Heartbreaking news. South Africa international and Mamelodi Sundowns midfielder Jayden Adams has sadly passed away at the age of 2,5, @SundayWorldZA confirm. 💔🇿🇦
Adams recently made his World Cup debut with South Africa and played a key role in Mamelodi Sundowns’ successful CAF Champions League campaign.
Two weeks ago, Adams lost his grandmother Marianna Adams but demonstrated remarkable professionalism by featuring for Bafana Bafana in their World Cup match against Czechia.
Our condolences and thoughts go out to his family, friends, teammates, and everyone at Mamelodi Sundowns.
Rest in peace, Jayden. 🕊️
@jreesehp@john322226 Yes, Jayden Adams played for Bafana Bafana in the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Tragic news. Condolences to his family and South African football. 💔
Don-Anele Munachimso and Egejurum Onyedikachi were received like kings yesterday in Owerri.
They returned home with two gold medals from the International STEM Olympiad Grand Finale in Rome.
Together, they are the world's best in Mathematics in the Primary and Senior categories. Don-Anele Munachimso is also the world's best in Science (Senior Category).
This is what excellence looks like.
These children are not just champions; they are proof that Nigerian children can stand shoulder to shoulder with the very best in the world when given the opportunity.
They are stars today.
The world will celebrate them even more tomorrow.
This is not the peak.
This is just the beginning of greatness.
Lagos is flooding again.
We have UNILAG, LASU, Pan-Atlantic University, thousands of engineering students, and hundreds of PhDs.
Where are the practical engineering solutions?
What exactly is the purpose of an engineering degree if our biggest engineering problems remain unsolved?
Are our universities producing problem-solvers or just issuing certificates?
I’m really worried that Nigeria is behind in science.
It became obvious at the International STEM Olympiad Grand Finale where I saw children from other countries doing great things in science.
How do you think we can solve this?
@winexviv The grassroot;From nursery, primary and junior secondary school to make sure they have a good teacher in maths who can make them fall in love with it cos it appears in almost all science subject directly or indirectly which Il reduce miracle centres drastically
@megareactor@Wizarab10 I don pass 40 but I dey fear to press calculator to know d exact number but I go press am soon I mean very soon when money come.
Four year old Vinicius Correa was beginning to feel ashamed of his hair.
At school in Brazil, children kept telling him the same thing.
His long hair was for girls.
They told him to cut it.
They called him a girl.
His mother, Angélica Almeida, watched as the words slowly made her little boy sad.
Then one day, a simple comparison changed everything.
Someone at school said Vinicius looked like Erling Haaland.
Vini did not even know who Haaland was.
So his mother showed him videos of the Manchester City striker.
The little boy looked at the screen and immediately noticed something.
Haaland had long hair too.
“Mum, he is handsome and has hair like mine.”
From that moment, Vini stopped seeing his hair as something to be ashamed of.
He became “Mini Haaland.”
He watched the Norwegian striker, became a huge fan and even had an entire Haaland themed birthday party.
But before the celebration, his mother decided to tell Manchester City what their number nine had unknowingly done for her son.
The club heard Vini's story.
And somehow, it reached Haaland himself.
Then came the birthday surprise.
Erling Haaland recorded a personal video message for the four year old boy who had found confidence simply by seeing someone like him.
The football superstar praised his hair and gave Vini a message of encouragement.
For a little boy who had once been mocked for looking different, his hero had just told him that being himself was perfectly okay.
Vini later said he loved Haaland because he was the best player in the world.
And because his hair was beautiful.
Just like his own.
Haaland scores goals in front of millions.
But without even knowing it at first, he had already changed the life of one little boy thousands of kilometres away
She never set out to become famous.
She was simply a mother who noticed something no child should ever experience.
Hunger.
After seeing children in her St. Louis neighborhood asking for food, Champale Anderson decided she couldn't just walk away. So she went home, bought bread, fruit, snacks and juice, and started making lunches with her own money.
One lunch became ten.
Ten became fifty.
Before long, she was preparing more than 100 lunch bags every school day, making sure children had something to eat after school. Her own children even joined her, helping pack the bags for kids they knew by name.
When her story reached the world, thousands of people stepped in to help. But by then, she had already proved something powerful.
You don't need wealth to change lives.
Sometimes all it takes is seeing an empty stomach... and refusing to ignore it.
Because kindness doesn't always arrive with grand speeches.
Sometimes it arrives in a simple brown paper bag, packed by a mother who believed no child should go hungry.
@Stake I saw this message from stake via my https://t.co/CrRfZiKwBc questions;
1. If I deposit 1 dollar minimum ( in naira) can it be withdrawn my bonus (34 dollars)?
https://t.co/38sU907GXO can I depoyin crypto since I don't have crypto account?
🚨🇧🇪 Thibaut Courtois: “I want to rest for a year without ANY Belgium matches, and then play the EURO qualifiers and the 2028 EURO”.
“I don't know if Belgium will agree to this”.