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Edition 24

May 28, 2026

From eco-friendly pads to cosmic discoveries and a forest reborn, this edition is full of inspiring innovation and amazing breakthroughs!

A Nigerian teen is turning agricultural waste into biodegradable sanitary pads

A Nigerian teen is turning agricultural waste into biodegradable sanitary pads

Nigerian teen Raheema Auwal-Panti is transforming agricultural waste into eco-friendly sanitary pads. Her innovative solution tackles plastic pollution and provides a sustainable menstrual health option.

Conservation news

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One Man turned 100 Acres Of Barren Land Into Forests With 25 Lakh Trees

One Man turned 100 Acres Of Barren Land Into Forests With 25 Lakh Trees

One man transformed 100 acres of barren land into a thriving forest, planting over 25 lakh trees. His legacy lives on as a testament to nature's resilience and the power of a single individual's dedication.

The Better India

2
The Wheelie Schoolbag Initiative Transforming Hospital Rooms into Classrooms for Sick Children

The Wheelie Schoolbag Initiative Transforming Hospital Rooms into Classrooms for Sick Children

Sick kids get a leg up on learning with a portable, wheelie schoolbag that transforms into a desk and chair. This South African innovation ensures no child falls behind in school, even during long hospital stays.

Good Things Guy

3
Perfect randomness realized for the first time

Perfect randomness realized for the first time

Scientists have achieved perfect randomness for the first time using quantum physics. This breakthrough can secure digital communications and applications, creating a certified source of randomness for all eternity.

Phys.org

4
James Webb Space Telescope reveals black hole that formed before its galaxy

James Webb Space Telescope reveals black hole that formed before its galaxy

Webb telescope discovers a black hole that predates its galaxy, potentially forming within the first second of the Big Bang. This finding challenges our understanding of how supermassive black holes form and grow.

esa.int

5
Did You Know?

Dr. Helen Taussig overcame severe dyslexia, partial deafness, and sexism to earn a medical degree and, in the 1940s, she helped develop a life-saving operation for "blue baby syndrome," a birth defect of the heart that had a very high morality rate. Now recognized as the founder of the field of pediatric cardiology, her unique insights on previously incurable babies would go on to change the field of neonatal medicine forever.

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