Bernice Moore Posted November 14, 2011 Share Posted November 14, 2011 Just passing along this information...b Ernst Titovets' book available at 2011 conventions! New Oswald audio! Just an announcement to forum members that Dr. Ernst Titovets, one of Oswald's closest friends in Minsk will have his book, Oswald:Russian Episode available for purchase at the Dallas conventions later this month. Andy from the Last Hurrah will be handling the book at the conferences. As yet the book unfortunately is not available in bookstores or online(yet). In the meantime, Dr. Titovets has a website, www.etitovets.com with biographical information about the author as well as links to unpublished snippets of taped conversations with Oswald made in Minsk. I encourage you all to visit his website and get in touch with Andy if you are interested in purchasing the book but can't attend the conferences. Thanks! Paula Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Graves Posted November 14, 2011 Share Posted November 14, 2011 Just passing along this information...b Ernst Titovets' book available at 2011 conventions! New Oswald audio! Just an announcement to forum members that Dr. Ernst Titovets, one of Oswald's closest friends in Minsk will have his book, Oswald:Russian Episode available for purchase at the Dallas conventions later this month. Andy from the Last Hurrah will be handling the book at the conferences. As yet the book unfortunately is not available in bookstores or online(yet). In the meantime, Dr. Titovets has a website, www.etitovets.com with biographical information about the author as well as links to unpublished snippets of taped conversations with Oswald made in Minsk. I encourage you all to visit his website and get in touch with Andy if you are interested in purchasing the book but can't attend the conferences. Thanks! Paula Thanks Bernice! Listening to LHO was fascinating. He had a good sense of humor! --Tommy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bernice Moore Posted November 14, 2011 Author Share Posted November 14, 2011 Just passing along this information...b Ernst Titovets' book available at 2011 conventions! New Oswald audio! Just an announcement to forum members that Dr. Ernst Titovets, one of Oswald's closest friends in Minsk will have his book, Oswald:Russian Episode available for purchase at the Dallas conventions later this month. Andy from the Last Hurrah will be handling the book at the conferences. As yet the book unfortunately is not available in bookstores or online(yet). In the meantime, Dr. Titovets has a website, www.etitovets.com with biographical information about the author as well as links to unpublished snippets of taped conversations with Oswald made in Minsk. I encourage you all to visit his website and get in touch with Andy if you are interested in purchasing the book but can't attend the conferences. Thanks! Paula Thanks Bernice! Listening to LHO was fascinating. He had a good sense of humor! --Tommy Your welcome, i hope it will be available soon, the book, for those that are interested and cannot get to Dealey, it appears this time he has much attributations to his studies and qualifications, as well as his recorded documentation, nice for a change.. take care b.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kathleen Collins Posted November 14, 2011 Share Posted November 14, 2011 Just passing along this information...b Ernst Titovets' book available at 2011 conventions! New Oswald audio! Just an announcement to forum members that Dr. Ernst Titovets, one of Oswald's closest friends in Minsk will have his book, Oswald:Russian Episode available for purchase at the Dallas conventions later this month. Andy from the Last Hurrah will be handling the book at the conferences. As yet the book unfortunately is not available in bookstores or online(yet). In the meantime, Dr. Titovets has a website, www.etitovets.com with biographical information about the author as well as links to unpublished snippets of taped conversations with Oswald made in Minsk. I encourage you all to visit his website and get in touch with Andy if you are interested in purchasing the book but can't attend the conferences. Thanks! Paula Thanks Bernice! Listening to LHO was fascinating. He had a good sense of humor! --Tommy Your welcome, i hope it will be available soon, the book, for those that are interested and cannot get to Dealey, it appears this time he has much attributations to his studies and qualifications, as well as his recorded documentation, nice for a change.. take care b.. I just listened to Oswald. Is it Oswald? When he reads Shakespeare he does so with an accent. Then you hear a tape where he is supposed to be a famous killer. You get to hear him say the F word and "Goddamn." His American accent was better. http://www.etitovets.com/Recorded%20_voices.html Kathy C Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kathleen Collins Posted November 14, 2011 Share Posted November 14, 2011 (edited) Deleted double. Edited November 14, 2011 by Kathleen Collins Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Richard Hocking Posted November 14, 2011 Share Posted November 14, 2011 Thanks for the update, Bernice. Does anyone in the research community do audio/voice analysis? Titovet's Oswald tapes from Minsk could be compared to samples from Oswald's statements recorded by the press while he was in custody in Dallas, or to the NO Radio debate to determine if the Minsk Oswald voice recording matches the New Orleans and Dallas Oswald voice recordings. Just a thought. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kathleen Collins Posted November 14, 2011 Share Posted November 14, 2011 Thanks for the update, Bernice. Does anyone in the research community do audio/voice analysis? Titovet's Oswald tapes from Minsk could be compared to samples from Oswald's statements recorded by the press while he was in custody in Dallas, or to the NO Radio debate to determine if the Minsk Oswald voice recording matches the New Orleans and Dallas Oswald voice recordings. Just a thought. His cursing in those days and laughing bring to mind Lee Oswald, not Harvey. Kathy C Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
