Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Photos of the 1960 batch reunion from 'Kalu Nana'.

Derrwyck, Kalu Nana, Jayalath & Balakrishnan

Sugi dancing with Nalini & Daya

Chitra dancing           

Devi & Asoka D dancing

Nihal, Asoka D, Bala, Asoka J & Hetti

___, Udula, Hema, Kalu Nana

Philip & Ramya

___,Kalu Nana, Wijemanne,_________

___, Weerasinghe, ___,Thenabadu, Lucky, Nana, Nalini, Daya, Sujai.


Luckky, Ranjini, Udula, Devi, Sunethra, Duru, Anula, Nalini.


___, Nana, Asoka D, __, Lucian.
Please help me too fill in the blanks.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Oldies Medley Nonstop

Abdication: A Very British Coup

email from Kamala Ediriwira.

Dear Doctor Veerasingam,
 I
 regret very much my inability to attend the 50th Anniversary. Thank you for all the
 Email updates etc, you have been sending me  including the latest photos.
 Convey my  best wishes to all.  

Kind regards to all
Kamala Ediriwira
(nee Mettananda)

Always Nice to meet a Tax Account



From Nana
C.S.Nanayakkara

Just for a laugh !



The Tax accountant

A Young woman walks into a Chartered accountant’s office and tells him that
she needs to file her tax Returns.
The accountant says, “Before we begin, I’ll need to ask you a few
questions.”
He gets her name, address etc.
And then asks, ”What’s your occupation?”
“I’m a prostitute,” she says.
The accountant is taken aback and says, “That's too gross. Let’s try to
re-phrase that."

The woman says, “OK, I’m a call girl”.

“No, that still won’t work. Need something more acceptable."

They both think for a minute; then the woman says, “I’m a poultry farmer.”
The accountant asks, “What does poultry farming have to do, with being a
prostitute?”

“Well, I raised a thousand cocks last year.”


Chartered Acct :“ Brilliant !!! Poultry Farmer it is!! and agricultural
income is tax free in our country"


Enjoy


sena nanayakkara

The hug of the century.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Recalling the late Tissa Kappagoda's ways.


After the  1960 Batch, Medical entrants, Colombo, get together at Negombo, Sri Lanka recently, my friend Karalliedde (Karals), had these reminiscences of the late Tissa Kappagoda.
Tissa knew during his early days at Trinity College, Kandy that he was different from the other boys at school. The slightest trauma would bring on lumps under his skin and prolonged bleeding which needed  urgent medical attention. He was suffering from Haemophilia. This did not prevent him being an active spectator at all the sports activities at Trinity.
Pain was a recurrent part of his life. He learnt early in life to bear with pain. He got the message that ‘What you cannot cure, you must learn to endure’ during his boyhood.
Once while having a chat with Karals he had told him that ‘Pain as a symptom made one to get angry. The anger invariably was directed at the carers. The carers were invariably the near and dear. A sharp tongue could wound, worse than a sword’. Tissa learnt to control this anger and was remarkably successful at it.
Karals recalled a time when Tissa undertook to drive his car on a long journey. He had severe pain from a swollen joint, but he bit his lips and drove on. When Karals met him at the end of the drive Tissa’s lips were bleeding.
Caring for others at any cost to his physique, was Tissa’s philosophy in life.

‘At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember him’.
                Philip G Veerasingam