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Guest Blogger: Adrian Foster

4/5/2016

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Adrian Foster is an instructional coach and works with Harmony Public Schools North Cluster in Houston, Texas. This week he is featured as our guest blogger! The Last Plane Out of Saigon team is thrilled to share Mr. Foster's reflections on our latest speaking engagement with the group of educators who gathered to listen to Richard Pena.

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Adrian Foster shaking hands with Richard Pena at Last Plane Out of Saigon speaking Engagement for Harmony Public Schools | North Cluster.

An Educator’s Take on Last Plane Out of Saigon

These are the typical tools used to teach history in most schools across America. They encourage minimal student engagement, little critical thinking, and do not work to develop the 21st century skills that our young students will require once they become adults. I’m an instructional coach for a district in Texas. Basically, I help teachers learn how to create more engaging, rigorous, and effective lessons. One of the strategies I have been pushing all year onto my teachers has been the use of primary sources and first-hand accounts of the events covered in our curriculum. Such materials help students build literacy skills, categorize, compare and contrast, find bias, and learn to think critically. This, in turn, allows students to be more challenged and requires engagement on their part as they are responsible for breaking down a document for content information.
  
As I attended an educational conference earlier this year, I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Richard Pena and learning about Last Plane Out of Saigon. I was very intrigued by the preview of the book that I received and immediately started reading it when I got home. I quickly found that I couldn’t put it down. The experiences that Mr. Pena wrote about from his days in a South Vietnam operating room were raw, discomforting, and honest. I wrestled with what I had learned in school about the Vietnam War and the events that surrounded it, and the reflections and thoughts of a man who experienced it on a daily basis. It caused me to consider and ponder the current situation that we find ourselves in as a nation and gave me a deeper appreciation for those who served in the military during such a contentious time. As I put the book down I thought to myself, “All of my students need to read this”. I knew that an account like the one in Last Plane Out of Saigon would be engaging, provide essential content about the Vietnam War, and would challenge the students to think critically about Mr. Pena’s experiences and on warfare in general.
  
I immediately contacted Mr. Pena and asked him if he wouldn’t mind being my guest at an upcoming professional development day that I was organizing for my social studies teachers. I was thrilled when he accepted and I was even more excited when I contacted my teachers and found that they were extremely interested in this unique opportunity. My plan was to allow Mr. Pena to share his book with my teachers and give them a first-hand account of his experiences from an Army operating room during the Vietnam War. I would then describe how his book could be effectively utilized in our classrooms. During his presentation, Mr. Pena was honest, insightful, and very engaging. My teachers were left excited to read the book and to figure out how they could use passages to teach and illustrate the Vietnam Era curriculum that they were preparing to teach during the last quarter of the school year.
  
As I followed up with my teachers about Mr. Pena and Last Plane Out of Saigon, I was overwhelmed with positive feedback. They loved his presentation, and loved his book. I know that the students we teach will be equally enthusiastic about learning history using this book. It makes history real, helps them internalize the information, and challenges them to think about things bigger than their classroom, school, or community. Not only will it engage students in a history lesson, it will help to create responsible and patriotic citizens.
  
I am grateful for Mr. Pena’s willingness to collaborate with me and share his incredible experiences with my humble gathering of young teachers. I hope that other educators can see the important contribution that Last Plane Out of Saigon can make to their curriculum and instruction. It is definitely a unique account that will enrich and challenge their students.


RELATED LINKS:

Harmony Public Schools Website
Pictures from the event

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National Vietnam Veterans Day

3/29/2016

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Picture Taken by the Last Plane Out of Saigon team at the
Veterans Memorial Museum in Katy, Texas.


Today is recognized as National Vietnam Veterans Day. This day was chosen back in 2012 by President Barack Obama when he signed a presidential proclamation, March 29th of that year, to honor those who served in Vietnam.

Please join us as we honor all of the 3.1 million Vietnam Veterans who served. Their valor deserves to be recognized and the Last Plane Out of Saigon team strives to honor all our veterans, not only today, but every day.

