René Haby

René Haby ( born October 9, 1919 in Dombasle -sur -Meurthe; † 6 February 2003) was a French education minister from 1974 until 1978.

At the age of 7 years died Habys father, a factory worker. He attended school in Dombasle, started in 1934 trained as a teacher and was from 1938 worked as such at Nancy. In 1940 he was drafted and went into German captivity. After his release in 1941 he worked again in Nancy, but at the same time acted as a liaison officer of the Maquis. After the war, he trained at the University of Nancy in the literature on science and obtained his doctorate in 1965. From 1962 to 1965 he was in the Ministry of Education, Head of the Department of Education and adopted under the Minister of Youth and Sports, François Missoffe, from 1966 to 1968 rank high. From 1972 to 1974 he was then head of the Academy of Clermont -Ferrand, before he was appointed on 28 May 1974 on the education minister of the first cabinet of Jacques Chirac. In this position, he led the reform of the unit high school ( " Haby reform " ) in the way, the structures he unified strong. Haby had the ministerial position until April 5, 1978, was until 1988 a deputy in the National Assembly for Meurthe -et -Moselle.

Jean Berthoin | André Boulloche | Michel Debré | Louis Joxe | Pierre Guillaumat | Lucien Paye | Pierre Sudreau | Louis Joxe | Christian Fouchet | Alain Peyrefitte | François -Xavier Ortoli | Edgar Faure | Olivier Guichard | Joseph Fontanet | René Haby | Christian Beullac | Alain Savary | Jean -Pierre Chevènement | René Monory | Lionel Jospin | Jack Lang | François Bayrou | Claude Allègre | Jack Lang | Luc Ferry | François Fillon | Gilles de Robien | Darcos | Luc Chatel | Vincent Peillon

  • Minister of Education (France)
  • Member of the National Assembly (France)
  • Person (Avignon )
  • Born in 1919
  • Died in 2003
  • Man
678256
de