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Buntism derives from Sergeant Matthew Bunt, a British Marine who was two years a castaway on an uninhabited Pacific islet early in the igth century. When prim Captain Overton of H.M.S. Achilles stopped by, Marine Bunt, greeting him on the beach, showed some outer symptoms of extreme Buntism-"a paunch that hung over the belt of his tattered drawers, and cheeks which shook." But Captain Overton did not recognize the signs. "Show me round your little kingdom, Sergeant Crusoe," ordered the captain, "the stockaded hut and the wheat patch and the goat pen, and so on. This promises...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fact and Fiction | 4/23/1956 | See Source »

...Louisiana's Democratic Representative Overton Brooks organized 100 greedy Congressmen in a bipartisan rump caucus, blithely added $86,376,000 in home-district chitterlings to the Public Works Bill (which included the TVA appropriations) in one of the most blatant congressional pork-barrel operations in years. Lamented Republican Glenn Davis of Wisconsin, in a futile motion to send the bill back to committee: "There is but one way that we can purge ourselves of the shame that has descended upon us here this afternoon, and that is to recommit this bill to the committee on appropriations." Brooks and friends...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CONGRESS: Sluice & Bobble | 6/27/1955 | See Source »

Last week the local Christian Science reader, Mrs. Kenneth Overton, who had been holding lunchtime sessions with three pupils, notified Superintendent Hendricks that she was withdrawing from the program on advice from her church's headquarters in Boston. But Superintendent Hendricks and his friends in Bangor were undismayed. Says Hendricks: "We're not particularly concerned with the outside opposition . . . We're going right ahead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Schooltime Religion | 3/14/1955 | See Source »

...Jean Overton Fuller (240 pp.; Little, Brown; $3.50), is the gripping, troubling story of a British secret agent who played a double game with his Nazi captors. Caught the second time he parachuted into France, Captain John Starr pretended to compromise with the enemy. He accepted the Germans' invitation to stay at their counter-espionage headquarters in Paris, lettering maps (he was a commercial artist), and chatted daily with the Germans (harmlessly, he says). He soon learned that the Germans had succeeded in capturing Allied agents' radio sets and cutting them into the British network...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Three Who Came Through | 2/28/1955 | See Source »

America's Town Meeting (Tues. 9 p.m., ABC). The Role of Businessmen in American History, with Professors Richard Overton and Broadus Mitchell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: Program Preview, Sep. 13, 1954 | 9/13/1954 | See Source »

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