William Kelly Posted January 5, 2012 Share Posted January 5, 2012 (edited) Ernst Titovets Education: 1957-1963–Minsk State Medical Institute, Minsk, Belarus. 1958-1963–Student-Researcher at the Students Research Center, Department of Chemistry, Minsk State Medical Institute. 1963-1966–Postgraduate researcher in biochemistry, Department of Biochemistry, Minsk State Medical Institute. 1992-1993–Course on the U.S. Foreign Policy: Contemporary American History read by Prof. Francis Feeley, Ph.D. Oswald: Russian Episode by Ernst Titovets, MonLitera Publishing House. Minsk (2010) 490 p., ISBN 978-985-90215-3-4. US Copyright Office Registration Number / Date: TX 7-348-345 /2011-02-26. The JFK issue–a momentous episode in American history–presents another area of interest for Ernst Titovets. As Lee Harvey Oswald's close English-speaking friend in Russia he got to know him very well. "Erich [Ernst Titovets]...is my oldest existing acquaintance...a friend of mine who speaks English very well…" as Oswald would put it in his Historic Diary. In his book Oswald: Russian Episode Ernst Titovets investigates the Russian period of life and activity of Lee Harvey Oswald, an alleged assassin of JFK.The book is based mainly on the author's first-hand experience of knowing Oswald. It also includes the author's interviews with many Russians who met Oswald, there are documents with Oswald's longhand never published before, unique transcripts of the audio recordings of Oswald and Titovets reading stories, enacting plays, giving mock interviews to one another. The book presents a culmination of the Author's painstaking research conducted over many years to reveal the true character of Oswald, a close-up of this still largely misunderstood man. Voices of Lee Oswald and Ernst Titovets Contents: 1. Introduction by Prof. Ernst Titovets. November, 2011. 2. Excerpt from Tape #1. Lee Oswald reading a piece from Othello by William Shakespeare.December, 1960. The transcript is in Chapter 15. Studying Lee's English,Oswald:Russian Episode by Ernst Titovets. 3. Excerpts from Tape #2. Mock interviews: (i) Senator Titov (the interviewer Lee Oswald); (ii) Jack Marr (the interviewer Ernst Titovets); (iii)Prof. Pepper (the interviewer Ernst Titovets). December, 1961.The transcripts are in Chapter 30. The revealing tape recordings,Oswald: Russian Episode by Ernst Titovets. Edited January 5, 2012 by William Kelly Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris Bennett Posted January 5, 2012 Share Posted January 5, 2012 Here is a link to some excerpts from the book. Looks interesting to me! http://www.etitovets.com/OSWALD-Russian-Episode.pdf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Robert Morrow Posted June 12, 2013 Share Posted June 12, 2013 (edited) Bump. This book is extremely rare & historically significant. We need to get Trine Day or Skyhorse Publishing to print this book and make it available for the masses. David Lifton highly recommends "Oswald Russian Episode" by Oswald's best friend in Russia, Ernst Titovets. Web link: http://www.etitovets.com/OSWALD-Russian-Episode.pdf Oswald’s writings with his observations about the Soviet Union provided an insight into his political outlook and philosophy of life. Oswald knew better than to reveal his views in Russia and there was a very good reason for it. But in our private debates on political sociology and philosophy he clearly let me see where he stood. His papers, when they became available much later, only confirmed this having also demonstrated that his outlook did not change upon returning back to the States. [...] For me, getting to know Oswald better was cutting him down to size. If I might have viewed him initially as an American VIP, the delusion was only a short-lived one. Before long there was before me a real down-to-earth man about whom I would have said that nobody is perfect. In the divided world of the Cold War period, Oswald and I presented two opposing mentalities. It was a time when Americans and Russians viewed each other over the ideological divide, not always seeing eye to eye on what should be considered right and wrong. I was a product of the socialist world while Oswald, at his core, belonged to the capitalist one. It became obvious through our debates, his attitude to local values and other telling signs. But it never stood in the way of our friendship. To the contrary, through him I learned, first-hand, things about his American world that the Iron Curtain had effectively prevented me from reaching otherwise. Edited June 12, 2013 by Robert Morrow Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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