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Subject: Prospective First Lady: Heinz 57
On Watch    2/28/2004 1:12:16 AM
After her Wal*Mart fandango, the Kerry Committee bettero get her on meds and park her out in Rocky mountains for the duration. Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2004 12:13 p.m. EST NewsMax Teresa Heinz Kerry: I'm an 'African American' First lady wannabe Teresa Heinz Kerry sometimes describes herself as an "African American," even though she grew up amidst segregated privilege in colonial Mozambique. "My roots are African," she told a reporter in 1995. "The birds I remember, the fruits I ate, the trees I climbed, they're African." Throughout the 1990s, Heinz Kerry referred to herself as "African American," the Baltimore Sun revealed on Tuesday. And when her use of the term set off a firestorm of controversy in 1993, she defended the claim. "African-hyphen-American belongs to blacks," Heinz Kerry's spokesman told reporters, insisting that it was proper for his boss to call herself African American as long as no hyphen was used or intended. The one-time Republican's depiction of herself as African rankles some who knew Heinz Kerry in the days when her father ran a medical clinic in Mozambique. Some say the wealthy "African American" has snubbed blacks in her homeland, because she has done next to nothing with her vast Heinz Foods fortune to improve living conditions there. "We are proud she is a daughter of the land," Neo Simbine, 75, a retired black nurse who worked with Heinz Kerry's father, told the Sun. "But you have to live what you say. If she really loves Mozambique and has lots of money, why doesn't she build us a hospital?" Heinz Kerry's fortune is equal to nearly a quarter of Mozambique's annual Gross Domestic Product. But aside from a contribution to her homeland's Save the Children Fund, the woman who repeatedly invokes her Mozambican roots has limited her generosity. A spokeswoman for the Heinz Foundation said the prospective first lady would give more if she were more confident the money would be managed properly.
 
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On Watch    The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   2/28/2004 11:52:05 PM
OH BOY! A cross between Hillary & Helmsly--I'm beginning to feel sorry for Kerry! She still calls John Heinz "my husband" and doesn't always correct herself -- "my late husband" -- even when Kerry is around. She still wears the blue sapphire engagement ring that Heinz gave her. But John Heinz's enduring presence in Teresa's life is best revealed when someone slights his memory. Which, at least indirectly, is why she and Kerry are now in mid-bicker. "That guy does not deserve diplomacy," says Heinz. She is referring to Sen. Rick Santorum, the Pennsylvania Republican who offended her in 1994 during his campaign for John Heinz's old Senate seat. She won't elaborate on what Santorum said to earn her enmity, only that she won't speak to him again. "He's changed," Kerry mumbles, trying to keep this from becoming an on-the-record spectacle. The Massachusetts Democrat tries to add that he gets along with his colleague, but Heinz interrupts. "Sweetie, I know," Kerry says, talking over her, "I'm just saying . . ." He exhales a long, loud sigh. Just a few minutes earlier, Kerry, 58, was saying how much he admires his wife's candor. And Heinz, 63, was saying that while she can be opinionated, she can also be tactful. But sometimes she can't help herself, especially when the matter involves John Heinz, who was killed in a plane crash in 1991. Every time Heinz raises her voice, Kerry tries to play down his wife's agitation, which only inflames her more. A Yankee stoic, he gently suggests that his wife and Santorum get together. "No, I don't want to get together with him, John," she snaps. "I don't have to do certain things." "Well." "Okay? I don't have to be that politic." Heinz speaks in a high, breathy voice and sharply accented English -- she grew up in colonial Mozambique, where her first language was Portuguese. In 1995 she married Kerry and today, they are perhaps America's most compelling political couple not named Clinton or Bush. Their story packs all the qualities that captivate Washington -- money, romance and ambition -- with the bonus of mingling the big legacy of one senator with the big plans of another. The Heinz-Kerry marriage is a delicate merging of public families, large profiles and political missions. SNIP.... When Kerry is asked about the nightmares that haunted his sleep for years after he returned from Vietnam, he shrugs. "I don't think I've had a nightmare in a long time," he says. But then Heinz begins to mimic Kerry having a Vietnam nightmare. "Down! Down, down!" she yells, patting her hands down on her auburn hair. "I haven't gotten slapped yet," she says. "But there were times when I thought I might get throttled." Kerry quivers his right foot and steers the discussion to the counseling programs he has supported for Vietnam veterans. Asked if he has been in therapy himself, he non-answers. "It doesn't bother me anymore, I just go back to sleep." Heinz presses him. "Not therapy for the dreams, therapy for the angst," she says, and looks quizzically at him, awaiting an answer. Kerry shakes his head "No." This is not your father's political couple, though you wonder, at this moment, if Kerry wishes it were. "Barbara Walters time," Kerry says when he is asked about an observation from Heinz that the "shells" around him have softened in recent years. Nor does he relish the personal issues that a presidential run highlights, "the kind of crap that's so light and trivial." SNIP... Heinz was reluctant to embrace parts of her new husband's life. Her identity stayed rooted in the Heinz family, foundation and company. She never considered taking the name "Kerry," never cast a vote for John Kerry (she remains registered, as a Republican, in Pittsburgh) and still spends much of her time in the four homes she shared with John Heinz in Washington, Idaho, Nantucket and Pittsburgh. They are all adorned with multiple photos of John Heinz, whom she still calls "the love of my life," and their telephone numbers contain the digits "57," the traditional number of Heinz food varieties. (Heinz and Kerry own a mansion together on Boston's Beacon Hill.) "The cliche is that time heals everything," says David Garth, the media consultant who was a friend of John Heinz and remains close to Teresa. "But that doesn't seem entirely true in this case." Kerry is gracious about John Heinz's prominence in his marriage. He lets out a quick, exasperated laugh when he is asked about it, and he stammers out his answer. "I just feel, just sort of comfortable," he says. "It's okay, it's not a . . ." He stops mid-sentence and talks about how he loves the Heinz boys, how they should be comfortable in the home they grew up in. "I'm not trying to come in and replace that memory," he says. Teresa Heinz says Kerry knew what he was getting when he married her. "I am sentimental, loyal," she says. "I love my husband" -- she means John Heinz -- "
 
