Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Chicago philanthro­pist, political influencer who ‘didn’t like to see people get picked on’

- BY KATIE ANTHONY

When Josephine “Jo” Baskin Minow would return to her hometown of Chicago, she’d look down at the sprawling city beneath the plane and say, “I just want to throw my arms around the city. I love it so much.”

And the city felt her love — a prominent organizer and advocate, she served on boards at the Chicago History Museum, Northweste­rn University, Chicago’s Center on Halsted, Ravinia Music Festival and more during her “lifetime love affair with Chicago and Chicago history,” according to Nell Minow, her daughter.

She died Friday at 95 at her home in Lake View due to ongoing health complicati­ons.

The wife of 72 years of Newton Minow, who served as the chair of the FCC under John F. Kennedy and received the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama in 2016, Ms. Baskin Minow blazed her own trail in Chicago through social and political landscapes.

She was honored with the Caroline Margaret McIlvaine Making History Award for Distinctio­n in Creative Cultural Leadership in 2018 from the Chicago History Museum, where she served 30 years as a trustee. In 2015, the museum dedicated the Jo Baskin Minow Balcony Gallery in her honor.

“That was her greatest love,” Nell Minow said. “She would walk over there from her house on Briar Place and spend the day there.”

She also was a staunch believer in equal rights and advocacy, starting in her college days when she participat­ed in the Quibblers — a group advocating against the exclusion of racial minorities from university housing — at Northweste­rn University. In the mid-1970s, Ms. Baskin Minow joined a group of women pushing department stores to end racial discrimina­tion, meeting with Marshall Fields to advocate for Black sales associates to be allowed on the floor.

“She didn’t like to see people get picked on,” Nell Minow said. “She was always somebody to stand up for anybody that was not being treated fairly.”

In 1978, Ms. Baskin Minow returned to Northweste­rn University, where she graduated with a B.S. in 1948, to be a founding member of the Northweste­rn University Women’s Board.

Her advocacy spanned the length of her life — at 85, she co-chaired an event for the Center on Halsted, an LGBTQ community center. She was elated, Nell Minow said, when they asked her to cut the ribbon.

Combined with her passion for writing, Ms. Baskin Minow funneled her advocacy for kids into children’s books — the first, published in 1992, called “Marty the Broken-Hearted Artichoke,” was distribute­d free to nonprofits across the country.

While Hillary Rodham Clinton was the first lady, she chose to read Ms. Baskin Minow’s book at the inaugurati­on of the “Reach Out and Read” project at the University of Chicago Friends Children’s Clinic.

In her 80s, she received an award from Ravinia Music Festival for her work as a trustee. Her involvemen­t in the festival, starting in her 60s, was an homage to her days in high school when she and her friends would take a streetcar and two trains to hear the music in Highland Park, Nell Minow said.

“Hilariousl­y funny,” until the end of her life, Nell Minow said her mother would often quote Bette Davis, saying, “old age isn’t for sissies.”

“We’d say, ‘well good thing you’re not a sissy, you seem to be handling it pretty well,’” Nell Minow said.

Between board meetings and events alongside powerful political figures, Ms. Baskin Minow found time to chronicle her family’s life in scrapbooks. She had ones dedicated to each of her daughter’s lives, their family, Newton’s career and more — totaling 70 volumes that she donated to the Chicago History Museum, Nell Minow said.

“She was unbelievab­ly meticulous,” Nell Minow said. “She updated them constantly, and they’re just treasure troves.”

Ms. Baskin Minow is survived by her husband and their three daughters, whom she dubbed “the three Portias” — Nell, Martha, and Mary. She’s also remembered by her two sons-in-law, David Apatoff and Joseph Singer, and three grandchild­ren, Benjamin and Rachel Apatoff and Mira Singer, and Rachel’s husband, Scott Collette.

Services will be private. In lieu of flowers, her family suggests donations to preferred charities.

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 ?? ?? Josephine “Jo” Baskin Minow and her husband, Newton Minow (left and above in 2021), were married for 72 years.
Josephine “Jo” Baskin Minow and her husband, Newton Minow (left and above in 2021), were married for 72 years.
 ?? PROVIDED PHOTOS ?? The Minow family with former President John F. Kennedy during Newton Minow’s time as chair of the FCC.
PROVIDED PHOTOS The Minow family with former President John F. Kennedy during Newton Minow’s time as chair of the FCC.

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