Request received for copies of Rural Ireland and The Landmark.
General request for information about Muintir na Tíre and its work.
General requests for information on Muintir na Tíre structure; on community councils; on its work.
2 letters received by Canon Hayes on 27 November 1956 from people in County Limerick requesting assistance. Includes:
-Letter from Mrs. Cleary, Lisnagry, requesting a few pounds (which she 'will refund it again and a lot more for masses'), as her husband is unemployed and her son Patrick was killed on 23 September 1956 (2pp);
-Letter from Mrs. E. Hayes, Limerick city, asking Canon Hayes to help her husband find a job.
Requests by Traolach Ó hAonghusa to Coiril Ó Mathúna to act as judge at various drama competitions and permissions for same [in Irish].
Request from Senator Phil Prendergast to Maurice Hayes asking for any material he might like to give for an auction towards Clonmel Community Development.
2 copies of the written submission authored by the National Executive of Muintir na Tíre to the Economic Co-operation Administration (ECA) asking for funding to establish a Parish Council Advisory Office in every parish of Ireland to give advice in matters concerning all agricultural and social services. The ECA was a body of the United States government's post-World War II European Recovery Programme; the ECA's mission to Ireland focused on agricultural investment. Inscription at top of front page: 'Original Document submitted to Department in 1950.'
Form letter and agenda sent to members of the County Tipperary (S.R.) Vocational Education Committee in advance of the monthly meeting at the Central Technical Institute, Clonmel, 23 January 1942.
Request on behalf of Nejdet Buldan to the European Court of Human Rights to refer his case to a Grand Chamber, as the applicant believes that the judgment of 20 April 2004 'contains serious defects in its interpretation and application of principles formulated in its own jurisprudence. The effect is to leave relevant areas of the law in a state of uncertainty, as well as to have done a serious injustice to the applicant.' In particular, the applicant claims that his complaints under Article 2 of the Convention (the failure to protect the lives of himself and his brother) were inadequately addressed.