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4/04/2026

Topic Reading-Vol.5093-4/4/2026

Dear MEL Topic Readers, 
Educated and employed but still struggling: India's middle class under strain
Education and the middle class sound like key drivers of economic growth, but not quite so nowadays in India. Over eight million college students graduate each year, only a few million shy of China, and nearly 30% of them are unemployed. Even among the graduates of 23 Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), India’s world-famous premier IT and engineering institutions, almost 40% are unemployed, while uneducated people can find jobs much more easily, even though the pay is much lower than the national average. Thus, the number of middle-class workers and families isn’t increasing so much any longer. Also, inflation has been outpacing income growth, including rent, food, healthcare, and education. In order to fill the gap between earnings and spending, nearly half of all Indian families are taking personal loans. But borrowing money creates debts and an extra burden, the interest, which is higher than the inflation and often the income growth. Unless income growth outpaces inflation and interest rates, borrowers fall into a debt trap, taking new loans to pay off old ones. It seems that AI and inflation are eroding the illusion of creating a middle-class economy with education.
Read the article and learn about what hampers India’s economic growth.

4/03/2026

Topic Reading-Vol.5092-4/3/2026

Dear MEL Topic Readers, 
Frosting, sprinkles and layers of fun: Giant cake picnic hits Sydney
Initiated by a Google employee who works deep in the world of AI, Cake Picnic is a social gathering where people bring and exhibit their homemade cakes and enjoy seeing and eating others’ cakes, like a potluck party. It is now organized by the branches of CAKE PICNIC in many cities beyond San Francisco, including Los Angeles, Mexico City, Melbourne, and Sydney, and many other places in the coming year. At the Melbourne event in March, 1,600 cakes were exhibited and eaten. Once entered, the participant needs to bring one whole uncut cake of a minimum 20cm in width and 7.5cm in height, a label for the cake, including the cake’s name, list of ingredients, and any major allergens it contains, if any, and a cake server. On the site, cakes of all kinds, colors, shapes, and tastes are laid out, pictures are taken, recipes are shared, and compliments are exchanged before they are sliced to be eaten. The events are inclusive, and the participants are diverse, but they all want to share the sweet experience. Indeed, cakes are designed to be sliced and shared.
Read the article and learn about the sweet picnic where all participants enjoy the taste of.

4/02/2026

Topic Reading-Vol.5091-4/2/2026

Dear MEL Topic Readers, 
Arctic sea ice just dropped to an alarming new low
Sea ice has a significant influence on the global climate. Its bright surface reflects as much as 80% of sunlight back into space, keeping polar regions cold. When it melts, it exposes the dark ocean surface, which absorbs sunlight, leading to higher ocean temperatures and accelerating further melting. The Arctic sea ice reaches its peak in March each year, covering around 14 to 15 million square kilometers. This March, the Arctic sea ice peaked at 14.29 million square kilometers, marking the lowest maximum extent in the 48-year satellite record. This year’s peak was approximately 1.36 million square kilometers below the 1981-2010 average, about twice the size of Texas. Ongoing buildup of heat-trapping gases from burning fossil fuels has been warming the oceans, heating the air, melting the ice, and causing extreme weather events. Even if climate pollution is stopped, the Arctic will have no ice during the summer season within a decade or two. Where will polar bears live?
Read the article and learn about the impacts of global warming on the Arctic sea ice.

4/01/2026

Topic Reading-Vol.5090-4/1/2026

Dear MEL Topic Readers, 
UN votes to recognise slavery as gravest crime against humanity
The African coastal slave trade was established by Europeans in the 15th century, and trade to the Americas began in the 16th century, lasting until the 19th century. The vast majority of the slaves were captured in Central and West Africa, transported, and sold to European traders, who then shipped them to the Americas as part of the triangular trade. It is estimated that around 12 to 15 million Africans were captured, traded, and forced to work as slaves. On March 25, a resolution to designate the Transatlantic Trafficking of Enslaved Africans and the enslavement system as the gravest crime against humanity was adopted at the UN General Assembly with an overwhelming majority of 123 member states. Three members, Argentina, Israel, and the United States, voted against the resolution, and 52, including many European countries, abstained. The resolution, which was spearheaded by Ghana and strongly supported by the African Union, is meant to safeguard against forgetting the inhumane practice. African countries also call for financial repartition, including educational, endowment, and skills training funds. The US said it does not recognize a legal right to reparations for historical wrongs that were not illegal under international law at the time they occurred, and refused to use modern resources for reparations.
Read the article and learn what recognition and reparation of slavery mean to African countries.

