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died. 25 October 1995 in Kraków) - Polish pianist, teacher, professor and rector of the State Higher School of Music in Krakow .

Biography [ edit ]

He was educated at the Conservatory of Music in Cracow Society under the guidance of Joseph Sliwinski and Victor Łabuńskiego , received a diploma in 1928 . Then continued his studies in Krakow and Berlin with Egon Petri , as his assistant, while commuting to Lviv , where he worked as a teacher at the music school Sabina Kasparek. In the years 1 931 - one thousand nine hundred and thirty-three was a professor of Cracow Conservatory, and later to the outbreak of World War II gave private lessons in Krakow, Lvov and Bielsko . During the war he was initially in Lviv, where in 1941 he was an associate professor of the Conservatory , then in Krakow. Hiding from the Gestapo , he was a secret teaching , he gave secret concerts. Immediately after the war, he was among the co-founders of the State Higher School of Music in Cracow (since 1979 the Academy of Music). He was at the school a number of functions, including Dean of the Instrumental Department (1945-1949, 1954-1955), Head of the Piano Department (1963-1978), Vice-Rector (1963-1966, 1975-1978), president (1966-1968). In 1958 received the title of professor. After retiring in 1978 he continued to teach. He was also a teacher in Helsinki , where in the years 1962-1981 conducted piano master classes, and in Weimar . His students included such Wladyslaw Kedra , Marek Drewnowski , Janusz Lower , Janina Baster , Finn T. Mikkilä (two Chopin Competition juror) and Andrzej Zielinski (founder of Skaldowie). In the years 1926 - 1 968 worked in the Polish Radio . He was a jury member of many international piano competitions, including the five Chopin Competition (1949-1970), competition in Bydgoszcz and Lodz , and from such foreign Competition. Robert Schumann in Berlin, Prague Spring, competitions in Bolzano , Seregni and Munich (five times). Was active in the Association of Polish Artists and Musicians and the Association. Frederic Chopin (long-term Board and Vice-Chairman of the Scientific Council). In 1950 the state has been awarded first degree (the team), he was awarded, among others Officer and Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta Polish , Order of the Banner of Labour and the class title of Distinguished Teacher of the PRL. He also received three awards of the Minister of Culture and Art (1964, 1968, 1986). He has performed as a soloist and chamber musician in the interwar years as a conductor. Performing works by contemporary Polish composers (such as Witold Lutoslawski , and Artur Malawski - first made ​​his Symphonic Etudes ), as well as the classics - Johann Sebastian Bach , Ludwig van Beethoven , Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Johannes Brahms , performed and recorded such of Eugenia Umińska , Boleslaw Woytowicz , John Ekier , Zbigniew Drzewiecki . He is also editing - prepared to spend in the Polish Music Publishers more than 150 items (some jointly with Zbigniew Drzewiecki and Adam Rieger ), including selection of songs (with S. Hoffmanowa). References [ edit ]

Encyclopedia of Music PWM. Part biography , Volume IV: HJ (edited by Elizabeth Dziębowskiej ), Polish Music Publishers, Cracow 1993


Mechanics of Oscar Pistorius' Running Blades


Oscar Pistorius is a South African sprint runner with double below the knee amputations who competes in both able-bodied and T44 amputee athletics events. He is the T44 world record holder for the 200m and 400m events. Pistorius' elgibility to run in international able-bodied events is sanctioned by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF).

Pistorius began running in 2004 after a rugby knee injury led to rehabilitation at the University of Pretoria's High Performance Centre[1] with coach Ampie Louw.[2] His first racing blades were fitted by South African prosthetist Francois Vanderwatt. Because he was unable to find suitable running blades in Pretoria, Vanderwatt ordered some to be made by a local engineer. These quickly broke, and Vanderwatt referred Pistorius to American prosthetist and Paralympic sprinter Brian Frasure to be fitted for carbon-fiber blades by Icelandic company Össur.[3]

Pistorius participation in able-bodied international sprinting competitions in 2007 raised questions about his use of running blades, and the IAAF amended their rules to ban the use of "any technical device that incorporates springs, wheels or any other element that provides a user with an advantage over another athlete not using such a device". After initial studies, Pistorius was ruled inelgible for competitions under these IAAF rules.[4] After further research was presented, the Court of Arbitration (CAS) ruled that his running prostheses were not shown to provide a net competitive advantage over biological legs.[5] In 2012 Pistorius qualified for and competed in both the 2012 Olympic Games and the 2012 Paralympic Games using his running blades, becoming the first amputee sprinter to run in the Olympic Games.

