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Out of the Running

JAMA. 1939;112(25):2629. doi:10.1001/jama.1939.02800250053033.
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ABSTRACT

Gertrude Hoopes is in many ways far from being "out of the running," though she is severely handicapped by infantile cerebral palsy. Practically unable to walk, she gets about on a specially constructed tricycle; unable to talk, she has evolved a shorthand sign language and joins conversations by pointing to letters of the alphabet. Despite her handicaps, she has lived a very active life and has enjoyed the friendship of many cultured and prominent persons. Throughout the book one is continually reminded that through her religious faith she was able to conquer feelings of depression and morbidity which would assail her when she contemplated how different her life was from that of the normal person. So strong were these feelings that on two occasions she attempted suicide, but so strong has her belief in religion become that never since has the thought of suicide troubled her. Infantile cerebral palsy is

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