Morning Edition

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Morning Edition, with Cathy Wurzer in St. Paul and NPR hosts in Washington and Los Angeles, brings you all the news from overnight and the information you need to start your day. Listen from 4 to 9 a.m. every weekday.

Morning Announcements | Weather chats with Mark Seeley | Parting Thoughts

At Camp Needlepoint, diabetics avoid being ‘odd kid out’
About 500 children are attending a camp this week or next designed specifically by and for people with diabetes. The aim is stigma-free fun.
How the mosquito created Great Britian, toppled the Roman Empire and continues to threaten humankind
Here’s a startling statistic: an estimated half of the roughly 100 billion people who have ever lived have been killed by the mosquito. Or, rather, the diseases they transmit. In causing such wide-spread destruction, the mosquito has been a main character on the world stage throughout history. In his new book, The Mosquito: A human history of our deadliest predator, Tim Winegard shows just how important the mosquitoes were and will be to human civilization. He spoke with MPR’s Cathy Wurzer.
This beautiful, warmer-than-normal start to August is putting a smile on everybody’s face. But, it won’t last. Next week may prove to be wetter than normal. MPR’s Cathy Wurzer spoke to University of Minnesota professor emeritus Mark Seeley about this week in weather and answered listener climate questions.
Art Hounds: From Peter Pan to Bertolt Brecht
This week Art Hounds recommend “When the Shark Bites” in Minneapolis, “Peter and the Starcatcher” in Lanesboro, Minn., and the Steve Kenny Quartet in Rochester, Minn.
The drum solo at the top is unusual for a Beatles song, because Ringo and his bandmates thought drum solos were pretentious.
Not enough affordable housing? What about mobile homes?
Minnesota, like much of the nation, has acute shortages of affordable housing. Manufactured housing costs far less to build than traditional homes and could be a solution. But lack of supply and a decline in the number of mobile home parks are major impediments.
The publishers of the Raymond-Prinsburg News in Minnesota closed the paper around a year ago. News about those communities is now included in another paper owned by the same family: the Clara City Herald.