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Lee Harvey Oswald (1939 - 1963)

 

In this specimen we can also see the signature of Lee Harvey Oswald the assassinator of the late president of the United States of America, John Fitzgerald Kennedy.

Its taken from his formal request to American authorities for citizenship in the former Soviet Union.

In this letter as can be seen hestates his responsibility to be to the Soviet Union. Although this letter is of extreme value to graphologists to examine I will try to settle with a brief essentials and leave further examining of it to the reader. This letter alone is so full of contradictions and so full of materials for the eager becoming graphologist to discover and investigate; it has all the element that a graphologist can ever ask for.

The baseline in the upper half of it is all slanting upwards. However there are words in this part where the baseline is slanting downwards. These are the words "citizenship" and "needs". Sometimes it can be of help to the graphologist to focus on those words where the baseline is slanting downwards in order to see if they present a special meaning or obvious psychological connection in some way or other.

In the lower part the baseline is considerably even, however a moderate downward slant can be seen.

On the other hand the signature is heading upwards but it must be pointed out that the -d does not only occupy its natural zones but its final ending is where it not belongs, in the lower zone.

In comparism to the signature of Dr. Freud there is some resemblance. The eagerness and state of euphoria is also present in this signature.

Its seemingly of great importance to the writer that the content of his letter may be noticed and recognized by the authorities; that the wish put forward to them will be granted.




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