You might find this funny. The last time I sent it out, everyone thought I had fallen off my rocker... "The Professor was unconscious of the passage of time, the atmosphere in the room, or the necessity for food and drink. He was a thin little white-haired man with large spectacles who was standing behind his desk talking enthusiast- ically about a little-known variety of louse. Lice were the Professor's life. For thirty years they had filled his thoughts during the day and spilled into his dreams at night. He had, at points during that time, married and raised five children, but he was only faintly aware of these occurrences. The fore- ground of his mind was filled by lice. He spent his time in his own small laboratory on the top floor of the hospital wholly occupied in studying their habits. He rarely came near his students. He left the teaching to his as- sitants and considered he had done his share by occasionalyy wandering round the students' laboratory, which he did with the bemused air of a man whose wife has invited a lot of people he didn't know to a party. He insisted, however, in giving to each class a series of lectures on his specialty. He was the greatest authority on lice in the world, and when he lectured to o other pathologists in Melbourne, Chicago, Oslo, or Bombay, men would eagerly cross half a continent to hear him. But the students of his own hospital, who had only the effort of shifting themselves out of the sofas in the common room, came ungracefully and ungratefully, and found it all rather boring." Gordon Ostlere, "Doctor in the House," 1952.