Mr James Dance
May 5, 1907 - March 16, 1971Summary information for Mr James Dance
Contributions
1963
Road Research (Safety Barriers) Written Answers February 19, 1963
Branch Lines Written Answers February 20, 1963
M.1 (Accidents) Written Answers February 20, 1963
TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING Commons February 26, 1963
Prisoners, Birmingham (Work) Written Answers February 28, 1963
2 speeches — Warning Signs, Motorways (Remote Control) Commons March 6, 1963
2 speeches — Double White Lines (Bus Stops) Commons March 6, 1963
Warning Signs, Motorways (Remote Control) Written Answers March 6, 1963
Motor Vehicles (Mud-Flaps) Written Answers March 6, 1963
VOTE A. NUMBER OF LAND FORCES Commons March 14, 1963
Telephones (Design and Colour) Written Answers March 26, 1963
Hyde Park Underpass Written Answers April 10, 1963
Motor Vehicles Written Answers April 10, 1963
2 speeches — Vehicle Test Certificates Written Answers April 10, 1963
2 speeches — Motorways and Trunk Roads (Trees and Shrubs) Commons May 8, 1963
3 speeches — Sub-Office, Cofton Hackett Commons May 14, 1963
Betting Office Licences Written Answers May 30, 1963
Commonwealth Immigrants Act (Deportation Orders) Written Answers May 30, 1963
4 speeches — POST OFFICE, REDNAL Commons July 5, 1963
Railway Workshops, Swindon Commons July 8, 1963
Racecourses Commons July 18, 1963
2 speeches — Vehicles (Mudguards) Commons July 24, 1963
Betting Shops Written Answers August 1, 1963
2 speeches — HOUSING AND LAND PRICES Commons November 18, 1963
Licensed Betting Offices Written Answers November 21, 1963
Motorways (Anti-Dazzle and Crash Barriers) Written Answers November 27, 1963
2 speeches — Maternity Facilities, Redditch Commons December 2, 1963
Compulsory Acquisition of Land (Tenant Farmers) Written Answers December 2, 1963
AFTER-CARE (ADVISORY COUNCIL'S REPORT) Commons December 3, 1963
Tenant Farmers (Land) Written Answers December 9, 1963
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.