Word: cheeks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Bulganin playfully pinched the cheek of an American security guard; at a reception, Khrushchev patted LIFE's Photographer Carl Mydans on the shoulder...
After one rare evening that ended in a Brahms string sextet played by Casals, with Violinists Menuhin and Arpad Gerescz. Violists Ernst Wallfisch and Karen Tuttle and Cellist Madeline Foley, the Queen left the audience and walked up onto the stage. Menuhin greeted her with a kiss on the cheek, then led her backstage to congratulate the shy Casals and the other members of the sextet...
...Victims of tic douloureux, an excruciating form of neuralgia, said Philadelphia's Neurosurgeon J. Rudolph Jaeger, are often too feeble for radical surgery, and lose their faith in doctors because most medical treatments give only short-lived relief. Under light general anesthesia, a needle is pushed through the cheek to the base of the skull, the surgeon following it by X ray. When it hits the Gasserian ganglion, he injects scalding water (158°F.), which kills the sensory nerves. Dr. Jaeger has had good results in 27 of 32 tic victims, and some success with facial cancer patients...
...only non-Elephant who won a first place in Friday's field events was Marion Cheek of Leverett who threw the 12-pound shot 58 feet, 8 1/4 inches. Nick Ludington, Phil Eastabrooks, Fletcher Hodges and Tony Gianelly, all of Eliot, won the broad jump, javelin, high jump, and discus events respectively...
Leverett: Frank H. Baker, Marion A. Cheek, Lindsay E. Fishcer, Paul G. Gamble, Jr., David F. Hawkins, David P. Segal...