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dcXhc
06 Nov 2003, 12:57 PM
I said almost......



NPR Given Record Donation
McDonald's Heiress Leaves $200 Million

By Paul Farhi and Reilly Capps
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, November 6, 2003; Page A01


National Public Radio will announce today the largest donation in its history, a cash bequest from the will of the late philanthropist Joan Kroc of about $200 million.

The bequest from the widow of the founder of the McDonald's fast-food chain both shocked and delighted people at NPR's headquarters in Washington yesterday. It amounts to almost twice NPR's annual operating budget. "No one saw this coming," said one person.

The nonprofit organization, which will disclose details of the bequest at a news conference this afternoon, called the donation the "largest monetary gift ever received by an American cultural institution" in a brief announcement to its staff yesterday.

The gift was such a surprise to NPR officials that they were uncertain what the money would be used for. The organization's board is expected to meet in the next few weeks to decide what to do with the windfall. An NPR spokesperson declined to comment yesterday.

NPR, best known for its daily news programs "Morning Edition" and "All Things Considered," cut back on some of its music and cultural programs earlier this year, and there was speculation yesterday that Kroc's money could be used to restore those offerings. It could also be used to expand NPR's news programs, which are heard by about 22 million people weekly.

Speaking generally, Michele Norris, a co-host of "All Things Considered," said any cash infusion is welcome at an organization that is perpetually on tight budgets. "What we do every day is a miracle on the order of loaves and fishes with such a small and dedicated staff," Norris said.

Kroc, 75, died of brain cancer on Oct. 12 in San Diego. She had been a longtime listener of NPR's local affiliate, KPBS, but had no formal association with NPR or history of funding it. People at NPR said yesterday that she had expressed admiration for NPR's coverage of the events leading up to the war in Iraq and its reporting of the war itself.

Her gift to NPR is one of several that flowed from her estate. Last week the University of San Diego and the University of Notre Dame announced they each had been given $50 million by Kroc's estate. The donations are the largest either university has ever received.

In 1998 she gave $25 million to USD for the establishment of the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice. Notre Dame hosts a similar institution, the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, which was established in 1986.

With a long history of philanthropy, Kroc has donated to individual public radio stations in the past. In 2001 she gave $3 million to KPBS to help the station build a new studio. KPBS spokeswoman Nancy Worlie said that her station also would announce a gift today. She would not confirm that the gift came from Kroc, who lived much of her life in Rancho Santa Fe, near San Diego.

Forbes magazine estimated Kroc's worth at $1.7 billion and ranked her No. 121 on its list of the nation's wealthiest people.

Joan Beverly Mansfield was born in 1928, the daughter of a railroad man who was often out of work during the Depression. Still, he made sure his daughter received piano lessons, and eventually she became a piano player in a St. Paul restaurant. She met Ray Kroc in 1957 when he was dining, on business, and caught her eye. In his autobiography he called her a "blonde beauty." Though she was 25 years younger, the two fell in love and eventually married. The couple had a daughter, Linda Kliber, who could not be reached for comment yesterday.

When Ray Kroc died in 1984, she took control of the San Diego Padres, which her husband had purchased 10 years earlier. And though Ray Kroc had been committed to philanthropy, opening the Kroc Foundation in Chicago to support medical research, his wife took giving even more seriously.

She gave more than $90 million to the Salvation Army, the largest donation that organization had ever received, to build a 12-acre community center that opened in June 2002. She also helped build the St. Vincent de Paul Joan Kroc Center for the homeless, a palliative care center, and the Kroc-Copley Animal Shelter, all in or near San Diego. She was also a major benefactor of the Carter Center of Emory University in Atlanta, and in 1987 she gave $1 million to the Democratic National Committee, at the time believed to be the largest single contribution to a political party in U.S. history.

During its most recent fiscal year, which ended in September, NPR had an operating budget of $103 million and broke even despite the cost of covering the war in Iraq. Despite gains in listeners, its income has grown slowly over the past three years. In fiscal 2001, NPR lost about $4 million.

About half of NPR's revenue comes from public radio stations that pay annual dues based on the size of their audience. The balance comes primarily from private donations and corporate contributions. The organization receives less than 1 percent of its funding directly from federal tax dollars. The federal Corporation for Public Broadcasting supplies about 15 percent of the budgets of NPR's member stations, however, which then pay some of that money to NPR.

Staff writer Roxanne Roberts contributed to this report.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A6973-2003Nov6.html

butter_of_69
06 Nov 2003, 01:02 PM
Can't help but think that's gonna kill local public radio station contributions for a little while. People will probably think that's helping the individual stations, when it sounds like it's not.

Duemellon
06 Nov 2003, 05:15 PM
well, i'm glad.

Nothing like funding commercial-free free speech.. u'kno...speech not tied to an industry, set of businesses, or limited contributor pool.

Which, interestingly enough, tends to be liberal in their stories.

go fig...

dcXhc
06 Nov 2003, 06:09 PM
Originally posted by Duemellon
Which, interestingly enough, tends to be liberal in their stories.


That's a common complaint, but I find them to be pretty balanced. I think you can find a liberal slant in their story choices but I think they tend to present both sides of each story and avoid the sensationalist spin that marks so many other news outlets.

Duemellon
06 Nov 2003, 06:17 PM
It's hard to argue that they aren't liberal when they've dedicated the last month interviewing the democratic candidates...

oh... wait..

there are no republican candidates.

tobedawg
06 Nov 2003, 09:39 PM
Wow!!! I thought that someone who was married to the head of McDonald's would be donating to the Republican Party or the Ronald Reagan Alzheimer's Fund.. It's great that she did this for NPR..

It makes me almost think about going to McDonald's and ordering a Meatless Big Mac ... but I don't eat at McDonald's... (It's a rule!)

Huxley
07 Nov 2003, 07:32 PM
i dont eat at mcd's either, but two days ago i was walking across the street and i saw my ex- high school bittersweet heart walking down the road with the guy she cheated on me with. she called out my name then i jetted into the mcd's and downed the 5 oz. of cheap vodka i had in my flask. so i just go to mcd's to down nasty booze.

The Mad Hater
07 Nov 2003, 10:04 PM
I used to shun NPR AND AM radio on the basis that one was strictly conservative and the other strictly liberal. not so, I have discovered. yes, AM radio is cloyingly conservative, but I have found NPR, at least WYSO (now my second favorite radio station), to be pretty balanced. a general example: an interview between an AM radio host and a liberal guest typically turns out to be an abrasive one-way discussion dominated by the overbearing host as he shoves his self-righteous agenda down his listener's throats at the expense of his guest. whereas an interview between an NPR host and a conservative guest is typically an enjoyable friendly discussion in which the host does little more than use the interview to educate the listeners about the guest. unless it's O'Reilly, of course. then again, that was pretty educational.