Louis Storck

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Louis Storck (born December 3, 1928 in Melle ; † January 25, 2012 in Hameln ) is a German administrative lawyer and manager.

Life

At 15, Storck became an air force helper , at 16 a soldier. At 16 ½ he was taken into American captivity and from there into French captivity. When he was released home a year and a half after the end of the war, shortly before his 18th birthday, he weighed only 45 kg. He never saw his father, who was missing in Russia, again. From 1949 he studied law at the Westphalian Wilhelms University . He found the newly founded free corps "Die Mark" and became its first fox . In February 1950 he was there when “Die Mark” took over the tradition of the Corps Rheno-Guestphalia, which was suspended in 1935. At that time, “Lü” Storck was also the first post-war Rhine-Westphalia fox. Soon after recipiert , he distinguished himself as Zweitchargierter out. He fought great games, cramming and seconded countless games. In the Convent his clear judgment was appreciated and respected. He was body Bursch from Eberhard-making . The purchase of the boathouse on the Werse shortly after the reconstitution was mainly due to him (and Wolfgang Petersmann). In 1955 he was awarded a Dr. iur. PhD. First in the financial administration of Osnabrück , he was city director in Gronau (Westphalia) from 1963 . From January 1, 1965 to September 9, 1968, he was the city ​​director in Hameln . The old town redevelopment initiated by him had a model character for the Federal Republic. Lauritz Lauritzen brought him to the Federal Ministry for Urban Development and Housing on September 1, 1968 . As a ministerial director, he headed the urban planning and structural engineering department. From October 1969 until the 1972 federal election he was State Secretary . In 1973 he took on board positions at the Deutsche Bau- und Bodenbank and the German Society for Public Works. In 1978 he became a member and then spokesman for the Official Home Office . In 1993 he retired. As a passionate hunter, he was buried in a funeral forest.

The first marriage resulted in a daughter and two sons (Marietta, Joachim, Peter). A few years after his wife's death, he married a judge.

See also

literature

  • International Biographical Archive 33/1993 from August 9, 1993

Individual evidence

  1. Corpszeitung No. 268, edition 3/2010, reconstitution of the Rheno-Guestphalia 60 years ago
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1996, 138/187
  3. a b c [Horst] Fiebrand, [Werner] Kaase, [Eberhard] Machens: In memoriam Dr. Louis Storck
  4. Dissertation: The prohibition of the double taxation of those involved in the Emschergenossenschaft by the municipalities 13 Emschergenossenschaftsgesetz .