Pistorius' athletics gear

[edit]

Oscar Pistorius races with Flex-Foot Cheetah carbon fiber running blades. These are transtibial prostheses, meaning they replace legs and feet that are amputated below the knee (BK). Flex-Foot Cheetah blades were developed by medical engineer Van Phillips who incorporated Flex-Foot, Inc., in 1984, and in 2000 sold the company to Össur which now (in 2012) manufactures the blades. Unlike previous models of prosthetic legs and feet, the Flex-Foot Cheetah was designed to store kinetic energy like a spring, allowing the wearer to jump and run effectively.[6]

Carbon fiber is actually a carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer, and is a strong, light-weight material used in a number of applications, including sporting goods like baseball bats, car parts, helmets, sailboats, bicycles and other equipment where rigidity and high strength-to-weight ratio is important. The polymer used for this equipment is normally epoxy, but other polymers are also used, depending on the application, and other reinforcing fibers may also be included. In the blade manufacturing process, sheets of impregnated material are cut into square sheets and pressed onto a form to produce the final shape. From 30 to 90 sheets may be layered, depending on the expected weight of the athlete, and the mold is then autoclaved to fuse the sheets into a solid plate. This method reduces air bubbles that can cause breaks. Once the result is cooled, it is cut into the shape of the blades, each of which costs between $15-18,000.[7]

Pistorius has been using the same Össur blades since 2004. He was born without fibula and with malformed feet, and his legs were amputated about half way between knee and ankle so he could wear prosthetic legs. The running blades are bolted to sockets made to fit his remaining calves and tibia bones. He wears socks and pads which are visible above the sockets to reduce chafing and to prevent blisters, and the sockets have straps in the front that can be tightened to make the prosthesis fit more snugly.

Pistorius wearing Flex-Foot blades

Pistorius uses spike pads made by Nike on the blades. Before development of the pads, his spikes were changed by roughing up the surface and applying over-the-counter spikes by hand, but the results using this method were inconsistent. Nike conducted research in Össur’s Iceland lab using a pressure sensitive treadmill and film at 500 fps to measure the blade strike, and produced a spike pad which includes a midsole of two machine-molded pieces of foam of different densities to cushion impact, with a carbon fiber plate on the bottom. The developers attached the pad with contact cement, which can be quickly removed with the application of heat when the spike pad needs to be changed.[8]

Because of the curved design, Flex-Foot Cheetah blades have to be slightly longer than a runner's biological leg and foot would be. The blades replace the hinge of an ankle with elastic compression that bends and releases the blade with every stride, so the uncompressed blade leaves the user standing on tiptoe. They are designed to move forward, so have no heel support in the back. According to Josh McHugh of Wired Magazine, "The Cheetahs seem to bounce of their own accord. It’s impossible to stand still on them, and difficult to move slowly. Once they get going, Cheetahs are extremely hard to control."[7]

How the blades work

[edit]
Oscar Pistorius running during 2011 World championships Athletics in Daegu.

In 2007 Pistorius applied to run in able-bodied track meets. He was at first accepted, but questions quickly arose about whether the blades give him an unfair advantage. After initial research showed the blades did provide an advantage, the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) changed their rules to ban the use of technical devices that provide an advantage and ruled him inelgible to compete. Pistorius challenged the ruling with additional research and was reinstated by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in 2008, meaning that he can continue to run in able-bodied meets as long as he uses the equipment that was studied in the research.

Pistorius' performance in the early able-bodied races raised questions because of two major concerns: his pattern of running the races and his leg-swing times. Most sprinters spring out of the blocks with their fastest time and slow down as the race progresses, but Pistorius ran a "negative split," starting slowly and building up speed in the last half of the race (though he no longer uses this pattern). His average time was also less in the 400m race when compared to other runners than in the 200m.[9] Controversy still remains about the use of the blades, but the research did provide considerable information on how they work in application, and other research has followed.

