Category Archives: world events & processes

Merle Oberon: The Full Montage ….

The Wikipedia Disclosures …. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merle_Oberon

Merle Oberon with Laurence Olivier in  in Wuthering Heights (1939)

 

Merle Oberon (born Estelle Merle O’Brien Thompson; 19 February 1911 – 23 November 1979) was a British actress. She began her acting career in British cinema in the early 1930s, with a breakout role in The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933). She later moved to Hollywood, where she became an international star, earning acclaim for films such as The Dark Angel (1935), Wuthering Heights (1939), and That Uncertain Feeling (1941). Her career spanned from the 1920s to the 1970s, primarily in English-language films produced in the UK and the U.S. Her performance as Kitty Vane in The Dark Angel earned her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress.

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For Humankind: Jaffna’s Medics in Eternal Service

Abbi Kanthasamy, … an item circulated by Charles Schokman of Australia, early June 2025, with this title “A Beacon Amidst the Bleeding: What Jaffna’s Doctors Taught Me About Life”

I’ve spent most of my adult life building things. Businesses, brands,
homes, arguments. Always chasing—the next goal, the next deal, the
next piece of validation in a world that measures worth by margins and
milestones. But this past week, watching my mother fight for her life in a small hospital in northern Sri Lanka, I was reminded of something I had forgotten: not all heroes chase.
  … Dr Samuel Fiske Green

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Humankind’s Shared Humanity as Touchstone for The Future

Harvard 2025 Graduation Speech: Chinese Student Yurong Jiang on Humanity and Shared Future ….  https://youtu.be/6hoIEBv486E …

30 May 2025 …. At Harvard University’s 2025 graduation ceremony, Chinese graduate Yurong Jiang [delivered] a powerful message on global unity. Emphasizing that “humanity is a community with a shared future,” she reminds us that even those labeled as enemies are still human beings. Her words call for empathy, understanding, and a rethinking of division in our world.

CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, UNITED STATES – APRIL 22: Views of Harvard University, an Ivy League University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States on Tuesday, April 22, 2025. Harvard University sued the Trump administration on Monday after the federal government said it was freezing $2.2 billion in grants and sought what university officials described as ‘unprecedented and improper’ control over the Ivy League institution. ‘The consequences of the government’s overreach will be severe and long-lasting,’ Harvard President Alan Garber said in a message Monday announcing the lawsuit. Last week, the Trump administration announced that it was freezing federal funding after the school refused to accept demands that the administration has said aim to address antisemitism on campus. Among the government’s demands were an audit of student body views and a ban on international students who are “hostile to the American values and institutions.” In Monday’s suit, the university argued that the funding freeze is not related to the administration’s antisemitism concerns. (Photo by Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images)

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How the Punjab Kings Ousted the Mumbai Indians in the IPL Semi-Finals

Alagappan Muthu in ESPNcricinfo, 1 June 2025, where the title reads 

Punjab Kings 207 for 5 (Iyer 87*, Wadhera 48, Inglis 38, Ashwani 2-55) beat Mumbai Indians 203 for 6 (Suryakumar 44, Tilak 44, Bairstow 38, Dhir 37) by five wickets.

