Jim and Dougster, I thought I'd tell you something funny. I guess some wonder how a polio victim passed the physical to get on the police department and I can tell you my career was an accident.
In the '60s, a Dr. Wharton was #2 man at the city health department, and he was the one who handled the physicals for police and fire applicants. He rejected everyone he could for any reason he could, so in spite of me going to see him 3 times, trying to prove I could do anything anyone else could, he simply was NOT going to pass me. As he said, "Yeah, maybe you're OK now, but you'll want a disability pension before you put in your 20 years."
So, I finally made an early afternoon appointment to see Dr. Bass, who was the head man at the health department. On the way to that appointment, I really wasn't paying any attention to the news on the car radio, but they mentioned that Dr. Bass was being awarded some "Man of the Year" or some such thing by the Lions Club, or Kiawanis, or Odd Fellows (one of those groups anyway) at their noon luncheon. When I got to his office, his secretary said he wasn't back from lunch yet. So I waited, and it dawned on me where he was. So when he arrived, he went straight into his office, and Dr. Wharton went into Dr. Bass's office, and the secretary. When the secretary came out, she said I could go in. So I walked in there, straight to Dr. Bass's desk, reached across the desk to shake hands, and said, "Congratulations, Dr. Bass on (and now I've forgotten exactly what the award was)". The old gentleman beamed from ear to ear.
So he asked if my left foot ever bothered me and I replied in the negative. Then he asked me to take off the shoe and sock so he could see the scars on the top of that foot. And then he turned to Dr. Wharton and said, "Aw, let's give'im a chance." Dr. Wharton glared at me over the top of the little eyeglasses he wore, and said, "Alright, but don't you dare limp going out of here."
So, I'd probably have never been able to get on the police department if Dr. Bass hadn't received that award.

I went on to graduate #1 in my recruit class of 29, am the only one from that class to attain the rank of captain, and I retired about 2 months and 5 days short of
25 years, on a "long service" pension; not disability.

Darn it, if it had been disability, it sure would have saved me a lot of money in income tax.
