-2 The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 17, 2006 NATION/WORLD U.S., Iraq launch massive air attack :-:: NEWS IN BRIEF HEADLNS* RMAOUDTE OL . 71 6 6 - .. ____ .d____..m...m__. . :: -'r°:" . ... . In search of insurgents, U.S. gives go-ahead to largest air assault since beginning of war BAGHDAD (AP) - In a well-pub- "licized show of force, U.S. and Iraqi forces swept into the countryside north of the capital in 50 helicopters yester- ,day looking for insurgents in what the American military called its "largest air assault" in nearly three years. There was no bombing or firing from the air in the offensive northeast of Samarra, a town 60 miles north of Baghdad, the U.S. military said. All 50 aircraft were helicopters - Black Hawks, Apaches and Chinooks - used to ferry in and provide cover for the 1,450 Iraqi and U.S. troops. The military said the assault - Operation Swarmer - aimed to clear "a suspected insurgent operating area" and would continue over several days. Residents in the area of the assault reported a heavy U.S. and Iraqi troop presence and said large explosions could be heard in the distance. Ameri- can forces routinely blow up structures they suspect as insurgent safe-houses or weapons depots. It was not known if they met any resistance, but the mil- itary reported detaining 41 people. The attack was launched as Iraq's new parliament met briefly for the first time. Lawmakers took the oath but did no business and adjourned after just 40 minutes, unable to agree on a speaker, let alone a prime minis- ter. The legislature set no date for it to meet again. Still, the session marked a small step toward forming a unity govern- ment that the Bush administration hopes will calm the insurgency and enable it to begin withdrawing U.S. troops. Operation Swarmer also came as the Bush administration was attempting to show critics at home and abroad that it is AP PHOTO Iraqi Army soldiers of 4th Iraqi Army Division exit a CH-47 Chinook heli- copter in support of Operation Swarmer in Samarra, Iraq. dealing effectively with Iraq's insurgen- cy and increasingly sectarian violence. White House spokesman Scott McClellan denied it was tied to the new campaign to change war opin- ion. "This was a decision made by our commanders," he said, adding that President Bush was briefed but did not specifically authorize the operation. The U.S. military forces have been trying to build up the Iraqi army so that it can play a leading role in fight- ing the insurgents. The operation appeared concen- trated near four villages - Jillam, Mamlaha, Banat Hassan and Bukad- dou - about 20 miles north of Samarra. The settlements are near the highway leading from Samarra to the city of Adwar, scene of repeated insurgent roadblocks and ambushes. Katrina evacuees suffer mental health problems * States changing focus from providing housing to offering counseling and additional support CHICAGO (AP) - When William Villavaso closes his eyes, the nightmare is waiting for him - the one about the -15 hours he spent in water slick with diesel fuel in New Orleans, a life jacket and a chunk of wood keeping him afloat until he was rescued. Six months after losing his home and his possessions to Hurricane Katrina, the 49-year-old New Orleans native is now living in Chicago, where he has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and wakes up from bad dreams in a cold sweat. On a scale from 1 to 10 - 10 being well - Villavaso says that emotionally, "right now I'm probably a 2." "I hope to have normalcy again in my life," says Villavaso, who is trying to battle his depression at group counsel- ing. "I'm just hoping for that stability." As many as 500,000 Katrina evacu- ees around the country may need mental health counseling, according to the U.S. Substance and Mental Health Services Administration. And while Villavaso is getting help, the government says many others are not, and may not even know they need it. Several states that took in evacuees are recognizing the problem, changing their focus from providing housing and jobs to offering counseling and emo- tional support. In Illinois, about 20 counselors are tracking down approximately 7,000 evacuees, and officials are referring them to professionals. "We know that there's several stag- es of emotional crisis that people go through," says Carol Adams, Illinois's human services secretary. "Right now, people are in the stage when they real- ize things won't work out quite how they