The Jasprit Bumrah yorker isn’t invincible. Not even when it starts to tail. Shreyas Iyer met it with extraordinary coolness and an open face of the bat to find a boundary. It gave him the 61st run of an enormously impressive innings and reinforced a feeling of helplessness on Mumbai Indians (MI). They were staring into the eyes of the man who was single-handedly beating them. The five-time champions came up short, and for the first time, couldn’t defend a total in excess of 200. This means IPL 2025 will mark the arrival of a new power. Punjab Kings (PBKS) or Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB).
Shreyas=Kohli
There is something extra special about batters who do their best work in a chase. Even now, when the accepted wisdom is to know what your target is, the prospect of a batter playing like he owns every little blade of grass that surrounds him is the stuff of dreams. Shreyas had his eyes wide open. This was real. This was class.
  • Story ImageHardik, Santner not completing their overs ‘an opportunity missed’ for MI
  • Story ImageThe night MI felt the full force of Shreyas’ ire
  • Story ImageIPL to crown a new champion as RCB and PBKS meet in the final
  • Story ImageWhy Bumrah’s IPL 2025 could be the greatest IPL for a bowler
He arrived at the crease in the last over of the powerplay and knew he couldn’t take his time. The second ball went for four. He never looked flustered, even when PBKS needed two runs a ball for the last eight overs. He launched Reece Topley for a hat-trick of sixes in the 13th over. Those three hits doubled PBKS’ chances of victory. It was 25% coming into the over and 53% coming out of it.
Standing deep in his crease, watching every ball right onto his bat, functioning sometimes on pure instinct. There was a four he got off Hardik Pandya where he seemed almost ready to leave the short ball only to ramp it as it passed him and get it over the keeper. There was a six that he got off Ashwani Kumar, he almost seemed to predict the bowler would go wide yorker to mitigate the damage of a free-hit ball and he shifted across his crease and scythed the ball over cover.
His best shots, though, were those steers all along the ground to the backward-point boundary off the two best bowlers in the opposition – Trent Boult and Bumrah. That was when everybody at the ground knew the game was firmly in Iyer’s hand. That it had always been there. He was expressionless in victory. He knew it was his. He knew it was coming.
Such a big over’ – Aaron on Inglis taking 20 off Bumrah in the fifth

The support act

Josh Inglis produced a banger of an innings, one where he took Bumrah down for 20 runs in an over. Nehal Wadhera has had a campaign to remember. Batting at No. 5, he showed great steel and rode the kind of luck a batter at that position earns by being clear-headed. Wadhera could have been dismissed on 2 if Naman Dhir had not misjudged a catching opportunity on the midwicket boundary and came rushing in instead of holding his position. He enjoyed another life on 13 and made the most of it, the pick of his shots a straight six off Ashwani Kumar in the 16th over just before he was dismissed for 48 off 39.
PBKS’ bowlers deserved credit as well. They understood that going into the pitch and taking pace off was a useful option. Kyle Jamieson took pace off once every 2.67 deliveries on average. He is a Test match bowler starting to find his way even when conditions aren’t in his favour. PBKS always found a way to come back just as MI were threatening to get away. A big powerplay was offset with a wicket in the seventh over. Fifty runs between overs nine and 12 was offset by the wickets of the set batters Suryakumar Yadav (44 off 26) and Tilak Varma (44 off 29) between overs 14 and 15. ESPNcricinfo’s Forecaster had MI looking good for 220 at the halfway stage. PBKS kept them to 203.

Power to the max

A lot of teams this IPL have focused on not allowing an early wicket to disrupt the attempt to take advantage of the field restrictions. MI lost Rohit Sharma to the 14th ball of the innings. They attacked 11 of the next 22, with Jonny Bairstow leading the way even if on occasion he was beaten by slower balls into the wicket. MI collected 43 runs off overs three, five and six.
Moody: Dhir should be batting ahead of Hardik

The SKY show

Suryakumar arrived immediately after the powerplay. At that stage, PBKS were starting to string something together. They matched him up with Yuzvendra Chahal, whom he strikes at only 117 in the IPL. On Sunday, the MI lynchpin hammered the PBKS legspinner for 33 off 16 balls. That included three sixes – two majestic hits down the ground and one sweep shot that turned the bowler’s intentions to tie him down on leg stump into a real gimme. Over the course of his 44 off 26 balls, Suryakumar also took home a world record – the highest aggregate (717) in any T20 tournament by a non-opener, surpassing AB de Villiers (687 in IPL 2016).
Tilak and Dhir’s high impact
Tilak came down the track and struck his second ball for a six. Later, he simply extended a defensive push and presented a high elbow and that was enough to send Vyshak Vijaykumar over the long-off boundary. His innings only had two fours and two sixes but he was striking at 152.
Dhir was a lot more high-impact. He was 5 off 4 balls at the start of the 17th over. He took three boundaries off PBKS’ best death bowler, Arshdeep Singh, and never looked back. Arshdeep had to return for the 19th over and work with an over-rate penalty. He could only have four fielders on the boundary and Dhir exploited that handicap to score 37 off 18 with seven fours. At that point, it felt like anybody’s game. Except it wasn’t. It was Shreyas Iyer’s game. It was always Shreyas Iyer’s game.
                Alagappan Muthu is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

