^ could do any more against the
selecting a mate. We didn't know each
idn't know each other's families. And we
1 future."
1
OaI J
SHIRLEY K. and SUYDAM OSTERHOUT
ou increase. When they're three, they need
/hen they're six, they need car pools and
copy notes, so only one of us had to
get up for an 8 o'clock class.”
Later when they both taught
public health and pediatrics in
Ethiopia, they found they could
substitute for each other in teaching.
"When he had hepatitis, I carried on
his classes," Kimm said, "and when I
had typhoid fever, he carried on for
me.
Syd Osterhout sometimes
substitutes for his wife when the
parents of her pediatric patients call
for advice. "I'll tell them what we do
for diaper rash or the common cold
or even give poison control advice,"
he said.
(Continued on page 4)
V
DRS. LAURA T. and ROBERT A. GUTMAN