LOTTOMIKE's Blog

Clinton, Obama Denounce Bush at Party Event

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Wooing influential California Democrats, presidential contender Barack Obama vowed to "turn the page on this Iraq  disaster" while Hillary Rodham Clinton denounced President Bush 's conduct of the war as "one of the darkest blots on leadership we've ever had."

California, long a major cash source for candidates of both parties, is poised to become more influential in the electoral process as well, having moved its primary to next Feb. 5. As a result, the state Democratic weekend convention was expected to attract all the party's major presidential contenders except Delaware Sen. Joe Biden, who was campaigning in South Carolina.

Saturday's program featured appearances by frontrunners Clinton and Obama, as well as Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd and Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich.

Clinton unleashed an unusually personal critique of Bush, accusing his administration of ignoring scientific evidence about global warming  and stem cell research and lying about the effects of toxic dust at the World Trade Center site.

Her voice hoarse from days of campaigning, Clinton brought the 2,000 delegates to their feet when she said she wished she could turn the clock back to a different time.

"Somebody said to me that he wished we could just rewind the 21st century and just eliminate the Bush-Cheney administration, with all their mistakes and misjudgments," she said to cheers. "People are ready for leaders who understand it is our votes who put them in power, our tax dollars that pay the bills."

Obama, who has made his early opposition to the Iraq conflict a central theme of his campaign, told delegates he was proud to have bucked popular opinion at the time. It was a subtle but direct jab at Clinton, who voted in 2002 to grant Bush authority to invade Iraq.
He also renewed his call for the parties to find common ground where they could and declared it was time to "turn the page" on issues like health care, education and energy independence.

But he, like Clinton, also leveled a sharp critique of Bush, saying "the president may occupy the White House, but for the last six years the position of leader of the free world has remained open." And he characterized the administration's foreign policy as "bluster and bombast."

Both Obama and Clinton were received warmly by the left-leaning, activist crowd -- a stark contrast to the same convention four years ago, when the party was bitterly divided over the Iraq war.

There, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean -- then a little-known figure in the 2004 Democratic field -- thrilled delegates with his fiery denunciation of the conflict. His rivals at the time, including Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, who eventually won the nomination, were loudly booed for defending their 2002 vote to authorize the war.

Clinton cast the same vote in 2002, but met with only sporadic heckling during her speech.

The New York senator also promised to "treat all Americans with dignity and equality no matter who you are and who you love." The pledge was clear bow to California's politically active and influential gay community.

She lambasted the speech nearly four years ago, in which Bush -- under a "Mission Accomplished" banner on an aircraft carrier returning to home port -- declared an end to major military actions in Iraq.

That speech, Clinton said, was "one of the most shameful episodes in American history. ... The only mission he accomplished was the re-election of Republicans."

Dodd echoed the day's anti-war sentiment in his remarks.

"My friends, this is not about cutting and running," he said, accusing the White House of trying to police a civil war.

Earlier Saturday, candidates who attended South Carolina's party convention said they thought the United States has lost its global standing during Bush's presidency. America, they said, needs a Democratic commander in chief to restore its place in the world.

"We are today internationally and domestically a nation that is no longer a leader," Richardson said.

Edwards, the 2004 vice presidential nominee, said the world needs to see that "America can be a force for good."

"What their perception is that America is a bully and we only care about our short-term interests," Edwards said. "The starting place is to end the bleeding sore that is the war in Iraq."

Richardson, Edwards and Delaware Sen. Joe Biden said they would make ending the war a priority.

"The American people are looking for us as Democrats," said Biden, chairman of the Senate  Foreign Relations Committee. "They're looking for someone literally, not figuratively, to restore America's place in the world."

