Mr Charles Curran
1903 - September 16, 1972Summary information for Mr Charles Curran
Contributions
1965
Secondary Education (Comprehensive System) Written Answers January 21, 1965
School Building Programme, Greater London Written Answers January 21, 1965
2 speeches — REPRESENTATION OF THE PEOPLE (EXTENSION OF VOTING FACILITIES) BILL Commons February 12, 1965
Hansard (Sales) Written Answers March 9, 1965
9 speeches — MURDER (ABOLITION OF DEATH PENALTY) BILL (COMMITTEE STAGE) Commons March 18, 1965
2 speeches — Social Security (Review) Commons March 24, 1965
5 speeches — PRIVILEGE Commons March 24, 1965
SOUTH-EAST ASIA TREATY ORGANISATION (IMMUNITIES AND PRIVILEGES) Commons April 5, 1965
Clause 1.—(DEVELOPMENT REQUIRING OFFICE DEVELOPMENT PERMIT.) Commons April 14, 1965
2 speeches — CONTROL OF OFFICE AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BILL Commons April 14, 1965
13 speeches — REDUNDANCY PAYMENTS BILL Commons April 26, 1965
2 speeches — TRAFFIC WARDENS Commons May 11, 1965
M.4 Written Answers May 12, 1965
BROADCASTING Commons May 13, 1965
2 speeches — Clause 10.—(ALTERATIONS IN RELIEFS.) Commons May 20, 1965
2 speeches — Wage Stop Commons May 24, 1965
2 speeches — Widows Commons May 24, 1965
National Assistance (Television Licences) Written Answers May 24, 1965
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS (TELEVISION) Commons May 28, 1965
Prisoners (Sentences) Written Answers June 29, 1965
4 speeches — Clause 1.—(CERTAIN ACTS NOT ACTIONABLE IN TORT OR AS DELICTS.) Commons July 27, 1965
8 speeches — LABOUR PARTY (ELECTION PLEDGES) Commons July 29, 1965
SOCIAL SECURITY (REVIEW) Written Answers August 2, 1965
Pensioners (Local Authority and Welfare Services) Written Answers August 5, 1965
2 speeches — TRAFFIC CONGESTION (LONDON) Commons October 28, 1965
4 speeches — LONDON TRANSPORT BOARD (BORROWING POWERS) Commons November 16, 1965
Government Training Centres Written Answers December 6, 1965
Part-time Day Courses Written Answers December 6, 1965
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.