
“I was looking forward to the lockdown being over and all of a sudden an additional two weeks was announced. President Cyril Ramaphosa’s extension of the 21-day nationwide lockdown by an additional two weeks until April 30, was a blow for students like Kwambana. They can improve verbal reasoning, vocabulary, problem-solving, spelling, grammar and memory, thats why we recommend everybody solving CrossWord Puzzles. On the other side, he worries about me so much.” Crossword puzzles can help improve our processing speed, so that we are able to solve problem and arrive at the correct answer faster. I was praying that he doesn’t get the virus.

I was seriously worried about my dad, who lives in London. “When I heard news of the UK prime minister contracting the virus. It all made me worried.”įor Kwambana, there came a moment when the Covid-19 fight got personal. “She will say to me that people are dying and bombards me with figures of increasing cases and asking me not to move too much and to stay safe. Kwambana said that when the pandemic started, her mother would call regularly. I think I am fine here and worry about my people back home, but they tend to worry more about me. “Sometimes the calls become annoying and I feel like turning off my phone. Worried families back home bombard students with regular calls. The solutions in this page may answer other puzzle clues as well.

If you are presented two or more answers, then look at the most recent one which is the last row in the answers box. News of infection rates and death tolls in their home countries compounds students’ fears. Limbo prerequisite NYT Crossword Clue Answers are listed below and every time we find a new solution for this clue, we add it on the answers list highlighted in green. Most of us haven’t gone to our countries and at times like these it’s important to share your fears close to family because the ‘what if’ something happens to me will be knocking in.” But now, I have to drive myself and sometimes I’m just stocked in my room it’s not easy,” said Gabrielle Kwambana, an honours student studying geological sciences at Wits University.Ī similar view is echoed by a second-year law student from Zimbabwe studying at Unisa, who prefers not to be named. I have to wake up early and know that I have an assignment and things like that. “Previously, I knew that I had a lecture. International students are concerned about shortages of food and medical care and difficulties with doing academic work. Now 20 international students remain, with nowhere else to go. Randera said that before Covid-19, 63 international students lived at Wits Junction (of a total of 1 193 students). Universities had to devise measures to accommodate students who could not go home.

I wanted to return, but the border was closed before I could complete my travel arrangements.” “Living away from home right now is very challenging. “This is something nobody planned for and it’s taking a toll on everyone irrespective of where they are,” said Stephen Kafeero, a Ugandan student studying at Wits university.įor Kafeero, going home would have been the preferred option. Academic programmes have been greatly affected and students face worse predicaments.
