I don't see a route number, but the sign you're referring at the 1:04 mark is mainly a warning sign stating that road ahead is wet and that the section between
Mukogawa and
Fukae is closed due to construction. It also states that it will take 15 minutes to get to
Tenpozan and 15 minutes to get to
Mizuhai. It's been a long long long long time since I driven in Kansai, but that might be what you're seeing in that video based on
Kobe Route#List of interchanges. --
Marchjuly (
talk)
13:59, 3 November 2021 (UTC)reply
When Kishida was selected as the leader of the LDP at the end of September, he became the de-facto PM because his party was the largest member of the ruling coalition in power at the time; thus, that was his first cabinet. When the LDP–Komeito retained power in the
national election held on October 31, he remained the PM and that would be his 2nd cabinet. He replaced some of his cabinet members so I guess that would be considered a re-shuffle. Note that
Kishida Cabinet now redirects to
First Kishida Cabinet; so, a separate article for each cabinet appears to be the convention when dealing with this kind of thing. See
Category:Cabinet of Japan for some other examples. --
Marchjuly (
talk)
14:15, 3 November 2021 (UTC)reply
So, it will not be a mere "reshuffle" and it's somewhat more than mere "convention". As the National Diet convenes after the 49th general House of Representatives election, the current, 100th [(First) Kishida] cabinet must resign under the constitution. The 206th National Diet [bound to convene November 10] will hold an
election to designate a new prime minister who will then
be appointed as prime minister of the new, 101st [with likelihood bordering on certainty, save for divine intervention/insurance cases: Second Kishida] cabinet. --
Asakura Akira (
talk)
18:11, 5 November 2021 (UTC)reply
I have started a draft about the artist Tetsuya Noguchi where I have collected a few likely sources in English, which I believe do at least establish the subject's notability. I would really appreciate assistance/collaboration from someone interested in contemporary Japanese art and able to access sources in Japanese.
BTW I have noticed that there is no link to the archives of this page in the header. There is simply a mention of the existence of archives but no way to access them.
Roger (Dodger67) (
talk)
06:44, 3 November 2021 (UTC)reply
The Japanese Handball Federation scanned all theirs
Bulletins since 1960. This would be a gold mine for Asian Handball. But we have no Japanese speaking author at the
Wikipedia:WikiProject Handball. So we are not able to use this information.
My request is if somebody from your project is willing to help. First it would be help full if you could improve the articles about the competitions which the
men's and
women's national teams particped. Especially the Asian Championships. Because most of the author are from Europe and we didn't found a lot off sources for the early editions.