tribtown > Emiko Ishihara shows a Japanese sushi bowl to students at Freetown Elementary School Thursday. A group of Japanese women living in Seymour visited the school to share their culture with fourth and fifth-graders.
tribtown > Michael Fish, 9, left, and Kylen Terry, 9, pretend to be Japanese samurai warriors Thursday afternoon at Freetown Elementary School. Students got to dress up in traditional Japanese clothing as part of a lesson on the culture presented by a group of Japanese women who live in Seymour.
tribtown > Yumiko Koizumi shows Shelby Miller, 11, how to play with a traditional Japanese toy Thursday at Freetown Elementary School. The object of the toy was to swing the red ball up and land it in the attached wooden cup. A group of Japanese women who live in Seymour visited the school to share their culture with fourth and fifth-graders.
tribtown > Ethan Parr, 11, races Freetown Elementary School Principal Trent Shelton Thursday, to see who could transfer marshmallows the fastest from one bowl to another using chopsticks. The activity was one of several students got to participate in to better understand Japanese culture.
tribtown > Masako Hosono ties a bandana around 9-year-old Harold Temple's forehead to complete his outfit as a Japanese samurai warrior Thursday at Freetown Elementary School. A group of Japanese women visited the school to share their culture with fourth and fifth-graders.
tribtown > News Photos Nov09 photo
tribtown > News Photos Nov09 photo
tribtown > News Photos Nov09 photo
tribtown > News Photos Nov09 photo
Emiko Ishihara shows a Japanese sushi bowl to students at Freetown Elementary School Thursday. A group of Japanese women living in Seymour visited the school to share their culture with fourth and fifth-graders.
tribtown > Emiko Ishihara shows a Japanese sushi bowl to students at Freetown Elementary School Thursday. A group of Japanese women living in Seymour visited the school to share their culture with fourth and fifth-graders.
Emiko Ishihara shows a Japanese sushi bowl to students at Freetown Elementary School Thursday. A group of Japanese women living in Seymour visited the school to share their culture with fourth and fifth-graders.
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