Ursula Heinlein

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Ursula Heinlein (born November 5, 1923 in Bork , Selm ; † June 4, 1997 in Hanstedt ) was a German politician ( SPD ) and a member of the Lower Saxony state parliament .

After graduating from high school in 1942, Heinlein completed a year of labor and military service and then studied law for three semesters. She then did military service in Norway for half a year; until the end of 1946 she was interned . After her marriage in 1947, she initially worked in agriculture, but in 1951 decided to do a commercial job in Hamburg. From 1963 she worked for the publishing house Die Welt , which later became the Axel Springer publishing house . In 1966 she joined the SPD and became district chairman of the Working Group of Social Democratic Women and a member of the sub- district executive of the Working Group for Employee Issues . As councilor of the community of Asendorf , local association Hanstedt , she was active from 1976 to April 1982, and from June 21, 1978 to June 20, 1986 she was a member of the Lower Saxony state parliament (9th and 10th electoral period).

After taking up her state parliament mandate, she took leave of absence from 1979 to 1986 without any pay. Heinlein was a member of the IG Druck und Papier , an honorary member of the collective bargaining commission, a member of the works council of the Axel Springer Verlag, a member of the BUND , the Humanist Union and the Friends of Nature .

Ursula Heinlein was married.

literature

  • Barbara Simon : Member of Parliament in Lower Saxony 1946–1994. Biographical manual. Edited by the President of the Lower Saxony State Parliament. Lower Saxony State Parliament, Hanover 1996, p. 150.