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Κανονική προβολή Προβολή MARC Προβολή ISBD

A time of change : a reporter's tale of our time / Harrison E. Salisbury.

Κατά: Τύπος υλικού: ΚείμενοΚείμενοΛεπτομέρειες δημοσίευσης: New York : Harper & Row, c1988.Περιγραφή: xiii, 352 σ. ; 24 εκISBN:
  • 0060390832
  • 9780060390839
Θέμα(τα): Ταξινόμηση DDC:
  • 070.92 23
Περιεχόμενα:
The red-eye -- Mr. Hagerty's desk -- Garbage: NYC -- What are Yonkers? -- A midnight walk in Red Hook -- Damn the law -- Fear and hatred -- Death in the family -- Behing the iron curtain -- "A second-rate story in the suburbs" -- A time of change -- Nightmare in Sikkim -- The war next door -- A walk down Pho Nguyen Thiep Street -- Noël -- The first casualty -- Lies -- "A mean man" -- An inscrutable mark -- "The meanest queen" -- Blindfolded in room 393 -- Who lost China? -- War between Russia and China -- The long March -- A verray parfit gentil knight -- A great lady -- The little man nobody mentioned -- Rosenthal redux -- Where's the rest of me? -- The world of op-ed -- "Death for noble deeds makes dying sweet" -- The winged eye.
Περίληψη: In his reporter's notebook, Salisbury describes how he gathered material for his 1960 articles on racial violence in the South, provides perspective on his controversial Vietnam war pieces from Hanoi, offers his views on various presidents, officials and issues from the early '60s into the Reagan era and shares in-house lore from the offices of the New York Times. Much of the journal deals with China: U.S. policy toward the People's Republic, the relationship between Mao and Stalin, and Salisbury's admiration for Zhou Enlai ("No man I have met in a lifetime has made so deep a mark on me"). The expressed theme of the book is "the virtue and total necessity of reporting the unpopular event at the mostespeciallyat the most difficult touchy moment." In this engrossing memoir, rich in memorable quotes (Nixon is described as "the most complicated, smartest, and stupidest President of our times"), Salisbury reveals how he went about his job and what the ramifications were.

Περιλαμβάνει ευρετήριο.

The red-eye -- Mr. Hagerty's desk -- Garbage: NYC -- What are Yonkers? -- A midnight walk in Red Hook -- Damn the law -- Fear and hatred -- Death in the family -- Behing the iron curtain -- "A second-rate story in the suburbs" -- A time of change -- Nightmare in Sikkim -- The war next door -- A walk down Pho Nguyen Thiep Street -- Noël -- The first casualty -- Lies -- "A mean man" -- An inscrutable mark -- "The meanest queen" -- Blindfolded in room 393 -- Who lost China? --
War between Russia and China -- The long March -- A verray parfit gentil knight -- A great lady -- The little man nobody mentioned -- Rosenthal redux -- Where's the rest of me? -- The world of op-ed -- "Death for noble deeds makes dying sweet" -- The winged eye.

In his reporter's notebook, Salisbury describes how he gathered material for his 1960 articles on racial violence in the South, provides perspective on his controversial Vietnam war pieces from Hanoi, offers his views on various presidents, officials and issues from the early '60s into the Reagan era and shares in-house lore from the offices of the New York Times. Much of the journal deals with China: U.S. policy toward the People's Republic, the relationship between Mao and Stalin, and Salisbury's admiration for Zhou Enlai ("No man I have met in a lifetime has made so deep a mark on me"). The expressed theme of the book is "the virtue and total necessity of reporting the unpopular event at the mostespeciallyat the most difficult touchy moment." In this engrossing memoir, rich in memorable quotes (Nixon is described as "the most complicated, smartest, and stupidest President of our times"), Salisbury reveals how he went about his job and what the ramifications were.

Πανεπιστήμιο Πατρών, Βιβλιοθήκη & Κέντρο Πληροφόρησης, 265 04, Πάτρα
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