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Psychopath

THE MASK OF SANITY

Section 2: The Material

Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations

8. Tom

 

 

Energy Enhancement          Enlightened Texts         Psychopath           The Mask Of Sanity

 

 

8. Tom

This young man, 21 years of age, does not look at all like a criminal type or a

shifty delinquent. In fact, he stands out in remarkable contrast to the kind of patient

suggested by such a term as constitutional inferiority. He does not fit satisfactorily into

the sort of picture that emerges from early descriptions of people generally inadequate

and often showing physical "stigmata of degeneracy" or ordinary defectiveness.123,249

Tom looks and is in robust physical health. His manner and appearance are

pleasing. In his face a prospective employer would be likely to see strong indications of

character as well as high incentive and ability. He is well informed, alert, and entirely at

ease, exhibiting a confidence in himself that the observer is likely to consider amply

justified. This does not look like the sort of man who will fail or flounder about in the

tasks of life but like someone incompatible with all such thoughts.

There is nothing to suggest that he is putting on a bold front or trying to adopt

any attitude or manner that will be misleading. Though he knows the examiner has

evidence of his almost incredible career, he gives such an impression that it seems for

the moment likely he will be able to explain it all away. In his own mind he has

evidently brushed aside so satisfactorily such matters as those to be mentioned that

others, also, caught up in the magic of his equanimity, almost share his invulnerable

disregard.

Tom has so plainly escaped the ordinary and, one would think, the inevitable

consequences of his experience that, in a sort of contagion, his interviewer is also

affected. The effect is to make it seem more plausible to accept the whole detailed

reality of a life as dream or illusion than believe that this man could so regard it were it

otherwise. With indisputable evidence that a human being has been run over and

dismembered by a series of freight trains and that the bodily remnants have

subsequently been put through a sausage grinder, any investigator will have definite and

vivid preconceptions of what he will behold. The evidence itself bleaches, suddenly and

automatically, at the sight of the intact victim, whole, smiling, immaculate, unscarred,

without a scratch. What happened to the anatomic unit in this allusion scarcely seems

more drastic than what, as a social unit, the patient before me had experienced.

This poised young man's immediate problem was serious but not monumental.

His family and legal authorities were in hope that if some psychiatric disorder could be

discovered in him, he might escape a jail sentence for stealing. Despite many years of

disappointment, the family still sought

THE MATERIAL 65

some remedy, some treatment or handling, that might bring about favorable changes in

the patient's behavior. Those concerned with the legal aspects of the immediate

problem had dealt with this man often in the past and saw in his conduct indications of

something more than, and something different from, an ordinary or sane antisocial

scheme of existence. His high intelligence made it difficult for them to account for

what he did on that basis.

Evidence of his maladjustment became distinct in childhood. He appeared to be

a reliable and manly fellow but could never be counted upon to keep at any task or to

give a straight account of any situation. He was frequently truant from school. No

advice or persuasion influenced him in his acts, despite his excellent response in all

discussions. Though he was generously provided for, he stole some of his father's

chickens from time to time, selling them at stores downtown. Pieces of table silver

would be missed. These were sometimes recovered from those to whom he had sold

them for a pittance or swapped them for odds and ends which seemed to hold no

particular interest or value for him. He resented and seemed eager to avoid punishment,

but no modification in his behavior resulted from it. He did not seem wild or

particularly impulsive, a victim of high temper or uncontrollable drives. There was

nothing to indicate he was subject to unusually strong temptations, lured by definite

plans for high adventure and exciting revolt.

Often when truant from high school classes, Tom wandered more or less

aimlessly, sometimes shooting at a Negro's chickens, setting fire to a rural privy around

the outskirts of town, or perhaps loitering about a cigar store or a poolroom, reading the

comics, throwing rocks at squirrels in a park, perpetrating small thefts or swindles. He

often charged things in stores to his father and stole small items, cigarettes, candy,

cigars, which he sometimes gave away freely to slight acquaintances or other idlers he

encountered. Though many wasteful, inopportune, and punishable deeds were correctly

attributed to him, these apparently were only a small fraction of his actual achievement

along this line.

