Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/22897
Tuesday, January 11, 2011 – Daily News – 5A WORLD BRIEFING year term on the conspir- acy charge. He also sen- tenced him to five years in prison on the money laun- dering charge but allowed DeLay to accept 10 years of probation instead of more prison time. Michael Douglas hopeful for full recovery NEW YORK (AP) — Michael Douglas says his tumor is gone and that he may have beaten throat cancer. In a taped interview with NBC’s Matt Lauer, Douglas said he felt relieved after a ‘‘wild, six-month ride.’’ Excerpts of the interview were released Monday ahead of its airing Tuesday on ‘‘Today.’’ Douglas says the odds are that he has beaten the disease. He said that he had lost 32 pounds, but was now working out and had put 12 pounds back on. He said he’ll contin- ue to go in for monthly checkups. The 66-year-old actor is set to begin shooting Steven Soder- bergh’s ‘‘Liberace’’ in May or June, with Dou- glas playing the title part. 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Grocery Specials General Mills Cheerios Cereal 12.25-14oz. 2 for $500 lb. Produce Specials Navel Oranges (product of USA) LB. Fancy ‘‘Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.’’ Petraeus says military push in southern Afghanistan is weakening the Taliban LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan (AP) — NATO’s top commander in Afghanistan said Monday that a recent pledge by a southern Afghan tribe to stand up to the Taliban shows the military push in the country’s most violent region is making headway and stifling the insurgents’ ‘‘central nervous system.’’ U.S. Gen. David Petraeus told The Associat- ed Press in the southern city of Lashkar Gah that a shift in thinking by the Afghan government and NATO means that the tribe’s risky move is being embraced rather than ignored. And that brings the hope that oth- ers may follow suit, he said. Later Monday, Petraeus was on hand in Kabul to greet Vice President Joe Biden, who made a surprise visit to Afghanistan to assess progress toward the key objective of handing over security from interna- tional forces to Afghans. The White House said Biden, who was last here in January 2009, was to meet with President Hamid Karzai as well as U.S. troops. Petraeus spoke with the AP during a visit to the cap- ital of Helmand province, where he discussed last week’s tribal pledge with provincial Gov. Gulab Man- gal. He told the AP that the Taliban is losing sway in volatile Helmand and Kan- dahar provinces in the south. Petraeus said there is increasing dissension among the fighting ranks of the insurgency and that fighters are bristling at being ordered to battle through the winter by bosses sitting far away in Pakistan. Mean- while, targeted strikes on midlevel leaders in Afghanistan have fractured the hierarchy, Petraeus said. Southerners struggle to dig out from winter storm ATLANTA (AP) — Southerners more accustomed to sunshine than snow began dig- ging out Monday from a wintry blast that strand- ed drivers and air trav- elers, cut power to thou- sands of homes, and even forced Auburn University to cancel viewing parties for the national championship bowl game. Snow ranging from Ashley Stever Financial Advisor 108 Main St., Suite B Next to Little Caesars Red Bluff, CA 96080 Bus. 530-527-9560 TF. 866-527-9560 Fax 877-898-1030 ashley.stever@edwardjones.com www.edwardjones.com 384-1563 WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS NO CARDS REQUIRED FOR EVERYDAY LOW PRICING OR SALE ITEMS several inches to more than a foot blanketed states from Louisiana to the Carolinas — a region where many cities have only a hand- ful of snow plows, if any. 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