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Junior Marian Network - April 2024

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The Network

Hot off the Press

Marian High School • 7400 Military Ave. • Omaha, Nebraska • 68134 • Student Newspaper • Volume 68 • Issue 7 • April 2024

Spring Break in Nice: More than nice Photos courtesy of Mrs. Janet Tuttle

Jane Kidder ’24, Iona Stites ’24, Kaylene Bialas ’25, Emma Koch ’24, Lilly Kimble ’25, Diane Koumaka ’25, Darian Lilly Kimble ’25 shops for perfume at Perfume FragJones ’25, Christina Joka ’24, Kendra Peprah ’24 and Grace Comstock ’24 pose in front of a sign before stopping by onard in Eze, France. There, the girls learned how the Cascade Waterfall in Nice, France over spring break. The girls had just come from French class that morning. perfume was made and packaged. MaryMcKay en girls from Marian’s French class- two with host families to stay with for the they visited was entirely different; one bus Both Jones and Koch enjoyed their trip es took an immersion trip to France entirety of the trip. “I really loved our ride took them from a modern city to a to France and would return if given the on March 2-9. Students enrolled in host family, and I think it made the trip medieval town. chance. “If I went back, I would definitely either French III or IV were able to sign more enjoyable,” Jones said. The chaperThe culture in Nice consisted of a slow- want to stay for longer because a week up for the trip around spring break of last ones stayed in hotels. er, calmer pace than in America. Smoking was just not long enough,” Koch said. year. The cost was just under $3,400 per Although it was spring break, the stuwas also common which was shocking With a small group, the trip created person. dents attended classes from 8 a.m. to noon for the students. Another surprise was a great bonding experience for Marian These trips were common before the every day. Some days it was just learning how “[French citizens] get this bad rap for students. Koch said, “There were only 10 Covid-19 pandemic, but Mrs. Janet Tuttle the language but others they were taken being rude when really they are helpful Marian girls on the trip, so I definitely got brought them back on an every-other year into town to learn about the culture. They and kind as long as you are kind to them,” to know some Marian students better than cycle similar to the summer trips. For learned in and out of class. Jones said. I did before.” She continued on to say, future trips, Tuttle plans to move them to “I think that the best part of the trip was Trams and trains were more common “We also made friends with a girl from the week before spring break so she and being able to use my French more than I than cars which was something the stuItaly which was really cool.” With close the students can enjoy their break. thought,” senior Emma Koch said. dents were not used to. quarters, new friendships were formed. On this year’s trip, students stayed in After class, they went on day trips “This was really cool because for Jones ended with some final words of Nice, which junior Darian Jones said “[is] by bus or train to other parts of France, everyone who was on the tram, it was their advice, “I recommend that everyone travel similar in population to Omaha and not one favorite being Monaco. Then, when main form of transportation which is so abroad if the chance comes.” Take the super busy with tourists.” they returned, they would buddy up and different from everyone going to school in trip and make new memories or you will The students were placed in groups of explore Nice on their own. Each location their own car,” Koch said. forever regret not taking a chance.

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Marian blue meets Irish green in March trip RowanHamm on Voyage! Or “turas maith a bheith agat” if you were one of the six Marian students who participated in the creative writing trip to Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland this spring break. On March 1, the six students, composed of three seniors, one junior, and two sophomores, departed from Eppley Airfield on their way to the Dublin airport with their two chaperones, Mrs. Megan Gillespie and Ms. Halli Tripe from the Marian English department. Once the “family of eight,” as the group called themselves, arrived in Dublin, their fast-paced Irish adventure commenced. The group spent eight days in Ireland sandwiched between travel days. Starting in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and ending in Dublin, each day the group traveled to a new part of the country while working on their final writing pieces to present at the end of the trip. They visited historical and religious sites, as well as museums and sites dedicated to famous Irish authors such as W.B. Yeats and Seamus Haney. Aside from seeing beautiful locations, the students also got to speak with published young adult author, Sue Divin. Senior Maggie McGill’s favorite part of the trip was “visiting the statue of Mary at the bottom of St. Patrick’s mountain” in County Mayo “or just driving through the Irish countryside on the coach and getting to know everyone.” To get

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from one location to another, the group was chauffeured in a van driven by their “fabulous” coach driver, John, a Dublin local and experienced tour guide. For sophomore Layla Weedin, her favorite part of the week in Ireland was visiting the Kylemore Abbey in Connemara. Weedin described her time there by saying, “It was beautiful there, and the views were amazing. It was so interesting to see the inside of the Abbey and its history as a castle. I loved the garden as well. Plus, the chocolate there was great.” Throughout the trip, the travelers were given time to write nightly blogs about their day’s adventures. While the group wrote Mrs. Megan Gillespie, Katherine Dietz ’26, Margaret McGill ’24, Rowan Hamm ’25, Ms. Halli about their time in Ireland, they Tripe, Chizora Okolo ’24, Madeleine Smith ’24 and Layla Weedin ’26 pose for a group picture on were also required to compose a their last night in Dublin. The group celebrated the end of the trip with dinner at Finnegan’s Pub, final piece. The students gained a Dublin staple. Photo courtesy of Ms. Tripe. inspiration from a number of flight from Washington D.C. to Chicago was highly recommended by both Weedin sources, from the scenery to visiting the was delayed long enough that the only and McGill. Weedin described the trip as Seamus Haney center dedicated to his life flights available out of Chicago to Omaha “magical” and gave her approval for the and works. Some girls wrote short stories were taking off the next day. McGill decontinuation of this Marian-sponsored trip while other students wrote collections of scribed the experience as “pretty terrible” by saying, “There were so many inspiring poetry or even children’s books. Weedin and Weedin echoed that sentiment by places to write about, and the sights were cited the trip as being a major inspiration saying that she “wasn’t a big fan of that, absolutely gorgeous!” for her work, as well as meeting novelobviously.” Once the students all were Aside from the incredible towns ist Sue Divin during their night stay in reunited with their families and their own and awe-inspiring scenery in the Irish Londonderry. beds, they were able to look back on the countryside, McGill recommends the trip After a long stay on the Emerald Isle, trip fondly. because it “made me value the people and the Marian students tried to head home The trip, minus the return flight fiasco, experiences in my life way more.” only to face an unexpected challenge. The


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