01487nam0 2200361 i 450 CFI021457220231121125447.0887640202019930320d1992 ||||0itac50 baitaitz01i xxxe z01nProblemi clinici in pneumologiaRichard A. Bordow, Kenneth M. Mosercon bibliografia commentataedizione italiana a cura di Delfino LegnaniTorinoCentro scientifico[1992!XVIII, 522 p.24 cmTrad. di vari.Manual of clinical problems in pulmonary medicine. -CFI0214573CFIV1194173605586Apparato respiratorioMalattieFIRRMLC002004IPneumologiaFIRRMLC004997I616.24Malattie dei polmoni.22Bordow, Richard A.CFIV1194170701320299Kenneth, M. MoserCFIV1194180701440680Legnani, DelfinoCFIV119419ITIT-0119930320IT-RM0263 IT-FR0017 BIBLIOTECA MEDICA STATALERM0263 Biblioteca umanistica Giorgio ApreaFR0017 NCFI0214572Biblioteca umanistica Giorgio Aprea 52DGS M 34 52SBA0000218515 VMB RS A 2016121620161216 05 52Manual of clinical problems in pulmonary medicine3605586UNICAS02848nam 2200601 450 991048072260332120201016235154.02-7606-3063-3979-1-03-650216-32-7606-2563-X10.4000/books.pum.9749(CKB)2560000000055880(EBL)3272867(MiAaPQ)EBC4750186(CEL)434848(CaBNvSL)slc00226311(MiAaPQ)EBC3272867(FrMaCLE)OB-pum-9749(VaAlCD)20.500.12592/qvzrsb(PPN)225781824(EXLCZ)99256000000005588020161213h20092009 uy 0freur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierL'interview à la radio et à la télévision /Claude Sauvé[Montreal, Quebećbec] :Les Presses de I'Universite de Montreal,2009.©20091 online resource (245 p.)ParamètresPubl. antérieurement sous le titre: Faire dire. 2000.2-7606-2179-0 Includes bibliographical references and index.Les concepts et la méthode -- Le sujet et l'angle de traitement -- Les trois types d'interview -- La recherche -- La préinterview -- L'interview proprement dite -- Le contexte -- La suite de l'interview -- Conclusion.N'importe qui – à condition d'avoir du talent et un peu d'instinct – peut interroger une autre personne dans le but de diffuser une information. Mais si l'on fait de l'interview son métier, connaître les règles et les techniques fait la différence entre l'échec et la réussite. Ce livre s'adresse aux intervieweurs comme aux interviewés, aux professionnels comme aux étudiants, bref à tous ceux et celles qui entretiennent des liens avec les médias et l'information. Il expose des concepts et des procédés permettant de comprendre les mécanismes de l'interview à toutes ses étapes, de la recherche jusqu'à la conclusion. Intervieweur chevronné, Claude Sauvé illustre son propos d'exemples réels, tirés d'émissions d'information récentes, et tient compte des moyens les plus avancés du monde des communications.Paramètres.Interviewing on radioInterviewing on televisionInterviewing in mass mediaInterviewing on radio.Interviewing on television.Interviewing in mass media.070.4/3Sauve Claude893108MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910480722603321L'interview à la radio et à la télévision1994805UNINA06542nam 2200601Ia 450 991078273310332120230926160032.00-7735-6457-810.1515/9780773564572(CKB)1000000000713407(SSID)ssj0000278765(PQKBManifestationID)11219268(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000278765(PQKBWorkID)10259956(PQKB)11337360(CaPaEBR)400923(Au-PeEL)EBL3330920(CaPaEBR)ebr10141591(OCoLC)929121171(DE-B1597)654650(DE-B1597)9780773564572(VaAlCD)20.500.12592/kdsw0c(schport)gibson_crkn/2009-12-01/1/400923(MiAaPQ)EBC3330920(EXLCZ)99100000000071340719931124d1994 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe disturbed state of the Russian realm /Conrad Bussow ; translated and edited by G. Edward OrchardMontréal :McGill-Queen's University Press,1994.1 online resource (xlii, 244 pages) illustrations, portraitTranslation of: Relatio : das ist summarische Erzehlung vom eigentlichen Ursprung dieses itzig en blutigen Kriegs-Wesens in Moscowiter-Land oder Reussland.0-7735-1165-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.Front Matter --Contents --Acknowledgments --Introduction --Chronology --The Disturbed State of the Russian Realm --Prince Fedor Ivanovich --Concerning Tsar Boris Fedorovich, and How He Came to Rule --Fedor Borisovich, Son of Boris Fedorovich --The First Dmitry and His Reign --What Befell the Governor of Sandomir and the Poles after the Tsar's Murder --How the Muscovites Dealt with the Tsaritsa and her Father --What Happened to the Murdered