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The Nazi and the Psychiatrist

Page 30

by Jack El-Hai


  ———, to Alice Vivienne Kelley, August 20, 1935. MS. File “To 1937.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to Burton C. Andrus, October 26, 1945. “Mental Examination of Prisoner [Ley] to Commanding Officer.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to C. C. Carpenter, July 26, 1949. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to Chief Administrator, July 18, 1955. MS. Special Collections, University of California, Santa Cruz.

  ———, to Commanding Officer, Internal Security Detachment, October 14, 1945.

  “Psychiatric Status of Internee.” MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to J. D. Holstrom, January 30, 1950. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to Lewis Terman, July 6, 1955. MS. File “To 1937.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to William Donovan, October 26, 1945. Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection, Cornell University Law Library.

  ———, to William Donovan, November 9, 1945. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to William Donovan, November 10, 1945. Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection, Cornell University Law Library.

  ———, to William Donovan, November 13, 1945. Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection, Cornell University Law Library.

  ———, to William Donovan, November 17, 1945. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to William Donovan, November 22, 1945. Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection, Cornell University Law Library.

  ———, to William Donovan, November 26, 1945. Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection, Cornell University Law Library.

  ———. 22 Cells in Nuremberg; a Psychiatrist Examines the Nazi Criminals. New York: Greenberg, 1947.

  ———. “Use of General Semantics and Korzybskian Principles as an Extensional Method of Group Psychotherapy in Traumatic Neurosis.” The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 114, no. 3 (1951): 189–220.

  ———. “The Use of Narcosis Therapy in the ETO.” 1943. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———. “Von Schirach.” 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Kelley, Douglas McGlashan, and Gordon Waldear. “The Criminal.” 1957. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Kelley, Douglas McGlashan, and Howard Whitman. “Squeal, Nazi, Squeal!” Collier’s, August 31, 1946.

  Kelley, Douglas McGlashan, and Terry Hansen. “Dumb Cops Are Dangerous.” n.d. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Kelley Says Dictatorship Is Danger.” Winston-Salem Sentinel, March 27, 1947.

  “Kelley Suicide Mystery Deepens.” January 3, 1958. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Kelley Teaches Battle Psychiatry.” Chattanooga Free Press, April 7, 1944.

  Kirkland, E. H., to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, January 26, 1946. “Promotion.” MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Kitchin, Thurman, to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, August 13, 1946. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers, File “1946.”

  Klam, Najeeb, and Douglas McGlashan Kelley. “Clinical Lab Report on Leonardo Conti.” 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Kodish, Bruce I. Korzybski: A Biography. Pasadena, CA: Extensional Publishing, 2011.

  Koehli, Harrison. “Ponerology 101: Psychopathy at Nuremburg—Science of the Spirit—Sott.net.” SOTT.net, September 6, 2010. http://www.sott.net/articles/show/214764-Ponerology-101-Psychopathy-at-Nuremburg#.

  Koopman, John. “Gordon Waldear–State’s Film Chronicler.” San Francisco Chronicle, April 27, 2002.

  KQED Television. “Application for a Grant from the Educational Television and Radio Center.” n.d. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “KQED Wins TV Award.” January 29, 1959. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Lawmen Hear Crime Cause from Savant.” [Logan, Utah], 1951. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Lebert, Stephan, and Norman Lebert. My Father’s Keeper: Children of Nazi Leaders. New York: Little, Brown, 2000.

  Lecture Contracts 1947. MS File “1947.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Lecture Engagements 1947–1949. TS File “1947.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Lecturing Contracts 1946. MS File “1946.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Ley, Robert. Last Will and Testament. n.d. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———. Statement. n.d. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Ley’s Brain Sent to U.S. for Study.” San Francisco Chronicle, November 1, 1945. Long, Tania. “Hess Tells Court He Faked Illness as ‘Tactical’ Move.” New York Times, December 1, 1945.

  Loosli-Usteri, Marguerite, to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, December 8, 1953. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Magic and Mickey Mouse.” Time, November 24, 1941.

  “Magic Helps Treat Insane.” San Francisco News, November 17, 1941.

  “Magicians Will Present Stunt at 10 Today.” Daily Californian [Berkeley], February 24, 1932.

  Malloy, George D., to Douglas M. Kelley, June 28, 1952. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Mandel, William, to Alice Vivienne Kelley, August 2, 1985.