By BETH FOUHY
AP
Entry #1,110

most expensive house in the world

 

Price: $122.2 million
Location: Windlesham, England

Your blood may not run blue, but with enough green you can still live near—and like—royalty. Updown Court is currently the most expensive residence in the world, costing about $50 million more than the priciest U.S. home. The brand-new property is totally over the top, with 103 rooms, five swimming pools and 24-carat-gold leafing on the study's mosaic floor. There's a squash court, bowling alley, tennis court, 50-seat screening room, heated marble driveway and helipad. All eight of your limousines will fit in the underground garage. Then there are the neighbors, who include the queen (at Windsor Castle) and Elton John. It is listed with Savills and Hamptons International.

Entry #1,109

keno

7-11-28-34-45-53-57-60-68-69

5-13-24-33-44-57-59-65-69-70

6-15-22-28-33-46-55-67-68-69

4-12-17-22-26-33-34-55-67-70

8-15-17-19-22-33-44-57-68-70

7-22-26-28-33-44-55-66-67-68

9-11-33-35-48-52-55-58-68-70

7-11-19-22-25-28-44-65-67-70

2-12-15-22-33-42-45-54-67-70

6-10-11-22-27-33-41-48-57-70

3-12-15-18-26-29-32-45-56-70

4-11-18-22-25-28-44-52-60-70

7-15-19-27-32-33-48-51-54-68

6-19-22-29-35-45-58-59-67-70

8-19-22-28-33-55-56-57-67-70

4-12-18-24-30-36-42-49-53-67

6-11-18-19-22-27-32-55-57-70

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8-11-12-22-44-48-53-57-67-70

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2-10-15-20-25-30-35-50-65-70

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8-32-33-38-57-58-59-68-69-70

5-22-44-55-60-61-64-65-68-69

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9-34-38-42-46-50-54-58-63-67

7-50-52-55-57-58-60-67-68-69

5-32-35-37-54-58-59-64-69-70

7-55-57-58-59-63-64-65-67-68

8-18-19-28-29-38-39-49-59-69

2-12-22-32-42-52-62-65-67-68

4-13-23-33-43-53-63-65-67-69

5-12-32-46-56-64-65-66-67-68

4-15-25-35-45-54-64-65-67-70

7-10-12-22-55-56-57-58-65-68

9-12-19-24-33-44-55-66-67-68

6-10-24-35-46-57-58-67-68-69

4-17-22-29-33-45-55-65-67-69

7-19-33-55-59-60-62-64-66-68

8-12-15-48-55-57-60-65-66-67

 

