Wilhelm Röhrl

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Wilhelm Röhrl (born March 4, 1921 in Munich ; † May 14, 2013 ) was a German politician ( CSU ).

Life

Röhrl attended elementary school and the humanistic grammar school in Munich and Freising and passed his Abitur in 1938. After he had actively worked in the then banned Catholic youth movement and had been active in labor service and military service, he was deployed in France , Russia and Italy during World War II and wounded six times. Most recently was in the rank of lieutenant. After his release from captivity in 1946, he first studied philosophy and then economics at the University of Munich . In 1950 he obtained the diploma examination to become a qualified economist.

At the CSU, which he joined in 1946, Röhrl worked for years as managing director of the CSU parliamentary group and responsible editor of the CSU correspondence . He ran the business of the District Association of Upper Bavaria on a voluntary basis . From 1957 to 1970 he worked in the Bavarian State Ministry for Economic Affairs . From 1958 to 1978 he was a directly elected member of the Bavarian State Parliament . Its former district of Berchtesgaden - Reichenhall - Laufen largely corresponds to today's district of Berchtesgadener Land . In 1963, he suggested that girls from the age of 14 should be allowed to work as waitresses due to the lack of young skilled workers. Wilhelm Röhrl was awarded the Bavarian Order of Merit on June 9, 1969 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Röhrl from: Der Spiegel edition 35/1963