Meet America's new secretary of state: Antony Blinken [online]. Bureau of Global Public Affairs, 26 January 2021. Dostupné online.
archive.today
MAUGH, Thomas. D. Carleton Gajdusek dies at 85; Nobel Prize winner identified exotic disease, was unrepentant pedophile. Los Angeles Times, December 18, 2008. Dostupné online [cit. 2012-05-12]. Archivované 2013-01-27 na Archive.today
books.google.com
Kenneson, Charles. Musical Prodigies: Perilous Journeys, Remarkable Lives, p. 279. Hal Leonard Corporation, 1998. ISBN 9781574670462. Accessed September 22, 2019. "Thus wrote Michael Privitello, Joey Alfidi's music tutor, about the triple-threat musician who was pianist, composer, and conductor. Born in Yonkers, New York, on 28 May 1949, Joey was the son of American-born parents of Italian descent."
census.gov
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U.S. CENSUS BUREAU, American FactsFinder. 2010 Census Redistricting Data (Public Law 94-171) Summary File [online]. [Cit. 2011-09-19]. Dostupné online. (po anglicky)
MAUGH, Thomas. D. Carleton Gajdusek dies at 85; Nobel Prize winner identified exotic disease, was unrepentant pedophile. Los Angeles Times, December 18, 2008. Dostupné online [cit. 2012-05-12]. Archivované 2013-01-27 na Archive.today
nbcnews.com
Daniels, Karu F. "'Reminisce': 25 Years Later, Mary J. Blige, Queen of Hip-Hop Soul Reigns Supreme; The '411' On Mary J. Blige's Groundbreaking Debut", NBC News, September 5, 2017. Accessed September 22, 2019. "It’s been a long and winding — and yet triumphant — road since a street-savvy, aspiring singer from Yonkers’ Schlobohm housing projects came to the attention of Uptown Records executives via a karaoke style cassette tape of her singing Anita Baker’s ‘Caught Up in the Rapture.'... The young woman’s birth name was Mary Jane Blige and she had a look and sound that was quite a polarizing contrast to what the record industry grew comfortable with for a black R&B vocalist."
nytimes.com
nytimes.com
Dr. John H. Northrop, Nobel Laureate, Dies [online]. July 16, 1987, [cit. 2022-12-13]. Dostupné online.
Bennetts, Leslie. "The Blond From The Bronx Returns", The New York Times, December 13, 1981. Accessed September 23, 2019. "The third of seven children, Miss Moriarty was born in the Bronx, the daughter of a warehouseman for National Cold Storage in Brooklyn. When Cathy was 5, the family moved to Yonkers, where she attended parochial schools."