Please check to see if the Image(s) you are being asked to review has a title. If there is a title, then I expect you to click on the title and read the corresponding document about the image and phrase your answer in a way that demonstrates your comprehension of this document as it relates to the theory in the text. Go to The Globe. Locate Mongolia (in Asia). Take a look at the photographs. You just viewed a scene from the film Mosquito Coast starring Harrison Ford. Harrison Fords character has moved his family from a small mid-western town in the United States to a fictional country in Africa. Ford and his family give up the comforts of the American lifestyle and build an agricultural community with indigenous people. Every so often, Ford makes a trip to the city for supplies. He has just brought fabric back for his wife. In this scene, one of the indigenous persons sees her making clothes for the children and simply says, I sure do like this color. It was graduation day, and the school auditorium was filled with mothers in kimonos dabbing away tears, their husbands snoozing beside them. Keiko Yoshida was on stage accepting a pile of high school diplomas from the principal on behalf of herself and the 41 other girls of Koto Girls gh Schools 3-1 class, who stood watching from the floor. Keiko carefully descended the stage stairs, put the diplomas on a table, and found her seat. All 42 students then sat in unison. They had just graduated. As I watched one representative from each of the four graduating classes go up to the stage and accept her classmates diplomas, I grew increasingly disillusioned at the lack of individual recognition. In some respects, Japan and America are like jungle and ocean; there are different rules of existence in each environment. Many Westerners see Japanese group dependency as weak and conformist, said my friend and fellow English teacher. Mr. Shibuya, when I took up the issue with him later. And many Japanese see Western individualism as weak and egotistical. He was right. I had been taught that independence equals strength and that dependency equals weakness. Shibuya had learned that individuality equals weakness and strength is found in modesty& Keiko had not even wanted to be on that stage. She was elected to accept the diplomas by a class vote. When I asked one of Keikos classmates why she and her classmates were so unwilling to serve as class representative, she said that 3-1 was the strongest class at school and that she was happy graduating as part of it, without the onus of being the one seen on stage. When I told Shibuya that at my high school graduation, each student accepted a diploma individually, he smiled and said, Maybe many parents will sleep. Why does every student need to stick out? Please check to see if the Image(s) you are being asked to review has a title. If there is a title, then I expect you to click on the title and read the corresponding document about the image and phrase your answer in a way that demonstrates your comprehension of this document as it relates to the theory in the text. Go to The Globe. Locate the countries of Laos (Asia) and Greece (Europe). Take a look at the various customs for each country. How do their customs of Socializing differ?