Able-bodied sprinters have calves and ankles that return and amplify the energy supplied by their hips and knees, but Pistoius compensates with additional work because he doesn't have calves and ankles with their associated tendons and muscles. An analysis published by Engineering & Technology magazine estimates that in using the blades, Pistorius must generate twice the power from his gluteal and quadriceps muscles that a normal sprinter would.[10] Other sources also credit core abdominal muscles and a faster arm swing.[11] His trainer estimates that about 85 percent of his power comes from his hips and the rest from his knees. This results in a gait that waddles slightly, as Pistorius swings his upper body to balance the springing action of the blades. The blades compress under his weight, then release as he moves forward, providing forward thrust from the tips as they return to their molded shape. As they spring off, he swings them slightly out to the side and throws them forward for the next stride.[7]

Pistorius is always slow in starting a race because the flexible blades do not provide thrust out of the blocks. Pistorius must begin from an awkward position, swing his leg to the outside and pop straight up from the blocks to begin running, when the preferred method is to push off with horizontal force.[12][13] For the first 30 meters of a race, he keeps his head down and takes short, quick strides. As he establishes a rhythm, he can raise his head and increase his speed. While some runners jog up and down, losing energy, Pistorius directs energy forward, looking somewhat like he is rolling on wheels. He also compensates for the adjustments ankles make on the turns, breaking the curves into short, straight lines. According to his coach Ampie Louw, Pistorius may be able to use the inward lean to generate force and come out of a turn going faster.[7]

Research

[edit]

Brüggemann study

[edit]
Oscar Pistorius running in the first round of the 400m at the London 2012 Olympic Games.
Oscar Pistorius running in the first round of the 400m at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

To resolve questions about the blades, Pistorius was asked to take part in a series of scientific tests in November of 2007 at the German Sport University Cologne with Professor of Biomechanics Peter Brüggemann and IAAF technical expert Elio Locatelli. After two days of tests, Brüggemann reported that Pistorius used about 25 percent less energy expenditure than able-bodied athletes once he achieved a given speed. The study also found that he showed major differences in sprint mechanics, with significantly different maximum vertical ground return forces, and that the positive work or returned energy was close to three times higher than that of a human ankle. The energy loss in the blade during stance phase when the foot was on the ground was measured as 9.3 percent, while that of normal ankle joint was measured at 42.4 percent, showing a difference of more than 30 percent. Brüggemann's analysis stated that the blades allowed lower energy consumption at the same speed, and that the energy loss in the blade is significantly less than in a human ankle at maximum speed.[14] In December of that year, Brüggemann stated to Die Welt newspaper that Pistorius "has considerable advantages over athletes without prosthetic limbs who were tested by us. It was more than just a few percentage points. I did not expect it to be so clear."[15] Brüggemann did not publish his results, and later researchers stated that the analysis "did not take enough variables into consideration".[16]

Weyland, et al. study

[edit]

In 2008 a team of seven researchers conducted tests at Rice University, including Peter Weyand, Hugh Herr, Rodger Kram, Matthew Bundle and Alena Grabowski. The team collected metabolic and mechanical data by indirect calorimetry and ground reaction force measurements on Pistorius' performance during constant-speed, level treadmill running, and found that the energy usage was 3.8 percent lower than average values for elite able-bodied distance runners, 6.7 percent lower than for average distance runners and 17 percent lower than for able-bodied 400m sprint runners. At sprinting speeds of 8.0, 9.0 and 10.0 m/s, Pistorius produced longer foot to ground contact times, shorter leg swing times, and lower average vertical forces than able bodied sprinters. The team concluded that running on the blades appears to be physiologically similar but mechanically different from running with biological legs. The study was published several months later in the Journal of Applied Physiology.[17][18] The inconsistencies between the finding of this study and the Brüggemann study were attributed to differences in study methodology.

Oscar Pistorius in London, 2012.
Oscar Pistorius in London, 2012.

In the study, the blades were found to have an elastic energy return of about 92 percent when biological legs provide between 93 and 95 percent return. Grabowski also stated that the prostheses reduce the amount of force Pistorius can apply to the ground when he runs, reducing his ability to propel forward. The shape of the blade foot is a longer lever than the human foot, providing a contact point further away from the axis of rotation then a real foot. This would allow greater torque generation when an identical amount of force is applied, but because of the springy quality of the blades, Pistorius is unable to exert the same force as an able-bodied runner during push off from the ground.[19] Kram also stated that Pistorius' "rate of energy consumption was lower than an average person but comparable to other high-caliber athletes."[20]

The lightness and rigidity of the blade compared to muscle and bone allows Pistorius to swing his legs faster than able-bodied runners. In comments on the article, Peter Weyland and biomechanist Matthew Bundle noted that the study found that Pistorius could re-position his legs 15.7 percent faster than most world record sprinters, allowing for a 15 to 30 percent increase in sprint speed.[19]

