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I Had a Good Day

University - 10

Thursday & Friday - week 3

I bring Oksana her second cup of coffee not long after the first. She knows this is the signal to get up and join the day.

She moans a little, but I am growing accustomed to her moans. I take her by the hand, lead her to bathroom. I run shower and, when it is hot enough, gently propel her under it. I showered more than an hour ago. I am ready to dress.

Which I do while Oksana is in shower.

I do not think I have ever met someone so unadapted to mornings. It would be very annoying, if it were not so sweet. Still, I must be firm or we will never get anything done.

I make more coffee. I lay out some breakfast for Oksana. I tidy up apartment while I wait for her to be ready.

We have deliberately chosen Wednesdays for our midweek date nights, as Thursdays are the only mornings when neither of us has a lecture, tutorial or essay group scheduled. It takes a lot of the stress out of the awakening process, and affords us a little time together before we launch into the day.

Eventually, she is ready and we set off for campus. It is nice to stroll together through the midmorning city. The first rush gone. But there is still some bloom on the day. We divert via my favourite deli, to get some rolls for lunch. A treat. And coffees to take out. A necessity, in view of the standard of coffee substitute provided in the campus canteen.

We part on campus, with a promise to meet again Saturday night. I say, come early to apartment, I will get in something for us to eat. Oksana smiles, OK. She heads off to her lecture on business reputation management. I go to see my Journalism tutor.

The proposed field trip to Donbas is firming up. Departure will be a week today. We will have a meeting tomorrow, and a full military briefing Tuesday next week.

I eat my lunch with my tutor. Then a brief time in library before lectures in afternoon. Watching the political situation unfold in UK is fascinating. And now more scandal about what President Trump said to President Zelenskiy about delaying US aid.

After lectures, I spent about another hour in library. Then back to apartment. It is quiet evening, studying, making essay notes and some progress with essay.

I check in with friends on SW and fall sleep.

Friday is just another day. Up and out early to campus. Lectures and study time in library.

Significant event is meeting for Donbas field trip. Six of us are going - producer, camera, sound, presenter, editor/researcher, writer (me). Three girls, three guys. We leave Thursday lunchtime, drive east about 200km to military barracks. There we will change into military uniforms and equipment. Leave all personal comms - phones, tablets, laptops - which we cannot carry in war zone.

Army will provide heavy duty cameras, recording equipment for us to use. This is all specially adapted for use in war zone. We will then join military convoy to travel about another 600km to front. We will stop overnight at a military encampment and complete journey Friday morning. We will return to Kyiv after six of seven days, depending on army transport capacity.

On the way home, I call at sushi shop, buy a selection of items for tomorrow night. Then to deli, for a couple of fresh made pizzas. One with salami, one with red and yellow peppers, onions. I can easily heat these in my oven.

Back in apartment, I put food in refrigerator and settle in for evening. Some friends were going out for beer, but I am too tired to watch people getting drunk. I have a coffee and some salad. Apple.

Just before 20:00 I call Papa, Mama, to tell them about field trip. Mama is quite stoical, warns me to be careful. Papa's immediate reaction, do you want me to see if i can get you out of this? I don't laugh, but explain that i really want to do it. Then he is ok, suggests some stuff to take to front for soldiers there, bring them some happiness. It is good idea.

We exchange other news about home and university. The village is collecting money to buy new car for priest. Papa has confirmed booking for ski lodge outside Bukovel for ten days after Christmas. I have letter about flying club membership.

Then I settle down again to enjoy evening with my own company. More study, some leisure reading. Chat with friends on SW.

Go to bed thinking about tomorrow.
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President Volodymyr Zelensky addressed the 74th United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 25 in New York. It was the president’s debut at the assembly.

Zelensky dedicated his 15-minute speech to Russia’s war against Ukraine.

“No one can feel safe when there is a war in Ukraine, a war in Europe,” he said.

The United Nations General Assembly holds a yearly general debate in late September, inviting world leaders to give speeches and hold bilateral meetings during the event.

For Zelensky, who took office on May 20, it is also his first official visit to the U.S.

“You all remember your first time (in the UN), when you are an unknown politician trying to draw attention to the problems of your country,” he said to the assembly.

Zelensky began his speech with the story of Vasyl Slipak, a Ukrainian baritone opera singer who was well-known outside Ukraine. Slipak was a frequent performer at the Paris Opera and London’s Royal Opera House.

In 2014, after Russia invaded Ukraine, Slipak volunteered to fight against the Russia-backed militants in eastern Ukraine. In 2016, Slipak was killed in action.

Speaking about Slipak, Zelensky held up a bullet like the one that killed the singer.

“The price of this bullet is $10 – that’s the cost of a human life,” he said. “(Russian backed militants) didn’t just end his career, they ended his life.”

As of 2019, over 13,000 people were killed due to the Russian invasion, and over 1.5 million people were displaced.

“There are thousands of such stories. There are millions of such bullets,” Zelensky said. “Welcome to the 21st century. The age of opportunity. Where instead of ‘being heard’ you have the opportunity to be killed.”

Zelensky mentioned the need to reform international institutions for them to be able to solve international conflicts and expressed his regret that nations and states still use war as a means of solving conflicts.

The president said that Ukraine deliberately gave up nuclear weapons and didn’t expect that the country would ever need them.

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine ended up with the third largest nuclear arsenal in the world.

In 1994, then-President Leonid Kuchma signed the Budapest Memorandum, part of Ukraine’s accession to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. The memorandum granted Ukraine security assurances from Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States in return for Kyiv giving up its nuclear stockpile.

Zelensky said he will dedicate his presidency to stopping the war and restoring peace, “but not at the cost of the lives of our people, liberty, or Ukraine’s right to choose its own path.”

**“A strong leader is not the one who sends thousands to die,” said Zelensky. “A strong leader is the one who cherishes each life.”**
*And aside from me-is it right that a university can send its students to face death in a war zone?I think not!*