User:Hyacinth
From Academic Kids
I currently am broke and staying with relatives and have limited access to computers. Thus I am not currently engaged in any disputes or collaborative efforts. I would recommend contacting another administrator for administrative assistance. If you have a question that doesn't need a quick answer I actually enjoy answering them, so please ask.
| Contents |
Business
- User:Hyacinth/Style guide
- User:Hyacinth/How to use tables
- User:Hyacinth/Full disclosure
- User:Hyacinth/Portfolio
- User:Hyacinth/Outlines
- User:Hyacinth/Interval tables
- User:Hyacinth/Edit summary requests
Warren J. Blumenfeld argues in How Homophobia Hurts Everyone that anti-gay sentiment hurts straight people as well as gay, lesbian, bisexual, and queer people: http://www.glsen.org/cgi-bin/iowa/all/library/record/1279.html.
"No [person] can put a chain about the ankle of [another person] without at last finding the other end fastened about [his or her] own neck."-Frederick Douglass.
Internal links
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Music terminology
- Wikipedia:Risk disclaimer
- Refactoring
- Lee's Notes on Writing Style (http://www.piclab.com/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?Notes_On_Writing_Style)
- http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:EasyTimeline_syntax
Misc
"People often say to me, ‘I understand what you are talking about intellectually, but I don’t really feel it, I don’t realize it,’ and I am apt to reply, ‘I wonder whether you do understand it intellectually, because if you did you would also feel it.’" (Alan Watts) And vice versus!!
External link
Wikihate
I was gay bashed, online, on this very page by clever anonymous User:213.224.83.136. "Hyacinth, though I may really be a faggot." That's right, I was even provided with a link to faggot.Hyacinth 21:04, 2 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Apparently its becoming a trend: "Islam will destroy all of you dirty homos." This was from User:Kakarot, who, strangely, provided us with a link to homos, but not Islam. That has to say something about where one's priorities lie. Hyacinth 18:29, 5 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Current mysteries
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Pulitzer Prize winners in Music:
- 2005: Second Concerto for Orchestra Steven Stucky
- 2004: Tempest Fantasy Paul Moravec
- 2003: On the Transmigration of Souls John Coolidge Adams
- 2002: Ice Field Henry Brant
- 2001: Symphony No. 2 for String Orchestra John Corigliano
- 2000: Life is a Dream, opera in three acts: Act II, Concert Version Lewis Spratlan
- 1999: Concerto for Flute, Strings, and Percussion Melinda Wagner
- 1998: String Quartet No. 2, Musica Instrumentalis Aaron Jay Kernis
- 1997: Blood on the Fields (Oratorio) Wynton Marsalis
- 1996: Lilacs for soprano and orchestra George Walker
- 1995: Stringmusic Morton Gould


