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Category:October 1934 sports events in the United States | Table of Content | MonthCategoryNav |
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Draft:What | References | References
What is pitz??? |
Draft:What | Table of Content | AFC submission, References |
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File:Jean Carn - Closer Than Close.jpg | Fair use image data | Fair use image data |
File:Jean Carn - Closer Than Close.jpg | Table of Content | Summary, Licensing, Fair use image data |
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Donavin William Nechtman, simply known as Don Nechtman (born August 15, 2000) is an American fashion designer and entrepreneur. He is the founder of Off-Stitch, a contemporary clothing brand launched in 2023. He originally launched his fashion venture as Super Soles in 2018. Nechtman is also known for releasing his only music project, Established, under the now-inactive creative content company Nechtman Entertainment. |
Draft:Don Nechtman | Early life | Early life
Nechtman was born in Miami, Florida, and is of Ashkenazi Jewish descent through his father and Colombian descent through his mother. He came up with the idea of becoming a fashion designer at age 12 and envisioned a brand called Super Soles, which would later become Off-Stitch.
While in high school, he participated in sneaker reselling through Facebook groups and attended sneaker conventions. Nechtman graduated from Dr. Michael M. Krop Senior High School in 2018. He later enrolled at Miami Dade College but dropped out twice. |
Draft:Don Nechtman | Career | Career |
Draft:Don Nechtman | Super Soles | Super Soles
At age 18, Nechtman officially launched Super Soles with his first design, the "Glitter Tee", in 2018. In 2020, he hosted a Super Soles pop-up shop in Fort Lauderdale during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Nechtman received co-signs from American rapper Soulja Boy and NBA player Tyler Herro, who was seen wearing Super Soles in a viral TikTok. He also designed the "Fashion Stars" sneakers under Super Soles, which were manufactured in Italy by AliveShoes.
Super Soles LLC was incorporated on August 29, 2023. |
Draft:Don Nechtman | Music | Music
In 2023, Nechtman released his debut and only music project, Established, through his creative content company Nechtman Entertainment, distributed by DistroKid. The project was accompanied by merchandise for both the album and the company, designed by Nechtman himself. |
Draft:Don Nechtman | Off-Stitch | Off-Stitch
In 2024, Super Soles was rebranded as Off-Stitch LLC. The rebranding campaign featured press coverage in VoyageMIA, Bold Journey, CanvasRebel, and SHOUTOUT MIAMI. |
Draft:Don Nechtman | Personal life | Personal life
Nechtman previously went by the names BTG and Yung BTG early in his career. |
Draft:Don Nechtman | References | References |
Draft:Don Nechtman | Table of Content | AFC submission, Early life, Career, Super Soles, Music, Off-Stitch, Personal life, References |
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Draft:Health Information Management in India : Career Guide | Table of Content | AFC submission, References |
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Rohit Sharma (West Bengal politician) | Short description | Rohit Sharma (born 1955) is an Indian politician from West Bengal. He is a two time member of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly from Kurseong Assembly constituency in Darjeeling district. He won the 2011 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election representing the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha and retained the seat in the 2016 election. |
Rohit Sharma (West Bengal politician) | Early life and education | Early life and education
Sharma is from Kurseong, Darjeeling district, West Bengal. He is the son of late Bal Prasad Sharma. He completed his PhD in economics on Trade Union Movement in the tea gardens of Darjeeling Hills at North Bengal University in 2005. Earlier, he did his MBA at Lucknow University in 1978 and BCom at a college affiliated with the University of North Bengal in 1975. He is a retired associate professor. |
Rohit Sharma (West Bengal politician) | Career | Career
Sharma first became an MLA from Kurseong Assembly constituency representing the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha winning the 2011 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election. He polled 114,297 votes and defeated his nearest rival and sitting MLA, Shanta Chhetri of the All India Trinamool Congress, by a margin of 93,096 votes. He retained the seat for the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha winning the 2016 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election. He polled 86,947 votes and defeated his nearest rival Shanta Chhetri once again, by a margin of 33,726 votes. But in 2016 Chhetri contested on Trinamool Congress ticket. |