Entry #1,108

keno

7-11-28-34-45-53-57-60-73-78

5-13-24-33-44-57-59-65-72-77

6-15-22-28-33-46-55-67-73-76

4-12-17-22-26-33-34-55-67-78

8-15-17-19-22-33-44-57-68-72

7-22-26-28-33-44-55-66-77-79

9-11-33-35-48-52-55-58-68-71

7-11-19-22-25-28-44-65-71-75

2-12-15-22-33-42-45-54-67-71

6-10-11-22-27-33-41-48-57-70

3-12-15-18-26-29-32-45-56-72

4-11-18-22-25-28-44-52-60-79

7-15-19-27-32-33-48-51-54-68

6-19-22-29-35-45-58-59-67-78

8-19-22-28-33-55-56-57-67-76

4-12-18-24-30-36-42-49-53-67

6-11-18-19-22-27-32-55-57-73

2-18-22-25-37-42-55-77-78-79

3-11-18-22-39-45-51-58-64-77

7-11-19-25-28-55-58-68-72-75

6-12-17-22-28-44-48-52-57-58

5-13-18-24-27-33-37-42-57-70

4-15-19-22-27-33-39-45-56-68

8-11-12-22-44-48-53-57-67-79

6-22-23-33-37-55-56-57-66-77

2-10-15-20-25-30-35-50-65-70

7-44-47-48-57-58-59-67-78-79

8-32-33-38-57-58-59-68-69-74

5-22-44-55-66-68-69-70-75-76

8-24-34-44-54-64-74-75-77-78

9-34-38-42-46-50-54-58-72-76

7-50-52-55-57-58-60-69-70-75

5-32-35-37-54-58-59-64-69-76

7-55-57-58-59-68-69-70-75-78

8-18-19-28-29-38-39-49-59-69

2-12-22-32-42-52-62-72-75-79

4-13-23-33-43-53-63-73-74-75

5-12-32-46-56-66-70-75-77-78

4-15-25-35-45-54-64-74-76-77

7-10-12-22-70-71-72-74-76-78

9-12-19-24-33-44-55-66-77-78

6-10-24-35-46-57-58-67-77-79

4-17-22-29-33-45-55-65-75-77

7-19-70-71-72-73-74-75-76-79

8-12-15-48-55-57-60-70-75-78

7-19-27-46-50-54-60-65-70-78

8-55-57-58-59-64-67-68-74-78

9-12-15-18-33-47-52-55-67-70

7-11-18-45-48-57-67-70-75-79

4-42-45-48-55-58-59-62-65-78

bear with me these are my first keno predictions and they may miss the mark badly or they may hit but who knows anything is possible huh?

Entry #1,107

UK national thunderball picks

5-13-18-24-29-1
5-13-19-24-28-2
5-13-19-24-27-3
5-13-18-24-27-4
5-14-17-24-27-5
4-15-17-24-27-6
4-15-19-24-28-7
5-14-18-24-27-8
5-14-19-24-27-9
5-14-18-24-29-10
5-14-19-24-28-11
4-13-19-24-28-12
4-13-18-24-29-13
4-15-18-24-29-14
4-13-19-24-27-8
4-13-18-24-27-8
4-15-18-24-27-8
4-15-19-24-27-8
5-13-18-24-28-8
5-13-19-24-29-8
4-15-19-24-29-8
5-14-19-24-29-8
5-14-18-24-28-8
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4-13-18-24-28-8
4-13-19-24-29-8
4-15-19-25-28-8
4-15-18-25-29-8
4-13-17-24-29-8
4-13-17-24-28-8
5-13-17-24-27-8
4-13-17-24-27-8
5-13-17-24-28-8
5-13-17-24-29-8
4-15-18-23-26-8
4-15-19-23-26-8
5-14-18-23-26-8
5-14-19-23-26-8
4-15-18-23-27-8
4-15-19-23-27-8
5-14-18-23-27-8
5-14-19-23-27-8
5-14-19-23-28-8
4-15-19-23-28-8
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5-14-18-23-28-8
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5-13-18-23-28-8
4-13-18-23-28-8

Entry #1,106

Senate Approves Troop Withdrawal Bill

WASHINGTON (April 26) - In a bold wartime challenge to President Bush , the Democratic-controlled Congress  cleared legislation Thursday to begin withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq  by Oct. 1 with a goal of a complete pullout six months later. The White House dismissed the legislation as "dead before arrival."
The 51-46 Senate  vote was largely along party lines, and like House passage a day earlier it underscored that the war's congressional opponents are far short of the two-thirds majority needed to override a Bush veto.

Democrats marked Thursday's final passage with a news conference during which they repeatedly urged Bush to reconsider his veto threat. "This bill for the first time gives the president of the United States an exit strategy" from Iraq, said Rep. David Obey of Wisconsin.

The legislation is "in keeping with what the American people want," added Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid  of Nevada.

The White House was unmoved. "The president's determined to win in Iraq. I think the bill that they sent us today is mission defeated," said deputy press secretary Dana Perino. "This bill is dead before arrival."

Given that standoff, Republicans and Democrats alike already were maneuvering for position on a follow-up bill.
Senate Republican  leader Mitch McConnell dismissed the just-passed legislation as "political posturing" by Democrats that deserves the veto it will receive. "The solution is simple: Take out the surrender date, take out the pork and get the funds to our troops," he said.

The bill would provide $124.2 billion, more than $90 billion of which would go for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan . Democrats added billions more for domestic programs, and while most of the debate focused on the troop withdrawal issue, some of the extra spending also has drawn Bush's criticism.

