For this feature, I attempted to contact Elżbieta Goźlińska directly. Emails to the Radom university domain went unanswered. A call to the electrical engineering department’s main office yielded a polite but vague response: “Pani Goźlińska? Odeszła na emeryturę wiele lat temu. Nie mamy aktualnego kontaktu.” (Ms. Goźlińska retired many years ago. We don’t have current contact information.)
Since the exact PDF is not universally indexed by major English search engines, we must infer the table of contents based on standard Polish electrical engineering curricula and Gozlinska’s known focus areas. If you find , it almost certainly covers the following chapters: Maszyny Elektryczne Elzbieta Gozlinska.pdf
Why? Because at the turn of the millennium, Poland’s electrical engineering education faced a crisis. After the political transformation of 1989, state subsidies for technical education plummeted. Universities could no longer afford to buy Western textbooks. At the same time, old communist‑era tomes by Mieczysław Jeżewski or Antoni Plamitzer were out of print, their language stiff, their examples tied to Soviet industrial standards (ГОСТ) that had become obsolete. For this feature, I attempted to contact Elżbieta