13-06-2015, 07:08 AM
In his 1966 book THE SECOND OSWALD, Richard Popkin noted that the French
journalist Léo Sauvage, the esteemed New York correspondent for
the Paris newspaper Le Figaro, had earlier raised questions about
the conflicts in mysterious reports of Oswald's whereabouts that
seemed to suggest he was in two places at once. Despite his groundbreaking work, Sauvage
is not talked about much today, but he figures in John Kelin's book PRAISE FROM A FUTURE
GENERATION, and Sauvage wrote important
early articles published in French and English in L'Express, Commentary, and The New Leader and the
1965-66 book L'AFFAIRE OSWALD.THE OSWALD AFFAIR
journalist Léo Sauvage, the esteemed New York correspondent for
the Paris newspaper Le Figaro, had earlier raised questions about
the conflicts in mysterious reports of Oswald's whereabouts that
seemed to suggest he was in two places at once. Despite his groundbreaking work, Sauvage
is not talked about much today, but he figures in John Kelin's book PRAISE FROM A FUTURE
GENERATION, and Sauvage wrote important
early articles published in French and English in L'Express, Commentary, and The New Leader and the
1965-66 book L'AFFAIRE OSWALD.THE OSWALD AFFAIR