The day's developments amounted to a landmark of sorts.

The vote occurred nearly four years after Bush stood on the deck of an aircraft carrier before a banner that read "Mission Accomplished" - and 113 days after Democrats took power in Congress and vowed to change course in a war that has cost the lives of more than 3,300 U.S. troops.

During Vietnam, a longer and far deadlier war for U.S. forces, Congress went years before it was able to agree on legislation significantly challenging presidential war policy.
In the current case, any veto override attempt would occur in the House, and even Democrats concede they lack the votes to prevail.

With House Speaker Nancy Pelosi  at his side, Reid said Democrats hoped to have a follow-up war-funding bill ready for the president's signature by June 1. Despite administration claims to the contrary, he said that was soon enough to prevent serious disruption in military operations.

Several Democratic officials have said they expect the next measure will jettison the withdrawal timetable, a concession to Bush. At the same time, they say they hope to include standards for the Iraqi government to meet on issues such as expanding democratic participation and allocating oil resources.

Bush and congressional Republicans, eager to signal the public that they do not support an open-ended commitment to Iraq, have both embraced these so-called benchmarks. Unlike Democrats, they generally oppose using benchmarks to require specific actions, such as troop withdrawals.

Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, the House Republican leader, said at a news conference that the purpose of benchmarks should be to "see how the Iraqi government is doing," rather than to establish deadlines for a troop withdrawal.

Opinion on the issue covered a wide spectrum. "The only good measure that exists in Iraq now is body counts, and that's not a very good measure," said Sen. Mark Pryor of Arkansas, a moderate Democrat .

Congress acted as the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus, said at a Pentagon news conference that the U.S. mission "may get harder before it gets easier."

Less than three months after Bush announced an increase in troop strength and a shift in tactics, Petraeus said improvements were evident in both Baghdad and the Anbar Province in western Iraq. At the same time, he said the accomplishments "have not come without sacrifice" and that greater American losses have resulted from increased car bombings and suicide attacks, plus the greater concentration of U.S. troops among the Iraqi population.

There were no surprises in the Senate vote, in which 48 Democrats and one independent joined Republicans Gordon Smith of Oregon and Chuck Hagel of Nebraska in supporting the bill. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, a Connecticut independent who typically votes with the Democrats, sided with 45 Republicans in opposition.

In a clear warning to the White House, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, opposed the legislation but issued a statement saying her patience with the war was limited.

"If the president's new strategy does not demonstrate significant results by August, then Congress should consider all options including a redefinition of our mission and a gradual but significant withdrawal of our troops next year," she said. Like Hagel and Smith, Collins is coming up on a 2008 re-election campaign.

Democrats have long argued that Republicans must choose between a politically unpopular war on the one hand and a president of their own party on the other.

The legislation requires a troop withdrawal to begin July 1 if Bush cannot certify that the Iraqi government is making progress in disarming militias, reducing sectarian violence and forging political agreements, otherwise by Oct. 1.

While the beginning of a withdrawal is mandated, the balance of the pullback is merely advisory, to take place by April 1, 2008.

Troops could remain after that date to conduct counterterrorism missions, protect U.S. facilities and personnel and train Iraqi security forces.

The war aside, Democrats included more than $10 billion in the legislation that Bush did not ask for. Included was $3.5 billion for the victims of Hurricane Katrina ; $2.3 billion for homeland security and smaller amounts for rural schools, firefighting, children's health care and other programs.


By DAVID ESPO
AP

Entry #1,104

Scientists Offer Frightening Forecast

(April 22) -- Our planet's prospects for environmental stability are bleaker than ever as the world celebrates Earth Day on Sunday. Global warming is widely accepted as a reality by scientists and even by previously doubtful government and industrial leaders. And according to a recent report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), there is a 90 percent likelihood that humans are contributing to the change.

