Marysville Appeal-Democrat

TODAY IN HISTORY

- Appeal Staff Report

Nixon in China

On February 21, 1972, Richard M. Nixon arrived in China for an historic eight-day official visit. He was the first U.S. president to visit the People’s Republic of China since its founding in 1949.

The meeting between Nixon and Chinese Premier Zhou

Enlai resulted in the Shanghai Communique, a pledge to set aside difference­s, especially on Taiwan, and to begin the process of the normalizat­ion of relations.

The United States began to take an active interest in establishi­ng political and economic ties with China in the 19th century. After Japan attempted to invade China in 1894-95, Russia, France, Germany, and Great Britain sought to protect their interests in that country by carving the nation into spheres of influence. The U.S., an important power in the Pacific as a consequenc­e of its 1898 victory in the Spanishame­rican War, attempted to prevent this division with the formulatio­n, in 1899 and 1900, of what came to be known as the Open Door policy. This policy proposed to both ensure all nations equal trading privileges in China and to protect Chinese sovereignt­y.

Barbara Jordan: Woman of many firsts

On February 21, 1936, Barbara Jordan was born in Houston, Texas, to later become the nation’s first African American state senator since 1883.

Jordan was born into a family of three sisters in Houston. She graduated from segregated Phillis Wheatley High School in 1952. In 1956, she received her bachelor’s degree from Texas Southern University. Jordan received her law degree from Boston University and passed the bar in Massachuse­tts and Texas in 1959. In 1960, Jordan opened a practice in Houston and worked as an administra­tive assistant to a county judge to supplement her income. She tried to further her political career in 1962 and 1964 by running for the Texas House of Representa­tives and lost.

In 1966, Jordan won a new seat, formed due to redistrict­ing, in the Texas

Senate. She became the first African American state senator since 1883 and the first Black woman elected to the Texas State Senate. During her time in the state senate, Jordan pushed for bills leading to the establishm­ent of the state’s first minimum wage law, antidiscri­minatory laws in business, and the Texas Fair Employment Practices Commission. On

March 28, 1972, Jordan was elected President Pro Tempore of the Texas Legislatur­e, becoming the first Black woman to preside over a legislativ­e body in America. Later that year, on June 10th, Jordan served as acting governor for a day when the governor and lieutenant governor were out of the state, becoming the first Black chief executive in the nation.

In 1972, Jordan ran for Congress and won. She became the first African American elected to Congress from the Deep South in the 20th century. As she had during her time in the Texas legislatur­e, Jordan advocated for civil rights and women’s rights. She was reluctant to join any group or caucus. She commented, “I am neither a black politician, nor a woman politician. Just a politician, a profession­al politician.” Jordan served on the Judiciary Committee and the Committee on Government Operations. While serving on the Judiciary Committee in 1974, she gave the opening remarks on the procedures of the articles of impeachmen­t against President Richard Nixon, which brought her recognitio­n and respect as a national politician. In 1975, Jordan sponsored the expansion of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to include Hispanic Americans, Native Americans, and Asian Americans.

In 1976, Jordan became the first African American and the first woman to deliver the keynote speech at the Democratic Party

National Convention. She then campaigned for Jimmy Carter during his presidenti­al campaign. President Carter considered her for a cabinet position; however, she only wanted the position of Attorney General, which Carter decided to give to Griffin B. Bell.

Jordan did not seek reelection for a fourth term in Congress in 1978 so that she could focus on addressing issues in Texas. She was appointed Lyndon Johnson Chair in National Policy at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas in Austin. She delivered speeches at the 1992 and the 1994 Democratic National Convention­s. In 1994, President Bill Clinton appointed her to the Commission on Immigratio­n Reform. In 1990 she was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in Seneca, New York.

On January 17, 1996,

Jordan died from pneumonia, a complicati­on of leukemia, in Austin, Texas. Barbara Jordan was the first African American to be buried in the Texas State Cemetery in Austin.

Source: Library of Congress

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