Word: heinze
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...Metropolitan Opera House by the magnificent Stuttgart Ballet. Traces is the portrayal of a woman who has escaped from totalitarian horrors but has yet to come to terms with those past agonies. Her present is visualized by some amiable bourgeois friends and a courtly but uncomprehending lover (Heinz Clauss...
...Lyndon Johnson's breathless world tours At various times on Leonid Brezhnev's historic four-day visit to Bonn, television cameras caught the Soviet party chief kissing the hand of Chancellor Willy Brandt's wife Rut, bear-hugging the minister-president of North Rhine Westphalia, Heinz Kiihn, and talking to Brandt's diminutive foreign policy adviser Egon Bahr with both hands on his shoulders. Brezhnev grinned and waved at crowds so relentlessly, in fact, that his grandstanding seemed to nettle Brandt-no mean crowd pleaser himself when in the right mood. Once, as Brezhnev stopped...
After an Eastern Establishment education-Exeter, Yale College and the Harvard University Business School-Heinz joined the family business. Within three years he had assumed a top sales job, but he was restless. In 1970 he quit to become a lecturer in business administration. After Representative Robert Corbett's death left a House seat vacant in the spring of 1971, Heinz declared his candidacy...
Launching his $146,000 campaign with a breakfast aboard a river excursion boat, Heinz never let up. He conducted opinion polls on dozens of subjects, blitzed the district with position papers, and wined and feted labor leaders, political pros and volunteer workers. One presumable campaign asset was his attractive wife Marie Teresa Simoes-Ferreira Heinz, 34. Born in Mozambique, she speaks French, Spanish and Portuguese, but can use very direct English when talking politics. She shocked one group by labeling it "a bunch of bigots...
When it was all over, Heinz had beaten his opponent, also a millionaire, 2 to 1. He and his wife set up housekeeping in Washington, D.C., in what had been the Russian embassy during the reign of Czar Nicholas I (it cost the Heinzes $500,000), and plunged into the capital's social life. But Heinz has taken his political responsibilities seriously. A hard worker and self-styled moderate, he has bucked the Republican leadership on some big issues, including the war. Last spring on the floor of the House, he questioned the mining of Haiphong Harbor...