Christine CarrilloA somber au revoir was said...
Christine Carrillo
A somber au revoir was said at Corona del Mar High School Friday
afternoon when six exchange students from Antibes, France headed back
to their homeland.
After bringing a bit of France to Newport Beach and getting a
taste of America to take back with them, the hardest thing they had
to do was leave their new friends behind.
Unable to push back the tears, the six students from Lycee
Audiberti, a high school in Antibes, and their six high school hosts
embraced and assured one another that they’d be reunited very soon --
April 5, to be exact.
As part of the Newport Beach Sister Cities Assn., six Newport
Beach students, all of whom just happened to be girls, got to
participate in the organization’s student exchange program. Although
Antibes has been Newport’s sister city for about 20 years, the
student exchange program, which is for freshmen and sophomores only,
wasn’t established until 2000.
“It’s been great, and it’s amazing the bonding that has developed
here,” said Sidney Stokes, president of the association.
And the bonding will continue when the six Corona del Mar students
head to Antibes on April 5 for a two-week crash course on life in
France.
“I think I learned I could speak a lot more French than I thought
I could,” 16-year-old Maggie Nelson said. “I’m very excited to go and
I’m looking forward to meeting the people. ... It’s just such an
unbelievable opportunity.”
And her fellow Corona del Mar students agreed. They seem to be
more excited about meeting the French boys, which their new friends
assured them they would arrange.
Aside from getting to know different people, the students got to
know just how different their two countries are.
“It provides a better understanding of people and other
countries,” said Marie Atkins, director of the Antibes Committee.
For the students from France, the biggest differences they noticed
about the two cities and even the two countries were the size of the
vehicles and the hours of school. It seems Americans have bigger cars
and shorter school days -- something the American students were glad
to hear.
“It’s just been such an experience,” 15-year-old Samantha Price
said. “I’ve learned a lot.”
And those words are very pleasing for the association and school
to hear, since learning is the entire purpose of the program.
“It all went very well,” said Olga Stepanovic, an English teacher
at Lycee Audiberti who traveled with her students. “It’s great
because they got to know young people from another country.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.