User:Nihonjoe

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日本穣 — Nihonjoe
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I was an

Salvador Dali) and Shukkei-en
(an amazing and peaceful garden which is right next door to the museum).

I also highly recommend that anyone who can get there should visit the

origami cranes), and a statue in honor of Sadako Sasaki (also often draped with origami cranes). You can also visit the Hiroshima National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims there. The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Ceremony is held in the park every year on August 6, the anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima
.

I rode trains regularly on several different lines, including the Geibi Line, the Kisuki Line, the Fukuen Line, the Hiroden Main Line (the main street car line in Hiroshima), and the San'yō Main Line. I created and expanded many of the articles on the stations of the Geibi Line (as well as the article on the line itself). There was (don't know if it's still there) an awesome homemade ice cream shop about 20-30 minutes' walk from Bingo-Ochiai Station. I love manjū (especially Momiji manjū), Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki (the best kind!), and most kinds of sushi.

After absorbing all I could of the

WikiProject
for it.

I also enjoy working on an eclectic mix of other topics, including artists William Bliss Baker, Arnold Friberg, Adalbert J. Volck, Kevin Wasden, Howard Tayler, and Stephan Martinière, poet and author Michael R. Collings, critic and author Gilles Poitras, author Toren Smith, and cultural anthropologist Rachel Thorn. I regularly read Leading Edge magazine, I think Agnes Lum was the perfect first Clarion Girl, and I love the styling of Karatsu and Kutani ware.

One of my biggest achievements here is bringing

reading in general. I have a strange fondness for Hinamatsuri
.

I especially enjoy

make it better. I also enjoy graphic design and taking pictures and making images for Wikipedia. I like user boxes. I even made a couple of them myself. Feel free to use any of the ones I created, or go to the user boxes
page and see what's already there.

Stuff I helped with:

Featured articles: Japan (April 2007), Boshin War (FAR, September 2020), Manzanar (FARC
, September 2020)
Speculative fiction
(September 2010)
Good articles: Cross Game (August 2009), William Bliss Baker (February 2018), Hachijō-jima (March 2018), Brandon Sanderson
(April 2022)


Unified login: Nihonjoe is the unique login of this user for all public Wikimedia projects.

Editing

Userspace drafts:

Mainspace:

Selected articles I've worked on

Ancestry.com, Inc., formerly The Generations Network, is an

for-profit genealogy company in the world. They run a network of genealogy and family
-related websites, listed below.

In addition to their main sites, Ancestry.com, Inc., operates FamilyHistory.com, which contains basic information for free, but mostly serves as a portal to Ancestry.com. They also publish Ancestry Magazine and formerly published Genealogical Computing. They have a presence in the United Kingdom under the name Ancestry.com Inc., whose offices are located in Hammersmith, London, England and Munich, Germany.

In 1990, Paul Allen (not to be confused with Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen) and Dan Taggart, two Brigham Young University (BYU) graduates, founded Infobases and began offering LDS (Latter-day Saints — Mormon) publications on floppy disks. Allen's brother Curt and his brother-in-law, Brad Pelo, had founded Folio Corporation, where Paul Allen had worked in 1988. Infobases chose to use the Folio infobase technology which Allen was familiar with as the basis for their products.

The first products were floppy disks and

compact disks sold from the back seat of their car. In 1994 Infobases was named among Inc.
magazine’s 500 fastest-growing companies. Their first offering on CD was the LDS Collectors Edition, released in April, 1995, selling for $299.95, which was offered in an on-line version in August 1995.

On January 1, 1997, Infobases' parent company, Western Standard Publishing, purchased Ancestry, Inc.

Wikipedia Picture of the day

Crepidotus

Crepidotus is a genus of fungus in the family Crepidotaceae. Species of Crepidotus all have small, convex to fan-shaped sessile caps and grow on wood or plant debris. The species are cosmopolitan in distribution, and are well-documented from the Northern temperate to the South American regions. This Crepidotus variabilis cap growing on a branch was photographed in De Famberhorst, a nature reserve near Joure in Friesland, Netherlands. The photograph was focus-stacked from 42 separate images.

Photograph credit: Dominicus Johannes Bergsma

Stuff I'm involved in

This editor is an administrator. Click here for more information.
This editor is a bureaucrat. Click here for more information.
This editor is part of WikiProject Anime and manga. Click here for more information.
This editor is part of WikiProject Japan. Click here for more information.
Administrators
Bureaucrats
WikiProject Anime and manga
WikiProject Japan

Portals I help maintain

Portal:Anime and Manga Portal:Japan Portal:Speculative fiction
Anime and Manga
Japan Speculative fiction

Did you know...

These are

Main page
.

A. c. japonica forming a "bee ball" in which two giant hornets (Vespa simillima xanthoptera) are engulfed and are being heated

View of Mount Izumi Katsuragi

  • ... that the harvesting of Japanese beech trees on the slopes of Mount Izumi Katsuragi is forbidden for religious reasons?
  • ... that Sandra Tayler wrote Hold on to Your Horses to help her daughter "visualize and control her impulsive ideas"?

About this page

This is a Wikipedia user page.
This is not an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user this page belongs to may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia itself. The original page is located at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Nihonjoe.
Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
I am content with licensing my contributions under both the
CC-by-SA 3.0
licenses. I believe that introducing other incompatible licenses complicates the legal situation of Wikipedia, so I choose not to do it.