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

No black women? St. Paul cops adjust recruiting tactics
Following podcasters' advice, officers try spreading the word through beauty salons to recruit more female African-American police officers.
Artist Max Siedentopf has incorporated the song into a new installation in the Namib desert, using an MP3 player connected to six speakers. He told the BBC that he "wanted to pay the song the ultimate homage and physically exhibit 'Africa' in Africa."
Some businesses are following consumers to cashless transactions
With the rise of online retailing and the ubiquity of credit and debit cards, a majority of consumers prefer to pay with plastic. And some businesses are going plastic-only for purchases.
This week at the Minnesota state Capitol
Minnesota's new cast of lawmakers are back at the state Capitol for the second week of the 2019 legislative session. MPR News host Cathy Wurzer talked with MPR News political reporter Briana Bierschbach about what to expect from state legislators this week.
Twin Cities music legend Willie Murphy dies at 75
Murphy was part of the Minnesota music scene for decades, and fronted the band Willie and the Bees. "One of my main crusades (is) to get people to dance," Murphy told MPR News in 2009.
He'll be playing a record release show Friday night at Icehouse in Minneapolis.
Last year, southeastern Minnesota climate stations reported 50 inches of annual precipitation and two of them broke the state record: Caledonia reported 57.97 inches, and Harmony reported 60.21 inches.
Sandstone hopes to be a Minnesota ice climbing mecca, if the ice holds out
Sandstone's ice cliffs offer a practical lesson in the problems of climate change and how Minnesotans must increasingly adapt. The cliffs attract climbers and business, but it's getting harder to keep the scene going as winter temperatures moderate.