The international panel of scientists predicts the global average temperature could increase by 2 to 11 degrees Fahrenheit by 2100 and that sea levels could rise by up to 2 feet.

Scientists have even speculated that a slight increase in Earth's rotation rate could result, along with other changes. Glaciers, already receding, will disappear. Epic floods will hit some areas while intense drought will strike others. Humans will face widespread water shortages. Famine and disease will increase. Earth’s landscape will transform radically, with a quarter of plants and animals at risk of extinction.

While putting specific dates on these traumatic potential events is challenging, this timeline paints the big picture and details Earth's future based on several recent studies and the longer scientific version of the IPCC report, which was made available to LiveScience.

2007

More of the world's population now lives in cities than in rural areas, changing patterns of land use. The world population surpasses 6.6 billion. (Peter Crane, Royal Botanic Gardens, UK, Science; UN World Urbanization Prospectus: The 2003 Revision; U.S. Census Bureau)

2008

Global oil production peaks sometime between 2008 and 2018, according to a model by one Swedish physicist. Others say this turning point, known as “Hubbert’s Peak,” won’t occur until after 2020. Once Hubbert’s Peak is reached, global oil production will begin an irreversible decline, possibly triggering a global recession, food shortages and conflict between nations over dwindling oil supplies. (doctoral dissertation of Frederik Robelius, University of Uppsala, Sweden; report by Robert Hirsch of the Science Applications International Corporation)

2020

Flash floods will very likely increase across all parts of Europe. (IPCC)

Less rainfall could reduce agriculture yields by up to 50 percent in some parts of the world. (IPCC)

World population will reach 7.6 billion people. (U.S. Census Bureau)

2030

Diarrhea-related diseases will likely increase by up to 5 percent in low-income parts of the world. (IPCC)

Up to 18 percent of the world’s coral reefs will likely be lost as a result of climate change and other environmental stresses. In Asian coastal waters, the coral loss could reach 30 percent. (IPCC)

World population will reach 8.3 billion people. (U.S. Census Bureau)

Warming temperatures will cause temperate glaciers on equatorial mountains in Africa to disappear. (Richard Taylor, University College London, Geophysical Research Letters:)

In developing countries, the urban population will more than double to about 4 billion people, packing more people onto a given city's land area. The urban populations of developed countries may also increase by as much as 20 percent. (World Bank: The Dynamics of Global Urban Expansion)

2040
The Arctic Sea could be ice-free in the summer, and winter ice depth may shrink drastically. Other scientists say the region will still have summer ice up to 2060 and 2105. (Marika Holland, NCAR, Geophysical Research Letters)

2050

Small alpine glaciers will very likely disappear completely, and large glaciers will shrink by 30 to 70 percent. Austrian scientist Roland Psenner of the University of Innsbruck says this is a conservative estimate, and the small alpine glaciers could be gone as soon as 2037. (IPCC)

In Australia, there will likely be an additional 3,200 to 5,200 heat-related deaths per year. The hardest hit will be people over the age of 65. An extra 500 to 1,000 people will die of heat-related deaths in New York City per year. In the United Kingdom, the opposite will occur, and cold-related deaths will outpace heat-related ones. (IPCC)

World population reaches 9.4 billion people. (U.S. Census Bureau)

Crop yields could increase by up to 20 percent in East and Southeast Asia, while decreasing by up to 30 percent in Central and South Asia. Similar shifts in crop yields could occur on other continents. (IPCC)

As biodiversity hotspots are more threatened, a quarter of the world’s plant and vertebrate animal species could face extinction. (Jay Malcolm, University of Toronto, Conservation Biology)

2070

As glaciers disappear and areas affected by drought increase, electricity production for the world’s existing hydropower stations will decrease. Hardest hit will be Europe, where hydropower potential is expected to decline on average by 6 percent; around the Mediterranean, the decrease could be up to 50 percent. (IPCC)

Warmer, drier conditions will lead to more frequent and longer droughts, as well as longer fire-seasons, increased fire risks, and more frequent heat waves, especially in Mediterranean regions. (IPCC)