Grabowski, et al. study

[edit]

In 2009 a research team including Alena Grabowski, Rodger Kram and Hugh Herr conducted a follow-up study of single amputees with running blades which was published in Biology Letters. Each of six amputees' affected leg performance was compared against that of their biological leg. The team measured leg swing times and force applied to the running surface on a high-speed treadmill at the Orthopedic Specialty Hospital, and also studied video of sprint runners from the Olympics and Paralympics. They found no difference in leg swing times at different speeds, and recorded leg swing times similar to that of able-bodied sprinters. They also found that single running blades reduced the foot to ground force production of the tested runners by an average of 9 percent. Because force production is generally considered the most significant factor in running speed, the researchers concluded that this reduction in force limited the sprinters' top speed. Grabowski also found that amputees typically increased their leg swing times to compensate for the lack of force.[21]

Other discussion

[edit]

Discussion continues about the relative advantage or disadvantage of using the blades. Researchers and analysts also point out that the research studies are done on level, stationary treadmills, and do not measure performance from starting blocks or on actual curved tracks. They also do not take into the account differences in physiology between amputees and non-amputees, who have such factors as musculature, blade height and weight and differences in blood circulation patterns due to the history of their limb loss.

2012 Paralympics

[edit]

A controversy over the effects of running blade length rose at the 2012 Paralympic Games, as Brazilian runner Alan Oliveira and USA runner Blake Leeper changed to longer running blades within a few months before the 2012 Paralympic Games, leading to marked improvements in their running times. Pistorius complained after the 200m race that the blades provided artificially lengthened running strides, which would be an infringement of the IPC rules, regardless that the blades were within the allowable height limits for the athletes concerned.[22] His complaint was supported by single-leg runners including Jerome Singleton and Jack Swift, who called for the T43 double blade and T44 single blade classes to be separated in future events, as single blade runners were unable to adjust the height of the prostheses, and must always match the length of their biological leg with a running blade.

The improvement in running time and the wide broadcast of the race results provided a public demonstration of how the blade length affects performance. Pistorius' stride length was actually 9 percent longer (2.2m vs 2.0m), but Oliveira took more strides (99 vs 92). The combination of stride length and stride rate led to a clearly unusual performance with the longer blades.[23] Pistorius' management issued a statement saying that Pistorius is always 1.84 meters tall, regardless of what prostheses he wears, and that the decision to maintain this height for his running blades was an issue of fairness.[24]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Mike Moon (2012), "Blade Runner: Oscar Pistorius is forcing the world to rethink what it means to be disabled", Readers' Digest Asia, archived from the original on 29 August 2012, retrieved 29 August 2012
  2. ^ Davies, Gareth A. (interviewer) (23 May 2007), My sport: Oscar Pistorius, The Daily Telegraph (London), retrieved 20 September 2012 {{citation}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  3. ^ Felix Gillette (10 November 2004), "Racing tall: A Paralympian stands accused of getting an illegal leg up", Slate, archived from the original on 12 September 2012
  4. ^ Knight, Tom (10 January 2008), IAAF call time on Oscar Pistorius' dream, The Daily Telegraph (London), retrieved 20 September 2012
  5. ^ Mackay, Duncan (18 May 2008), Diack relaxed over Pistorius's victory, The Observer, retrieved 20 September 2012
  6. ^ Pogash, Carol (2008-07-02), A Personal Call to a Prosthetic Invention, New York Times, retrieved 19 September 2012
  7. ^ a b c d McHugh, Josh (March 2007), Blade Runner, Wired Magazine, retrieved 19 September 2012
  8. ^ Wilson, Mark, How Nike Made Track Spikes For Oscar Pistorius’s Carbon Fiber Blades, retrieved 19 September 2012
  9. ^ Epstein, David (4 August 2012), Fair or foul? Experts split over whether Pistorius has advantage, retrieved 19 September 2012
  10. ^ London 2012 Paralympic games, Oscar Pistorius’ blades – an annotated graphic, Engineering & Technology, retrieved 19 September 2012
  11. ^ Science of the Olympics: How Oscar Pistorius' blades work, NBC, retrieved 19 September 2012
  12. ^ Borden, Sam, Pistorius Misses Chance at Final, but Remains Upbeat, The New York Times, retrieved 19 September 2012 {{citation}}: Text "5 August 2012" ignored (help)
  13. ^ Simpson, Jake (8 August 2012), 'No Advantage to Being an Amputee': A Defense of Oscar Pistorius's Prostheses, The Atlantic, retrieved 19 September 2012
  14. ^ Oscar Pistorius - Independent Scientific study concludes that cheetah prosthetics offer clear mechanical advantages, IAAF, 14 January 2008, retrieved 19 September 2012
  15. ^ "Report: Artificial limbs give paralympic champion competitive edge", International Herald Tribune, 20 December 2007
  16. ^ Jonathan Clayton (15 January 2008), "Oscar Pistorius vows to fight Olympics ban", The Times, London
  17. ^ Eveleth, Rose (23 July 2012), Does Double-Amputee Oscar Pistorius Have an Unfair Advantage at the 2012 Olympic Games?, Smithsonian Magazine, retrieved 19 September 2012
  18. ^ Weyand, Peter G.; Bundle, Matthew W.; McGowan, Craig P.; Grabowski, Alena; Brown, Mary Beth; Kram, Rodger; Herr, Hugh (17 February 2009), The fastest runner on artificial legs: different limbs, similar function?, Journal of Applied Physiology, retrieved 19 September 2012
  19. ^ a b Hashish, Rami (10 August 2012), Oscar Pistorius' Prosthetic Legs: Do They Give Him an Advantage Over Other Olympic Runners?, Huffington Post, retrieved 19 September 2012
  20. ^ Bryen, Whitney (11 July 2012), CU-Boulder researchers help Oscar Pistorius become first amputee to compete in Olympics: Research shows his prostheses are not an advantage, retrieved 19 September 2012
  21. ^ Grabowski1, Alena M.; McGowan, Craig P.; McDermott, William J.; Beale, Matthew T.; Kram, Rodger; Herr, Hugh M. (4 September 2009), Running-specific prostheses limit ground-force during sprinting, Biology Letters, retrieved 19 September 2012{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  22. ^ Hart, Simon (3 September 2012), Oscar Pistorius blade controversy: sour grapes or is South African right to complain about Alan Oliveira's blades?, retrieved 20 September 2012
  23. ^ Tucker, Ross (September 2012), http://www.sportsscientists.com/2012_09_01_archive.html, retrieved 20 September 2012 {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. ^ Leicester, John (5 September 2012), Column: History-maker Pistorius a hypocrite, too?, AP, retrieved 20 September 2012
[edit]





