What's making news in Minneapolis, through the weekend and this morning:

Cables break on bicycle bridge, disrupting traffic and train service on Hiawatha: The failure of a cable support on the four-year-old Sabo bike and pedestrian bridge has resulted in closure of the bridge, suspension of light-rail service at three stops and the rerouting of vehicle traffic on Hiwatha Avenue. (Paul Walsh) Stay with startribune.com for updates on this breaking story.

Night of hopping trains ends in teen's death: The grieving mother of Christopher Hanson, a 15-year-old who lived in northeast Minneapolis, hopes to warn thrill-seeking teens. (Nicole Norfleet)

City considers ways to get North Side rolling: City officials say streetcars would signal investment in a region hit by poverty and disaster.(Eric Roper)

Sources: Vikings stadium deal has been reached: Minneapolis, the state and the Minnesota Vikings have reached a tentative agreement on a new, $975 million stadium on a site at or near the Metrodome and on how to divide the costs, multiple sources said Friday. (Rochelle Olson and Mike Kaszuba) Hennepin-Dakota morgue merger in the works? If the new Vikings stadium pushes out the Hennepin County morgue, there could be a new regional center for the dearly departed. (Kevin Duchschere)

Public session on north Minneapolis shredder delayed again: Northern Metal Recycling wants to raise some pollution limits and loosen restrictions on what materials may be shredded. (Steve Brandt)

Columnist Neal St. Anthony writes about the benefits of a revitalized Nicollet Mall. Downtown backers lobby for Republican support of Dayton's bonding bill provision.

"White tuna" sushi could be gut-wrenching: In a Whistleblower report, four restaurants in MInneapolis have been cited by city inspectors for serving escolar - a fish linked to digestive distress - and calling it something else, such as "white tuna." (Jane Friedmann) Also in Whistleblower, Friedmann's Hard Data column lists the top food-code violators among Minneapolis restaurants.