He lied so plausibly and with such utter equanimity, devised such ingenious alibis

or simply denied all responsibility with such convincing appearances of candor that for

many years his real career was poorly estimated. Among typical exploits with which he

is credited stand these: prankish defecation into the stringed intricacies of the school

piano, the removal from his uncle's automobile of a carburetor for which he got 75

cents, and the selling of his father's overcoat to a passing buyer of scrap materials.

Though he often fell in with groups or small gangs, he never for long identified

himself with others in a common cause. In the more outlandish

66 THE MASK OF SANITY

and serious outcroppings of group mischief, he sometimes played a prominent role.

With several others he broke into a summer cottage on a nearby lake, stole a few

articles, overturned all the furniture, and threw rugs, dishes, etc., out of the window. He

and a few more teenage boys on another expedition smashed headlights and windshields

on several automobiles, punctured a number of tires, and rolled one car down a slope,

leaving it slightly battered and bogged in a ditch.

At 14 or 15 years of age, having learned to drive, Tom began to steal automobiles

with some regularity. Often his intention seemed less that of theft than of heedless

misappropriation. A neighbor or friend of the family, going to the garage or to where

the car was parked outside an office building, would find it missing. Sometimes the

patient would leave the stolen vehicle within a few blocks or miles of the owner,

sometimes out on the road where the gasoline had given out. After he had tried to sell a

stolen car, his father consulted advisers and, on the theory that he might have some

specific craving for automobiles, bought one for him as a therapeutic measure. On one

occasion while out driving, he deliberately parked his own car and, leaving it, stole an

inferior model which he left slightly damaged on the outskirts of a village some miles

away.

Meanwhile, Tom continued to forge his father's name to small checks and steal

change, pocketknives, textbooks, at school. Occasionally, on the pretext of ownership

he would sell a dog or a calf belonging to some member of the community. His youth

made long terms of imprisonment seem inappropriate, it being felt that this might

confirm him in a criminal career or teach him additional and more malignant antisocial

techniques. He was ineligible for the state hospital.

Private physicians, scoutmasters, and social workers were consulted. They talked

and worked with him, but to no avail. Listing the deeds for which he became ever more

notable does not give an adequate picture of the situation. He did not every day or

every week bring attention to himself by major acts of mischief or destructiveness. He

was usually polite, often considerate in small, appealing ways, and always seemed to

have learned his lesson after detection and punishment. He was clever and learned

easily. During intervals in which his attendance was regular, he impressed his teachers

as outstanding in ability. Some charm and apparent modesty, as well as his very

convincing way of seeming sincere and to have taken resolutions that would count, kept

not only the parents but all who encountered him clinging to hope. Teachers,

scoutmasters, the school principal, etc., recognized that in some very important respects

he differed from the ordinary bad or wayward youth, made special efforts to help him

and to give him new opportunities to reform or readjust.

THE MATERIAL 67

When he drove a stolen automobile across a state line, he came in contact with

federal authorities. In view of his youth and the wonderful impression he made, he was

put on probation. Soon afterward he took another automobile and again left it in the

adjoining state. It was a very obvious situation. The consequences could not have been

entirely overlooked by a person of his excellent shrewdness. He admitted that the

considerable risks of getting caught had occurred to him but felt he had a chance to

avoid detection and would take it. No unusual and powerful motive or any special aim

could be brought out as an explanation.

Tom was sent to a federal institution in a distant state where a well organized

program of rehabilitation and guidance was available. He soon impressed authorities at

this place with his attitude and in the way he discussed his past mistakes and plans for a

different future. He seemed to merit parole status precociously and this was awarded

him. It was not long before he began stealing again and thereby lost his freedom.

The impression he made during confinement was so promising that he was

pardoned before the expiration of the regular term and he came home confident,

buoyant, apparently matured, and thoroughly rehabilitated. Considerable work had

been done with him at the institution, and he seemed to respond well to psychiatric

measures. He found employment in a drydock at a nearby port and talked modestly but

convincingly of the course he would now follow, expressing aims and plans few could

greatly improve.

His employers found him at first energetic, bright, and apparently enthusiastic

about the work. Soon evidence of inexplicable irresponsibility emerged and

accumulated. Sometimes he missed several days and brought simple but convincing

excuses of illness. As the occasions multiplied, explanations so detailed and elaborate

were made that it seemed only facts could have produced them. Later he sometimes left

the job, stayed away for hours, and gave no account of his behavior except to say that

he did not feel like working at the time.