http://www.thedaily.com/page/2012/08/05/080512-news-olympics-pistorius-1-2/


http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/olympics/2012/writers/david_epstein/08/03/oscar-pistorius-london-olympics/index.html

http://www.nbcolympics.com/video/track-and-field/science-of-olympics-how-oscar-pistorius-blades-work.html

http://jap.physiology.org/content/107/3/903.abstract

http://www.futurity.org/science-technology/runners-gain-no-advantage-from-prosthetic-legs/ http://www.futurity.org/science-technology/debate-continues-about-%E2%80%98blade-runner%E2%80%99s%E2%80%99-edge/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2wDD2zZMho motion study

http://graphics.latimes.com/towergraphic-olympics-track-field/

http://engtechmag.wordpress.com/2012/08/28/london-2012-paralympic-games-oscar-pistorius-blades-an-annotated-graphic/

http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/interactive/2012/sep/03/pistorius-oliveira-paralympics-2012-interactive

http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/15.03/blade.html?pg=2&topic=blade&topic_set=

B


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/magazine/oscar-pistorius.html?pagewanted=all

LGBT activism

[edit]

In a February 2003 She magazine cover story, Adams came out as a lesbian, the first Playmate to have done so.[13] In their 2004 "Best of", the Village Voice declared her the "Best lesbian sex symbol", saying it was "hard to turn a page in a queer rag without seeing the willowy model peeking out in a bikini, or nothing at all".[14] Following this announcement, Adams was featured at a number of GLBT activist events, appearing as a speaker, announcer and spokesperson. Selective appearances include the Human Rights Campaign "National Coming Out Day" in Ft. Lauderdals, Florida, on October 11, 2003, sponsored by The Women's Alliance of South Florida;[1] Heritage of Pride, NYC Gay Pride 2004 Rally, on 20 June 2004,[2], the The 36th Annual Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender PRIDE March on 26 June 2005[3] and on 26 June 2006,[4]; the Jersey City Lesbian & Gay Outreach, 28 August 2004,[5]; the Empire State Pride Agenda on 16 March 2006,[6] Out Professionals on 29 March 2006;[7]. In addition, Adams served as sponsor and made a special appearance for the Publishing Triangle book expo on 12 June 2004.[8]




Minako Hamano (n. 28 de junio de 1969) es un compositor japonés conocido por música de videojuegos electrónicos. Ella es uno de los pocos compositores de mujeres trabajando en este género.

