Word: sefton
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...fall production, "Charles and Mary," were voted into membership: M. E. Bothner '34, D. W. Brown, Jr. '34, John Cornell '35, J. C. Cort '35, T. F. Crane '33, M. J. Crowley '34, J. C. Haggett '35, H. G. Hutchinson '34, J. F. Nagle '34, W. B. Sefton '33, and Warren Sturgis...
Watched by 300,000 people (100,000 of them women) they stood for a few seconds jostling at the line, then broke in the confusion of a false start. A moment later the field broke again, this time gathering speed and narrowing together as they went past Sefton Yard. Every horse went over the first fence. At Becher's Brook, Swift Roland fell and was killed when the horse behind him landed on his head. The first time past the stands, Easter Hero was ahead, with Gregalach second and Grakle, Shaun Goilin (last year's winner), Solanum, and a half...
Lord Thomson answered all these questions with confident negatives last week. Calmly, with no fanfare he entered the moored R-101 at Cardington at misty twilight. With him were other British air notables?Sir William Sefton Brancker, Air Vice-Marshal and Director of Civil Aviation; Wing Commander R. B. B. Colmore, Director of the R-101'S construction; Lieut.-Col. V. C. Richmond, designer; Major G. H. Scott, Commander of the R34 (first dirigible to cross the Atlantic); and 49 other passengers, officers, crew...
Killed. Brig.-General Lord Christopher Birdwood Thomson, Baron Cardington, 55, Secretary of State for the British Air Ministry; Air Vice-Marshal Sir William Sefton Brancker, Director of Civil Aviation for the Air Ministry and its Director of Air Organization and Controller-General of Equipment during the War; Major George Herbert Scott, Commander of the R-34, first dirigible to fly the Atlantic ocean (July 1919); with 44 others in the R-101 disaster over France...
...printed an article in which a succession of circumstances, beginning with a gathering of members of the Paper Industry at the country home of Mr. George W. Gair, President of the Robert Gair Co., during July of last year and ending with the totally irrelevant acquirement of the Sefton Manufacturing Corp. by the Container Corp. of America, implied that these events indicated an eventual merger of the Robert Gair Co. with the Container Corp. of America. This forecast is the product of a willing imagination, which undeterred by facts, envisions a "U. S. Steel of paperboard companies" rising upon...