Thursday, October 20, 2011

Presidential Pens

Payne (left) at the 1965 Voting Rights bill signing.
Ethel Payne is certainly among the very few journalists, and perhaps the only one, to have received a pen used by a President to sign a bill into law. I bet she is certainly the only one to have been given two.
     Pens used in signing bills have been given by presidents to those who helped make the bill into a law ever since the days of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. When, for instance, President Obama signed his health care bill into law he used 22 pens, according to the New York Times.
     The pens go mostly to lawmakers and then a few to those behind the movement or cause that gave rise to the new law. Journalists, who report on events rather than shape them, aren’t among the recipients of these prized political items.
     In Payne’s case, however, her reporting on the Civil Rights movement in the black press, which both enlightened and activated readers across the country, was seen as so important by President Lyndon B. Johnson that he presented her with a pen when he signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act and again when he signed the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
     You can see a video of Johnson signing the 1964 Civil Rights act on YouTube.  He used between 72 and 75 pens (you can see them lined up in special holders on the desk) and gave them to politicians such as Senators Hubert Humphrey and Everett McKinley Dirksen and Civil Rights leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr. and one to Ethel Payne. You don’t see that moment in the YouTube video as it cuts off before the end of the event. But if you look carefully you can spot Payne, wearing one of her distinctive hats, as she makes her way through the crowd to the desk. (The scene occurs at about 3 minutes and 40 seconds into the tape just before Johnson gives King and A. Philip Randolph their pens.)
    Incidentally, the pens are not only politically valuable, usually displayed prominently on the walls of one's office, they are also financially valuable. One of the pens used by Johnson in signing the Civil Rights Act is being offered for sale by the autograph dealer Sign of History for $75,000.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

A Day in Shanghai

I love this photo taken in 1973 when Payne was among the first American journalists to visit China (we called it "Red China" back then) following President Richard Nixon's historic visit the previous year.
Among those who traveled in Payne's group was Reg Murphy of the Atlanta Constitution. Here is how he recalled the afternoon the photo was taken.
"Ethel Payne is a fairly large black woman and by Chinese standards worthy of long stares. One day on a Shanghai street she wore a coat which looked like leopard skin and in the land of the blue Mao jackets she could be mistaken for a foreign potentate.
A group of mischievous white American reporters traveling in the same journalistic tour came up with a great idea. They hustled around into her intended direction. As she came past, the reporters began a slow and solemn salaam.
The crowd of Chinese following Miss Payne turned big-eyed in wonder. Their suspicions had been confirmed: This was the potentate of some rich country visiting the land of militant equality.
A lesser person would have lost her poise and either laughed or castigated her 'subjects.' Ethel Payne did neither. She accepted the deep bows with a trifling nod of her head and swept on past in her leopard-skin coat. Only when the troupe was back in their cars did she finally lose control and laugh until great tears rolled down her cheeks."