Rohit Sharma (West Bengal politician) | References | References
Category:1955 births
Category:Living people
Category:Gorkha Janmukti Morcha politicians
Category:People from Darjeeling district
Category:West Bengal MLAs 2011–2016
Category:West Bengal MLAs 2016–2021
Category:University of North Bengal alumni
Category:University of Lucknow alumni |
Rohit Sharma (West Bengal politician) | Table of Content | Short description, Early life and education, Career, References |
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Template:Taxonomy/Incertae sedis/Iguanodontia | Don't edit this line {{{machine code | |
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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Kunerth's algorithm | [[:Kunerth's algorithm]] | :Kunerth's algorithm
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
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Reason
The first reason I believe the page should be removed is non-notability. There are only two non-forum references I can find not written by the Wikipedia article's creator and main contributor about Kunerth's algorithm. (Both references are listed in the Wikipedia article.) The first is the original 1878 paper by KunerthAdolf Kunerth, "Sitzungsberichte. Academie Der Wissenschaften" vol 78(2), 1878, p 327-346, url="https://pdfhost.io/v/~OwxzpPNA_KUNERTH_1878" retrieved="30/05/2025". It is written in German, a language neither me nor the article's creator can read (as they admitted in the talk page). The second reference is a 1920 textbookLeonard Eugene Dickson, "History of Numbers", vol 2, pp. 383–384.. The reference to Kunerth's algorithm in the textbook is fairly short (shorter than the body of the article), and is mostly just a restatement and very terse summary of Kunerth's original paper, with no proofs. In my opinion, an algorithm that finds modular square roots isn't notable on its own anymore because there already multiple, well known algorithms the solve the modular square root problem. (There are four Wikipedia articles on different algorithms that solve the problem.) Admittedly, the claim that doesn't need to be factored is different from the other algorithms, and may warrant notability. However, the 1920 textbook directly contradicts this claim (it states that must be prime). So, there seems to be only two relevant references to Kunerth's algorithm, one written in a language neither I nor the article's creator can read, and the other which directly contradicts one of the main claims in the article.
The second reason I'm nominating this Wikipedia page for deletion is because the most of the page is incomprehensible, low quality, and probably not correct. The algorithm as written does not work. There are many variables that aren't defined. (For example, what are and ?). As noted before me on the talk page, it seems like can be anything. There is no indication as to how the algorithm works when a square root doesn't exist (i.e., if there are no solutions to the congruence ). There is no attempt at a proof of correctness, or even an attempt to explain why the algorithm works. While the main contributor has posted many examples of Mathematica I/O (input/output) on the talk page, there seems to be no code (pseduo or otherwise) that actually implements the algorithm in general. Two other user before me also had concerns about the algorithm presented in the article, and in neither case, were these concerns resolved by the article's main contributor.
Most of the concerns addressed in the previous paragraph could theoretically be addressed and fixed. However, as stated in the first paragraph, I don't believe that Kunerth's algorithm is notable enough and too few references on the topic seems to be available. Obviously, I don't feel comfortable fixing the article unless other references on Kunerth's algorithm are found, due to the language barrier of the original paper and the lack of other English references. Regardless, the state of the current article needs to be addressed.
For more context, see the discussion I started on it's talk page: Talk:Kunerth's_algorithm#This_article_should_be_deleted. Also, here is another user attempting to understand the algorithm presented directly on the main contributor's talk page: User_talk:Endo999#A_question_about_Kunerth%E2%80%99s_algorithm_on_how_to_get_several_square_root_for_the_same_square%E2%80%A6.
