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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened | ||||||
3 | to learn of the death of Newton N. Minow, former chairman of | ||||||
4 | the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), who passed away | ||||||
5 | on May 6, 2023 at the age of 97; and
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6 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on | ||||||
7 | January 17, 1926; he served as a U.S. Army sergeant in the | ||||||
8 | China-Burma-India Theater during World War II; he attended | ||||||
9 | Northwestern University, where he served as editor-in-chief of | ||||||
10 | the Illinois Law Review, known today as the Northwestern | ||||||
11 | University Law Review, and earned his bachelor's degree in | ||||||
12 | 1949 and his Juris Doctor in 1950; he married his true love and | ||||||
13 | lifetime collaborator Josephine "Jo" Baskin in 1949, and she | ||||||
14 | preceded him in death in February 2022 after 72 years of | ||||||
15 | marriage; and
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16 | WHEREAS, After graduating from law school, Newton Minow | ||||||
17 | served as law clerk to the Honorable Fred M. Vinson, Chief | ||||||
18 | Justice of the United States, and then as assistant counsel to | ||||||
19 | Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson, during which he first | ||||||
20 | suggested televised presidential debates in a memo to the | ||||||
21 | governor in 1955; and
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22 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow was selected to chair the FCC by |
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1 | President John F. Kennedy in 1961; he drafted legislation that | ||||||
2 | expanded the broadcast spectrum, known as the All-Channel | ||||||
3 | Receiver Act (ACRA) of 1962, and promoted the implementation | ||||||
4 | of communication satellite technology; during his tenure, he | ||||||
5 | additionally cemented presidential debates as a national | ||||||
6 | institution and vigorously supported children's programming | ||||||
7 | and broadcasting for the public interest, leading the way for | ||||||
8 | the creation of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS); he | ||||||
9 | served in the Kennedy Administration until 1963 and became | ||||||
10 | executive vice president and general counsel of Encyclopedia | ||||||
11 | Britannica, Inc.; and
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12 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow returned to Chicago in 1965, joining | ||||||
13 | the law firm of Leibman, Williams, Bennett, Baird & Minow, | ||||||
14 | which merged with Sidley & Austin in 1972 to become one of the | ||||||
15 | largest law firms in the nation at the time; he was a partner | ||||||
16 | at Sidley Austin, LLP from 1965 until 1991, serving on the | ||||||
17 | firm's Management Committee and Executive Committee and | ||||||
18 | remaining active as senior counsel until his death; he was a | ||||||
19 | prominent business and civic leader who helped Sidley Austin, | ||||||
20 | LLP and Chicago grow and prosper; and
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21 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow was committed to supporting | ||||||
22 | education, including through his and Sidley Austin, LLP's | ||||||
23 | adoption of the Kanoon Magnet School in 1984; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow was a man of ideas who authored five | ||||||
2 | books and wrote numerous articles; and
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3 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow remained active in Democratic | ||||||
4 | politics and with the Commission on Presidential Debates | ||||||
5 | (CPD), including co-chairing the 1976 and 1980 presidential | ||||||
6 | debates; he was involved in every organizing presidential | ||||||
7 | debate since then, serving on the CPD until last year; he also | ||||||
8 | served on commissions appointed by presidents of both | ||||||
9 | political parties; and
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10 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow maintained a lifelong relationship | ||||||
11 | with Northwestern University, joining its board of trustees in | ||||||
12 | 1975, where he served for nearly five decades, and becoming a | ||||||
13 | life trustee in 1987; he received the Northwestern Alumni | ||||||
14 | Medal in 1978; he was also the Walter Annenberg Professor | ||||||
15 | Emeritus of communications and law and was the director of the | ||||||
16 | Annenberg Washington Program in Communications Policy Studies | ||||||
17 | of Northwestern University; he became the namesake of an | ||||||
18 | endowment for a named professorship at Northwestern University | ||||||
19 | Pritzker School of Law in 2014 through funding by a consortium | ||||||
20 | of his personal friends, fellow alumni, and colleagues at | ||||||
21 | Sidley Austin, LLP, which also established the Newton and Jo | ||||||
22 | Minow Debate Series at the Law School, the first of which was | ||||||
23 | held in November 2015; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow served as a director of many | ||||||
2 | companies, including the Aon Corporation, CBS, the Sara Lee | ||||||
3 | Corporation, Manpower, Inc., the Tribune Company, and Foote, | ||||||
4 | Cone & Belding Communications, Inc.; he was a former chairman | ||||||
5 | of the RAND Corporation, trustee emeritus of the Mayo Clinic, | ||||||
6 | a life trustee of the University of Notre Dame, a former | ||||||
7 | trustee and chairman of the Carnegie Corporation, and former | ||||||
8 | chairman of PBS; and
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9 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow was named one of 21 recipients of | ||||||
10 | the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest | ||||||
11 | civilian honor, by President Barack Obama in 2016; he was also | ||||||
12 | the recipient of the American Bar Association Silver Gavel | ||||||
13 | Award, the Chicago Bar Association John Paul Stevens Award, | ||||||
14 | the Federal Communications Bar Association Lifetime | ||||||
15 | Achievement Award, and the American Lawyer Lifetime | ||||||
16 | Achievement Award; he was the recipient of several honorary | ||||||
17 | degrees, including from Brandeis University, the University of | ||||||
18 | Wisconsin, Northwestern University, and the University of | ||||||
19 | Notre Dame; and
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20 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow was a mentor, friend, | ||||||
21 | philanthropist, leader, and an icon throughout his many years | ||||||
22 | of service in the public and private sectors; he was | ||||||
23 | kind-hearted to all those he encountered and never shied from | ||||||
24 | an opportunity to speak openly and frankly about something in |
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1 | which he believed; he was known for his leadership, brilliant | ||||||
2 | insights, commitment to democracy and justice, warmth, and | ||||||
3 | sense of humor; he will be remembered for the incredible | ||||||
4 | contributions he made to society, the State of Illinois, and | ||||||
5 | the nation; and
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6 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow was a devoted husband, father, and | ||||||
7 | grandfather; and
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8 | WHEREAS, Newton Minow is survived by his daughters, Nell | ||||||
9 | (David Apatoff) Minow, Martha (Joe Singer) Minow, and Mary | ||||||
10 | Minow, and his grandchildren, Ben (Michelle Campagna) Apatoff, | ||||||
11 | Rachel (Scott Collette) Apatoff, and Mira Singer; therefore, | ||||||
12 | be it
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13 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL | ||||||
14 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of | ||||||
15 | Newton N. Minow, former chairman of the Federal Communications | ||||||
16 | Commission (FCC) and a champion for the public interest, and | ||||||
17 | extend our sincere condolences to his family, friends, and all | ||||||
18 | who knew and loved him; and be it further
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19 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
20 | presented to the family of Newton Minow as an expression of our | ||||||
21 | deepest sympathy.
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