There seemed to be no cause for dissatisfaction, no discernible change in his

attitude toward the work. When he chose to apply himself, he did better than most. It

was plain to the employers that this promising young man was not merely lazy or, in an

ordinary way, fretfully restless.

The theft of an automobile brought Tom to jail again. He expressed remorse

over his mistake, talked so well, and seemed so genuinely and appropriately motivated

and determined that his father, by making heavy financial settlements, secured his

release. After a number of relatively petty but annoying activities, another theft made it

necessary for his family to intervene.

Reliable information indicates that he has been arrested and imprisoned

68 THE MASK OF SANITY

approximately fifty or sixty times. It is known that he would have been put in jails or

police barracks for short or long periods of detention on approximately 150 other

occasions if his family had not made good his small thefts and damages and paid fines

for him.

Sometimes he was arrested for fomenting brawls, for initiating fights, or for such

high-handed and disturbing behavior as to constitute public nuisance. Though.not a

very regular drinker or one who characteristically drank to sodden confusion or

stupefaction, he often exhibited unsociable and unprepossessing manners and conduct

after taking even a few beers or highballs. In one juke joint imbroglio he is credited

with having struck a fellow reveler on the head with a piece of iron. No serious injuries

resulted, although great uproar and spectacular commotion prevailed. Under similar

circumstances he was involved in, or on the fringes of, an altercation in which gunplay

occurred and the other man received a minor flesh wound. Meanwhile, he continued to

forge his father's name to checks, often insisted on sleeping through breakfast, obtained

loans through ingenious misrepresentations, and ran up debts which he simply ignored.

Tom's mother had for some years suffered special anxiety and distress because of

his unannounced absences. After telling her good-bye, saying he was going downtown

for a Coca-Cola or to a to movie, he might not appear for several days or even for a

couple of weeks. Instead of his returning, a long-distance telephone call might in the

middle of the night arouse the father, who would be entreated to come at once to

nearby or distant places where the son had encountered unpleasant events or, perhaps,

restraint by the police.

He expressed particularly heavy penitence for all the worry and sleepless nights

he had caused his mother, maintaining that he loved her dearly and that nothing about

his life so displeased him as having given her even a moment's distress. He spoke as if

with feeling about the patience, generosity, and understanding of his father and seemed

to believe the filial bond was unusually fine and satisfactory.

Recently, an elderly friend of the family who was in town on business learned

something of the situation. This man, whose experience in dealing with other people

and their problems was considerable (and very successful), undertook the task of

helping the lad. Though he had heard a good deal about past exploits, he could not but

feel hopeful after his first talk. A little later he took the patient with them on an

automobile ride, feeling that in this way he could bring the problem to full discussion by

a more natural, informal approach.

The conversation, once begun, developed amazingly. The younger man not only

promised to behave from now on in an exemplary fashion but

THE MATERIAL 69

analyzed and discussed his past in such a way that the older found there was little that

could be added. Despite his interest and his experience in such matters, he had seldom,

if ever, encountered a more plausible interpretation of human mistakes and social

confusion, of how distortion of aims and maladjustment develop out of the complicated

influences and situations of modern living. Even more than the pertinent presentation

of cause and effect and the cogent steps proposed for solution, the young man's

appearance of sincerity in all these realizations impressed the older counselor. He spoke

as the wisest and most contrite of men would speak and seemed to have a more detailed

and deeper understanding of his entire situation than even the most sagacious observer

could reach.

The patient talked not only of what he would avoid but discussed plans for work

and recreation, for development and progressive maturation. Tom emphasized how his

irregular hours and unforeseen absences had kept his parents much of the time not sure

whether he was dead or alive. Before the ride was over, the judicious counselor was

encouraged and deeply optimistic. In addition, he was so impressed by points this

young man had brought out and by his apparent earnestness and resolution that he felt

himself wiser from the experience. Moved and stimulated, he admitted that he had

obtained new and valuable viewpoints on life and deeper seriousness. He had been

stimulated to review his own patterns of behavior and to seek a better and more

progressive plan of self-expression. In this frame of mind he bade the patient goodnight,

letting him out of the car at the front gate of the parents' home.

The patient did not even enter the house. After going in the gate, he walked

through the grounds, went out by a back entrance, and was not heard from that night.

