Mr John Corrie
July 29, 1935 -Summary information for Mr John Corrie
Contributions
1978
Community Councils (Court Actions) Written Answers January 19, 1978
Horticulture Written Answers January 19, 1978
Houses (Building Costs) Written Answers January 26, 1978
Rent Acts Written Answers January 26, 1978
Farms (Purchasing) Written Answers January 27, 1978
Invalidity Pension (Housewives) Written Answers February 6, 1978
Seat Belts Written Answers February 6, 1978
Fish Catch Written Answers February 13, 1978
Mountain Areas Written Answers February 16, 1978
Greece (Second Financial Protocol) Written Answers February 20, 1978
Drunkenness Written Answers February 20, 1978
Beer Written Answers February 27, 1978
Scottish Assembly Written Answers February 27, 1978
Ayrshire and Arran Health Board Written Answers February 27, 1978
Egg Producers (France) Written Answers April 6, 1978
Unemployed Persons Written Answers April 10, 1978
Hospital Waiting Lists Written Answers April 10, 1978
Milk Levies Written Answers April 10, 1978
Motor Vehicle Tests (Personnel) Written Answers April 12, 1978
Electricity Boards (Debt Recovery) Commons May 17, 1978
Fishing Industry Commons May 17, 1978
2 speeches — Hunterston Written Answers June 7, 1978
Teachers Written Answers June 7, 1978
Bank Notes (Braille Marking) Written Answers June 7, 1978
2 speeches — Fish Farming Written Answers July 31, 1978
Untreated Milk (Sales) Written Answers November 13, 1978
Animals (Export) Written Answers November 17, 1978
Vaccine-damaged Children Written Answers November 20, 1978
Nuclear Waste (Dumping) Written Answers November 23, 1978
Housing (Homeless Persons) Act Written Answers November 27, 1978
Unemployed Teachers, Ayrshire Written Answers December 4, 1978
Hunterston (Oil Rigs) Written Answers December 8, 1978
Kirkby Manufacturing and Engineering Company Written Answers December 11, 1978
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.