Word: seaton
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...yard freestyle was won by Dick Seaton, at 2:15.6, with Pete Macky second. Dyer took the 60-yard freestyle in 27.9, followed by Roger Clifton. Jim Stanley placed second in the 200-yard butterfly, and Bob Jaffe was third. The winning time...
...Seaton, who was clocked at 4:53.2, took the 440-yard freestyle for the Crimson, while Stanley and Dave Falk placed second and third in the 200-yard breaststroke. This event was won by Springfield's Bob MacDonald...
Frederick Andrew Seaton, 47, after seven months as Secretary of the Interior, is the youngest Cabinet officer in age and service. Succeeding Douglas McKay, Seaton assumed a difficult job with the light hand and sure footwork that marked earlier Washington assignments, e.g., as Charlie Wilson's public relations counselor and as presidential administrative assistant. Currently Seaton's touchy job is to reverse some McKay water and power decisions that proved to be vastly unpopular in the Far West, e.g., to shift emphasis from McKay's theories of all-out help for quick, private-power development...
...Medley Relay: Harvard Time: 4:00.0 220 Yd. Freestyle: Dyer (H), Seaton (H), Ceres (N) Time: 2:12.1; 50 Yd. Freestyle: Clifton (H), Lind (H), Beron (N) Time: 23.9; 200 Yd. Butterfly: Stanley (H), Neville (N), Jaffe (H) Time: 2:36.2; Dive: Stone (H), Murner (H), Pheris (N) Points 67.85; 100 Yd. Freestyle: Dyer (H), Lind (H), Peltier (N) Time: 51.0; 440 Yd. Freestyle: Seaton (H), Martin (N), Gentz (N) Time: 5:03.7; 200 Yd. Breaststroke: Stanley (H), Falk (H), Friederich (N) Time 2:31.8; 400 Yd. Freestyle Relay: Navy Time...
AGRICULTURE The Year the FIsh Died Accompanied by Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson, Interior Secretary Fred Seaton and a retinue of aides and specialists, President Eisenhower was off this week on his flying threeday, six-state inspection tour of drought-stricken areas beyond the Mississippi. What he would find was nicely summed up by Texas Rancher Stanley Walker, longtime (1928-35) city editor of the New York Herald Tribune, in a byliner for his old newspaper. Wrote Walker of the drought belt's 1956: "It was the year the windmills pumped air, the fish died in the dusty ponds...