He was not, in fact, heard from for a week. News then came of his being in jail again at

a nearby town where he had forged, stolen trifles, run up debts, and carried out other

behavior familiar to all who knew him.

This young man apparently has never formed any substantial attachment for

another person. Sexually he has been desultorily promiscuous under a wide variety of

circumstances. A year or two earlier he married a girl who had achieved considerable

local recognition as a prostitute and as one whose fee was moderate. He had previously

shared her offerings during an evening (on a commercial basis) with friends or with

brief acquaintances among whom he found himself. He soon left the bride and never

showed signs of shame or chagrin about the character of the woman he had espoused

or of any responsibility toward her.

During the war Tom maintained over some months an offhand relationship with

the wife of a man in combat overseas. When in town he ate at her

70 THE MASK OF SANITY

house, sometimes slept there with her, but was as heedless of her and her feelings as of

his parents. She apparently suffered some anxiety when, after making plans and

promises to do something special with her, he disappeared and she heard nothing from

him until he called her from another city (reversing the charges) to chat casually and

sometimes to speak eloquent words of endearment. Sometimes he took precautions to

deceive her about his sporadic sex relations with other women; sometimes he forgot or

did not bother.

On returning from his trips during the war, he sometimes told interesting stories

of having been for a time in the Navy, narrating with vivid and lifelike plausibility action

in which he had participated and which led to the destruction of a German submarine

off Jamaica or the pursuit of a raiding warship off the coast of Greenland. Again he

would talk at length about his experiences transporting airplanes from Miami to Havana

or accidents leading to hospitalization and operation and diverse adventures with nurses,

other patients, interns, etc. Once, during a stag party discussion of venereal disease, he

even fabricated an account of having caught one or more of these unenviable maladies

and enlightened his listeners about treatments he had received, drugs, dosage, and

complications.

None of these fraudulent stories had a real element of delusion. When really

caught in the lie about any of them and confronted with definite proof, he often laughed

and passed it off as a sort of joke.

After these events and many others similar in general but differing in detail, Tom

seemed modestly pleased with himself, effortlessly confident of the future. He gave the

impression of a young man fresh and unhardened, in no respect brutalized or worn by

his past experiences. He also seemed a poised fellow, one who would make his

decisions not in hotheaded haste but calmly, whether these were prompted by

immediate whim or by intentions he had much time to entertain.

 

Next: Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 9. George

 

Energy Enhancement          Enlightened Texts         Psychopath           The Mask Of Sanity

 

 

Section 2, Part 1

 

