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・ Malcolm Hancock
・ Malcolm Handscombe
・ Malcolm Harbour
・ Malcolm Hardee
・ Malcolm Harding
・ Malcolm Harding (archbishop of Rupert's Land)
・ Malcolm Harding (bishop of Brandon)
・ Malcolm Harrison
・ Malcolm Hartley
・ Malcolm Harwood
・ Malcolm Havladar
・ Malcolm Hazell
・ Malcolm Healey
・ Malcolm Heath
・ Malcolm Hebden
Malcolm Hebert
・ Malcolm Hedding
・ Malcolm Henderson
・ Malcolm Henry Ellis
・ Malcolm Hickman
・ Malcolm Hickox
・ Malcolm Hill
・ Malcolm Hill (audio engineer)
・ Malcolm Hill (basketball)
・ Malcolm Hill (footballer)
・ Malcolm Hilton
・ Malcolm Hoenlein
・ Malcolm Hogg
・ Malcolm Holmes
・ Malcolm Holzman


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Malcolm Hebert : ウィキペディア英語版
Malcolm Hebert

Malcolm Paul Hébert, Sr. (October 25, 1926 – September 23, 2006), was a mechanical engineer who served from 1973 to 1977 as the last commissioner of streets and parks〔In Alexandria and in other cities with the city commission government, the commissioner exercises both legislative and executive duties, on the city council and as a department head. This position should not be confused with a county commissioner, most of whom were and still are elected in single-member districts. County commissioners are the "legislators" of a county (called parish in Louisiana), with the county judge normally in the role of the "executive" head of the county. In Louisiana, the executive of the parish can be the police jury president, the president of the parish, or a parish "administrator", depending on the structure of the parish government. City commissioners could not be chosen on a district basis, as their administrative duties affected the entire city. African Americans were not then elected to city government in most parts of the American South. Soon an outcry in the Civil rights movement raised legal challenges to the city commission governments.〕 in Alexandria, Louisiana, a citywide elected position which was abolished with a change in the city charter.
==Background==

Hébert was born in Monroe in Ouachita Parish in northeastern Louisiana, one of three children of Maxime Paul Hébert and the former Linda Talbot. He had two sisters, Maxine Hébert Meadows of Alexandria and Betty Hébert Thompson of Lake Charles. The family soon relocated to Alexandria, where he resided for most of his life.〔 In 1943, he graduated in the top third of his class from the Roman Catholic-affiliated Holy Savior Menard Central High School, then known as Menard Memorial High School.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Menard Memorial High School ''Menardian'' yearbook, p. 55 )〕 There, Hébert was a drum major and played football. After high school, he became an apprentice machinist for the since dis-established Missouri Pacific Railroad, in which capacity he joined the International Association of Machinists union. Soon he enlisted in the United States Navy near the end of World War II and volunteered for submarine service on the ''USS Ling'', which was operational from 1945 to 1946. Hébert studied in the Naval Diesel Training School in Gulfport, Mississippi, and the Submarine School in New London, Connecticut.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Malcolm Paul Hébert, September 24, 2006 )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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