Also, as a disclaimer. I'm not an active Wikipedia contributor, so I welcome any feedback about my approach to nominating an article for deletion. byhill (talk) 04:33, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
The article is noteable as it has two pages devoted to it in the 1920 History of Numbers by Leonard Dickson, who was the premiere American mathematician between 1900 and 1950. Saying that Dickson's reference is 100 years old is like saying that Dante wrote in 1300 and his thought does not reflect Catholic church dogma. It does and so similarly is Dickson's expertise in Number theory (1920) to be respected. Endo999 (talk) 04:48, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
The Kunerth modular square root algorithm is notable as it is the only one I know of that manages to find the square root of a number without factoring the
modulus. For that alone it is notable. The algorithm substitutes the requirement that a quadratic equation must be solved for the need to factor the modulus. It can do this for modula that cannot be factored. Endo999 (talk) 15:42, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
The Dickson source talks only about prime moduli. If you know that the modulus is prime you know its prime factorization. So there is no avoidance of factoring. —David Eppstein (talk) 16:25, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
I don't how you come to the conclusion that does not need to be factored. Dickson contradicts this claim. While I can't read Kunerth's paper due to language barriers, all the examples in the paper use prime moduli. The claim that doesn't need to be factored needs to be backed up.
Additionally, the integer factorization problem is equivalent to finding modular square roots . So if Kunerth's algorithm doesn't require to be factored, then it must solve an equally difficult problem. byhill (talk) 16:38, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Kunerth's method does not require factorisation of the modulus. I've tested this on the TALK page where I factor 5 for the modulus
1+RSA260^4+18*RSA260^2, a modulus that cannot be factored by current means. Endo999 (talk) 20:01, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
[]. In fact Kunerth's method can take the modular square root of 5 for any modulus of the formula 1+x^4+18*x^2. Endo999 (talk) 20:04, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Your comment here is further evidence that this article is in irrecoverable violation of WP:OR and WP:V. --JBL (talk) 20:13, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Is this original research or just agile use of the existing modular square root algorithm. Endo999 (talk) 20:48, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
So agile that no one else can see how it relates to anything in any reliable source .... --JBL (talk) 22:22, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Those pages of Dickson are readable here: . Reading them, it becomes obvious that Kunerth's work is primarily about finding integer solutions to the quadratic equation . Modular square roots, for prime moduli only, are mentioned in one paragraph as a special case of this method for and modulus . It does not really support the case made by our article that something called "Kunerth's algorithm" is a general method for finding modular square roots, and having a single secondary source on this method (whatever the method actually is determined to be) is not enough for WP:GNG-based notability. —David Eppstein (talk) 05:43, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Mathematics-related deletion discussions. –LaundryPizza03 (dc̄) 08:41, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete, per byhill and Eppstein. Also, looking on the talk page of the article, it appears, that the editor wrote a computer implementation, made some tests, and tried to (poorly) describe their implementation in this article. This is WP:Original research, and does not belong to Wikipedia. D.Lazard (talk) 08:47, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete per the compelling nomination; this article appears to be an unintentional hoax. --JBL (talk) 17:21, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete per nomination and discussion. 67.198.37.16 (talk) 01:19, 2 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Kunerth's algorithm | Table of Content | [[:Kunerth's algorithm]] |
File:Dukwon High School logo.png | Summary | Summary |
File:Dukwon High School logo.png | Licensing | Licensing |
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Natie Rens | Infobox rugby biography
| Ignatius Johannes Rens (19 July 1929 – 19 December 1989) was a South African dual–code international rugby player.
Born in Potchefstroom, Rens started out in rugby union. He was a Transvaal representative player, capped twice for the Springboks, both times as a fly–half in their home series against the Wallabies in 1953. Coming into the XV for the third Test match in Durban, Rens contributed three conversions in a 18-8 win, then for the final Test match in Port Elizabeth kicked a further 13 points in another Springboks win, which included a drop goal.
Rens later switched to rugby league and played as a five–eighth for Southern Suburbs. In 1963, Rens was a member of the first South Africa national rugby league team to undertake a tour of Australia.
