Word: cheeks
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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HARVARD--10, Lewis (HB); 12, White (HB); 14, Oehmler (HB); 15, Fyock (HB); 16, Cheek (HB); 21, Conzelman (QB); 23, Michelsen (QB); 30, Volmer (FB); 31, Messer (FB); Reynolds (FB); 33, MacDonald (FB); 41, Lowenstein (HB); 42, Murphy (HB); 43, Hoffmann (HB); 44, Crosby (HB); 50, Meyer (C); 51, Culbert (C); 52, Coon (C); 63, MacDowell (G); 65, Anthony G; 66, Caimi (G); 68, D. Wober (G); 69, Templeton (G); 71, Koch (RT); 72, Rosenthal (T); 73, Tice (LT); 74, Fremont-Smith (LT); 76, Pfahl (T); 77, Maher (RT); 79, Volkert (RT); 80, Cochran (LE); 81, Popell (RE); 82, Yoffe...
...grace of cheek or nose...
...back through Abilene, in front of St. Andrew's Church, Ike suddenly ordered his chauffeur to stop the car when a woman broke through the crowd and dashed into the street. The President greeted her with a warm kiss on the cheek and announced that she was Mrs. Gladys Brooks, his high-school sweetheart. On the way back to Salina, Ike halted the motorcade once more at a drive-in melon market. He enthusiastically accepted a dripping slice of cantaloupe from the flabbergasted proprietors, bought two watermelons to take along with...
...advertised that he had to sell 131 cars in 48 hours. The inference was that he would make a good deal, and customers nocked to his showrooms. Without benefit of discounts or special deals, McKay easily sold the cars. In Denver, Ford Dealer Richard Whitfield ran a tongue-in-cheek ad:"Bring your old car, horse, cow, goat or chickens. We'll trade for anything." To Whitfield's surprise, some brought horses, sheep and chinchillas, and 35 cars were sold...
Like many another medical journal, London's Lancet has printed reams of advice to doctors on how to behave toward their patients. Now the Lancet has let a layman turn the table and tell how the patient should treat the doctor. With tongue firmly planted in cheek, Londoner Marguerite A. Sieghart wrote...