60.30 Howe Enterprise December 5, 2022

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HoweEnterprise.com

Texas History Minute

The twentieth century transformed the United States from a moderate power only loosely involved in world affairs into a superpower where most Ken Bridges questions of foreign relations revolved around American goals and intentions. Much of this transition began taking place during the period just before and just after World War II. Numerous treaties were ratified, planning was required, and many discussions took place in the U. S. Senate. An important part of this work in creating a global role for the United States came from a one-time, small-town attorney from McLennan County, Texas.

Thomas Terry Connally was born on a farm near the small community of Hewitt in McLennan County in August 1877, just after the end of Reconstruction. He graduated from Baylor University in 1896 at age 19 and earned a law degree from the University of Texas in 1898. Immediately after graduation, he enlisted in the army to fight in the Spanish-American War. He believed in the role that America must play in world affairs, but in the meantime, moved to Marlin in Falls County to set up a law practice. After respected terms in the state legislature and as Falls County Prosecuting Attorney, he was elected to Congress in 1916. America entered World War I in 1917, and Connally, at age 40, briefly resigned from Congress to join the army once again. After his return, he was put on the House Foreign Affairs Committee where he actively supported President Woodrow Wilson’s leadership on the world stage and plans for American entry into the League of Nations, an organization dedicated to world peace founded by Wilson. Because of bitterly divisions over the League, American entry failed. Connally was elected to the U. S. Senate in 1928. He eventually came to serve on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, becoming its chair in 1941. He supported President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s efforts to help arm the Allies as they fought against the Axis Powers. America could not afford to shy way from the demands of a dangerous world. Connally’s role as Foreign Relations Chair proved to be invaluable as the nation worked with nations across the globe during World War II. As World War II neared an end, Connally supported new American leadership in world affairs following the war. Roosevelt himself had supported the American entry into the League of Nations years before and now support-

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ed a new organization similarly dedicated to peace and justice among the nations of the world. Roosevelt had referred to the Allies as “the United Nations” since the United Nations Declaration in 1942 and pushed for the creation of a formal organization that united the world’s countries. Connally was a natural choice to serve as a delegate, one of 850 from 51 nations. He met with delegates gathering in San Francisco, California, from other nations to form the United Nations in April 1945. He was named vicechairman of the Conference on International Organization that formally created the UN. He served as a representative to the first UN conference in London later that year and the second UN conference in 1946 in New York, which later became its permanent headquarters. He also helped the UN begin expanding beyond the initial World War II allies in 1946 by securing the admission of Afghanistan, Iceland, and Sweden to the assembly.

Connally won re-election in 1946. Nationally, the Democrats lost their majority in the Senate in light of President Harry S. Truman’s unpopularity. Connally lost his chairmanship of the Foreign Relations Committee but stayed on the committee. He took back the chairmanship when Democrats regained the Senate in 1948. With the Cold War with the Soviet Union deteriorating, a new treaty appeared before the committee that would also have lasting repercussions. The North Atlantic Treaty allied the United States and eleven other nations into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Connally pushed its approval through committee, and it was ratified in the Senate in July 1949 by a vote of 82 to 13. NATO would be the first permanent alliance that the United States had entered into since it allied with France during the American Revolution. NATO became the cornerstone of America’s defense against any communist expansion in Europe during the decades-long Cold War. America’s commitments abroad faced another test with the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950. Connally’s committee helped provide Truman with the congressional support he needed in organizing for the latest war. Connally also openly defended Truman’s controversial firing of Gen. Douglas MacArthur in 1951 for publicly criticizing him. Connally decided not to seek reelection in 1952. After his retirement, he remained in Washington; and though 75 years old, he opened a law firm. He died in October 1963. He died in a world that now looked to America for leadership to defend the free world.

Living with children Okay, stop it! Enough, already!

I guess we need some rules around here, beginning and ending with, John Rosemond “Don’t make Santa Claus into a boogie man.” I know him personally and he’s the most gracious and loving human being you’d ever want to meet. In the past week or so, since turkey carcasses began clogging our landfills, I’ve heard two mothers making a boogie man out of my dear friend, Santa B. Claus, which he maintains is properly pronounced “Klouse” as opposed to “Claws.” The B, by the way, stands for the same name as the B in “Johnny B. Goode.” One mother, bless her heart, was overheard by me telling her child, whom I estimated to be around five, “Now remember, if you’re not a good boy in the store with Mommy, Santa won’t bring you as many toys as you want.” Two things: First, that’s simply not true, which I shouldn’t have to explain. Second, the implication is that if said child doesn’t get every single thing he wants, he must have been bad in some nebulous way. Did he not get the lifesize Mickey Mouse Personal Servant Robot because he snitched that one oatmeal-raisin cookie on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving? That sort of stuff messes with a child’s mind, good people! C’mon! One does not have to be a psychologist to figure that out!

Santa is watching!” You can’t make this stuff up, although Charles Dickens came very close at times. Regardless of one’s particular worldview, I think we can all agree that the Christmas/Holiday/Winterfest season is a time for joy, generosity, and kindness. More specifically, it is a season for treating children in keeping with the joyous presence they bring to a family gathering. Even when they act like immature little brats, their presence is to be cherished. Besides, an adult who becomes aggravated at children who are just being children, which includes the potential, in each and every one of them, for immature brat behavior, needs a month-long massage of their emotions at a spiritual rejuvenation spa. In conclusion, allow me to make one last appeal to common sense on behalf of my good and faithful friend, Santa B. Claus (remember that pronunciation thing): He is not a boogie man and should not be turned into one for the purpose of disciplining a child. Ironically, however, Santa, being the humble fellow that he is and always will be, isn’t the least bit bothered when someone turns him into a boogie man. He leaves his public relations to people like me. Family psychologist John Rosemond: parentguru.com, johnrosemond. com.

The other mom, whom I encountered when leaving my default grocery store, was heard saying to her preschool child, who was struggling and screaming in her grip, “Santa is watching!

John Rosemond has worked with families, children, and parents since 1971 in the field of family psychology. In 1971, John earned his masters in psychology from Western Illinois University and was elected to the Phi Kappa Phi National Honor Society.

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