Fonseca at Wimbledon …. Stretching Sinner as I Write Now ….

Michael Roberts

João Franca Guimarães Fonseca (Portuguese pronunciation: [ʒuˈɐ̃w fõˈsekɐ]; born 21 August 2006) is a Brazilian professional tennis player. He has a career high ATP singles ranking of world No. 24 achieved on 3 November 2025 and a doubles ranking of No. 103, reached on 22 June 2026. He is the current No. 1 singles player from Brazil.[4]

Fonseca has won two ATP Tour singles titles and one doubles title. He is also the 2024 NextGen Finals champion

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THE CEYLANKAN, 28/1, June 2026 Hits the Circuits

THE CEYLON SOCIETY OF AUSTRALIA has a Fresh Burst of Spirit ….. & …. has stepped out with vigour

When a few Sri Lankan migrants set up an association to present their views of the situation in Sri Lanka and their experiences in Australia and the world, they adhered to their upbringing and chose to retain the “CEYLON” letterhead. That title remains and so do their attachments to the land. Some pioneers, alas, have passed away; others are ailing. …. BUT we owe them gratidue and sustaining effort.

We need to rejuvenate these patriotic commitments …. especially in the context of the blows struck by cyclone Ditwah. Jitto Arulampalam in Melbourne is one of those leading the present endeavours and THUPPAHI is happy to assist. Those who receive or see this NOTICE are encouraged to

A … take up membership in the Society by subscribing to the journal CEYLANKAN that is produced thrice (???) a year …. and …..B…. as vitally, presenting potential items for the journal – essays re their migrant experiences or why/how they migrated …. and/or outstanding photographic shots from their life experiences … and/or incisive commentary on the world around us.

  Jitto Arulampalam

  Dr Nimal Chandrasena

Prasenji Jayawickrema

 

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A Serving Life Shattered by the LTTE in 1984: Revd Anandarajan

Revd Dev Anandarajan, …….whose essay in the Colombo Telegraph is entitled Remembering Former Principal St. John’s College Jaffna: Reflections Of A Son

It is 30 years since the death of my beloved father who was killed by the LTTE on June 26th 1985. Many things have happened since then and I hope we can contemplate on the violent path taken by the LTTE and the unconditional support given by most of the Tamils to address their grievances against the Sri Lankan state.

I wonder if we have a collective maturity as citizens of Sri Lanka (Tamils, Sinhalese, Muslims, Burghers and other minorities) and Sri Lankan Diaspora to learn the lessons from the violent path from both sides and what that has led us to. Continue reading

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Cricket at Galle: India A vs Lanka A Ends in A Draw

ESPNcricinfo staff, June 2026 …. where the title reads ““Padikkal fifty, Sudeera five-for before India A, SL A settle for draw”

India A 452 for 6 dec (Jurel 141*,Sudharsan 132, Rasheed 63, Gunasekara 3 for 84) and 189 for 8 dec (Padikkal 67, Sudeera 5 for 49) vs Sri Lanka A 330 (Nuwanidu 84, Arachchige 72, Ashen 70, Nabi 4-58) and 70 for 2 (Weerasinghe 20, Nabi 1-18, Dubey 1-25). Match ended in a draw
Devdutt Padikkal‘s half-century and left-arm spinner Dilum Sudeera‘s five-wicket haul were the highlights on day four as the first unofficial Test between India A and Sri Lanka A petered to a draw.
India A declared for the second time in the game after setting Sri Lanka A a target north of 300, but were only able to take two wickets in the 15 overs they managed to get in.
    Padikkal batting …
Dilum Sudeera

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Debating Taxation Policy in Sri Lanka

 Sanjeewa Jayaweera, whose chosen title is  Politics, Taxation and the Need for Consensus”

The editorial in last Sunday’s Sunday Island, captioned Fuel Crisis: Beyond Price Debate,” deserves to be applauded because it called on both the government and the opposition to stop playing politics over fuel prices. The editor concluded by stating, “It is hoped that the government and the opposition will stop fighting over fuel prices and address the serious issues that threaten the country’s energy security and economic stability.”