Originally a farmer, Rens also operated the Punch Bowl hotel in Transvaal for a period in the 1970s. |
Natie Rens | See also | See also
List of South Africa national rugby union players |
Natie Rens | References | References
Category:1929 births
Category:1989 deaths
Category:South African rugby union players
Category:South Africa international rugby union players
Category:South Africa national rugby league team players
Category:Dual-code rugby internationals
Category:Rugby union fly-halves
Category:Rugby league five-eighths
Category:Rugby union players from Potchefstroom
Category:Golden Lions players |
Natie Rens | Table of Content | Infobox rugby biography
, See also, References |
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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Haveli Investments | [[:Haveli Investments]] | :Haveli Investments
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Fails WP:NCORP. Sourced to funding and acquisition announcements, which are typically not counted toward notability per WP:ORGTRIV. ~ A412 talk! 04:41, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Companies, United States of America, and Texas. ~ A412 talk! 04:41, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete I agree this fails GNG and NCORP guidelines. Most coverage is about acquisitions as stated in the nomination. It's a relatively young company (founded 2022) so I doubt we're missing something in older offline sources. As of now, I have not found any in-depth coverage in reliable sources to warrant an article. Anonrfjwhuikdzz (talk) 11:15, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete - fails WP:GNG. ロドリゲス恭子 (talk) 19:24, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Redirect - Redirect to ZeroFox, or merge ZeroFox into this article, but do not delete page history. --Jax 0677 (talk) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Haveli Investments | Table of Content | [[:Haveli Investments]] |
All of Us Strangers (soundtrack) | Use dmy dates | All of Us Strangers (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the film score to the 2024 film All of Us Strangers directed by Andrew Haigh, starring Andrew Scott, Paul Mescal, Claire Foy and Jamie Bell. The film score was composed by Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch and released by Hollywood Records on 22 December 2023, a month prior to the film's theatrical release in the United Kingdom. |
All of Us Strangers (soundtrack) | Development | Development
In August 2023, it was reported that Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch would compose the score for All of Us Strangers. Levienaise-Farrouch was involved in the project during the post-production stage and considered it as a "very special" film while watching the final edit, having connected with the characters and themes which she knew that she would be able to create a subtle score. There was no prescriptive approach, musically, but discussed on how the scenes meant and his reaction the music as a way of sense whether he would communicate with the right things with the cues. Though she did not reference any pre-existing music as inspirations, the 1980s pop songs had an impact within the storytelling which led Levienaise-Farrouch allowing the score to fluidly work with those synth sounds. She also did not reference Strangers by Taichi Yamada, and took Haigh's version as the only version, rather having any imagery or expectations in her mind.
Levienaise-Farrouch added that the performances from the cast played a huge role in shaping the music, as she wanted to mirror the intensity of the acting. She did not want the score to be huge and bombastic, due to the subtlety of the film. She decided to use acoustic instruments such as the cello, violin and piano, while also performing synths on the score while watching the film to have the emotional touch. She also admitted that bringing live instruments and musicians, would add so much variation and emotion to the score but Levienaise-Farrouch wanted "to manipulate the acoustic parts enough so that they were like a dream or a memory." Some of the synths used in the score were the Sequential take 5, Moog Sub 25 and the MicroKORG. |
All of Us Strangers (soundtrack) | Track listing | Track listing |
All of Us Strangers (soundtrack) | Reception | Reception
David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter wrote "Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch's pensive electronic score hums and chimes". Wendy Ide of The Guardian wrote "the score, by Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch, harmonises with and complements intricate use of sound". Richard Lawson of Vanity Fair "Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch’s jarring score pings and murmurs and drones." Helen Hawkins of The Arts Desk wrote "The music throughout is a perfectly judged mix of 1980s disco and a pulsing electronic score by Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch, suggesting both the real world and the supernatural one, between which Adam moves." Anna Smith of Rolling Stone UK called it a "haunting score", while Tori Brazier of Metro called it "atmospheric". Matt Glasby of Radio Times wrote "Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch’s score, all low shimmering chords, mimics the passing of time." |
