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・ William S. Groesbeck
・ William S. Gubelmann
・ William S. Guest
・ William S. Halstead
・ William S. Hamilton
・ William S. Hanna
・ William S. Harley
・ William S. Harney
・ William S. Hart
・ William S. Hart High School (California)
・ William S. Hart Union High School District
・ William S. Hatcher
・ William S. Haymond
・ William S. Haynes
・ William S. Hayward
William S. Heatly
・ William S. Hebbard
・ William S. Heckscher
・ William S. Herndon
・ William S. Herriman
・ William S. Hewett
・ William S. Higgins
・ William S. Hill
・ William S. Hixon
・ William S. Hoar
・ William S. Hobson
・ William S. Hofstra
・ William S. Holabird
・ William S. Holman
・ William S. Hooser


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William S. Heatly : ウィキペディア英語版
William S. Heatly

William Stanford Heatly, Jr., usually known as W. S. "Bill" Heatly (September 3, 1912 – February 25, 1984), was a Democratic member of the Texas House of Representatives who served from 1955 to 1983. Known as the "Duke of Paducah", a reference to his hometown of Paducah, the county seat of Cottle County, Heatly wielded significant political power during his tenure in office.
== Political career ==

First elected to the Texas House in 1954, Heatly had only four opponents during his subsequent twenty-eight years as representative of District 82 and then the nine-county District 80, which was reorganized in 1973 into the 15-county District 101.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=W. S. "Bill" Heatly )〕 Heatly became a member of the House Appropriations Committee; in 1959, he was elevated to the chairmanship during the second term of Governor Price Daniel. In that position Heatly became one of the most influential and controversial figures in the legislature, and he seldom concealed the joy with which he wielded his power. He was credited with procuring increased funding in the state's mental-health programs, the prison system, programs for troubled and wayward youth, and cancer research and treatment. He also made several enemies because of his reluctance to spend state funds on what he considered "superfluous" programs and his generosity to favored institutions and agencies.
Often Heatly was accused of using the appropriations bill to induce fellow legislators to vote his way. Many colleagues complained about his ruthless, domineering behavior, which included calling up influential people in their districts to put political pressure on them. Heatly, however, defended the practice by declaring that there was nothing wrong with "practical politics" and recommending that legislators be influenced by hometown voters instead of Austin lobbyists. Governor Preston Smith endorsed Heatly, and he obtained several state-funded projects for his district.
His twenty-four-year tenure on the appropriations committee and the twelve he served as chairman both set records unmatched for at least another decade. Frustrated by the Legislative Redistricting Board's 1980 plan for West Texas counties, Heatly retired from politics in 1982 and returned to Paducah to "take some time to spoil his nine grandchildren."
He was succeeded by the Republican Anita Dorcas Hill (1928–2003) of Garland in Dallas County, in a renumbered and fully reconstituted district.〔
Heatly was a thirty-third-degree Mason. He was also a past president of the Paducah Lions International and an elder in the Paducah First Christian Church. On February 25, 1984, he died in his sleep at his home from an apparent heart attack. He is interred at Garden of Memories Cemetery in Paducah.

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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