2080

While some parts of the world dry out, others will be inundated. Scientists predict up to 20 percent of the world’s populations live in river basins likely to be affected by increased flood hazards. Up to 100 million people could experience coastal flooding each year. Most at risk are densely populated and low-lying areas that are less able to adapt to rising sea levels and areas which already face other challenges such as tropical storms. (IPCC)

Coastal population could balloon to 5 billion people, up from 1.2 billion in 1990. (IPCC)

Between 1.1 and 3.2 billion people will experience water shortages and up to 600 million will go hungry. (IPCC)

Sea levels could rise around New York City by more than three feet, potentially flooding the Rockaways, Coney Island, much of southern Brooklyn and Queens, portions of Long Island City, Astoria, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens, lower Manhattan and eastern Staten Island from Great Kills Harbor north to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. (NASA  GISS)

2085

The risk of dengue fever from climate change is estimated to increase to 3.5 billion people. (IPCC)

2100

A combination of global warming and other factors will push many ecosystems to the limit, forcing them to exceed their natural ability to adapt to climate change. (IPCC)
Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels will be much higher than anytime during the past 650,000 years. (IPCC)

Ocean pH levels will very likely decrease by as much as 0.5 pH units, the lowest it’s been in the last 20 million years. The ability of marine organisms such as corals, crabs and oysters to form shells or exoskeletons could be impaired. (IPCC)

Thawing permafrost and other factors will make Earth’s land a net source of carbon emissions, meaning it will emit more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than it absorbs. (IPCC)

Roughly 20 to 30 percent of species assessed as of 2007 could be extinct by 2100 if global mean temperatures exceed 2 to 3 degrees of pre-industrial levels. (IPCC)

New climate zones appear on up to 39 percent of the world’s land surface, radically transforming the planet. (Jack Williams, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)

A quarter of all species of plants and land animals—more than a million total—could be driven to extinction. The IPCC reports warn that current “conservation practices are generally ill-prepared for climate change and effective adaptation responses are likely to be costly to implement.” (IPCC)

Increased droughts could significantly reduce moisture levels in the American Southwest, northern Mexico and possibly parts of Europe, Africa and the Middle East, effectively recreating the “Dust Bowl” environments of the 1930s in the United States. (Richard Seager, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, Science)

2200

An Earth day will be 0.12 milliseconds shorter, as rising temperatures cause oceans to expand away from the equator and toward the poles, one model predicts. One reason water will be shifted toward the poles is most of the expansion will take place in the North Atlantic Ocean, near the North Pole. The poles are closer to the Earth’s axis of rotation, so having more mass there should speed up the planet’s rotation. (Felix Landerer, Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Geophysical Research Letters)
By Ker Than and Andrea Thompson
Entry #1,098

Hillary Clinton reveals her plans for Bill should she win in 2008

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa (April 21) - Hillary Rodham Clinton said Saturday that if she is elected president, she would make her husband a roaming ambassador to the world, using his skills to repair the nation's tattered image abroad.

"I can't think of a better cheerleader for America than Bill Clinton , can you?" the Democratic senator from New York asked a crowd jammed into a junior high school gymnasium. "He has said he would do anything I asked him to do. I would put him to work."

Clinton spoke at a town hall-style meeting Saturday where she took questions from about 200 people. When asked what role the former president would play in her administration, she left no doubt it would be an important one.

"I'm very lucky that my husband has been so experienced in all of these areas," said Clinton, who pointed to the diplomatic assignments her husband has carried out since leaving office, such as raising money for tsunami victims.

Although former president Clinton was impeached after an affair with a White House intern, he remains a very popular figure in much of the world and is considered an effective diplomat.

That's precisely what America needs in the wake of a war in Iraq  that's left America isolated and hated throughout much of the world, Hillary Clinton  said.