3/31/2026

Topic Reading-Vol.5089-3/31/2026

Dear MEL Topic Readers, 
Transgender women athletes banned from Olympics by new IOC policy on female eligibility
Men and women aren’t the same when it comes to athletic performance. For endurance sports like running and swimming, men usually outperform biological women by 10% or more, 20% in throwing and jumping events, and 100% in punching sports like boxing. In order to protect fairness, safety, and integrity in the female category, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has decided that the women’s category of Olympic sports will be limited to biological females from the LA Olympics in 2028. The eligibility will be determined by a once-in-a-lifetime gender test, which would prevent transgender women and those with differences in sexual development (DSD) who have gone through male puberty from competing. The IOC believes that the gene test using saliva, a cheek swab, or a blood sample is the most accurate and least intrusive method available today. Critics argue that such gender testing not only violates privacy and human rights but also is flawed and inconclusive. At least, the IOC’s decision has come before a potential executive order by the president of the next Olympic host country.
Read the article and learn about the latest announcement by the world’s Olympic body.

3/30/2026

Topic Reading-Vol.5088-3/30/2026

Dear MEL Topic Readers,
2026 ‘Dirty Dozen’ produce: Nearly 100% tested positive for pesticides, including ‘forever chemicals’
Pesticides are chemicals or biological substances used to prevent, destroy, or repel pests, such as insects, weeds, fungi, rodents, bacteria, and viruses, to protect crops and increase yields. Unlike organic or hydroponic farming, conventional soil farming usually uses pesticides to some degree. Exposure to pesticides has long been linked to health problems, including birth defects, heart disease, and cancer. Even if you aren’t exposed to pesticides, they often remain on or in the food you consume as residue. And some of the chemicals aren’t broken down in the environment even after decades or centuries, called forever chemicals. Leafy greens, strawberries, and grapes have more pesticide residues, while pineapples, sweet corn, and avocadoes are much less contaminated. But pesticide residues remain in most vegetables and fruits. So, whether they are skinned, prewashed, or frozen, you want to wash or rinse them thoroughly before cooking or eating.
Read the article and learn about pesticide residue on and in the farm products.

3/29/2026

Topic Reading-Vol.5087-3/29/2026

Dear MEL Topic Readers, 
Artemis II: Inside the Moon mission to fly humans further than ever
Artemis II is a NASA spacecraft mission to return humans to the Moon, the first crewed deep-space and lunar mission since 1972. The 10-day mission will carry four astronauts on a free-return trajectory around the Moon and back to Earth. The 98-meter-tall Space Launch System is powered by two rocket boosters and four engines. Combined with the Orion spacecraft that goes to the moon, it weighs approximately 2,600 metric tons when it is loaded with fuel. Once reached space, the astronauts will spend 10 days in the 5-meter-wide by 3-meter-high capsule, where they will work, exercise, eat, sleep, urinate, and defecate. When it reaches the far side of the Moon, the side cannot be seen from Earth, and the crew will have their prime three hours to observe the Moon, which will help NASA plan for a future landing. After the 10-day, two-million-kilometer journey, the cone-shaped, 9-square-meter crew capsule will reenter the Earth’s atmosphere at 40,000 km/h, faster than any previous human mission, and splash down in the Pacific Ocean. A gigantic rocket to launch and a long journey to reach and return, Artemis II is a highly demanding but rewarding mission.
Read the article and see the images of the first manned mission to the Moon in the last half-century.