Our nation is protected every day by the bravery and selflessness of our soldiers. As we reach out to them today, we must remind ourselves that even though we cannot truly know their sacrifices they deserve our thanks.

The following passages from Last Plane Out of Saigon, illustrate how impossible it is for those who did not, or have not served to know the depths of what each of our soldiers endure in a war. However, we must strive to show our appreciation and respect for our armed forces. It is the least we can do.

There is much that has been said about Vietnam; there is much more that can only be understood by those of us who were there.”
—Richard Pena
Last Plane Out of Saigon | PG. 35
Who can ever know what your personal war involved? You had to remain there and say good-bye to your friends one by one until only you remained. With each good-bye, a little sanity must have been sacrificed. In the end did loneliness reign? Can you ever recreate Vietnam so the untraveled masses can understand what it was actually like?”
—Bozo, Fellow Solider in Vietnam
Last Plane Out of Saigon | PG. 109
 
 

Today we join others in honoring Vietnam Veterans, and their loved ones.
We must do our best to recognize you always.
 
Wishing thanks to all Veterans!

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We are in the USAFA Special Collections Department

2/11/2016

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It is official! Last Plane Out of Saigon is in the United States Air Force Academy, McDermott Library.
The U.S. Air Force Academy located in Colorado Springs, Colorado and has a range of libraries. These include the McDermott Library, the Base Library, departmental reference collections, and field libraries in staff agencies. Last Plane Out of Saigon is in the process of being cataloged in the “Cadet Academic” McDermott Library. Right now, you can go onto the USAFA McDermott Library website and search their Special Collections Department to find us! This is an exciting development for Last Plane Out of Saigon, especially since the library aims to
establish and maintain a special collection of unique and rare items pertinent to the growth and development of the USAF Academy."
Our team is honored Last Plane Out of Saigon is now a part of the Academy’s Special Collections Department and that it is recognized by USAFA as a “unique” and “pertinent” resource.  Check out the links below to learn more about the United States Air Force Academy and the McDermott Library.
Related Links:
Last Plane Out of Saigon - Special Collections
United States Air Force Academy
About McDermott Library

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Guest Blogger: Allan Van Fleet

12/31/2015

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This week the Last Plane Out of Saigon team is honored to have a guest blogger! Allan Van Fleet is a respected lawyer from Houston, Texas, who recently went on a trip to Vietnam this past November. While there, he found the "Last Plane Out" picture of Richard Pena boarding one of the final flights out of Saigon. Van Fleet discovered the picture while visiting a museum in Hanoi and reached out to us. Below is Van Fleet's account of his visit to Vietnam, written exclusively for our blog! Included are his own photographs from the trip. We hope you enjoy this powerful piece by Allan Van Fleet.

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It was already steamy by mid-morning November 8 2015.  I was in a boat on the Mekong River, on the border of Cambodia and Vietnam.

Earlier, when My girlfriend asked, “What do you think about this?” as she handed me a brochure for educational travel to Vietnam with her alumni association, I thought "Let's go." Previously, I could not have imagined a day when I would look forward to going to Vietnam.

But it is 2015 now. I can remember a time when I hoped like hell never to go to Vietnam.  In January 1971, on my 18th birthday, I registered for the draft in Luling, Texas.  That August, as I started Rice University, student deferments ended.  I was 1-A.


February 2, 1972 dawned cool and clear: a bluebird sky over Houston.  KTRU radio carried the draft lottery live.  One by one, birthdays were assigned call-up order numbers, which were broadcast across campus.  High numbers brought howls of relief.  Low numbers sent boys – we were still teenagers – to the ROTC building to postpone their trip to Southeast Asia.

Mine was 161.  Too low to celebrate, too high to sign up – or check road maps to Canada.  Like everyone in my cohort that night, I drank.  A lot.

Almost 50,000 draftees were inducted in 1972.  I was not one of them.  I heard that guys with numbers in the 150s were called for physicals.  I was not. Then, in January 1973, Nixon and Kissinger announced they had achieved “Peace with Honor” in Paris.  We all knew it was a ruse.  I didn’t care.  I wasn’t going.  It was over. Again, we drank.

