Word: heinz
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Last December in the lame duck session, Congress tabled a bill that would have eliminated the mandatory retirement age, currently set at 70. The two sponsors of the bill, Sen. John Heinz (R-Penn.), and Rep. Claude Pepper (D-Fla.), are expected to re-introduce the bill this spring. Universities, particularly Harvard, are strongly opposed to the bill and have been successful in securing a conditional amendment exempting universities from the law for 15 years after the bill's passage. Crimson reporter Lavea Brachman interviewed Henry Rosovsky, dean of the Faculty, last week and conducted a roundtable discussion with Morton...
...defeated in 1978. Yet, examined more closely, the overall numbers do not give much solace to the Republicans. Of the 19 Democratic incumbents, 13 won with 60% or better, while four others attracted between 57% and 59% of the vote. But only one of the eleven G.O.P. incumbents, John Heinz of Pennsylvania, drew 60%. Indeed, four moderate Republicans, Lowell Weicker of Connecticut, John Danforth of Missouri, John Chafee of Rhode Island and Robert Stafford of Vermont, squeaked by with a mere...
...Mario M. Cuomo (D) Daniel P. Moynihan (D) N.C. No Race No Race N.D. No Race Quentin N. Burdick (D) OHIO Richard F. Celeste (D) Howard M. Metzenbaum (D) OKLA. George Nigh (D) No Race ORE. Victor G. Atiyeh (R) No Race PA. Dick Thomburgh (R) John Heinz (R) R.I. J. Joseph Garrahy (D) * S.C. Richard W. Riley (D) No Race S.D. William J. Janklow (R) No Race TENN. Lamar Alexander (R) Jim Sasser (D) TEX. Mark White (D) Lloyd Bentsen (D) UTAH No Race Orrin G. Hatch (R) VT. Richard A. Snelling (R) Robert T. Stafford...
...much is he spending?" Durenberger keeps asking voters. The answer: some $4.5 million so far and perhaps a record $8 million by Election Day. (Republican John Heinz, of the pickle-and-ketchup family, spent $2.6 million of his own money to win a Senate seat in Pennsylvania...
...company stopped paying stock dividends. In 1979, it received $764 million in unsecured loans and new capital, mostly from a consortium of 24 banks. The bankers also hand-picked a new chairman: Heinz Durr, then 46, a soft-spoken manager of a family-owned manufacturer of painting equipment. Last year he sold operations worth $177 million and negotiated with banks to write off millions of dollars in loans...