All of Us Strangers (soundtrack) | Credits | Credits
Credits adapted from production notes:
Music composed and produced by: Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch
Orchestration: Noa Margalit
Score recorded by: Mat Bartram
Score mixed by: Graeme Stewart
Music editors: Neil Stemp, Francesco Le Metre
Score coordination: Manners Mcdade
Music coordination: Georgiamae Bromley
Music assistance: Noa Margalit
Violin: Eloisa-Fleur Thom, Ellie Consta
Cello: Max Ruisi, Claire O'Connell
Piano: Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch |
All of Us Strangers (soundtrack) | References | References
Category:2023 soundtrack albums
Category:Romance film soundtracks
Category:Drama film soundtracks
Category:Hollywood Records soundtracks
Category:2020s film soundtrack albums |
All of Us Strangers (soundtrack) | Table of Content | Use dmy dates, Development, Track listing, Reception, Credits, References |
File:St Columba's College, St Albans logo.png | Orphaned non-free revisions | |
File:St Columba's College, St Albans logo.png | Summary | Summary |
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File:Firefly.jpeg | Summary | Summary
Category:Film posters for Kannada-language films |
File:Firefly.jpeg | Table of Content | Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary |
File:Katihar Medical College and Hospital logo.png | Summary | Summary |
File:Katihar Medical College and Hospital logo.png | Licensing | Licensing
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Keith Horne (astronomer) | short description | Keith Douglas Horne is an American astronomer. He is Emeritus Professor in the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of St Andrews.
Horne completed his undergraduate degree in Mathematics and Physics at Pomona College in 1977, and earned his doctorate from Caltech in 1983. His doctoral advisor was John Beverley Oke. In 2010, he was part of an international team that discovered the Hot Jupiter exoplanet Qatar-1b.
Horne was the 2004 recipient of the Herschel Medal, which he received for his observational astronomy work on cataclysmic variable stars. |
Keith Horne (astronomer) | References | References
Category:Living people
Category:Academics of the University of St Andrews
Category:Pomona College alumni
Category:California Institute of Technology alumni
Category:American expatriates in Scotland
Category:Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh |
Keith Horne (astronomer) | Table of Content | short description, References |
Draft:Maslyhan | AfC submission/draft | Olena Oleksandrivna Maslyhan is a Ukrainian scholar, Doctor of Economic Sciences, and Professor at the Department of Management, Economic Processes Management, and Tourism at Mukachevo State University.
Biography
Olena Maslyhan obtained her higher education in economics and defended her PhD dissertation titled "Modern Managerial Paradigm of Financial Support for Enterprises" in 2010, specializing in Economics and Enterprise Management. In 2021, she earned her Doctor of Economic Sciences degree with a dissertation on "Theoretical and Methodological Foundations for the Formation and Development of Tourism and Recreation Clusters in the Regions of Ukraine." Her academic journey began in 2007 as a teacher at the Mukachevo Cooperative Vocational College of Business. Since 2010, she has held various positions at Mukachevo State University.
Scientific Activity
Professor Maslyhan specializes in cluster management of tourism enterprises, digitalization of tourism products, management, and geographic modeling. She has authored over 350 scientific works, including 4 monographs and 10 co-authored monographs, more than 100 articles in Ukrainian professional journals, and 30 scientific publications in international journals.
Her main research areas include:
Regional economics
Cluster policy
Development of tourism infrastructure
Digitalization of management
Formation of tourism and recreation clusters
Cluster model of regional development management
Application of information technologies in tourism
Geographic modeling of tourism markets
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Professor Maslyhan is recognized as a leading Ukrainian researcher in the field of cluster development in tourism. Her work is cited by other scholars in economics and regional studies, as evidenced by her profiles on Scopus, Web of Science, Google Scholar, Index Copernicus, and DOAJ. She co-authored models of regional management of tourism clusters, which are utilized in strategic planning of tourism directions in the Carpathian region. She actively collaborates with local governments, tourism associations, and public initiatives. Her scientific activity is interdisciplinary, combining economics, geography, sociology, and information technologies.