thought." WASHINGTON Congress ups debt ceiling to $9 trillion Congress pushed the ceiling on the national debt to nearly $9 trillion yes- terday, and the House and Senate promptly voted for major spending initia- tives for the war in Iraq, hurricane relief and education. The Senate, on a 52-48 vote, sent President Bush a measure allowing the gov- ernment to borrow an additional $781 billion and preventing a first-ever default on Treasury notes. The move allows lawmakers and the president to pay for the war in Iraq. without raising taxes or cutting popular domestic programs. Hours later, the House approved by a 348-71 vote $92 billion in new money for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and for relief along the hurricane-ravaged Gulf Coast. In the Senate, a late-night vote loomed on a $2.8 trillion budget blueprint for the upcoming year, but only after approving amendments breaking Bush's $873 billion cap on appropriated spending by more than $12 billion. Vice President Dick Cheney was expected to be on hand for a possible tie- breaking vote. Sen. Mary Landrieu, (D-La.), could prove a crucial vote. TEHRAN, Iran Iran agrees to talks with U.S. over Iraq Iran offered yesterday to enter into talks with the United States aimed at sta- bilizing Iraq, the first time the Islamic republic has agreed to negotiate with the superpower it calls the "Great Satan." The offer appears to reflect the desire of at least some top Iranian officials to relieve Western pressure over Tehran's nuclear program in return for help on Iraq, which is sliding ominously toward civil war. The Bush administration said it would talk with Iran - but only about Iraq, not nuclear issues. The White House said the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, is already authorized to talk with Iran about Iraq. "But this is a very narrow mandate dealing specifically with issues relating to Iraq," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said, adding that it did not include U.S. concerns about Iran's nuclear program. "That's a separate issue." BELGRADE, Serbia-Montenegro Few mourners attend Milosevic's funeral The flag-draped coffin of Slobodan Milosevic went on public display yesterday, but it drew relatively few mourners paying tribute to the former president who died while on trial for genocide and war crimes. Hundreds of die-hard Milosevic supporters - not the tens of thousands that organizers had predicted - lined up to view his casket in a museum dedicated to the late communist dictator Josip Broz Tito in Belgrade's plush Dedinje district. When the doors first opened, the crowd scrambled to get in, pushing back secu- rity guards amid cries of "Slobo! Slobo!" A window shattered in the melee, and police were called in to keep order. SAN DIEGO Bomb scare before NCAA game cleared The arena for the first-round NCAA men's tournament game between Alabama and Marquette was temporarily evacuated yesterday after bomb-sniffing dogs detect- ed "something strange" on a food vendor's cart about two hours before tipoff. After the FBI, police and security officials checked, the all-clear was given at Cox Arena nearly two hours later. The game began at 12:50 p.m. - 70 minutes after the original start time. - Compiled from Daily wire reports CORRECTIONS A story on yesterday's front page (Designs unveiled for new quad) incorrectly stated that "On Friday, the University Board of Regents is expected to approve the schematic design of North Quad" It should have said the regents were expected to be asked to vote on them Friday. The same story incorrectly stated the time of a informational meeting about the plans on March 23. The meeting, which will be in the Lorch Hall Auditorium and will focus on students, staff and faculty, will take place from 4 to 6 p.m. Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com I V I r Tft- UVNI -VF.ITY Of MICIt IrAN P -65N1T': DEPRESSION ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES' ± fovrth A~nVuwa Cnfncrcn'z4 The University's Role in Responding to Crisis, Disaster, and Lss 2f 0 D~pWiot~e C Marc-h 21-22, 2006-+ Rackham Graduate School, Ann Arbor, MI MkNZUNCeter } ' for Public H.alth eparwens The Department of Communication Studies presents a Howard R. Marsh lecture on Democracy and the Media I I 51vdc~ Monday, March 20, 2006, 7:30 pm Rackham Auditorium, The University of Michigan Mr. Rich will do a book signing, sponsored by Nicola's Books. 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