[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 133 (Wednesday, September 29, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S7732]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING JOHN W. KLUGE
Mr. REID. Mr. President, on Tuesday, September 7, 2010, John Kluge
passed away at a family home in Charlottesville, VA. He was 95.
Mr. Kluge was a successful businessman who parlayed the money he
earned from a Fritos franchise into a multibillion-dollar
communications company, Metromedia. This conglomerate grew to include 7
television stations, 14 radio stations, outdoor advertising, the Harlem
Globetrotters, the Ice Capades, radio paging and mobile telephones.
Mr. Kluge was born on September 21, 1914, in Chemnitz, Germany. His
father died in World War I. After his mother remarried, John was
brought to America in 1922 by his German-American stepfather to live in
Detroit. He began work at the age of 10, working for his stepfather's
family contracting business. At the age of 14, he left home to live in
the house of a schoolteacher, driving by his desire to have an
education.
He worked hard to learn and speak well the English language and get
the grades he needed in high school to win a scholarship to college. He
first attended Detroit City College, which was later renamed Wayne
State University, and transferred to Columbia University when he was
offered a full scholarship and living expenses. He graduated from
Columbia in 1937 and went to work for a small paper company in Detroit.
Within 3 years he went from shipping clerk to vice president and part
owner.
After serving in Army intelligence in World War II, he turned to
broadcasting and, with a partner, created the radio station WGAY in
Silver Spring, MD, in 1946. In the 1950s he acquired radio stations in
St. Louis, Dallas, Fort Worth, Buffalo, Tulsa, Nashville, Pittsburgh
and Orlando, FL. Meanwhile, he invested in real estate and expanded the
New England Fritos Corporation, which he founded in 1947 to distribute
Fritos and Cheetos in the Northeast, adding Fleischmann's yeast, Blue
Bonnet margarine and Wrigley's chewing gum to his distribution network.
In 1951 he formed a food brokerage company, expanding it in 1956 in a
partnership with David Finkelstein, and augmented his fortune selling
the products of companies like General Foods and Coca-Cola to
supermarket chains.
Mr. Kluge served on the boards of numerous companies, including
Occidental Petroleum, Orion Pictures, Conair and the Waldorf-Astoria
Corporation, as well as many charitable groups, including United
Cerebral Palsy.
His philanthropy was prodigious. The beneficiaries of his gifts
included Columbia University and the University of Virginia.
Mr. Kluge also contributed to the restoration of Ellis Island and in
2000 gave $73 million to the Library of Congress, which established the
Kluge Prize for the Study of Humanities.
In his business endeavors, Mr. Kluge savored the chance to move into
new areas of high technology and often took Wall Street by surprise
with some of his commercial decisions. He never lost his zest for
developing new businesses or his taste for complex financial deals. Mr.
Kluge once said, ``I love the work because it taxes your mind.''
At the time of his death, Mr. Kluge was deeply involved in a new
biological cancer treatment that has a positive effect on multiple
organ cancers, with no side effects. He also was engaged in a new
treatment for diabetes.
He is survived by his wife Maria, sons John, Jr. and Joseph, a
daughter Samantha, a grandson Jack, and stepchildren Jeannette Brophy,
Peter Townsend, and Diane Zeier.
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