Biographia

[edit]

Minako Hamano nació en Kyoto, Japón y después de completar su educación, comenzó a trabajar para la compañía Nintendo en Kyoto. A veces colabora con Kenji Yamamoto y ha trabajado en la serie de Metroid notable de los juegos.

La música de Metroid y otros juegos ha sido tocada por conjuntos de música incluyendo Jénova, Minibosses, OneUp Mushrooms y Select Start.[9] Orquestales arreglos de Metroid y Legend of Zelda se incluyen en el juego! Una sinfonía de videojuegos que hizo una gira por Estados Unidos y Europa y Asia debutó en el Festival de Artes de Singapur de 2007.[10] Videojuegos Live, otra gira internacional de música de videojuegos orquestado, también incluye arreglos de temas Metroid y Legend of Zelda..[11] El anual galardonado juego música conciertos sinfónicos (Symphonische Spielemusikkonzerte), jugando arreglos similares, se iniciaron en Alemania en 2003..[12]

A pesar de que algunos de sus trabajos se basa en la tecnología más antigua, el atractivo de composición de Hamano es evidente; Super Metroid señaló como uno de los cinco primeros videojuegos por Karen Collins en sonidos de juego: una introducción a la historia, la teoría y la práctica de diseño de videojuegos, música y sonido.[13] La calidad de la música ambiental en Super Metroid fue analizada por Gary Hill en el extraño sonido de Cthulhu: música inspirada en los escritos de H.P. Lovecraft.[14] A 2007 review en GameAxis Unwired describe su banda sonora para Metroid Prime 3: corrupción como "hauntingly bueno".[15] A revisar en vidas de juegos en el siglo XXI: conexiones alfabetizadas también describe la banda sonora como una composición de alta calidad..[16]

Las obras

[edit]

Seleccionadas créditos incluyen:

Sus obras han sido ordenados y grabado sobre la inclusión de medios de comunicación:

  • OverClocked ReMix|Relics of Chozo (2003)
  • Video Games Live, Vol. 1 Wendy Carlos, Michael Giacchino, Jason Hayes, y Utada Hikaru (2008)
  • Video Games Live Level 2 Various Artists (2010)
  • Video Games LIVE: Volume 2 (2010)
  • Metroid Prime & Fusion: Original Soundtracks (2003)
  • The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Orquesta Sinfónica de Hyrule[19]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ {{cite web |url=http://web.archive.org/web/20031021010830/http://www.hrc.org/ncop/ncod/events2003.asp%7Ctitle=Celebrate National Coming Out Day|publisher=Human Rights Campaign Foundation|date=2003|accessdate=5 August 2012
  2. ^ "The Rally, Pride Starts Here". Heritage of Pride, Inc. 2004. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  3. ^ "The 36th Annual Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender PRIDE March". Heritage of Pride, Inc. 2005. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  4. ^ "The MARCH: The Fight For Love & Life". Heritage of Pride, Inc. 2006. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  5. ^ "2004 Jersey City Pride Festival". JGLGO. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  6. ^ "Empire State Pride Agenda". Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  7. ^ "Great Second Acts: Surprising Career Transitions". Out Professionals. 29 March 2006. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  8. ^ "PINK INK: The Queer Book Expo". 2004. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  9. ^ "SPIN". septiembre 2004. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  10. ^ "GameAxis Unwired, No. 46" (Digitized online by GoogleBooks). julio 2007. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  11. ^ "Video Games Live". Retrieved 7 enero 2011. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  12. ^ "Symphonic Games Music Concerts". Retrieved 7 enero 2011. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  13. ^ Collins, Karen (2008). Game sound: an Introduction to the history, theory, and practice of video game music and sound design.
  14. ^ The Strange Sound of Cthulhu: Music Inspired by the Writings of H.P. Lovecraft. 2006.
  15. ^ "GameAxis Unwired". Oct 2007. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  16. ^ Selfe, Cynthia L.; Hawisher, Gail E.; Van Ittersum, Derek (2007). Gaming lives in the twenty-first century: literate connections.
  17. ^ "Minako Hamano". Retrieved 19 deciembre 2010. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  18. ^ "Snoopy concert".
  19. ^ Amazon.com listing