Word: wallingforder
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Clinical Chemistry); of a heart ailment; in Wallingford, Conn. Dismissed in 1953 by the U.S. Loyalty Review Board as part-time consultant (about ten days a year) to the U.S. Public Health Service, Dr. Peters held that he had a constitutional right to face his nameless accusers, fought his case to the Supreme Court. The outcome: the court ducked the constitutional issue, found that the board did not have the authority to review Peters' case, since he had been cleared twice previously...
...Craig D. Munson, 56, became president of International Silver of Meriden, Conn., world's largest silverware manufacturer (1954 sales: $64 million), succeeding the late Maltby Stevens. Born in nearby Wallingford, Munson prepped at Wallingford's Choate School, went on to Yale (where he rowed in the varsity), and to work for International in 1920, beginning as a salesman. In 1928, Munson moved up to general advertising manager of International's sterling silver division and a member of the board; seven years later he became International's sales vice president...
Riegger: Symphony No. 3 (Eastman-Rochester Symphony conducted by Howard Hanson; Columbia). Manhattan's Composer Wallingford Riegger, 69, was one of the "bad boys" of the 20s, and his symphony makes abundant use of tone clusters then fashionable. He is also interested in more stringent twelve-tone technique, and dips into that idiom every now and then. The work, which won the New York Music Critics Circle Award (1947-48), is full of dissonance, but consistently strong and appealing...
Sound Track. In Boston, Collis E. Wallingford was fined $200 for drunken driving after he careened into a bus terminal, sat honking his horn in an effort to get the buses...
Died. The Very Rev. William Ralph Inge, 93, longtime "Gloomy Dean" of St. Paul's Cathedral in London (1911-34); in Wallingford, England (see RELIGION...