10 May 2010: Afternoon By The Morning News — 10 May 2010 "I think he understood for the first time that Toyota was facing some very, very serious credibility problems..." The road to recovery. Gulf spill rig operator has been involved in nearly three out of every four federal rig safety investigations. Rising U.S. medical costs for treating cancer aren't because of expensive drugs, but because there are so many more patients. Gladwell on cancer drugs: "After [scientists] turn off one mechanism, they discover that the tumor has other deadly tricks in reserve." Fewer trains and new routes will require the M.T.A. to replace 3,000 signs and 25,000 maps in a two-week span. The Apocalypse is a rare subject for Italian artists, and this is one of the only known images painted of the Antichrist. Researcher argues "hardworking" students are no less able than "smart" ones, and the current dichotomy restricts mental potential. Editors of this paper (boomers again) frown on using the word "ironic" to describe this circumstance, so I'll call it a contradiction. Chefs discuss the ubiquitous plight of picky customers and crazy food requests. The evolution of F. Scott Fitzgerald's signature over two decades. "Geocities-ize" any website to look like it was created "by a 13-year-old in 1996." (For example.) A reenactment of Ferris Bueller's Day Off with multiple accounts over Twitter, Foursquare.