26 April 2010: Morning By The Morning News — 26 Apr 2010 Subway numbers reflect aboveground life: Midtown job losses emptied stations; the Bowery boomed with Brooklyn riders. Shepard Fairey completes mural for his Deitch Projects show, the gallery's last-ever exhibit. He decided he wanted a skeleton he could take apart. Creating artwork from human bones. Artist surveys subway riders, prints instructional signs from the "Metropolitan Etiquette Authority." See also: Our guide to urban etiquette. Photos from the 1948 and 1949 summers in Fairfield County, Conn. Houston police officer founds a Caucasian Law Enforcement group, says any officer--except white supremacists--can join. Feeling the recession, Tulsa P.D. lays off 11% of its force; crime is down, but cases are stalling. New York's cultural executives remain pleasant about the deep cuts into their seven-figure salaries. Crime TV shows influence trials by skewing jurors' understanding of evidence. DNA-altering "cosmoceuticals" are the next step in the anti-aging business. Story of a ballerina's dance career, and her preservation of the bone that ended it. First full-face transplant leaves patient with only one visible scar. Man builds business on assuming online identity of suitors. Video: A series of the disasters upon which infomercials hinge.