On March 29, 1973 the last plane bringing home American troops left Saigon.  Decades later I would learn that Richard Pena was on that plane.

In the late 1990s, I knew of Richard as the President of the State Bar of Texas and got to know him when we both served in the American Bar Association House of Delegates.  He served as the State Delegate from Texas and I as the representative of the Section of Antitrust Law, which I would later chair.  I found him thoughtful and quiet, but passionate in his belief that law should first serve people, rather than fill pocketbooks.
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It was when I was getting ready for my trip to Vietnam that I vaguely remembered Richard had published a memoir of his time in Vietnam. So I downloaded and read Last Plane Out of Saigon.  I had no idea it would be such a searing indictment of the war and its effect on men, such as Richard, who were forced to go despite their opposition to the senseless conflict.

I thought of Richard that morning as I stood on the deck of the Mekong Princess, crossing into Vietnam, and I thought of him often during the next two weeks.
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From Last Plane Out of Saigon I learned the chaos of the operating theater when the wounded were brought in from battle.  From sampans in delta tributaries and canals and from dikes dividing rice paddies, I learned something of what it must have been like to fight a hidden – and effective and inspired – enemy.  Our group included Brian, a Yale alum who had been a second lieutenant in Vietnam, spotting artillery from helicopters. He gave us a feel for the horror that sent soldiers to the hospital where Richard served as a surgical assistant. American soldiers, that is. South Vietnamese soldiers had their own hospitals. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong bodies were counted and left for villagers to bury.

Richard recounts honestly the booze and drugs permeating his “downtime” in Saigon. In war – especially against guerrillas in their homeland – there is no downtime. So many not killed by the Viet Cong would die of drugs or drink back home.  

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But on this trip mostly we learned about the war from the other side.  The Vietnamese call it The American War, which evolved from The French War.  We met no one – no one – who did not have family killed or wounded in the war. No one believes the official estimate of 1.2 million dead.  It’s more like 3 million, almost a tenth of the population at the time.  Nam, our guide in the Mekong Delta and Saigon (which the locals still call Ho Chi Minh City), was originally from Hanoi and had three uncles who fought for the North.  One came back alive.  He had been an artillery and mortar spotter, like Brian, but was up in trees, not helicopters.  The remains of a second uncle were discovered ten years after the war ended. (North Vietnamese soldiers had no dog tags; he had written his name on paper he put in a glass penicillin vile found in a mass grave.) One uncle is among the 500,000 still missing. A half a million Vietnamese men missing to this day.

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The visit to the War Museum in Saigon was hard.  Of course, told from the victors’ point of view, its story vilifies the Americans and their “puppets” in the South.  Yet, a memorial wall comprises photographs of those who died from all sides – including American soldiers.  The room depicting Agent Orange victims – to this generation – was especially difficult.  The amount of toxins poured onto the land and people (including American soldiers) was stunning.

I could not find the photo of Richard among those chronicling the end of the American intervention.  That would come later in Hanoi.

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From Saigon, we traveled by bus to Cu Chi. Here we would experience the elaborate tunnel system constructed to shelter guerillas – and Vietnamese civilians – from the carpet bombing one presidential candidate wants to bring to the Middle East.  We walked around craters the size of swimming pools and crawled through the cramped tunnels.

At an outdoor lecture hall we met Nem, who at 17 lost his right arm and eye in a firefight with Americans.  With Nam translating, Nem told us he never liked the term “Viet Cong.”  That was coined by Americans, as shorthand for “Vietnamese Communists.” 

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Nem said he was never a party member, nor were those who fought and lived in the tunnels along with him.  They were nationalists who wanted nothing more than an independent and united country free of the French and free of the Americans.  But he – as everyone else we met – held no personal animosity toward Americans. “We got news reports of the many American people – especially students – who were against the war.  That encouraged us.” 

