23 April 2008: Morning By The Morning News — 23 Apr 2008 In Pennsylvania, voter turnout nearly triples, handing Clinton a victory and keeping the race alive. Exit polls: Race, Catholicism, and bitterness made a big difference in who voters chose. Monthly donation program allows Roy Scheider to keep on donating to Obama. South Carolina church removes the marquee message that intimated a link between Obama and Osama. The United States has less than five percent of the world's population. But it has almost a quarter of the world's prisoners. Nearly one million Iraqi women are widowed, divorced, or their husbands are otherwise missing. Administration says it asked Carter not to meet with Hamas; Carter group says the White House's only stated concern was security. Companies start taking their digital suggestion boxes seriously. Whirlpool suspends workers for lying about tobacco use on company paperwork. The F.D.A. cited "the natural history of depression." When thoughts of suicide return after switching to a generic, flags should raise. Following a spate of escalator accidents, Japanese safety authorities petition Crocs to redesign. House of Lords votes against bill to ban homosexual-themed jokes--comedians of all orientations vastly pleased. Britain's new coin is essentially a big "sod off" to the Euro.