Professor Maslyhan participates in international and national conferences and publishes scientific articles in Ukrainian professional journals. She is a member of the specialized academic council at Mukachevo State University and serves on the editorial boards of scientific journals. Additionally, she supervises student scientific projects and postgraduate research.
She has repeatedly served as Chair of specialized academic councils for the defense of PhD dissertations.
Professor Maslyhan is also involved in working with international students and postgraduates at Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland.
Participation in Erasmus+ Projects
She is involved in the Erasmus+ KA2 BOOST project "Bringing Opportunities and Organizational Success to Small Local Universities in Ukraine" (March 1, 2023 – February 28, 2025). The project unites four Ukrainian and three European universities, including the University of Tartu, aiming to enhance the technical, digital, and international capacity of participants (faculty, students, administrative, and technical staff).
She also participates in international academic mobility programs for students and faculty under the Erasmus+ program.
Teaching Activity
At Mukachevo State University, Professor Maslyhan teaches the following courses:
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Strategic Management
Tourism Business Management
Enterprise Economics
Cluster Policy in the Region
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Significance
The practical significance of Professor Maslyhan's research lies in creating effective models for managing regional tourism resources. She actively collaborates with local government representatives and businesses, assisting in the creation of tourism and recreation clusters in Zakarpattia and other regions of Ukraine.
Olena Oleksandrivna Maslyhan exemplifies a modern Ukrainian scholar whose work has a tangible impact on regional economic development. Her contributions to science and education not only shape the next generation of professionals but also provide a platform for qualitative changes in the tourism sector.
Awards
Professor Maslyhan has been awarded honorary certificates for her scientific activity and contributions to the development of the tourism sector in Zakarpattia.
She was nominated for the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine's named scholarships for the most talented young scientists in 2016.
Bibliography
Olena Oleksandrivna Maslyhan is a Doctor of Economic Sciences and Professor at Mukachevo State University. Her primary research areas encompass regional economics, cluster policy, development of tourism infrastructure, and digitalization of management processes.
Monographs and Collective Works
Maslyhan O.O. "Development of Cluster Formations in the Tourism Sector of Ukraine's Regions." – Mukachevo: MSU, 2020. – 168 pages.
"Cluster Model of Tourism Business Development: Monograph" / Edited by O.O. Maslyhan. – Uzhhorod: Polygraphcenter, 2022. – 210 pages.
Selected Publications
Maslyhan O.O., Mashika H.V. "Fundamentals of Geographic Modeling of the Regional Tourism Market in the Carpathian Region" // Geography and Tourism. – 2019. – No. 50. – Pp. 64–69.
Maslyhan O.O. "Digitalization of Management and Routing of Clusters in Tourism and Hotel-Restaurant Business" // Agrosvit. – 2022. – No. 3. – Pp. 101–105.
Maslyhan O.O. "Clustering of Ukraine's Regional Economy: Problems and Development Prospects" // Scientific Bulletin of Mukachevo State University. Series: Economics. – 2020. – No. 2. – Pp. 45–52.
Maslyhan O.O., Savka L.M. "Digital Transformations of the Tourism Industry Amid Global Challenges" // Economy and Society. – 2021. – No. 32. – Pp. 140–148.
Maslyhan O.O., Mashika H.V. "Cluster Approach as a Tool for Developing Tourism Infrastructure in the Carpathian Region" // Scientific Bulletin of Uzhhorod University. Series: Economics. – 2019. – Issue 2(54). – Pp. 91–97.
Maslyhan O.O. "Formation of Tourism Clusters in the Context of Regional Economic Policy" // Problems of Systematic Approach in Economics. – 2022. – No. 3(87). – Pp. 88–95.
