The fun-loving medical students at the University of Toronto in 1929 published a pamphlet entitled Epistaxis which was somewhat on the order of a medical school class book, full of buffoonery aimed especially at the foibles of the faculty. It was printed for Daffydil Night, apparently an annual event at which the students presented a series of dramatic caricature vignettes. Conceived and carefully nurtured during the school year the publication was delivered "prematurely with the aid of ergot and axis traction." Among the "Facts About Sage People" I found the following pediatric profile: