The Mercury News

Klobuchar, journalist and Amy’s father, dies at 93

- By Katharine Q. Seelye

Jim Klobuchar was a renowned sports writer and general-interest columnist in Minnesota for decades.

Straight out of central casting, he was celebrated for his derring-do: He once held a piece of chalk between his lips while a sharpshoot­er took aim at it. He was a finalist for NASA’s initiative to send a journalist into space, until the Challenger explosion in 1986 ended the program. He scaled the Matterhorn eight times and Kilimanjar­o five.

And he could make readers weep, as when he wrote about a 5-year-old girl with a brain tumor who loved to ride the rails: “She was cradled in her mother’s lap on the observatio­n car of the Milwaukee Road’s Hiawatha, a tidy young lady. A dying little girl, taking her last train ride.”

But he did not come to national attention until 2018, when his daughter, U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., mentioned him during the contentiou­s televised hearings on Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court.

During her questionin­g of the nominee, Klobuchar noted that her father, then 90, was a recovering alcoholic who still attended meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous. She asked Kavanaugh whether he had ever drunk so much that he could not recollect events. He turned the question back on her, a breach of decorum for which he later apologized. She accepted the apology, adding, “When you have a parent that’s an alcoholic, you’re pretty careful about drinking.”

By then, her father had been sober for more than 25 years. When she ran for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination in 2020, Amy Klobuchar spoke often of his successful treatment and proposed spending billions of dollars to treat substance abuse.

Jim Klobuchar died Wednesday at a care facility in Burnsville, a suburb of the Twin Cities. He was 93. Amy Klobuchar, who announced his death on Twitter, did not specify a cause but said he had had Alzheimer’s disease. He survived a bout with COVID-19 last year.

Klobuchar was long popular in Minnesota, even a folk hero. In addition to his newspaperc­olumns 8,400ofthem by the time he retired from Minneapoli­s’ Star Tribune in 1995 he wrote 23 books, held a football clinic for women, hosted talk shows and for almost four decades led annual “Jaunt with Jim” bicycling trips around the state, stopping at pay phones along the road to call in and dictate his column. After he and his first wife, Rose (Heuberger) Klobuchar, divorced in 1976, he and Amy began taking long-distance biking trips to bond with each other.

As a young journalist for The Associated Press, he experience­d an especially heady moment the day after the 1960 presidenti­al election, when John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon were still neck and neck, with three states yet to report results. Klobuchar wrote the nationwide bulletin announcing that Kennedy had won Minnesota, giving him enough electoral votes to clinch the presidency. The scoop appeared in papers across the country.

James John Klobuchar was born April 9, 1928, in Ely, a small city on the Iron Range of northern Minnesota, where he grew up. His father, Michael Klobuchar, worked in the iron ore mines. His mother, Mary (Pucel) Klobuchar, was a homemaker.

From an early age, Jim read the Duluth Herald, and his mother encouraged him to pursue a career in journalism, Amy Klobuchar wrote in her 2015 memoir, “The Senator Next Door.”

He graduated from Ely Junior College (now Vermilion Community College) in 1948, then enrolled at the University of Minnesota, graduating with a degree in journalism in 1950.

He landed a job as wire editor at The Bismarck Daily Tribune in North Dakota. Six months later, he was drafted into the Army and assigned to a new psychologi­cal warfare unit in Stuttgart, Germany, where he wrote anticommun­ist material.

He returned briefly to the Bismarck paper, then was recruited by The Associated Press in Minneapoli­s, where he scored his election scoop. He joined the Minneapoli­s Tribune, the city’s morning newspaper, in 1961 as a sports reporter, focusing on the Vikings of the NFL.

He left the Tribune in 1965 for the competing St. Paul Pioneer Press, but it wasn’t long before the Minneapoli­s Star, the city’s evening newspaper, lured him away by giving him a column to write about whatever he wanted.

This was the heyday of print journalism, when newspapers sent their star writers all over the world. During the height of the Cold War, Klobuchar reported from Moscow. He covered the murder and funeral of Aldo Moro, Italy’s former prime minister, in 1978. He challenged pool hustler Minnesota Fats to a game. He wrote about an air service that employed topless flight attendants. He played a reporter in the 1974 movie “The Wrestler,” which starred Ed Asner.

In addition to Amy Klobuchar, he is survived by another daughter, Meagan; his wife, Susan Wilkes; his brother, Dick; and a granddaugh­ter.

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