Dmitry and His Champion Lord Peter Fedorovich Basmanov, and Also to the 2,135 Poles, Who Willed That the Second Dmitry Should Rescue Them in a Miraculous Fashion, and the Miracles Which Occurred When They Brought Dmitry's Corpse --True Evidence That This Dmitry Was Not the Son of the Tyrant Ivan Vasilievich but an Alien --Concerning Prince Vasily Shuisky and the Second Dmitry, Who Sought to Overthrow Shuisky, and Claimed to Be the Escaped Dmitry; also Concerning Sigismund III, King of Poland, How He Intervened, and How His Son, His Royal Highness Prince Wladyslaw, Was Offered the Muscovite Land and Throne --How Prince Grigory Shakhovskoy by Theft and Falsehood Brought Great Harm to Tsar Shuisky --Concerning Ivan Isaevich Bolotnikov, Who Came to Poland from Venice, and How in Poland a Certain Person, Who Allowed Himself to Be Addressed as Dmitry Tsar of Russia, Sent Him into Russia to Wage War --Concerning a Certain Cossack Sent to Poland to Urge Dmitry to Make Haste, or to Commit Everything to the King in Poland, and How a Certain Man from Shklov Claimed to Be Dmitry and Came into Russia --How Russia in the Year 1609 Was Beset on All Sides by War and Tribulation --Concerning the Return of Skopin and the Arrival of Jakob de la Gardie with Three Thousand Foreigners --Concerning Aleksandr Jozef Lisowski, the Second Dmitry's Commander Over Several Thousand Cossacks, and How He Proceeded with Them Too Deep into the Country, and How the Enemy Cut Off His Retreat to the Encampment, and How for This Reason He Was Compelled to Retreat to Suzdal, and How, Finally, Having Effected a Wide Diversion, He Withdrew Towards Pskov --Concerning the Embassy of His Majesty the King of Poland to the Poles in Dmitry's Encampment --Concerning Shuisky's Deposition; Also the Destruction of the Second Dmitry and the Election of Lord Wladyslaw, Son of King Sigismund of Poland --What Occurred in the Year 1611 in Russia, Especially in the Capital City of Moscow, and Why the Polish King Did Not Allow His Son Wladyslaw, Who Had Been Chosen Russian Tsar, to Proceed Thither, and What Great Misfortune and Irreparable Harm Resulted Therefrom --Appendices --Conrad Bussow's Missive to Duke Friedrich-Ulrich of Brunswick, 28 November 1613 --Conrad Bussow's Letter to J. Peparino, 3 February 1614 --Bussow's Map of Moscow --Notes --Bibliography --IndexConrad Bussow (1552-1617), a soldier of fortune from Lower Saxony, spent most of his career in foreign service. He arrived in Russia in 1600 and spent the next eleven years serving under a variety of rulers and rebel leaders. He witnessed many of the sensational events of that period: the triumph of the first False Dmitry and his subsequent overthrow, the Bolotnikov rebellion (his description is the most detailed provided by any contemporary observer), the civil strife and foreign intervention which bedeviled the reign of Tsar Vasily Shuisky; the Polish occupation of the Kremlin, and the beginning of the Russian struggle for national liberation. Bussow had all the instincts of an investigative reporter - most of the events he recounts are from first-hand experience - and he interviewed many of the key players. Although at one time a fairly prosperous landowner, Bussow was eventually reduced to living on the charity of his wife's relatives. He tried to recoup his fortunes by becoming an author, but died before his ambition could be realized. His authorship of this work remained largely unknown until the mid-1800s. This is the first English translation of the unabridged text of Bussow's chronicle. It is based on careful examination not only of various printed versions in early modern High German but also of several of the original manuscripts in the Herzog August Library, Wolfenbuttel. Complemented by an illuminating commentary by Edward Orchard, it will be of particular interest to those concerned with Russian and European history and the evolution of the Russian "spirit."HISTORY / GeneralbisacshRussiaHistoryTime of Troubles, 1598-1613RussiaHistoryTime of Troubles, 1598-1613SourcesHISTORY / General.947/.045Bussow Conrad-1617.1468925Orchard G. Edward(George Edward)1468926MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910782733103321The disturbed state of the Russian realm3680298UNINA