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  • Yoel Roth was a top executive at Twitter, until he resigned in early November. He says people need to "very thoughtfully and carefully weigh the costs and benefits of using Twitter."
  • Ahead of a deadline next week, the seven states that share the Colorado River have revealed competing plans for how the river should be managed in the future.
  • Housing costs are a top issue for many voters. Former President Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris have proposed different ideas for addressing the country's housing woes.
  • Happy Kansas Day! Here are the headlines for our area, as compiled by KPR news staffers.
  • The two-time Olympian artistic swimmer from N.Y. will compete for the first time this week since passing out at the Budapest 2022 FINA World Championships last June.
  • Here's a summary of the day's Kansas news headlines from the Associated Press, as compiled by the KPR news staff.
  • A voyaging canoe built to revive the centuries-old tradition of Hawaiian exploration is circumnavigating the globe. Its crew has already traveled 26,000 miles navigating with the sun, stars and waves.
  • Governor Brownback speaks to reporters after the meeting. (Photo by Stephen Koranda) Governor Sam Brownback has met with education officials and some top Republican lawmakers to talk about school finance. Brownback says the closed-door meeting was aimed at bringing together lawmakers and representatives of local school districts. He says those groups have not always seen eye-to-eye on the issue of education funding, leading to lawsuits.“The education system in Kansas is very split, and it has generally been one that’s been more fighting with each other than discussing with each other," says Brownback. "So the objective here is to get a discussion going and moving things out of the courts and into discussion.”The Kansas Supreme Court is considering a lawsuit over school funding and is expected to issue a decision later this year or early next year. That means education funding could turn out to be a top issue in the 2014 legislative session for many lawmakers.====================(VERSION TWO)Governor Sam Brownback met with education officials and some top Republican lawmakers yesterday (MON) to discuss school finance. The gathering comes as the Kansas Supreme Court considers a lawsuit over education spending and lawmakers prepare for the 2014 legislative session.Brownback says the meeting was aimed at bringing together his office, education officials that represent local districts and lawmakers. He says those groups have not always seen eye-to-eye on the issue of education funding, leading to lawsuits.“The education system in Kansas is very split, and it has generally been one that’s been more fighting with each other than discussing with each other," says Brownback. "So the objective here is to get a discussion going and moving things out of the courts and into discussion.”Frank Henderson, president of the Kansas Association of School Boards, agrees that the meeting was a good starting point.“We certainly have the same purpose in mind, and that is to have an outcome of students that are prepared for college and careers,” says Henderson.Some Democrats are concerned because no members of their party were invited. Brownback says his office is in the process of planning a follow-up meeting.
  • An "unspoken alliance" between scientists and the military had been brewing for millennia prior to Hiroshima. Neil deGrasse Tyson and Avis Lang excel at detailing this union and its possible future.
  • The GOP health bills would eliminate many of the taxes that help pay for coverage under the Affordable Care Act. Wealthy individuals stand to gain the most. And customers of tanning salons.
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