  “Kelley Project: Notes On: Description of Suicide.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Manvell, Roger, and Heinrich Fraenkel. Goering: The Rise and Fall of the Notorious Nazi Leader. New York: Skyhorse, 2011.

  McEwen, Jim. “Somnoform Promises Magic Aid to Victims of Amnesia.” Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, July 3, 1949.

  McGlashan, M. Nona. Give Me a Mountain Meadow: The Life of Charles Fayette McGlashan, 1847–1931, Imaginative Lawyer-editor of the High Sierra, Who Saved the Donner Story from Oblivion and Launched Winter Sports in the West. Fresno, CA: Pioneer, 1977.

  McIlwain, Bill. “Liquor Can Curb Its Own Problems.” Twin City Sentinel, August 6, 1949.

  “Mental Health Held Serious U.S. Problem.” Wilkes-Barre Record, January 28, 1948.

  Miale, Florence R., and Michael Selzer. The Nuremberg Mind: The Psychology of the Nazi Leaders. New York: Crown Group, 1976.

  Miles, Steven, Interview with Author, October 2009.

  Miller, Clint L. “Hermann Göring, Progress in Reduction of Paracodeine.” 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———. “Medical Report on PWS with Serious Illness.” 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Miss Alice Hill Weds Dr. Kelley.” n.d. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Modernism Blamed for Delinquency.” San Francisco Chronicle, April 7, 1951.

  Mosley, Leonard. The Reich Marshal; a Biography of Hermann Goering. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1974.

  Moss, Frank L., to Alice Vivienne Kelley, February 4, 1961. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Mrs. Pelton Not Insane, Declares UC Psychiatrist.” 1952. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Muir, Jean. “Profile of Douglas M. Kelley.” n.d. MS. Archives and Special Collections, University of California, Santa Cruz.

  “Mystery in UC Suicide Deepens.” San Francisco Examiner, January 3, 1958.

  “Nazis No Longer Swagger at Trial.” 1945. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Neave, Airey. On Trial at Nuremberg. Boston: Little, Brown, 1978.

  “Neurosis Victims Return to Battle.” n.d. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Newton, Dwight. “The Criminal Man.” San Francisco Examiner, August 12, 1958.

  Noyes, Arthur. “Ley Hangs Himself in Cell.” Stars and Stripes, October 28, 1945. The Nuremberg Nazi Trial: Excerpts from the Testimony of Hermann Goering, Albert Speer, Auschwitz Commander Rudolf Hoess, and Others. St Petersburg, FL: Red and Black, 2010.

  “Nuremberg Rorschach Tests.” 1945. TS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Outline of the Training Plan in Clinical Psychology for the Department of Psychiatry, the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest College. 1947. MS File “1947.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Overy
, Richard J. Interrogations: The Nazi Elite in Allied Hands. New York: Viking, 2001.

  Palm, Henry. “Psychiatrist Says There Is No ‘Criminal Type.’” San Francisco Examiner, July 22, 1951.

  Perkin, Robert L. “Time-Benders Watch Their P’s and C’s.” Rocky Mountain News [Denver], July 23, 1949.

  Pick, Daniel. The Pursuit of the Nazi Mind: Hitler, Hess, and the Analysts. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.

  “Politicians Should Get Mental Exams; and So Should the Psychiatrists!” Twin City Sentinel, February 18, 1948.

  “Private Rites Mark Funeral for Dr. Kelley.” Berkeley Gazette, January 3, 1958.

  “Psychiatrist Has Criticism for Pals.” San Francisco News, November 12, 1951.

  “Psychiatrists Using Shell Game to Treat Insane.” San Francisco Examiner, November 18, 1941.

  “Psychiatry and Crime.” Greensboro Record, November 17, 1947.

  “Quarter of U.S. Police Held Unfit.” September 24, 1952. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Randebaugh, Charles. “Theories, but Not One Fits Kelley Suicide.” San Francisco Chronicle, January 4, 1958.

  Rathgeb, Douglas L. The Making of Rebel without a Cause. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2004.

  Rees, J. R., to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, December 4, 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Rickman, Joel Y. “2 Deputies Balk Jail Probe Lie Test.” San Jose Mercury News, September 10, 1950.

  Rogers, Marian. “Faster Mental Cures Found during War, Kelley Asserts.” Tulsa World, December 4, 1947.

