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Political Career: Ran unsuccessfully for Parliament in 1935. When World War II began, entered government service. At the Board of Trade under Hugh Dalton, he rationed Britain's coal, regulated its retail prices. At war's end, despite a coronary thrombosis which prevented him from campaigning, was elected to Parliament with a 10,000-vote majority...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: LABOR'S NEW LEADER | 12/26/1955 | See Source »

...doyenne of Vincentown, N.J., returns now and then-they say-to stalk up and down -in front of the ruin of her mansion, in extirpation of the night she forced her drunken, demented son to lop off the head of his meek little wife with an ax. ¶ Lettitia Dalton, the vain and vicious wife of a rich Virginia planter, was quite a dame. One night she sent her sister Caro to an old greenhouse on her York River plantation to get some grapes. Poor Caro fell into a trap, died horribly in a shower of splintered glass panes. Next...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Friend of Ghosts | 12/5/1955 | See Source »

...expect them to be popular"). Then Butler turned sarcastically to the charge of incompetence. "Socialists," he said, "are connoisseurs of incompetence. Let us look at some of the vintage years-1947, 1949 and 1951." With that, he neatly skewered the Labor Chancellors of those years: Hugh Dalton, Stafford Cripps and Hugh Gaitskell. "Each Labor Vintage Chancellor," Butler charged, "produced his own distinctive crisis with his own particular brand of incompetence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Chancellor's Comeback | 11/14/1955 | See Source »

First out was Otho G. Bell, 24, of Hillsboro, Miss., a round-faced little man in a poorly cut fawn-grey cotton suit; next came William A. Cowart, 22, of Dalton, Ga., a hulking figure with dirty white pants shoved into high Korean cavalry boots; last was Lewis W. Griggs, 22, of Neches, Texas, a tall, thin, preoccupied youth, carrying the only luggage of the three: a bundled-up raincoat and a pair of brown shoes dangling by their laces...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: The Returncoats | 7/18/1955 | See Source »

...Even if I were going to be hung, I would come anyway," Bell recently wrote to his wife. The third American, William Cowart of Dalton, Ga., wanted to go to Japan. A couple of Belgian army deserters also wanted to get out of Red China, respectively in favor of the U.S. and Laos...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Beneath the Eaves | 6/27/1955 | See Source »

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