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 5. Max
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 5. Max, This patient first came to my attention years ago while I was serving my turn as officer of the day in a Veterans Administration psychiatric institution. His wife telephoned to the hospital for assistance, stating that Max had slipped away from her and had begun to make trouble again. With considerable urgency and apparent distress she explained that she was bringing him to be admitted as a patient and begged that a car with attendants be sent at once to her aid. He was found in the custody of the police, against whom he had made some resistance but much more vocal uproar. The resistance actually was only a show of resistance consisting for the most part of dramatically aggressive gestures made while he was too securely held to fight and extravagant boasts of his physical prowess and savage temper at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 6. Roberta
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 6. Roberta, This young woman, sitting now for the first time in my office, gave an impression that vaguely suggested-immaturity? The word is not entirely accurate for the impression. Immaturity might imply the guarded, withdrawn attitude often shown by children in the doctor's office. It was another, in fact, almost an opposite feeling that she gave. Something less than the average of self-consciousness, a sort of easy security that does not arise from effort or from pretense-some qualities of this nature seemed to enter into the impression at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 7. Arnold
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 7. Arnold, This patient had recently left the hospital (A.W.O.L.) while out on pass. The following letters arrived from him after a few days: Baltimore, April 4th, 19-- Saturday, 2 P.M at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 8. Tom
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 8. Tom, This young man, 21 years of age, does not look at all like a criminal type or a shifty delinquent. In fact, he stands out in remarkable contrast to the kind of patient suggested by such a term as constitutional inferiority. He does not fit satisfactorily into the sort of picture that emerges from early descriptions of people generally inadequate and often showing physical 'stigmata of degeneracy' or ordinary defectiveness at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 9. George
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 9. George, This man was 33 years of age at the time I first saw him and admitted him to a psychiatric hospital. He stated that his trouble was 'nervousness' but could give no definite idea of what he meant by this word. He was remarkably sell-composed, showed no indication of restlessness or anxiety, and could not mention anything that he worried about. He went on to state that his alleged nervousness was caused by 'shell shock' during the war. He then proceeded to elaborate on this in an outlandish story describing himself as being cast twenty feet into the air by a shell, landing in his descent at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 10. Pierre
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 10. Pierre, Some of the patients who have been presented give concrete and abundant evidence in their behavior of a serious maladjustment and one of long duration at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 11. Frank
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 11. Frank, The following letter was received by an influential senator in Washington and referred by him to the hospital at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 12. Anna
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 12. Anna, There was nothing spectacular about her, but when she came into the office you felt that she merited the attention she at once obtained. She was, you could say without straining a point, rather good-looking, but she was not nearly so good-looking as most women would have to be to make a comparable impression. She spoke in the crisp, fluttery cadence of the British, consistently sounding her 'r's' and 'ing's' and regularly saying 'been' as they do in London. For a girl born and raised in Georgia, such speaking could suggest affectation. Yet it was the very opposite of this quality that contributed a great deal to the pleasing effect she invariably produced on those who met her at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 13. Jack
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 13. Jack, My prolonged acquaintance with our next subject began on the occasion of his return for a fourth period of hospitalization. He was accompanied by the sheriff who had brought him from jail in Winston-Salem, N.C. He was affable and courteous, entirely rational in his conversation. Though rather carelessly dressed, he made an imposing figure of a man; he was 6 feet, 3 inches tall, weighed 210 pounds, had red hair, blue eyes, a quick, humorous glance, and a disarming smile. Though 45 years of age, he appeared to be in the early thirties. His body retained good athletic lines, and he sat or stood with an easy poise at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 14. Chester
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 14. Chester, In his first admission to the closed ward of a psychiatric hospital, Chester W., 24 years of age, was friendly and alert. His freedom from anything that would suggest an ordinary psychosis was immediately noticeable. He explained to the examiner that he did not suffer from any nervous or mental disorder and emphasized the statement that no question of such a condition had ever come up in his case. He said that he came to the hospital for further examination of a serious injury to his ankle which he sustained while in the army and for which he hoped to get a pension at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 15. Walter
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 15. Walter, Walter is an only child. In the old South Carolina city where he spent his early years, he is remembered by his first playmates as having been not only normal but also a particularly desirable friend. During his grammar school days he was a good but not an exceptionally bright pupil. He was happily at ease with boys his own age, being generally looked to as a leader, though never aloof or dictatorial. He was somewhat less inclined than usual to the more destructive forms of mischief so dear to the typical young male, yet no child could have been more secure from the taunts often evoked by primness or piety in the schoolboy. It is nothing short of incredible to imagine the term sissy, withering and still unhackneyed stigma of those times, ever having been applied to Walter by anyone. That term, in fact, could not have been defined better by those who used it than as his direct opposite at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 16. Joe
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 16. Joe, This patient came in the custody of two friends, both state officers in the American Legion, to apply for admission to the hospital. He had with him commitment papers showing that he had at his own request been declared incompetent. Joe was alert and intelligent and conducted himself in a manner that suggested a person of poise, good judgment, and firm resolution. He was anything but the sort of figure that might come to mind in thinking of a patient sent for admission to such an institution at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 17. Milt
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 17. Milt, An incomplete account of this patient will be offered. His behavior and his apparent subjective reactions differ little from those of the patients already presented at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 18. Gregory
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 18. Gregory, I first saw this patient when he was 13 years old. He was referred for study and treatment by a psychiatrist who had already tried to deal with his problems for several years and who had shown great personal interest in his complicated situation. Gregory came to me from the detention center in a large southern city where he had been confined after setting fire to the local cathedral. Though he did not succeed in causing serious damage to the cathedral, the exploit was considered daring and precocious for a boy of his age. Before he was controlled by confinement in the detention center he set another fire in a large apartment building that caused substantial damage at energyenhancement.org

  • Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 19. Stanley
    Psychopath Hervey Cleckley THE MASK OF SANITY, Section 2: The Material , Part 1: The disorder in full clinical manifestations, 19. Stanley, During the summer of 1972 a small item of news appeared in many of our daily newspapers over the country. It was an item that immediately engaged my attention at energyenhancement.org

 

 

 
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