I believe that most Sri Lankans would agree with that sentiment, except perhaps those engaged in politics whose primary objective appears to be the attainment of power, often regardless of the cost to the country.

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Some Exemplary Sri Lankan Legal Luminaries in the Recent Past

Dr. Chamila S. Talagala

For the lawyers who took their oath last week, and for everyone who still believes this profession is worth saving.

There is a courtroom complex in Colombo that lawyers still call by its old name, Hulftsdorp, long after the British left and the Republic was born. Its corridors have carried the footsteps of giants of the Bar, the quiet anxieties of litigants, and the slow, formal cadence of judgments that shaped a nation. Anyone who has walked those passages for thirty years or more will tell you, often without being asked, that something has changed. The trust once placed in lawyers and the quiet authority that used to precede a senior counsel into a room, none of it is what it was twenty-five years ago, let alone fifty. This is not nostalgia speaking. It is an observation that deserves honest investigation rather than a shrug.

 

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A Nameless Gravesite in Texas Generating Profound Meanings

“They gave her a name they didn’t know, a funeral they didn’t owe, and a grave they’ve tended for nearly a century. And in doing so, they answered the one question no one could solve: who she was—because she was one of them.” 🕯️🌹
In September 1927, a young girl was discovered in a shallow grave outside Fredericksburg, Texas—brutally beaten, assaulted, and buried in a grave so small her body had been forced into it. Investigators estimated she was a teenager with striking red hair and blue eyes. But despite a massive search, no one could determine who she was. As news spread, families traveled from hundreds of miles away, hoping—and fearing—that the victim might be their missing daughter. Leads poured in: witnesses reported seeing a red-haired girl traveling with two men, soldiers were questioned, a cabin with blood-stained bedding was found. Yet every promising lead eventually went cold. The girl remained nameless, a ghost haunting the Texas hill country. 💔

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A Political-Economy Balancing Act for Sri Lanka Today ….

Vishwamithra, presenting An ESSAY Entitled “The Sovereign Tightrope: AKD, the IMF, and the Politics of Post-Crisis Survival”

“Birds desert trees which are bare; a prostitute abandons a poor, and subjects abandon a powerless king. This always holds true.” — Kautilya

Conventional economists and sociopolitical pundits typically oppose any departure from IMF-
regulated boundaries. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) may have its own prescriptive
regulations and farsighted reasons to advise the National People’s Power (NPP) government against
pursuing certain economic policies. Such advice, of course, is often well-founded in the context of
macro-development and the country's painstaking journey toward economic stability and eventual recovery. But the IMF does not face the everyday demands of a suspicious electorate, nor is it the entity that has to stand for general elections. It is President Anura Kumara Dissanayake (AKD) and his NPP who must navigate that potentially grueling reality.

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Mona Khalil, Lebanese Sea Turtle Activist, Killed in Israeli Air-Strike

AI Overview

Lebanese sea turtle activist Mona Khalil, often referred to as the “guardian” of Lebanon’s sea turtles, died on June 19, 2026, after succumbing to injuries from an Israeli airstrike. [1, 2, 3, 4]
The 76-year-old conservationist was critically wounded on June 4, 2026, when her beachfront home in the village of Mansouri, near Tyre, was struck during intensified military operations in southern Lebanon. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • The Orange House: Khalil famously lived in her grandmother’s seaside home, turning it into an ecological sanctuary and ecotourism

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A Trinitian with A Philanthrophic Heart …

Chaminda Wariyagoda, presenting an item in FACEBOOK by Withanage Don  Gunaratne

Nahil Wijesuriya, the wonderful former student who gave 300 crores to the school where he studied .These days alumni of schools across Sri Lanka are talking about the record donation made by Nahil Wijesuriya, a Kandy Trinity College [product]. That donation was 300 crore rupees (3 billion). Nahil Wijesuriya, a leading businessman in Sri Lanka, is a wonderful man who lives very relaxed. He has a great bond with the Trinity School which laid the foundation for his success [and is a person]  who loves Kandy.

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