in economics. ture of what a homeless person is Bonhart said he would not in their head, and as I've seen now be where he is today without as well, they're people that have NSPIRE - or without Rhein. really fallen on hard times and for "When Wilkes first came into a variety of reasons just can't keep NSPIRE," Rhein said, "I think he an apartment or haven'tbeen able to had about a week of clean time secure a job," she said. after decades of crack use. Rhein explained that it's almost "He was clearly smart and tal- impossible for homeless people to ented and shrewd and needed the get jobs or apartments because they opportunity to take some chances don't have a permanent address. on himself and regain a sense of Because of the bad economy, purpose that he had lost in his Rhein said she has seen more home- early twenties." less individuals and families than Rhein admits they clashed aslot ever before. She said many people - in the beginning as Bonhart test- mostlythe unemployed - who can't ed the limits of the program. But provide for their families have had she said "he stuck with it, hum- their homes foreclosed on or have bled himself and has unveiled been evicted from their apartments this incredibly driven, committed because they cannot afford the rent. and thoughtful person." Rhein said she's frustrated that there's not more she can do, but said it's more frustrating from a recipi- ent'sperspectivetoknowyoucannot Rhein's sister, Robin Hurwitz take care of yourself or your family. - a 1988 University graduate - "I can't imagine how that must said that although their parents feel to know you're educated, you've had always taught them to do had a job, you've done everything good deeds, it wasn't until college right and you still can't manage to that her sister found her passion find a way to feed yourself or feed for helping those less fortunate. your family," she said. "Truthfully, I think when she got to Michigan, that is where a --- lot of this started," Hurwitz said. The two girls lived together After10years oflife on the streets, during Hurwitz's junior year at in the winter of 2007, Bonhart said the University. Hurwitz recount- he decided to make a change in his ed that her sister would wake up life. He started attending church, early on the weekends to work where he could escape his life of against people trying to block drugs, thefts and shootings. women from entering Planned "Even when I was geekin' - it Parenthood: might have been a hood Friday "She w ld come home and NSPIRE official Wendy Rhein (right) with p be so bruised from blocking people whoweresomuchbigger, especially adult men who were trying to block these women from getting the edu- cation they wanted," Hurwitz said. "But it was so important for her." Hurwitz added that the protests "started opening her (sister's) eyes to other things" and may have led her to where she is today. Hurwitz said she could never do the kind of work her sister does. "I think emotionally it would be way too hard for me," she said. "Especially having kids of my own, I think I would just fall apart, but she has an inner strength that not many other people have." program participant Wilkes Bonhart. NSPIRE would not run as smoothly or change so many lives if it were not for Rhein, Kennard said. "She has a great big heart and passionto help people to make a dif- ference," he said. Rhein said all the various expe- riences she has had working with disadvantaged populations during the last 18 years have culminated in her current job and said she is driv- en by knowing her small deeds can change a person's fate. "The ability to touch people's lives, to help them get from one place to another, it's kind of like watching a year of a miracle happen in somebody's life," she said. FREE brewed coffee or $1.00 OFF any specialty [ a beverage I I, 1741 Plymouth Rd * Ann Arbor F R EE . .B1GGBY FE) for franchise info www.biggby.com COFEE Good at this location only. Not good with any other offer. No copies of this coupon will be accepted. Offer expires 11/03/09. nruu I