Word: waltons
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...toplofty manner. The last arose after his baton flew out of his hand and struck a player. Able Conductor Halasz was sacked in 1951 and replaced by Austrian-born Joseph Rosenstock who staged a world premiere (Copland's The Tender Land) that failed, a New York premiere (Walton's Troilus and Cressida) that succeeded, two gloomy but interesting U.S. stage premieres (Von Einem's The Trial and Bartok's Blue beard's Castle). He did only passably well by standard repertory, and the board of directors could rarely agree on just what kind of opera...
...pair of untamed Pitt Panther ends, John Paluck and Joe Walton, spent the afternoon in the West Virginia backfield and helped send the Mountaineers home on the short end of a 26-7 score, West Virginia's first defeat of the season...
...Surgeon Clarence Walton Lillehei. 35, University of Minnesota, and three colleagues, for cross-circulation and other techniques allowing safer surgery inside the heart (TIME, May 10, 1954 and April...
...Within a year, surgeons may be able to take a big step forward in repairing coronary arteries in victims who have already suffered an occlusion, and so guard them against further attacks. The University of Minnesota's Dr. C. Walton Lillehei, one of last week's Lasker Award winners (see above), told the American College of Surgeons that he had used the technique successfully on dogs, was about ready to try it on human patients. A section of coronary artery near the chest wall (in which most occlusions occur) is either opened, scraped clean and sewed up again...
...Walton is convinced that operas are good for composers. "I don't know why it is," he says, "but you can write the greatest symphony in the world and remain quite unknown. If you write an opera, your name's all over the place...