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On the way back to Saigon, we stopped at a war cemetery. Row upon row of identical headstones reminded me of US military cemeteries, such as, the one at Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, where my father, grandfather and uncle are buried. The large sculpture of a woman grieving over a fallen soldier reminded us of the families left bereft.

Throughout the trip, Brian had been enthusiastic – exuberant, really – sharing his experiences and his copious knowledge of American and Vietnamese weapons and tactics. Our best “formal” lecture on board the Mekong Princess had featured Brian and Nam telling their different sides of the war.

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That afternoon, Brian was the last to return to the bus from the cemetery.  And there he lost it.  The former Army officer who directed artillery fire onto the Vietnamese wept openly.  Nam, who lost much of his family in the war, took Brian in his arms.  All of us on the bus watched and wept with them.

I would learn later that Brian returned from Vietnam to protest the war, including at the massive March on Washington.  Richard protested in Austin, before serving.  I only protested the 1972 Christmas bombings of Hanoi.  It was protest light.  My first courtroom experience was watching the arraignment of Rice students who had chained themselves the same federal courthouse in serious protest.

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Back in Saigon at night, we sat in the rooftop bar of the Rex Hotel.  Specialty drinks included the “B-52” and the “Five-o’clock Follies” – the name journalists gave to the ludicrously optimistic daily briefings the US military provided from the Rex.  We looked over the grand plaza that ran for dozens of blocks along Nguyễn Huệ street.  A statue of Ho saluted the large crowd of Vietnamese people strolling, sitting, laughing, singing.  Over martinis and hot tea we discussed when war is ever justified.  To stop a Hitler.  To stop a Pol Pot (we had walked the Killing Fields days earlier).  But not over differences in religion.  Not over differences in economic philosophy.

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Ironically, Vietnam today may be more capitalist and entrepreneurial than America.  Thousands of small shops dot the streets of Saigon and Hanoi.  Local young Yale alumni have already made fortunes in Vietnam. The Hermes store in Saigon is more expensive than the one in Houston.  Our guides and other Vietnamese we met were as openly critical of their government as we are of ours.

In Hanoi we saw more of the other side of the war.  In the magnificently restored Metropole Hotel, built by the French at the turn of the last century, we toured the bomb shelter added during the war. Our guide told us how as a young boy he would often have to scramble to get into one of the one-person shelters built into the streets.

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We visited the “Hanoi Hilton,” originally constructed by the French to imprison, torture, and guillotine Vietnamese resisters of colonial rule.  There is something of a shrine to John McCain, including his flight suit, his prison uniform, and his bed.  (McCain’s prison bed looked remarkably similar to Ho’s in his House on Stilts – both far from the opulence of the Presidential Palace in Saigon where President Diem lived and ruled.)

“The official policy was not to torture American prisoners,” our freelance guide told us, “but I’m not saying torture didn’t happen.   We hated them.  They were dropping bombs on us. They were killing us.”  I did not know that McCain’s plane had been shot down over Hanoi, into West Lake – today a popular shopping and dining district.

I skipped over much of the Military Museum.  I had seen enough, felt enough.  There was only one thing still to see.  In the room dedicated to the end of the war, I found the photo.  American soldiers lined up to board the Last Plane Out of Saigon.  Richard is recognizable from the back by his specialist patch and briefcase (mostly covered by a caption in the Hanoi museum) – a briefcase that survived law school and a war he never wanted any part of."
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On the Sunday we traveled from Hanoi to Halong Bay, the New York Times ran an op-ed by Neil Sheehan, the in-country journalist who wrote the brilliant history of the war, A Bright Shining Lie.  Our bus – coursing through rice paddies on either side – had WIFI, and we read on-line Sheehan’s piece entitled “At the Dawn of the Bloody Vietnam War.”  Sheehan recounted a battle in which green American soldiers held off wave after wave of North Vietnamese regulars.  “It always galls me when I hear or read of the men who fought the Second World War as ‘the greatest generation,’” Sheehan wrote.  Despite inflicting horrific casualties, “the North Vietnamese attackers never managed to break through that line in sufficient numbers to threaten the battalion position, because the men of C Company, First Battalion, Seventh Cavalry, fought and died like the young lions they were.” 

