Word: haddone
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...Freestyle: 1. A, Haddon :45.95; 2. H, Smith :47.16; 3. A, Welch :47.31; 4. H, Tull :47.75; 5. H, Lin :48.03; 6. A, Smorra :48.16; 7. A, Anderson :48.41; 8. H, Fisher...
...Medley Relay: 1. H, 3:25.01 (Watson 57.28, Lutz 57.12, Bird 50.20, Kaplan 45.41), 2. A, 3:25.32 (Ewen 53.58, Haddon 55.90. Redd 50.16, Anderson 45.68); 3. A, 3:31.98 (Deboom 55.22, Brown 58.57, Krall 50.98 Tieke 47.21); 4. H, 3:33.57 (Pardieck 55:37, Wolf 59.21, Fisher 52.20, Tull 46.43); 5,. A 3:41.53 (Post, Hauschild, Permuth, McIntosh...
...Freestyle: 1. A, Haddon 20.59; 2. H, Kaplan :20.97; 3. H, Tull :21.52; 4. A, Tieke: 21.71; 5. A, Redd :21.38; 6. A, Krall :21.93; 7. H, Fisher :22.14; 8. H, Lende...
Under a counter-protest by Army's Coll Haddon, who swam in the other lane adjacent to Sprout without difficulty, the decision was later overturned and the race declared official with Haddon the winner in 20.44 seconds. Harvard's Keith Kaplan finished in a three-way tie for second...
DIED. William Haddon Jr., 58, auto-safety crusader who from 1966 to 1969 led the several Government precursors of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration; of kidney failure; in Washington, D.C. A physician, he applied quantitative research and analysis techniques to highway accidents and deaths, especially those related to alcohol. As national traffic-safety head, he concentrated on federal standards for safe auto design and tougher local ( and state drunk-driving laws. After 1969, as president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, he pushed for mandatory air bags in new cars, calling the auto industry's resistance to them...