22 March 2007: Morning By The Morning News — 22 Mar 2007 U.S. investigating insurgents' use and killing of children to get past an American checkpoint. Examining the destruction of Iraq's marshes in light of the deterioration of its people. Detroit's now a boomtown in foreclosed property, where houses are cheaper than new cars. See also: Congressman compares Detroit to Iraq. Subpoenas on the loose for top White House and Justice aides; White House says again, no way. The House's vote on the Iraq spending bill looms, and not all Democrats are toeing the line. Dems contend there's a "document gap" in the U.S. attorney scandal; Justice says no relevant emails were sent during the time period. One-third of the capital's citizens are illiterate, compared to about one-fifth of the national population. New FDA rule says advisers who receive money from drug makers can't vote to approve that company's products. Apple/Obama ad's creator revealed to be former employee of Obama's web consultants. Edwards schedules a noon press conference, possibly related to his wife's health. Video: Guts spilled on the set of I Heart Huckabees (context). Stephen Colbert may be technically correct about "guts," but that doesn't mean you should use them to rule the world. We'd like to bring up guts one more time: Paul McCartney debuts as the first official Starbucks musician. To avoid Starbucks: Speakers in venues around New York. See also, pictures of Harlem.