[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 149 (2003), Part 14]
[Senate]
[Pages 19114-19115]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                         ADDITIONAL STATEMENTS

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                         TRIBUTE TO DAVE THOMAS

 Mr. DeWINE. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to Dave 
Thomas--a man who was known by many and loved by all. Dave was a great 
American, who launched an extremely successful career by opening his 
first Wendy's restaurant in my home State of Ohio in Columbus. He 
passed away in January 2002, at the age of 69.
  Earlier this year, along with several of our colleagues, Senator 
Levin and I introduced--and the Senate accepted by unanimous consent--a 
resolution to honor Dave Thomas. And today, President George W. Bush is 
awarding Dave Thomas the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his lifetime 
of philanthropy and service to his fellow man. While this award is 
being given to Dave posthumously, his tremendous spirit continues to be 
felt in Ohio and across our Nation.

[[Page 19115]]

  Although he faced incredible challenges as a child, Dave committed 
himself to success through a simple life philosophy: ``work hard and be 
honest.'' Dave grew up in a family that was constantly on the move, his 
father always looking for steady work. Getting a start in the 
restaurant business at the young age of 12, Dave worked hard to help 
his struggling family while going to school at the same time. However, 
school wasn't easy for Dave Thomas. The constant moving landed him in 
12 schools in 10 years. Dave dropped out of the 10th grade because it 
interfered with his work. He did, however, eventually earn his GED as 
an adult in 1993, a GED from Coconut Creek High School in Fort 
Lauderdale, FL.
  In 1953, Dave had a job working for Phil Clauss at one of his Hobby 
House restaurants in Fort Wayne, IN, but Dave's father decided to move 
the family again. Dave refused to leave his job and stayed at a YMCA, 
without the comforts of home or his loved ones. Soon after, Thomas 
served in the Korean war as a cook. When he came back, Phil Clauss 
promoted him to be an assistant manager of his newest Hobby House 
restaurant. It was then that Dave met COL Harland Sanders, who had 
stopped by the restaurant one day to promote his Kentucky Fried Chicken 
franchise.
  Clauss acquired four in Columbus, but they didn't fare well, so he 
recruited Thomas to turn them around in exchange for 45 percent 
ownership. Not surprisingly, Dave succeeded. By 1968, Dave sold his 
interest back to KFC for $1 million. The capital that Dave collected 
from the Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants allowed him to open up his 
own hamburger restaurant in Columbus--and the rest is history.
  Dave Thomas built his successful restaurant dynasty upon his sound 
and strong moral beliefs. However, his corporate achievements take a 
distant second place to his philanthropic contributions--especially to 
the cause of adopted children. He was given up for adoption as an 
infant, and his adoptive mother died when he was only 5 years old. But 
it was a sense of family--of belonging to a group of people who cared 
for him--that got Dave through his early life adversity. Dave Thomas 
never forgot the benefits his adopted life gave him. And so later, he 
committed his life to provide the same opportunities for others.
  Dave contributed millions of dollars to hospitals and charitable 
organizations. He founded the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption in 
1992 and the profits from his books go directly to the Foundation. Dave 
also established the Dave and Lorraine Thomas Clinical Laboratories at 
Columbus' Children's Hospital.
  He believed in philanthropy with a personal touch, whether it be his 
own letter-writing campaign to CEOs of the Fortune 1000 companies to 
ask them to make adoption benefits available to employees, or meeting 
with lawmakers to push for important adoption legislation. Dave truly 
believed that giving back to his community was of paramount importance, 
and I commend him for that.
  We shared our interest in finding safe, loving, and permanent homes 
for thousands of at-risk children in this country. I remember Dave to 
be a kind and genuine person who remarked that his greatest heroes were 
the children and parents who had come together as families. I had the 
opportunity to work with Dave Thomas in the development of the Adoption 
and Safe Families Act. As a national advocate for adoption rights, he 
played a key role in helping us get the bill passed and signed into 
law. At the bill's signing ceremony in 1997, then-President and First 
Lady Clinton praised Dave's work and his tireless commitment to 
children.
  In January 2002, President Bush praised Dave's adoption work at the 
signing ceremony of the Promoting Safe and Stable Families law, which 
Senator Rockefeller and I introduced in the fall of 2001. President 
Bush was quite right when he said: ``Dave's vision of America was one 
in which all children would be a part of a loving family, so they could 
grow into healthy and happy and successful adults. The bill I'm 
[signing] will bring us closer to his vision.'' I couldn't agree more.
  Indeed, Dave Thomas was a successful businessman who used his good 
fortune to help those in need. By helping so many children at risk, he 
testified to his true compassion and dedication to humanity. As 
Chesterton once said: ``Great men take up great space even when they 
are gone.'' Dave Thomas will continue to take up great space on this 
Earth--not just in buildings or foundations but in lives touched and 
lives changed. He will continue to live on through his great work and 
his deep compassion and commitment to bringing families together. We 
will remember Dave Thomas always.

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