Friday, January 23, 1987/The Battalion/Page 3 >/l :re{ 3USI Split family to reunite after 36 years Texas man finds his ‘home’ at last BEAUMONT (AP) — Some years back, a wealthy couple Jars adopted 8-year-old Travis Persall ! Ji., and folks at the orphanage near Corpus Christi where his ^^■ree older brothers remained told them he’d never want for anything. mm Travis Persall Jr. became ' James Franklin Sanders when the ’ adoption went through 36 years 1 ago, and he remembers having ls plenty of food, clothes and toys fl^lhen lie was growing up in his " ' adopted home in Aransas Pass. ve TeaiB B u t the folks at the orphanage ■ere wrong. What Sanders ■anted most were the three brothers he’d left behind at Boys ■ity, the brothers who’d been his companions until the time of his adoption. I “I guess I’ve lived like a ghost Bl these years, wondering if I had a family anymore,” says the 48- year-old Sanders of Mauriceville. “1 just wanted to be with my bi others, to know who I really ■as or that they even cared if I ■as alive.” ■ He didn’t know they’d been looking for him, too. ■ Thinking his brothers might be s< tere in Texas, Sanders contacted the Beaumont Enter prise. I Ron Seabridge, a martial arts instructor in Lumberton whose file’s family he located several years ago, read the Dec. 24 article and called Sanders. Sanders is flying to California on Feb. 2 for his mother’s 74th birthday. “Sometimes I’d think I could remember what my mother and when it fits, the puzzle all comes together.” The critical piece in Sanders’ case was one Penny Wise in Com merce, Calif. He got her name from a woman in Cullman, Ala., whose memory had faded with “Putting something like this together is like putting to gether a jigsaw puzzle. There’s that one critical piece, and when it fits, the puzzle all comes together.” — Ron Seabridge struckc '2,19/3. '.“Todji 'with 21 y is adi id a tils id here .station to obti Clemor. .yon, D-! lls “deii Kjrtion ector o! lion, saii iass am lid > dlthffi its mol* ills." looked like, but then I’d tell my self it was just my imagination,” Sanders says. “When I called her, she called me by my nickname, ‘Dumplin.’ No one has called me that for years.” Sanders talked with his mother on the telephone for the first time earlier this month after Seabridge found her in a small town south of San Bernadino, Calif. Armed with a pen, paper, road atlas and telephone, he tracked Sanders’ family from Corpus Christi to Cullman, Ala., to Red lands, Calif., in five hours’ time. All he asked Sanders was the price of the 30 or so phone calls. “Putting something like this to gether is like putting together a jigsaw puzzle,” Seabridge says. “There’s that one critical piece, the years but who believed she was Sanders’ aunt. Wise, who is married to Sand ers’ cousin Rayburn Wise, re membered her husband telling about the days when the Persall boys stayed with him while their father, now dead, was in the army. She remembered that Sanders’ older brother had hurt his hand in an accident, she remembered the nicknames, she remembered the stories of standing in line for the boys’ meat during World War II rationing days. “I asked her, ‘Is there any other thing you can tell me about the family?’ ” Seabridge says, smiling. “She said, ‘Yeah, his mother’s still alive.’ ” From his mother and other new-found relatives, Sanders pieced together what had hap pened. His mother and father di vorced, and his mother, Charlotte Persall, obtained legal custody of the children, which also included two sisters and a younger brother Sanders never knew he had. But Sanders’ father snatched the boys, his mother told him, and took them to Alabama, where he worked in a shipyard until he was drafted into the army. He left his sons with their aunt, Wise’s mother Elsie, but took them after he was discharged early because of medical prob lems. Those problems also in cluded drinking heavily, Rayburn Wise says, and he believes Sand ers’ father abandoned them after he brought them to Texas. Sanders, at that time about 6 years old, says he remembers working in the fields for meals and running from the law until he and his brothers were caught and sent to Boys City. Then he was adopted, and he believes his other brothers even tually ran away from the orpha nage. Two of Sanders’ three brothers are dead, and family members are trying to contact the other one where he lives in Washing ton. They want him to be there and finally see the brother for whom he searched so long. Committee suggests Supreme Court rulings caused crisis for Texas AUSTIN (AP) — Limiting court judgments and attorneys fees will help Texas recover from a crisis in liability insurance caused in part by the Texas Supreme Court, a special legislative committee said Thursday. “We are convinced beyond a shadow of a doubt that the crisis is real,” Sen. Grant Jones, D-Temple, and Rep. Mike Toomey, R-Houston, co-chairmen of the Joint Committee on Liability Insurance and Tort Law said in a joint statement. “It is causing tremendous harm to business, health care, governmental and charitable activities in Texas,” they said. The committee made a 245-page report to the Legislature Thursday after a year-long study. The report was signed by eight of the 10 committee members, and Sen. Kent Caperton, D-Bryan, said a minority report will be made later. Jones and Toomey said they found no single cause for the crisis but that the problems uncovered in the study must be attacked on three fronts — tort law reform, insurance law reform and stronger medical discipline. “The study produced conclusive evidence that fundamental changes in tort law over the past several years, largely through decisions by the Texas Supreme Court, have eroded the ability of insurers to ac curately predict the frequency and magnitude of their losses,” the statement said. Toomey told reporters he felt the time had come “to find out which body makes law in Texas. People must decide whether it’s the Legis lature or five men on the Supreme Court who make the laws.” The majority report said damage awards in personal injury suits should be limited to $250,000 for non-economic losses such as pain, suffering and mental anguish. It recommended no limit on mea surable losses in personal injury law suits, including medical bills and lost wages. The report urged that state law be changed to limit punitive damages to $100,000, or three times the actual economic damage, whichever is greater. The person filing the suit would get 25 percent of punitive damages, his attorney 25 percent and the state 50 percent. A plaintiffs attorney would be able to charge a fee limited to 40 percent of the first $100,000, 33.9 percent of the second $200,000, 25 percent of the next $200,000 and 10 percent of any amount over $500,000. The majority report made 30 rec ommendations for changes in state tort laws. K \ SUMMER JOBS CAMP OZARK A Christian sports and adventure camp for boys and girls ages 8-15, located in Mt. Ida, Arkansas is now accepting applications for couselor positions. WDEO PRESENTATION: THURSDAY, JANUARY 29 8:00 PM RUDDER BUILDING ROOM 607 For more Information contact: Camp Ozark SR 2, Box 190 Mt. 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