Monday, Jan. 17, 1944
Tattoo Suspected
A tattooed man is one and a half times as likely to be rejected by the U.S. armed forces as an unillustrated man. He is one and a half times as likely to be a psychiatric rejection. This conclusion was forced upon Captain Joseph Lander and Corporal Harold M. Kohn as a result of thousands of psychiatric examinations of recruits. The two Army examiners, who report their findings in the American Journal of Psychiatry, also conclude that:
P:About 58% of rejected tattooees are rejected for neuropsychiatric abnormalities.
P:A man with a siren tattooed on his arm is more likely to be abnormal than a man with a flag or a landscape. The psychologists' dark suspicion: the nude-flaunter is merely trying to persuade spectators of an insincere interest in women.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.