  Rosenberg, Alfred, to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, December 26, 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Rosenberg, Lee G., to Alice Vivienne Kelley, May 30, 1960. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  ———, to Alice Vivienne Kelley, August 23, 1960. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Ross, Helen. “Dr. Douglas Kelley Analyzes Neuroses of Hitler, Nuremberg Trial Principals.” Cataba New Enterprise (1947).

  Roth, Marschal, Jr. “Dr. Kelley Was Not Fooled by Hess’s ‘Faking of Amnesia’.” Chattanooga Daily Times, January 31, 1946.

  “Rudolf Hess: Report of British Observation and Findings.” n.d. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Ryan, Joan. “Mysterious Suicide of Nuremberg Psychiatrist.” San Francisco Chronicle, February 6, 2005.

  Sauckel, Fritz, to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Schacht, Hjalmar Horace Greeley. Confessions of “the Old Wizard”; Autobiography. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1955.

  Schaefer, Virginia Chumley. “Virginia’s Reel” [Chattanooga], 1945. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Schirach, Baldur von. “Dem Tod.” [“To Death”]. 1945. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Schroeder, Christa, to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, April 1, 1952. MS. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Schurr, Cathleen. “The Gods Come Down.” 1946. MS 229, Box 3:9. Special Collections, University of California, Santa Cruz.

  Schwarz, Wolfgang. “Hermann Rorschach, M.D.: His Life and Work.” Rorschachiana: Journal of the International Society for the Rorschach 21, no. 1 (1996): 6–17.

  Sears, Robert R., to William Mandel, September 8, 1985. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Semantics Held Key to Clarity in Thought.” Denver Post, July 21, 1949.

  “SF Doctor Predicts How 11 Nazis Will Die.” San Francisco Examiner, October 15, 1946.

  “S.F. Psychiatrist Is Amazed at Goering Suicide.” San Francisco Chronicle, October 16, 1946.

  Shurkin, Joel N. Terman’s Kids: The Groundbreaking Study of How the Gifted Grow Up. Boston: Little, Brown, 1992.

  Sprecher, Drexel A. Inside the Nuremberg Trial: A Prosecutor’s Comprehensive Account. Vols. I–II. Lanham, MD: University of America, 1999.

  Stack, Robert I. “The Capture of Goering.” n.d. 36th Infantry Division Association. http://www.kwanah.com/36division/ps/ps0277.htm.

  “Streicher’s Lewd Sex Library May Play Part in Trial.” October 20, 1945. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Stringer, Ann. “Hess’s Aloofness Fails: Talks to Old Partners in World Crime.” Dunkirk Evening Observer, November 20, 1945.

  Summers, Scott. “Graylyn Ready for Treatment of Mental Ills.” August 17, 1947. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Teich, Frederick. “Inventory: Alfred Rosenberg.” 1945. MS MLR P 20, Box 3. National Archives and Records Administration.

  ———. “Inventory: Hermann Goering.” 1945. MS MLR P 20. National Archives and Records Administration.

  ———. “Inventory: Rudolf Hess.” 1945. MS MLR P 20, Box 4. National Archives and Records Administration.

  “Tells Need of Training People to Grow up.” Los Angeles Evening Herald Express, April 1, 1952.

  Terman, Lewis, to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, June 23, 1955. MS. File “1955.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Therapeutic Progress.” The American Practitioner 48 (1914): 601–602.

  “They Can’t Tie Him.” Oakland Post-Inquirer, February 24, 1932.

  “Time-Bender Idea Bodes Ill for Russ.” Associated Press, 1947. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Totalitarianism Discussed.” Winston-Salem Sentinel, June 26, 1947.

  “The Trial of Adolf Eichmann (Session 55, Part 1).” n.d. Nizkor.org, http://www.nizkor.org/hweb/people/e/eichmann-adolf/transcripts/Sessions/Session-055–01.html.

  “The Trial of Adolf Eichmann (Session 55, Part 9).” n.d. Nizkor.org, http://www.nizkor.org/hweb/people/e/eichmann-adolf/transcripts/Sessions/Session-055–09.html.

  Triest, Howard. Telephone interview with author. January 2012.

  Tucker, George. “Doctors Seek Way to Clear Hess’s Mind, Put Him on Trial.” Fresno Bee, November 5, 1945.

  ———. “Hess Gloomily Views Newsreels of Himself.” San Francisco Examiner, November 9, 1945.

  ———. “‘I Feel Better,’ Hess Says after Confessing Ruse.” Los Angeles Times, November 30, 1945.

