Bonjour and a bon voyage
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH -- Until they spoke, there was no way to tell which
students would hop on a plane to head home to France and which would stay
here.
Friday, students and families gathered outside the Newport Beach
library to bid farewell to their house guests of two weeks. It marked the
end of the first leg of the inaugural student exchange program with
Newport Beach’s sister city of Antibes, France.
“What I like are [the] very interesting schools [here] and [that they
are] very different from French” schools, said Claire Massimi, a
15-year-old student who attends Audiberti High School in Antibes. “They
are a lot friendlier here.”
While the crowd of teenagers -- American and French -- looked the
same, they are accustomed to significantly different lives.
French students expounded on the many differences they noticed on
their two-week stay in Newport Beach.
The greatest variations in lifestyle, they said, were in the spacious
roads and the atmosphere at Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar high
schools.
“At schools, it is more strict in France,” Massimi said. “It’s nice
here. [There’s] a lot of space. The streets are big. Classes are
different. In France, we cannot talk or stand up. Here it is very noisy.”
Jordann Benhamouda, 15, said he enjoyed how friendly everyone was
here, but he added that he’s not quite ready to leave the wonderful
French food behind.
His classmate, Polo Sattezzi, on the other hand, was nearly ready to
abandon his home country for the big stores here, such as Best Buy and
Jack’s Surf Shop.
Even more excited than the French exchange students were the five
sophomores from Newport Beach who will depart for their two-week stay in
Antibes on April 7.
“It’s been awesome,” said Amanda Rubenstein, 14, a student at Corona
del Mar High.
Rubenstein said she was excited but a little worried about her ability
to speak French.
“Ten minutes an hour we spoke French,” she said of the past two weeks.
“Their grasp of English is a little better than our grasp of French, and
they’ve been struggling.”
But that worry could not dampen her excitement.
“They eat shark, frogs and snails there,” she said. “Also, the
schools, they said, were a lot different. And I know we have Disneyland
and amusement parks here, and I wonder what they do to pass the time
there.”
It is the city’s first exchange program in a 13-year relationship with
the French city and one they hope to continue, program coordinators said.
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