Vietnamese woman gets one child back Photo by Diana Totah ilbui Sennet! a member of the A&M Corps of Cadets, spends his Ll.'l' (l )nS i StlK 'V 1 * teac h' n K *n College Station. Sennett Is the only by Wvl, black member of the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band, spiratioo, ^ Senior hoots clank n J r - high halls Associated Press DES MOINES, Iowa — A Vietnamese mother who left her seven children in an orphanage while the Communists advanced on Saigon says “I am so happy I don’t know what word you can use” over a court decision returning one child to her. “I am excited and nervy,” said Dean thi Hoang Anh, 33, in a tele phone interview from Great Falls, Mont., where she lives with four of her children. “It’s like losing a son. We were hoping for a miracle,” was the reac tion of John Nelson, 33, the 6-year- old boy’s foster father for the last 18 months. “We’re happy we’ve had a year and a half with Ben. ” Iowa Supreme Court Chief Justice C. Edwin Moore wrote in the unanimous decision that “the Nel sons have rendered exceptional serv ice in Ben’s behalf. Under this rec ord, someone must be hurt.” Ben, who’s real name is Doan Van Binh, is one of seven brothers and sisters who escaped capture in the final days of the Saigon regime. Their mother left them in a Friends of Vietnam Children orphanage with a request to get them out of the coun try, according to court records. Their father had just been killed, and the court noted, “It was only after an incredible ordeal Anh and the chil- lexican the allep States, look, abf ’ ui ruiMui (ones of tlU ,”5ri(iay 0Ur a day ’ Monda y trough iesandlfi aliens fe °n Oct. 1 Sennette will take over eseventh grade class activities en- re . y ' He will use a contract grade jaugu«/ Sem which will enable the stu- llegalaM e J s work at their own levels, i Mesa PWette said he feels these ' he sail a series :an gofl , a .>cuu ne reels these be sji WVgiy^ the students some ibs anitel' een the to )od .0. By KATHY HENDERSON , en the senior boots loudly a en the quiet halls of An son "es Jr. High School in Bryan, one Teventh grade class knows that their , ,®!'t teacher has arrived. I dhert Pops” Sennette, a mr ma 5°dng in primary educa- mn at Texas A&M University, • , es socia l studies at Anson Jones ac re^, ,• V V y V Gullit; I o nsibility and a chance to be crea- ,e ' teacher is then available to ^d' nd ' v ' duid instruction, he •The students are well disciplined, en nette said, but there is one minor fobtem. Frequently, to his dismay, ev accidentally step on his boots. °P S can be seen on campus 'Hug the trombone and marching Nelly in the ranks whenever the 'g tin Texas Aggie Band steps off [Je beat of the Aggie War Hymn. ci's (ne Infantry Baud Battalion Wly officer and is also a member »Parsons’ Mounted Cavalry. ennette entered Texas A&M as a T Inor e in 1974 after a visiting lec ture professor for the English de partment, Dr. Ray Leighman, showed him around the campus. Sennette is from Galveston, Tex., where he worked as a treatment technician at the Shriners Burn Hospital for children, in Galveston. Sennette, a robust fellow measur ing 61” tall and weighing 250 lbs, played semi-pro football for the Gulf Coast Texans for four years. “I even tried out for the Dallas Cowboys,” he said. But Sennette’s real goal is to be an academic counselor on a high school level. He plans to enter graduate courses at Texas A&M after he graduates this December. Sennette said he spends much of his spare time on weekends camping out with “the guys.” “The guys are six troops of Boy Scouts, about 55 in all, and Sennette is their Scoutmas ter. The boys range in age from 11- to 15-years-old. “I’ve spent lots of nights trying to console kids who are scared of the dark,” he said. “It’s really surprising how many of them are.” The members of Sennette’s troops are from a low income area in Bryan. He said although the people like the Boy Scout program, they aren ’t will ing to help with the work involved. “They say, ‘oh, that sounds, when you tell them about it but they’re busy when you need help,” he said. ChESTEB, III. — A Mississippi Kver stexw'NVie.eA iWeYVwv&t. de coyed by explosion and fire about p)is free of its watery grave. The fcat didn t come up — the river ‘rent down. JForty feet of heavy timbers and Banking — all that remains of “The iun City — has emerged as the Juarter-mile-wide river shrank to paints size because of water short ies upstream. ; On each side of the Mississippi, about I<36 yards of what normally is river bottom is exposed and dry. Although the Army Corps of En gineers is maintaining a nine-foot channel for river traffic, the waterway is now only about an eighth of a mile wide. There apparently were no crew members killed when the ship sank, hut persons examining the wreckage said they found hones that may have been part of a horse’s skeleton. ’Pi ds ;es< j*-' Top of the Tower Texas A&M University Pleasant Dining — Great View SERVING LUNCHEON BUFFET 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Each day except Saturday $2.50 DAILY $3.00 SUNDAY Serving soup is- sandwich 11.-00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Monday - Friday ■$1.50 plus drink Available Evenings For Special University Banquets Department of Food Service Texas A&M University “Quality First” dren were able to escape the same fate.” Anh, as she is known in Great Falls, fled Vietnam and entered the United States as a refugee on Aug. 5, 1975. She said she never gave the orphanage permission to have her children adopted. When they ar rived in the United States, she traced them through the Denver of fice of the orphanage sponsors. The Nelsons contended that Anh had abandoned her children and that Binh’s best interests would be served by his being left with them. But the court said Anh was “a woman of extraordinary courage, perseverance and full compassion for her child. ” The court also said there was evi dence the Nelsons had caused Binh to avoid contact with another Vietnamese family in Forest City, where they live, “. . . in effect caus ing him to reject his cultural and ra cial roots.” The court did ask, however, that there be continued contact between the Nelsons and Binh. Anh, who is training to be a nurse’s aide, had already located and reclaimed four of her children from a private home in Denver. One still lives in a foster home in this country and an infant is with a family in France. ow river exposes remains L?^ arre d riverboat, bones m w We stock only the finest equipment and com ponents . . . 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