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Each meniscus has an outer vascular zone (red-red zone), which has a good blood supply and healing potential as well as a central avascular zone (white-white zone), which has limited healing capability. [2] The medial meniscus is more prone to injury due to its firm attachment to the joint capsule and limited mobility.
Norwegian actor [109] Kathleen Harrison: 1892–1995: 103: British actress [110] Shinobu Hashimoto: 1918–2018: 100: Japanese film director, screenwriter, and producer [111] Johannes Heesters: 1903–2011: 108: Dutch actor, vocalist and performer [112] Bob Hope: 1903–2003: 100: British-born American actor and comedian [113] Mieczysław ...
Julian Chagrin (born 1940) John Challis (1942–2021) Geraldine Chaplin (born 1944) (born in Santa Monica, California, United States) Graham Chapman (1941–1989) Ian Charleson (1949–1990) Julie Christie (born 1940) (born in Chabua, India) Warren Clarke (1947–2014) Stephanie Cole (born 1941) David Collings (1940–2020) Lewis Collins (1946 ...
A tear of a meniscus is a rupturing of one or more of the fibrocartilage strips in the knee called menisci. When doctors and patients refer to "torn cartilage" in the knee, they actually may be referring to an injury to a meniscus at the top of one of the tibiae. Menisci can be torn during innocuous activities such as walking or squatting.
Back at Fox he was in a war movie, 20,000 Men a Year (1939). Scott went over to Warner Bros to make Virginia City (1940), billed third after Errol Flynn and Miriam Hopkins, playing Flynn's antagonist, a Confederate officer – but a sympathetic one, and not the actual villain (which was played by Humphrey Bogart).
Long before leading the X-Men as Professor X or commanding the USS Enterprise as Jean-Luc Picard on "Star Trek," Sir Patrick Stewart began acting in grade school in the 1940s and became a member ...
John Constantine Flippen Jr. (J.C. or Jay C.) (March 6, 1899 – February 3, 1971) was an American character actor who often played crusty sergeants, police officers or weary criminals in many 1940s and 1950s pictures, particularly in film noir. [1] Before his motion-picture career he was a leading vaudeville comedian and master of ceremonies.
In the mid-1940s, he was under a five-year contract to Edward Small. [10] O'Keefe starred in film-noir classics such as T-Men and Raw Deal, both directed by Anthony Mann. In a 1946 newsreel following Howard Hughes' calamitous plane wreck into a neighbor's Beverly Hills house, O'Keefe can be seen walking through the home inspecting the damage.