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sentinel28a    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   2/29/2004 3:58:22 AM
Poor bastard.
 
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American Kafir    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   2/29/2004 9:15:09 AM
Must really sting when the subject of the Heinz sauce factories located in 57 foriegn countries comes up during discussions of outsourced jobs. Or when Kerry talks of "the rich" not paying enough taxes. Probably a real knee-slapper at tail parties. I'd say the "wife" takes Kerry's candidacy about as seriously as the American people should. One wonders if, by sheer confluence of celestial phenomena and simultaneous iterations of randomly oscillating political ravings, the Democrats could possibly come up with a more ridiculous candidate for President. At least Dean could play his one note song from memory.
 
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sentinel28a    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   3/1/2004 2:00:52 AM
"One wonders if, by sheer confluence of celestial phenomena and simultaneous iterations of randomly oscillating political ravings, the Democrats could possibly come up with a more ridiculous candidate for President." Al Sharpton?
 
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appleciderus    Poor Ba$tard   3/1/2004 6:19:03 AM
IMO, Kerry decided this was an acceptable price to pay in his continuing climb to the ultimate political office.
 
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American Kafir    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   3/1/2004 6:29:39 AM
"One wonders if, by sheer confluence of celestial phenomena and simultaneous iterations of randomly oscillating political ravings, the Democrats could possibly come up with a more ridiculous candidate for President." >>Al Sharpton?<< Nah. Sharpton's a racist card-carrying anti-Semite and outspoken admirer of Fidel Castro, with a penchant for semi-literate inane babbling and getting filmed discussing cocaine purchases with undercover narcotics agents. That none of the field of candidates dare attack him on these points merely suggests Sharpton personifies the constituency Democrats want in their party rather than who they want to be President. It's sort of a "vote for us, we let idiots like Sharpton stand on stage with us" kind of thing. Kucinich is pretty much the same thing, but for the "CIA black ops teams are practicing extraction missions on unsuspecting Americans and brainwashing them into believing they were abducted by UFOs" crowd. The Democratic Party - all nincompoops welcome.
 
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sentinel28a    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   3/1/2004 2:33:22 PM
And this is the party of JFK and FDR?! Great Gaia, the Whigs might make a comeback.
 
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American Kafir    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   3/1/2004 2:42:26 PM
>>And this is the party of JFK and FDR?!<< It has morphed over the years, but it is still the party of Nathan Bedford Forrest and Lyndon LaRouche.
 
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sentinel28a    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   3/2/2004 3:32:31 AM
Ah, Lyndon LaRouche. Is he still alive? He was fun to laugh at back in the Reagan era.
 
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Spent Case    RE:The hidden price of a dowager's dowery.   3/2/2004 6:03:00 AM
"Ah, Lyndon LaRouche. Is he still alive? He was fun to laugh at back in the Reagan era." He was actually on the dem primary ticket (in WI, anyway). I was almost going to land my "monkey wrench" vote there. SC-
 
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