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You Don t Have To Be An Olympian To Prioritize Your Mental Health

Things like anxiety and depression can affect everyone. These six Life Kit episodes can help you on your way. (We Are/Getty Images;NPR) Simone Biles decision to withdraw from the team competition and the individual all-around competition at the Tokyo Olympics came as a surprise to many. Biles, largely viewed as the greatest gymnast of all time, says mental health concerns were at the forefront of her mind. Her decision has been celebrated by many. It s the latest example of high-profile athletes publicly talking about the pressures they face and putting their mental health first. Tennis star Naomi Osaka has also made public statements about her struggles with depression. She pulled out of the French Open and Wimbledon this year to focus on her mental wellbeing.

Read Meron Hadero s Caine Prize-winning short story The Street Sweep

Meron Hadero is the first Ethiopian author to win the AKO Caine Prize for African Writing. (Supplied) Ethiopian author, Meron Hadero took home the prestigious AKO Caine Prize for African Writing, a first for Ethiopian authors.  Currently, a Steinbeck Fellow at the San Jose State University, the  author holds a Masters of Fine Art in creative writing from the University of Michigan, a juris doctoral degree from Yale, and a Bachelor of Arts in history from Princeton. Before this prize, Hadero’s work was widely acknowledged and published. In 2019, she was shortlisted for the Caine Prize for African Writing. Her essay The Displaced Refugee Writers on Refugee Lives was published by the New York Times and will form a part of the forthcoming anthology Letter to a Stranger: Essays to the Ones Who Haunt Us.

How Mama Brown changed students lives by paying for college and so much more: It s not about the money

July 29, 2021 For Gov. Gavin Newsom and anyone else promoting college savings accounts for low-income children, Oral Lee Brown has some advice: “It’s not about the money.” Brown, an Oakland real estate agent now in her 70s, has been promoting the same idea since 1987, when she “adopted” a class of first graders from Brookfield Elementary School in East Oakland, promising to pay their college costs if they stayed in school. Credit: Oral Lee Brown Foundation Oral Lee Brown with the first grade class she adopted from Brookfield Elementary School in East Oakland in 1987. Of that original class of 23, one went to work, two died of gunshot wounds, one went to culinary school and 19 went to college a college-going rate that rivals the highest-achieving districts in California. At the time, Brown’s students vastly outperformed their peers. In the 1990s Oakland Unified had some of the lowest test scores and highest dropout rates in California.

Grassroots Fight for $15 Movement Has Won $150 Billion in Raises for Millions of Workers, Study Shows

Grassroots Fight for $15 Movement Has Won $150 Billion in Raises for Millions of Workers, Study Shows
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Thursday Morning News Roundup

Thursday Morning News Roundup
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