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Rania Ali, 8, answers questions Tuesday about homes in Estonia during the Acadia Academy Culture Fair in Lewiston. Students displayed projects on countries in each classroom at the elementary public charter school. Each country selected had at least one student from the school who represented their nationality. Students visited each classroom and had their “passport” stamped so that they could see how many countries the student body represented. Ali is a third-grade student in Amy Boclair’s classroom. Daryn Slover/Sun JournalCael Schreiber, left, and Beckett Chase read about South Korea Tuesday during the Acadia Academy Culture Fair in Lewiston. Students displayed their projects on countries in each classroom at the elementary public charter school. Each country selected had at least one student from the school who represented their nationality. Students visited each classroom and had their “passport” stamped so that they could see how many countries the student body represented. Schreiber, 11, is a fourth grader and Chase, 8, is a student in the second grade. Daryn Slover/Sun JournalChloe Deraps-Chasse, 9, answers questions Tuesday about Estonia during the Acadia Academy Culture Fair in Lewiston. Students displayed their projects on countries in each classroom at the elementary public charter school. Each country selected had at least one student from the school who represented their nationality. Students visited each classroom and had their “passport” stamped so that they could see how many countries the student body represented. Deraps-Chasse is a third grader in Amy Boclair’s classroom. Daryn Slover/Sun JournalRozlyn Harris and Wyatt Henry wait Tuesday for students to visit their display on Japan during the Acadia Academy Culture Fair in Lewiston. Students displayed their projects on countries in each classroom at the elementary public charter school. Each country selected had at least one student from the school who represented their nationality. Students visited each classroom and had their “passport” stamped so that they could see how many countries the student body represented. Harris and Henry are second graders in Colleen Crowley’s classroom. Daryn Slover/Sun JournalFourth grader Clara Good’s passport was stamped Tuesday in each classroom she visited during the Acadia Academy Culture Fair in Lewiston. Students displayed their projects on countries in each classroom at the elementary public charter school. Each country selected had at least one student from the school who represented their nationality. Daryn Slover/Sun Journal
Daryn Slover always pulls for the underdog - what would you expect from someone that was raised in Cleveland and lives in Lewiston. He drinks cheap coffee and cheap beer so that he can afford to put his...
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