<p>Edward Seaton, a longtime Kansas newspaper publisher who served as the Pulitzer Prize Board's chair and advocated for international press freedom, has died.</p>.<p>He was 79.</p>.<p>He died of natural causes Monday night at his home in Manhattan in northeastern Kansas, his son, Ned, who followed his father as publisher of <em>The Manhattan Mercury</em>, told the newspaper. Edward Seaton was chairman of Seaton Publications at the time of his death.</p>.<p>He became <em>The Mercury's</em> publisher and associate editor in 1969 and its editor-in-chief in 1981.</p>.<p>His grandfather had bought the paper in 1915, and his father, uncle and brother were publishers.</p>.<p>Ed Seaton spent much of his career working for democracy and press freedoms, particularly in Latin America.</p>.<p>He was president of the Inter American Press Association and of the American Society of Newspaper Editors.</p>.<p>He served nine years on the Pulitzer Prize Board.</p>.<p>He and his family built a group of affiliated media companies in Kansas, Colorado, Nebraska, South Dakota and Wyoming. He was inducted into the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame in 2013.</p>.<p>He earned a bachelor's degree with honours at Harvard College in 1965 and was a Fulbright scholar in Ecuador.</p>.<p>He also did graduate work in journalism at the University of Missouri.</p>.<p>Born Feb. 5, 1943, in Manhattan, he began his journalism career as a reporter and copy editor at the Louisville, Kentucky, <em>Courier-Journal</em>.</p>
<p>Edward Seaton, a longtime Kansas newspaper publisher who served as the Pulitzer Prize Board's chair and advocated for international press freedom, has died.</p>.<p>He was 79.</p>.<p>He died of natural causes Monday night at his home in Manhattan in northeastern Kansas, his son, Ned, who followed his father as publisher of <em>The Manhattan Mercury</em>, told the newspaper. Edward Seaton was chairman of Seaton Publications at the time of his death.</p>.<p>He became <em>The Mercury's</em> publisher and associate editor in 1969 and its editor-in-chief in 1981.</p>.<p>His grandfather had bought the paper in 1915, and his father, uncle and brother were publishers.</p>.<p>Ed Seaton spent much of his career working for democracy and press freedoms, particularly in Latin America.</p>.<p>He was president of the Inter American Press Association and of the American Society of Newspaper Editors.</p>.<p>He served nine years on the Pulitzer Prize Board.</p>.<p>He and his family built a group of affiliated media companies in Kansas, Colorado, Nebraska, South Dakota and Wyoming. He was inducted into the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame in 2013.</p>.<p>He earned a bachelor's degree with honours at Harvard College in 1965 and was a Fulbright scholar in Ecuador.</p>.<p>He also did graduate work in journalism at the University of Missouri.</p>.<p>Born Feb. 5, 1943, in Manhattan, he began his journalism career as a reporter and copy editor at the Louisville, Kentucky, <em>Courier-Journal</em>.</p>