  Tusa, Ann, and John Tusa. The Nuremberg Trial. New York: Atheneum, 1984.

  “UC Criminologist Dr. Douglas Kelley Killed by Poison.” Berkeley Gazette, January 2, 1958.

  “UC Doctors Use Drug to Aid Psychiatric Test.” San Francisco Examiner, January 22, 1942.

  “U.C. ‘Houdini’ Sirkus Stunt.” Oakland Post-Inquirer, February 24, 1932.

  “UC Man Develops New ‘Truth Serum’ Method.” Berkeley Gazette, 1950. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “UC Man Reports Better Truth Serum.” 1949. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “UC’s Dr. Kelley, Crime Expert, Commits Suicide.” San Francisco Chronicle, January 2, 1958.

  University of California. “U.S. Neglects Mental Disease Research.” 1942. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  University of California, Berkeley. School of Criminology. Press Release. September 30, 1954. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Untitled News Clip. 1945. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Urban, Markus. The Nuremberg Trials: A Short Guide. Nürnberg: Sandberg, 2008.

  “U.S. Experts to Study Dr. Ley’s Damaged Brain.” Chicago Daily Tribune, November 1, 1945.

  Volz, Matt. “Montana Pilot, 99, Recalls Flying Goering.” Azcentral.com, January 29, 2011. http://www.azcentral.com/offbeat/articles/2011/01/29/20110129montana-pilot-recalls-goering-flight-ON.html.

  Waggoner, Walter H. “Walter Langer Is Dead at 82; Wrote Secret Study of Hitler.” New York Times, July 10, 1981.

  Walker, James. “Lessons of War Will Help Now.” Greenville News, February 19, 1947.

  Walker, Keith. A Trail of Corn. Santa Rosa, CA: Golden Door, 1995.

  Waller, Douglas C. Wild Bill Donovan: The Spymaster Who Created the OSS and Modern American Espionage. New York: Free, 2011.

  Waller, James. Becoming Evil: How Ordinary People Commit Genocide and Mass Killing. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.

  Walsh, Maurice N. “Historical Responsibili
ty of the Psychiatrist.” Archives of General Psychiatry 11, no. 4 (1964): 355–359.

  ———. Memorandum: “Interview with Prisoner #7.” 1948. MS. History of Medicine Collection, the Mayo Clinic.

  ———. War and the Human Race. New York: Elsevier, 1971.

  “Wedding Announcement.” n.d. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Wertham, Frederick. “A Psychiatrist Examines the Master-criminals at Nuremberg: Review of 22 Cells at Nuremberg.” New York Times, February 2, 1947.

  West, Rebecca. A Train of Powder. New York: Viking, 1955.

  Whitman, Howard. “Blots on Your Character.” Woman’s Home Companion (January 1947). Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “Wife Who Killed Sons Called Insane.” 1952. Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  Williams, Lena. “Dr. Gustave Gilbert Dead at 65; Trial Psychologist at Nuremberg.” New York Times, February 7, 1977.

  Wilson, O. W., to Douglas McGlashan Kelley, July 26, 1949. MS. File “1949.” Douglas M. Kelley Personal Papers.

  “WWII Adolf Hitler Profile Suggests ‘Messiah Complex’.” BBC News, April 4, 2012. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17949037.

  Wyllie, James. The Warlord and the Renegade: The Story of Hermann and Albert Goering. Stroud, UK: Sutton, 2006.

  Zillmer, Eric A., Molly Harrower, Barry A. Ritzler, and Robert P. Archer. The Quest for the Nazi Personality: A Psychological Investigation of Nazi War Criminals. Routledge, 1995.

  INDEX

  Abbott, Burton, 187–188, 215

  Abbott, Georgia, 215

  Adler, Herman Morris, 178–179

  Aggression, Nazi Germany and, 70

  Alcoholism, 167

  Ambition, of Nazis, 157

  Amen, John, 116

  Andrus, Burton C.

  animosity towards Göring, 8, 10–11

  as Ashcan commandant, 6, 7–8

  on danger facing Nazi prisoners, 55

  on defendants at trial, 132

  direction to separate prisoners at lunch, 139–140

  disposition of Göring jewelry and, 154

  Gilbert and, 104

  Göring family visit and, 148

  Göring’s complaints to, 21

  on Göring’s pill collection, 13–14

  Göring suicide and, 150–151

  Hess and, 84

  Hess’s amnesia and, 137

 

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