The Nazi and the Psychiatrist (38 page)

4   
Someone found a slightly larger plane
Volz, “Montana Pilot, 99, Recalls Flying Goering.”
5   
Emmy and Edda Göring
Lebert and Lebert,
My Father’s Keeper
, 202.
6   
perhaps to make him more cooperative
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 30.
6   
enjoyed attention from the international press
Manvell and Fraenkel, Goering, 327.
6   
“You will soon be free”
Gunkel, “How a Top Nazi’s Brother Saved Lives.”
6   
Göring chose his longtime servant
Manvell and Fraenkel,
Goering
, 327.
6   
US soldiers preparing for transports
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 22–23; Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 84.
7   
urgently requested female company
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial
, 45.
7   
spent his final days of freedom
Sprecher,
Inside the Nuremberg Trial
.
7   
Andrus took charge of fifty-two
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial
, 42.
7   
“either by fanatical Nazis trying to rescue”
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 23.
7   
A group of 176 Luxembourgers
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 98.
7   
“plump little figure”
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 14.
7   
the colonel was a lean water-polo enthusiast
Ibid., 15–17.
8   
disrespect he encountered from the gum-chewing American guards
Manvell and Fraenkel,
Goering
, 328.
8   
such items as jewel-encrusted military medals
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 88; Teich, “Inventory: Hermann Goering.”
8   
He bragged that one of the rings
Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg
, 68.
9   
now empty except for a flimsy table
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 29–30.
9   
“Had he sat on the table”
Ibid., 40.
9   
Concerns about suicide also prompted
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 94.
9   
“in very poor physical condition”
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 31.
9   
he often imbued his rising
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 85.
9   
Just before Kropp’s departure from Mondorf
Manvell and Fraenkel,
Goering
, 329.
10   
Göring asked Eisenhower to fly him out
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 46–47.
10   
“Whereas I do not desire to stand in the way”
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 95.
10   
“This food isn’t as good”
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 40.
11   
“the fat man in endless screenplays”
Neave,
On Trial at Nuremberg
, 71.
11   
once shot down and was credited with destroying
Tusa and Tusa, Nuremberg Trial, 496.
11   
“You’ve got to have bayonets”
Gilbert,
Psychology of Dictatorship
, 92.
11   
“that meant I could soon be a big man”
Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg
, 56.
11   
“Hermann will either be a great man”
Gilbert,
Psychology of Dictatorship
, 88.
12   
“For Hitler, Göring was a warrior”
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans
, 67.
12   
Göring exploded with laughter
Neave,
On Trial at Nuremberg
, 66.
13   
he gathered tame lions
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans
, 63.
13   
Only Gestapo chief Ernst Kaltenbrunner’s reluctance
Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg
, 66–67.
13   
“I felt you should see this, sir”
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 30.
14   
Göring had hoarded a much bigger stash
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans
, 66.
14   
“a relatively rare narcotic”
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 31.
14   
Hoover asked to be kept apprised
Hoover, “Hermann Goering.”
14   
“Imagine my being featured”
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 102.
14   
“Paracodeine fills a gap”
“Therapeutic Progress.”
16   
“from a Machiavellian villain”
Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg
, 51.
16   
As a boy he had visited the Grand Hotel”
Curnutte, “Interrogator Recalls Talks.”
16   
“We didn’t have to use artificial devices”
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 104.
17   
“12 lbs at birth”
Kelley, Bound Notebook of Interview Notes.
17   
The prisoner’s collection of toiletries
Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg
, 58–59.
17   
“truly massive baubles”
Ibid., 68.
20   
“When he was captured”
Kelley, “Clinical Summary.”
20   
“not an unusually large dose”
Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg
, 57.
20   
“It was the need to do something”
Ibid., 57–58.
21   
“he had whined and complained”
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 34–36.
22   
“He fancied looking like the hero”
Dolibois,
Pattern of Circles
, 88.
22   
“This concession was granted”
Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg
, 59.
22   
A doctor called it just a palpitation
Andrus,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer
, 34.

CHAPTER 3: THE PSYCHIATRIST

23   
“You are to contact Captain Miller”
Executive Command, “Carrier Sheet.”
23   
“Some went as far as to propose”
Pick,
Pursuit of the Nazi Mind
, 126.
25   
“Our house sang out from the hill”
McGlashan,
Give Me a Mountain Meadow
, 4–6, 95.
26   
“Give me a mountain meadow”
Ibid., 70.
26   
McGlashan tracked down Keseberg
Ibid., 105–107.
26   
In the decades that followed
Ibid., 96.
27   
This all-consuming project took a toll
Ibid., 109–113, 141.
27   
He collected splinters of wood
Ibid., 159.
27   
McGlashan’s polymath interests
Ibid., 141–145, 152.
28   
They practiced together
Ibid., 183.
28   
When publicly challenged
Ibid., 217.
28   
Before arguing a case
Ibid., 182.
28   
“The ring of steel”
Ibid., 182.
29   
“Super-vitality, courage”
Kelley, “Personal File, to 1937.”
29   
Douglas’s measured IQ
Sears to Mandel.
29   
Terman kept close tabs
Friedman and Martin,
Longevity Project
, 53.
29   
the 1,444 children
Shurkin,
Terman’s Kids
, 36.
29   
he had amassed collections
Kelley “Personal File, to 1937.”
30   
These feats included driving a car
“Faculty Will Not Examine Float Entries.”
30   
Kelley emulated Harry Houdini
“They Can’t Tie Him.”
30   
president of the San Francisco Society of Magicians
“Former Local Boy Given Major Scholarship in East.”
30   
working as a magician strengthens
“Magic Helps Treat Insane.”

Other books

The Gale of the World by Henry Williamson
Hero Engine by Nader, Alexander
Viracocha by Alberto Vázquez-Figueroa
Bite This! by Tasha Black
The Tree In Changing Light by Roger McDonald