Publications in English
Maslyhan O.O., Pasieka S. "The Project Scheme Management Cycle of Integrated Effort for the Development of Business in Clusters Tourism and Recreation" // Bulletin of the Cherkasy Bohdan Khmelnytsky National University. – 2020. – No. 1.
econom-ejournal.cdu.edu.ua
Maslyhan O.O., Oksana K.O. "Regional Management Paradigm of the Integrated Effort of Development Elements of Recreation and Tourism Cluster" // Economic Horizons. – 2019. – Pp. 23–36.
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Maslyhan E.A. "Model of Systematic Description of Activities of Tourism and Recreation Cluster" // Austrian Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences. – 2014. – 2(1-2), Pp. 154–159.
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See Also
Roman Mykhailovych Maslyhan
Sources
Lecturer's Page: Olena Oleksandrivna Maslyhan
Ukrainian Scientists Database
Google Scholar Profile
Mukachevo State University Website
Faculty of Management and Hospitality Industry |
Draft:Maslyhan | Table of Content | AfC submission/draft |
Women Justices' Association of Victoria | Short description | The Women Justices' Association of Victoria (WJAV) was an Australian women's organisation founded in 1938. |
Women Justices' Association of Victoria | History | History
The Women Justices’ Association of Victoria was formed in Melbourne on 30 June 1938 to unite women Justices of the Peace. The intention was to form a body similar to one already formed in Western Australia.
The first general meeting of the association was held at the Melbourne Town Hall on 25 July 1938, with Julia Rapke presiding. She instituted a series of lectures on the functions of justices, petty sessions, practice and procedure given by members of the Bar.
The association aimed to "unite women justices throughout the State of Victoria in a bond of mutual help and support; to work for an increase of appointments for women, and encourage them to exercise their privileges; to affiliate with the Justices' Association of Victoria, or any other Justices' Association; and to provide meeting-places for members."
The association intended to get a woman on the bench of every municipal court.
The association remained active until 1971. Declining numbers, due to fewer women being available for voluntary work, forced it to reconsider its role. The following year, it reformed to become the Australian branch of the International Association of Youth Magistrates.
The peak membership body for Justices of the Peace in Victoria is now the Royal Victorian Association of Honorary Justices. |
Women Justices' Association of Victoria | Notable women | Notable women
Women involved with the Association include:
Julia Rapke - Founder and first president
Millicent Preston-Stanley - President of Women Justices' Association of New South Wales 1923-1926
Amelia Morrison Macdonald - President of the Women Justices' Association of Western Australia 1925-1929 and 1938-43
Lillias Margaret Skene - Secretary of Victorian association in 1940
Ivy Wedgwood - Former president of WJAV
Elizabeth Britomarte James
Ma Dalley - Honorary secretary of WJAV |
Women Justices' Association of Victoria | Archives | Archives
The archives of the WJAV and the International Association of Youth Magistrates (Victoria) are held in the Manuscripts Collection of the State Library of Victoria. Items included in the collection include correspondence, minutes, agendas, annual reports, newsletters, attendance roll, and related items. |
Women Justices' Association of Victoria | References | References
Category:Women's organisations based in Australia
Category:1938 establishments in Australia
Category:Organizations established in 1938
Category:Legal organisations based in Australia |
Women Justices' Association of Victoria | Table of Content | Short description, History, Notable women, Archives, References |
Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Maltese nationality law/archive1 | [[Maltese nationality law]] | Maltese nationality law
Nominator(s): Horserice (talk) 04:54, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
This article is about the history and regulations of Maltese citizenship. Given that it's been in the news recently for its citizenship by investment scheme, I thought I'd be a good time to put this article forward for FAC. I took it through GA a few years ago (thank you ) and updated it according to recent developments. Looking forward to feedback, Horserice (talk) 04:54, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Great initiative, I wish you best of luck. Signed, Pichemist ( Contribs | Talk ) 16:40, 1 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Maltese nationality law/archive1 | Table of Content | [[Maltese nationality law]] |
Draft:Nimi Nightmare | AfC submission | Nimi Nightmare is an English speaking independent virtual youtuber who debuted on January 17th, 2025. |
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Draft:Nimi Nightmare | Table of Content | AfC submission, References |
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