Page 14-Saturday, May 20, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Senate: big bucks galore Heinz WASHINGTON (AP) - Missouri's John Danforth and Pennsylvania's H. John Heinz are probably the two richest men in the Senate, with each showing assets of up to nearly $18 million, newly released financial documents show. Danforth, with large holdings in the massive Ralston Purina Corp., which" manufacturers everything from break- fast cereals to dog foods, estimated his assets at between $7.33 million and $17.75 million. The freshman Republican senator said he had no liabilities. HEINZ, HEIR to the H. J. Heinz conglomerate so well known to ketchup and soup lovers, revealed assets of between $10.25 million and $17.85 million. His liabilities totalled between $1.13 million and $2.36 million. Heinz' fortune may be a trifle overrated. The Republican senator listed among his assets a $5 million debt owed him by his own campaign com- mittee for money he put into his recent race for the Senate. That normally would not be considered a solid invest- ment. In contrast to the Heinz and Danforth fortunes, such well known senators as Ted Kennedy and Russell Long appear almost middle class. KENNEDY (D-MASS.), who live in a house valued at less than $1 million, showed assets between $2.23 million and $5.25 million and liabilities between $1.80 million and $3.61 million. Long (D-La.) listed assets of $3,333,791 and liabilities of $40,463. Surprisingly, Kennedy could have nearly as much oil and gas holdings as does oil-rich Long. Long estimated his oil and gas royalties at $1.1 million. Kennedy estimated his oil and gas holdings between $249,000 and $871,000, with most of his holdings in Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas.- -- UNDER SENATE rules, senators are not required to list the actual amount of their holdings, but only the broad range in which the amount would fall. That's the reason the figures are not precise. But the financial statements still reveal enough to show that few mem- bers of the Senate are poor men. An ex- ception-according to the forms-is Sen. John Tower (R-Texas), who RI M showed his Senate pension fund to be his only asset and who listed liabilities of up to $30,000. Tower acknowledged that his wife had assets but said he had no knowledge of her holdings and thus could not report them. Others on the low end of the Senate income included Sen. Jasmes Abourezk (D-S.D.), who showed assets of $80,000 to $95,000 and liabilities of $30,000 to $100,000, and Sen. John Durkin (D- N.H.), with assets of $148,000 and liabilities of $116,000. ALTHOUGH IT was impossible to say how many members of the Senate were millionaires, a substantial num- ber appear to qualify. Among the obvious millionaires are Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (D-Texas), who listed assets of $4.8 million to $11.2 million; Sen. Charles Percy (R-Ill.), who said his assets total between $4.7 million and $10 million; and Sen. Her- man Talmadge (D-Ga.), who listed 'assets between $1.8 million and $4.1 million. Sen. Richard Stone (D-Fla.) ob- viously is in the million-dollar club, with assets of $1.6 million to $3.4 million, as is Sen. Lowell Weicker (R- Conn.), with assets between $1.2 million and $3.5 million. Oklahoma Republican Dewey Bartlett probably is, with assets between $815,000 and $1.8 million. Sen. S. I. Hayakawa (R-Calif.) listed assets of $1.4 million to $3.2 million; Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss.) showed assets between $870,000 and $2.2 million; and Sen. Adlai Stevenson (D- Ill.), who chairs the Senate Ethics Committeethat oversees the financial disclosures, showed assets of $775,000 to $1.9 million. Several senators showed they were heavily mortgaged. Sen. Henry Bellmon (R-Okla.) listed assets bet- ween $665,000 and $1.5 million but said his liabilities were between $540,000 and $1.1 million. Sen. James Allen (D-Ala.) showed assets between $120,000 and $330,000 and liabilities between $115,000 and $320,000. Alcohol a viable fuel? LANSING (UPI) - A Dearborn Democrat has introduced legislation creating a special office in the state Commerce Department to study the feasibility of using alcohol as a sub- stitute for gasoline as a motor fuel. The bill, sponsored by state Rep. Lucille McCollough, would charge the special office with serving as a clearinghouse for information onsthe potential uses of alcohol and promoting its use if it proves practical. F-EO Huron Towers co-op prospects look good after HUD (Continued from Page 1) provided, and other matters. If conver- ted, it would be the first time in city history - and one of the few times nationally - a large apartment com- plex has been made into a co-op. George Day, a special assistant at HUD's Detroit office, has said that before entering any negotiation his of- fice would have to determine "if selling the complex would be feasible" from HUD's point of view. "We would have to conduct an investigation to see if sales Out- PREPARE FORear:' MCAT *"DAT LSAT GRE GMAT -OCAT - VAT -"SAT NMB I31 , ECFMG-"FLEX-VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There ISa difference! M4N EDUCATIONAuL CENTER Test ereparations pecialists since 1938 For information Please call:. (313) 662.3149 For Locations in Otiier Cities, Call. TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 Cenmes, nmaj orusC ties meeting proceeds to a co-op would equal what we could get in the open market," he said. HUD IS NOW looking for contractors to repair the twin 12-story towers. Ac- cording to Goray, HUD's "main con- cern" is improving the complex's heating system which he labels "inef- ficient." Goray said HUD would re-carpet all rooms, install storm windows, caulk the many cracks, and replace both towers' roofs. Other problem spots, he said, include increasing storage area security, replacing old refrigerators and stoves, installing new laundry facilities, providing better facilities for the han- dicapped, and.repairing the driveways to underground parking lots. At Wednesday's meeting, many residents expressed concern about the interim period during which HUD retains control of the complex. The residents complained of HUD's lack of accessability asa landlord. "You've got to realize that we're HUD. We are a bureaucracy," defen- ded HUD representative Beaupied. "It's not like being in the private sector, where you can go down to some corner and finda private contractor. "You must remember it took seven- teen years for this building to get in this cditioqb iap we'y pnly.peej here six month ',e&dded,." ha #e/ Another ume. Anomer place. Ana an uncommon family that triumphs over the intergalactic forces that would destroy it. By Nebula award nominee Marta Randall. 2 , in pap~em~inckh ( 'l' Orpnt 'PuPrto Rico ana Lugano S*itzerlaM # !- "4*s p Frtf3t :fd 1!* F N, - f+c "? 4 i1 r.fk fa sM' ik of i M- w i 0 i*