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An original Minnie Mouse gives major gift to St. Luke’s ‘with love for the children’

Connie Downs, a longtime friend of Jimmie Lou Aquino, holds a replica check outside the sedation room at St. Luke's Children's Cancer Institute that Aquino made possible with a $375,000 donation from her will.
By Dave SouthornLast Updated December 19, 2023
Children were always central to Jimmie Lou Aquino's life, from entertaining thousands of them in a unique job, to raising three of her own.
Even after her death in June at the age of 96, Aquino has ensured that children will be taken care of for years to come.
Upon her passing, Aquino left a $375,000 donation to the St. Luke's Children's Cancer Institute — a donation that has already been used to equip a special sedation room for chemotherapy.
“Gifts like this from Jimmie Lou are extraordinary and humbling,” said Travis Bradburn, St. Luke's Health Foundation's vice president and chief philanthropy officer. “To be thought of in this way in her will is the embodiment of the sentiment of planting a tree under which she will never sit.
“The children and families cared for at St. Luke's Children's Cancer Institute are the beneficiaries of this thoughtful and meaningful gift and we could not be more grateful for how this will impact their lives.”

Jimmie Lou Aquino, left, as Minnie Mouse in the late 1950s at Disneyland.
The sedation room bears the names of Jimmie Lou and her husband George, who died in 1985 from cancer, with the inscription “with love for the children.”
In creating the sedation room, the physical space was not an issue, but being able to fully equip it was key — from gurneys to the right kinds of needles to oxygen monitors and medical systems.
Sedation is most often used when administering chemotherapy via lumbar puncture in the spine, but also requires multiple staff members to be on hand. Also, not having the sedation room in the St. Luke's Children's Cancer Institute meant transporting patients to the pediatric ICU at St. Luke’s for sedation, then back to St. Luke's Children's Cancer Institute for the chemotherapy.
“This has been a number of years in the making, getting sedations done in the clinic,” said St. Luke's Children's Cancer Institute nursing manager Renee Vomocil. “… it makes it so we can provide better, more consistent patient care. It's making it easier on patients, parents and on the team.”
Even back in the 1950s, the Aquinos found a special way to make children's lives happier by finding jobs at a new spot in California: Disneyland. Jimmie Lou worked as a costumed Minnie Mouse, greeting visitors in the park’s opening years.
Later, she and George owned an ambulance service in Orange County, Calif. During her life, she also owned three video stores and earned her contractor's license to build homes. Later, the Aquinos moved to Emmett, where Jimmie Lou lived for the second half of her life.
“No one could tell that woman what she could or couldn't do; she was a little spitfire,” said Connie Downs, a longtime friend and Emmett resident. “Jimmie Lou was very strong, very determined, not afraid to do what she needed to do and not afraid to put anyone in their place. … she just did a lot of stuff, this lady.
“She believed in being involved. After her husband died, she was by herself, but that didn't stop her from doing what she wanted to do.”