 "I believe in using former presidents, particularly what my husband has done, to really get people around the world feeling better about our country," she said. "We're going to need that. Right now they're rooting against us and they need to root for us."

The former president can also be a political asset to his wife's campaign. While his image with the electorate is mixed, he remains immensely popular among Democrats.

When it was announced last year that he would be the main speaker at the Iowa Democratic Party's largest annual fundraiser, the event sold out overnight.

On Saturday, Hillary Clinton chatted with activists in Marshalltown and mingled at a coffee shop in Newton before raising money for Rep. Leonard Boswell.

Throughout the day, Clinton toughened her rhetoric by offering sharply populist themes.

"Rich people didn't make American great," Clinton said. "It was the middle class who made this country great."

She denounced the Bush administration, which she said has left the government incompetent. "They have shown contempt for our government," Clinton said. "We've got to get back to having qualified people, not cronies, serving in the government of the United States."

She said Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney  have done lasting damage. "I don't think we know all the damage that this president and vice president have done," Clinton said.

She was scheduled to visit Dubuque on Sunday.

In Marshalltown, she was pressed on immigration  issues in a city where a raid at a local meatpacking plant led to the detention of nearly 100 workers. Clinton called for more assistance for cities with significant numbers of undocumented workers.

"You've got to have more help for communities when you have a lot of undocumented workers because they have costs associated with that and they don't set immigration policy," Clinton said.

She also said any immigration reform must be tougher on businesses that hire illegal immigrants.

She said nothing will affect the issue until leaders of countries, such as Mexico, improve the economic lives for millions living in poverty.

Clinton also said she would raise taxes for the wealthy, who she said "aren't paying their fair share." She also praised the economic policies of her husband that brought budget surpluses.

"We need to get back to fiscal responsibility," she said

Entry #1,097

Wounded Student Says He Forgives Virginia Tech Gunman

(April 19) - Garrett Evans was in German class when the Virginia Tech senior heard what he thought was construction noise. Then, a scream.

That, reports The Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith, is when Evans knew what he was hearing was gunfire.

By then, Cho Seung-Hui was at the classroom door.

"The gun was already drawn and pointed," the economics major from Plainfield, Ill., told Smith from his bed in Montgomery Regional Hospital in Blacksburg, Va. "Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. This girl gets shot, this girl gets shot. The teacher went down, too.

"He wasn't erratic or anything with his shots. He was totally deliberate.

"He had this face. It was total concentration on what he was doing. He had a purpose in mind and the purpose was taking lives. And he just kept shooting, and he loaded a clip, and reloaded in that room."

Evans was shot in the leg as he dove to the floor.

In all, he thinks Cho was in the room about 30 seconds before leaving.

Several determined students who hadn't been shot rushed to the door to close it.

"I really had a bad feeling he was gonna come back and try to finish what he started," Evans said. "And sure enough, he did try to. He tried to force that door open, but those three just stayed persistent, kept it closed, kept it closed, although it got open about (enough for me to) see his face."

Cho moved on and Evans' life was spared, thanks to the bravery of his classmates.

"I'm thankful for them, truly thankful for them. And they certainly saved my life," he said.

It was, Smith observes, as if goodness and evil were battling before his eyes.

"I saw the devil at work," Evans says. "I felt both spirits at the same time. And God spared my life."

Evans says he bears no ill will toward Cho.

In fact, he says he feels sorry for him: "I wish I had a chance to meet him before this happened, so that I'd have had a chance to reach out to him."

"You know that sounds crazy!" Smith interjected.

"Yes," Evans acknowledged. "If someone could have reached out to him, none of this would have happened."

Evans says the only pain he feels is for the families who lost loved ones — this from a man with a bullet still lodged in his left leg.

And as for healing?

"The key to healing," Evans said, "and the first step, the most important step, is to forgive. I forgive that shooter.

"I'm alive. I'm healing. I'm just so blessed. Words cannot describe how blessed I am."

By Harry Smith/Early Show

Entry #1,096