2014年11月28日
New articles up
For those of you who were subscribed to this blog, Pat and I have new articles up again at Art City Takamatsu's new site.
Check here: http://www.art-takamatsu.com/
Or you can click right on the articles here:
http://www.art-takamatsu.com/blog/2014/11/spotlight-on-fall-colors.html
http://www.art-takamatsu.com/blog/2014/11/-wasanbon.html
The technical team is looking into making the new website one you can subscribe to, but until they do that, we'll let you know on this site here each time we put up a new article on the other site.
Thanks for your patience!
Check here: http://www.art-takamatsu.com/
Or you can click right on the articles here:
http://www.art-takamatsu.com/blog/2014/11/spotlight-on-fall-colors.html
http://www.art-takamatsu.com/blog/2014/11/-wasanbon.html
The technical team is looking into making the new website one you can subscribe to, but until they do that, we'll let you know on this site here each time we put up a new article on the other site.
Thanks for your patience!
My Profile
Cathy Hirano キャシー ヒラノ
I've lived in Japan since 1978. After graduating from a Japanese university with a BA in cultural anthropology in 1983, I worked as a translator in a Japanese consulting engineering firm in Tokyo for several years. My Japanese husband and I moved to Takamatsu in 1987 to raise our two children in a slower-paced environment away from the big city pressures. We've never regretted it. I work as a freelance translator and interpreter and am involved in a lot of community work, including volunteering for Second Hand, a local NGO that supports educational and vocational training initiatives in Cambodia, and for the Takamatsu International Association. I love living in Takamatsu.
Cathy Hirano キャシー ヒラノ
I've lived in Japan since 1978. After graduating from a Japanese university with a BA in cultural anthropology in 1983, I worked as a translator in a Japanese consulting engineering firm in Tokyo for several years. My Japanese husband and I moved to Takamatsu in 1987 to raise our two children in a slower-paced environment away from the big city pressures. We've never regretted it. I work as a freelance translator and interpreter and am involved in a lot of community work, including volunteering for Second Hand, a local NGO that supports educational and vocational training initiatives in Cambodia, and for the Takamatsu International Association. I love living in Takamatsu.
Posted by cathy at 18:38│Comments(0)
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