this is cnn saturday morning. i m gary tuchman. we sit down and chart this morning with politics. the new hampshire primary is three days away. as we saw in iowa, every single vote literally counts. mitt romney, ron paul and jon huntsman have been out to meet voters this morning. here is jon huntsman talking about his hopes for new hampshire. all the others have gone up and down. you know, i m getting a stiff neck just watching all of my friends just go up and down. perry, cain, back mapp, thhmaba come in, go up to 22 and down to 2. i don t want that to happen to me. i want a gradual, steady, substantive rise, like we re getting here in new hampshire. so how are all the candidates spending their weekend? cnn political director mark presston joins us live from manchester, new hampshire. is it just a free for all right now? it is, gary. we ve had several campaign events happen this morning. there s one going on right now here in manchester with rick santorum. it s interes
good morning to you. happy monday, november 7th. this is your a.m. wake-up call. i m carol costello joining you live from new york this morning. prime minister george papandreou is meeting with the leader of the main opposition party after agreeing to step down. on the table who will be the next prime minister after both sides agree to form a unity government? the new government is expected to approve a $178 billion bailout package aimed at preventing greece from defaulting on its massive debt. cnn s diana magnay explains how it went down. reporter: it was a day of intense political wrangling in athens as the leaders of the two main parties fought tooth and nail over the formation of a new government. finally they came together in a late night meeting with the president. the reporters waited outside. after one and a half hour, a written statement delivered through the bars of the palace gate, a statement that a new government will be formed to tide the country through t
republican front-runner for the president. according to the latest national poll. leaving many analysts wondering if the georgia businessman s plan resonating. all that and more on american morning. good morning, everybody. it is thursday, october 13. it is certainly not a good morning. i can t get messages from people, i can t send messages. mine was down yesterday but back now. mine was up yesterday but i e-mailed this morning. our executive producer said i will be late. that s the e-mail i sent. he is panicking going where are my anchor. if you don t know what we are talking about, millions of blackberry users are without service this morning. now four-day blackout spreads to north america. the outage primarily affects e-mails and internet access, not the ability to make phone calls or text. weird. problem started monday affecting customers in europe, middle east and africa. by tuesday, it has spread to south america and yesterday customers here in the un
purchasing this heroin that s high purity and either smoking it or snorting it. it s become chic. it s been called the perfect storm in all the wrong directions. very pure heroin that s easy to get for less than the price of a six-pack of beer is flooding the suburbs of the northeast and it s no longer coming from southeast asia or afghanistan. mexico actually supplies most of the heroin west of the mississippi but the biggest supplier in the northeast is a country that made its reputation selling another drug colombia. although some intelligence analysts and law enforcement officials disagree, as early as the 1980s there s evidence that members of the cali cocaine cartel in colombia decided to expand their product line. everybody remembers miami vice in the 80s. why did they switch from cocaine to heroin? greater profit margin. with heroin you can cut it significantly more than you can cut cocaine. according to some law enforcement officials, when the
california, the san onofre nuclear plant where we sent reporters to los angeles in the past two weeks or so, we also wanted to find out seismic activity going back, say, 100 years, back to the year 1900, but the majority of nuclear plants east of the mississippi, we find the greater amou of seismic activity all west of the mississippi and up into alaska and hawaii, if that s any cancellation. laura ingle in upstate new york reporting there. we d like to hear from you. how concerned are you about a nuclear plant in your area? foxnews.com/ america s newsroom , weigh in, cast a vote, we ll bring you the results later in our show. 9:34 now. here s martha: martha: over the last year, i ve traveled to nearly every state in the country and i know many americans are feeling that way today. i know that feeling. i have lived it. martha: well? here we go, folks. the race is on. former minnesota governor tim palenty basketballing