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he man whose at the back of the polling pack -- despite recent buzz giving him a late boost -- is taking nothing for granted but has nothing to lose."My feeling is when you're sitting last, if you can do better than that, that's good," he told Fox News.Santorum said he's got 1,000 caucus representatives in a contest with about 1,700 caucus locations. He acknowledges that means no official representative to make his case at each of the locations, but at "almost all of them, and no other campaign is going to have someone there who's going to get up and speak on our behalf."Santorum, who claims organization and message will make the difference, is also banking on a divide and conquer strategy."There's really three primaries going on here," Santorum said. "Ron Paul has his own primary, the libertarian primary. And (Newt) Gingrich and (Mitt) Romney are sort of the establishment primary. And I think there are three who are vying for the conservative mantle to go up
SACRAMENTO, Calif. Rescue firefighters responded to a Southwest Airlines flight in distress after two tires blew on the runway Tuesday evening, leaving the jet and its passengers grounded.The left main tires blew at about 6:15 p.m. as Southwest flight 2287 was departing for Seattle, Sacramento International Airport spokeswoman Laurie Slothower said.Southwest Airlines spokeswoman Katie McDonald said the pilot quickly aborted the takeoff and emergency crews were called in to hose down the 737 as a precautionary measure. They later set up a portable stairway to let the 130 passengers off the plane."I want to stress that there were no injuries tonight, and the tires never caught on fire," Slothower said.McDonald said all passengers were being booked onto other flights.Officials have not determined what caused the blowout and the incident is being investigated. In the meantime, one of the airport's two runways remains closed.




MOSCOW Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Wednesday rejected calls to hold talks with opposition leaders who have drawn tens of thousands of Russians to protest rallies to demand free elections and an end to his 12-year rule.The opposition leaders "do not have a common platform, so there is nobody to talk to," Putin told journalists from state news agencies.Organizers of the Moscow demonstrations include prominent public figures and representatives of various opposition groups. But they have passed joint resolutions with a list of concrete demands, including a rerun of the fraud-tainted Dec. 4 parliamentary election, the resignation of the Central Election Commission chief and the removal of barriers that have prevented opposition parties from taking part in elections.Putin on Tuesday firmly rejected the demands for a rerun of the election. The government has promised to ease rules for opposition candidates.Putin, who served as president in 2000-2008, is now seek