Draeger, Donn. 1999. Letter to Robert W. Smith, May 10, 1964, in "Judo," Journal of Combative Sport.[3] Retrieved 22 September 2012.
"A Donn Draeger Bibliography." 2000-2005. Journal of Combative Sport[6][ligação inativa] Retrieved 23 September 2012.
For background to the writing and publication of Asian Fighting Arts, see Draeger, Donn. 2002, April. "Publishing Asian Fighting Arts," Journal of Combative Sport[7] Retrieved 23 September 2012. For an introduction to Draeger's thesis on the distinction between martial art (bugei) and martial way (budō), see Hurst, G. Cameron. 1998. Armed Martial Arts of Japan: Swordsmanship and Archery. New Haven: Yale University Press, p. 8. For information about the International Hoplology Society, which Draeger created, see [8].
georgetown.edu
alumni.georgetown.edu
Georgetown University. Georgetown Alumni Online, Class of 1956[1] Retrieved 22 September 2012.
For background to the writing and publication of Asian Fighting Arts, see Draeger, Donn. 2002, April. "Publishing Asian Fighting Arts," Journal of Combative Sport[7] Retrieved 23 September 2012. For an introduction to Draeger's thesis on the distinction between martial art (bugei) and martial way (budō), see Hurst, G. Cameron. 1998. Armed Martial Arts of Japan: Swordsmanship and Archery. New Haven: Yale University Press, p. 8. For information about the International Hoplology Society, which Draeger created, see [8].
imdb.com
Kendo: The Path of the Sword (1980) at IMDb [9] Retrieved on September 27, 2012.
inosanto.com
Belzer, Mike (23 de julho de 2008). «Donn Draeger». Inosanto Academy. Consultado em 16 de fevereiro de 2012. Donn Draeger was recognized as a world authority on Asian martial culture and human combative behavior.
Smith, Robert W. 1999. "Donn Draeger: An Excerpt from Martial Musings." Koryu.com. [5] Retrieved 23 September 2012. Streaming video showing Draeger demonstrating techniques from various traditional Japanese martial arts are available. See, for example, "Uchida Ryu Tanjojutsu" no YouTube and "Donn Draeger Katori Shinto Ryu 1970's (sic) Pt (2)" no YouTube. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
Amdur, Ellis. 2004. "How to do justice to memory?", from Koryu.com. "The other benchmark was his sense of privacy. For example, Donn was a fifth dan in Tomiki Aikido. I once saw a video of him, and it was among the very best aikido I have ever seen--there was no moment where he did not have three points of body contact with his partner (this is the essence of effective grappling.) This single viewing changed the way I have done, not only aikido, but every body-to-body martial art I have practiced. At any rate, I called Dobson up, raving about what I had seen, and Terry said, "I never knew he did aikido. He used to always tease me about doing it!"
"Larger Than Life Heroes: Prints of Sumo Wrestling from the Donn F. Draeger Collection." 2004. Seattle Art Museum. «Archived copy»[ligação inativa] Retrieved 23 September 2012. For more information about sumo woodblock prints, see Bickford, Lawrence. 1994. Sumo and the Woodblock Print Masters, Tokyo: Kodansha.
Friman, H. Richard. 1999. "Donald F. Draeger's Wisconsin Grave." Journal of Asian Martial Arts 8:3.. The exact site is Section 4, site 377. See United States Department of Veterans Affairs. Nationwide Gravesite Locator[2] and National Cemetery Administration. U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca. 1775-2006 [database on-line], Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2006.
Smith, Robert W. 1999. "Donn Draeger: An Excerpt from Martial Musings." Koryu.com. [5] Retrieved 23 September 2012. Streaming video showing Draeger demonstrating techniques from various traditional Japanese martial arts are available. See, for example, "Uchida Ryu Tanjojutsu" no YouTube and "Donn Draeger Katori Shinto Ryu 1970's (sic) Pt (2)" no YouTube. Retrieved 27 September 2012.