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Imperial Modalities in USA’s Elite Universities

Mathew Maavak, whose favoured title for this piece is “University Inequality: The New Empire of Credentialed Elites”

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In-Migration to Australia, 2024: Ethnic Breakdown

Courtesy of KEITH BENNETT

SOME INTERESTING AUSTRALIAN MIGRATION STATISTICS….

Out of the top ten countries where migrants came from in 2024, England was on top with 963,000 migrants (3.5%) and Sri Lanka 10th with 172,000 migrants(0.6%).

In second and third place were India and China

Australia’s total population in 2024 was 27.1m

PS: The Rest of this Item sent to me by Keith Bennett did not reproduce. Till I insert it, let me present data derived from Wikipedia and the internet.

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Resisting Racist Oppression: Measures Symbolic & Minute ….. Yet Meaningful

Channa Wickremasekera in Facebook, … [where items disappear into the depths] … with highlighting imposed by The Editor, Thuppahi

A close friend recently sent me the link to Louis Theroux’s documentary ‘The Settlers’. He was moved by it, he said. I was too, not only by the documentary, but also by the fact that my friend was moved. He is hard to move. He is very cynical about all the protests I go to. How many bombs have you stopped? He asks jokingly. He hates what Israel is doing in Gaza but he cannot see how ordinary people like him or me can change anything.

The King of Brobdingnag and Gulliver

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Chickungya Rampant in Sri Lanka NOW…

Dr Sarath Gamani De Silva, a Richmondite friend of mine in Colombo, confirmed this fact  and provided this basic NOTE drawn from Wikipedia.

Chikungunya fever is now rampant in Sri Lanka. It is caused by a mosquito bite. Same species causing dengue.  Aedes aegypti or Aedes albofictus. Hence the coexistence with the dengue epidemic.

Presenting with fever, headache, muscle and joint pains and fatigue. Many recover in 7 to 10 days. 
A significant number gets debilitating joint pains and swellings affecting mainly hands, knees and feet. These can last upto 2 months or more.
Treatment calls for  ….. rest, increased fluid intake and pain killers.  Stronger analgesics and prednisone for more severe joint pains. ….  Sarath sigining off
NOTE …. The full monty in Wikipedia …. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chikungunya

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An Incisive & Slashing Stella Prize Speech from Michelle de Kretser

Michelle De Kretser’s Acceptance speech on Winning the STELLA PRIZE,  .. May 2025

 

Thank you all so much for being here. The 2025 Stella Prize does my work great honour, and I’m so happy to accept it. I wish I could join you in person to celebrate all the long and shortlisted writers. As that’s not possible, I’m recording this on land stolen from the Gadigal people of the Eora nation. I pay my respects to Gadigal elders past and present, and acknowledge that their connection to country is unbroken. Always was, always will be Aboriginal land.

To Amy, Samah, Jumaana, Santilla and Melanie, my heartfelt thanks for the honour of your company, and for the many ways in which you reconfigure our understanding and our literature.

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Linking Together For Survival: A Lesson from the Ant-World

Harry Solomon’s Item in FACEBOOK, May 2025, entitled Togetherness For Survival: A Lesson from the World of Ants” … presented by David Attenborough

 Sir David Attenborough opens Woodberry Wetlands on April 30, 2016 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Danny Martindale/WireImage)

 Everything  · dnrspeootS7h4t7736a210a614tcfl8mg1cahauth929fua89mgtl013c74a  ·

Once, waking up in nature early in the morning, I noticed something surprising. Several dozen ants had fallen into a five-liter bottle of water that had been left open the night before. They waved chaotically in the transparent water, as if each one was fighting for its life.

At first, it seemed to me that they were drowning each other, saving themselves at the cost of the death of others.

This thought made me repulsed, and I turned away, deciding not to intervene.

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