Sheehan concluded: “They, and so many others who fought in Vietnam, were as great as any generation that preceded them. Their misfortune was to draw a bad war, an unnecessary war, a mistake by American politicians and statesmen, for which they paid.”

Richard and Brian were among those who paid for that mistake; too many paid the ultimate price.

As I left Vietnam on a flight out of Hanoi’s modern international airport, I thought of my father, a career Army officer and ROTC instructor.  My forefathers were soldiers in the Revolutionary War, the Civil War (both sides), the “Indian Conflicts,” the Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, and the Korean War.  I often wondered if I disappointed my father by not volunteering to fight in Vietnam.  After my Dad died in 1993, I learned from my brother that Dad, still a lieutenant colonel in the Army reserves in the early 1960s, declined the offer of a star to activate and go to Vietnam as an “advisor.”  He also told my brother that had my draft number come up, he hoped I would have found my way to Canada.

Like Richard, I left Vietnam on a plane.  But the lottery – the airline upgrade lottery, not the draft lottery – put a glass of Merlot in my hand, not an M-16.
 
Allan Van Fleet
Houston, Texas
December 25, 2015


Allan Van Fleet is currently a partner at McDermott Will & Emery LLP in Houston, TX. Check out the links below for more information on Van Fleet and other topics mentioned in his post.

Related Links:
Allan Van Fleet
McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Neil Sheehan
A Bright Shining Lie

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Tis the Season

12/15/2015

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The Last Plane Out of Saigon team wants to wish you a heartfelt Happy Holidays! We know that not everyone will not be home with their loved ones, as many people are serving our Nation. Hopefully, however, we can still spread some warmth this season as we think of all those who serve and remember how lucky we are to have their bravery and protection. As some of you may know, co-author of Last Plane Out of Saigon, Richard Pena, is a distinguished Lawyer in Austin, Texas. This year his firm the Law Offices of Richard Pena celebrates with a non-traditional, yet, festive tree. Of course, the tree would not be complete without Last Plane Out of Saigon atop his law books. Richard Pena's life was completely altered when he was drafted to serve in Vietnam. This tree serves as a reminder of his past and present. We must never forget those who serve for our country and especially those who fought in Vietnam. Wishing safety, love and new memories to everyone this holiday. Check out our season's greetings below!
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We are in the latest issue of the Alcalde

12/1/2015

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Last Plane Out of Saigon has made its debut in the Texas Exes publication Alcalde! Author Richard Pena is a longhorn alum for both his undergraduate degree and his Doctorate of Jurisprudence. The Alumni Authors section in the Alcalde is designated to celebrate Authors who bleed orange. Pena’s book made it into this latest issue among other Texas Exes with recently published books. The Last Plane Out of Saigon team is thrilled to have a spot in the November|December issue! Be sure to look for our mention in the magazine, or follow this link to see it online! If you are interested in purchasing a copy of Last Plane Out of Saigon, you can find us on Amazon.  
                             
                                 Hook ‘Em Horns


Related Links:

Alcalde online


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Giving Thanks

11/25/2015

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Happy Thanksgiving from the Last Plane Out of Saigon team! We hope everyone enjoys the holiday. We are especially thankful for the opportunity to make new memories with those close to us. Let us take a moment and recognize how wonderful it is and how grateful we are to have our troops home for the holidays. Those who serve can never truly escape their experiences at war. It is important for our soldiers, our country and their loved ones that they are home. Thanksgiving is a time that should be spent among family and friends. A special thank you to those who are serving and have served.
We wish a happy and safe Thanksgiving to everyone!
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Thank You to All Our Veterans

11/11/2015

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We are extremely fortunate for the bravery of veterans and the protection they selflessly provide our nation. Always and especially today we must strive to honor those that serve. The effects of wars permeates the support systems of veterans. So as you reach out to veterans today, make sure to express your gratitude to their families and loved ones as well. Each year, on November 11th a simple ‘Thank You’ is just one way to confirm our gratefulness. While it is a wonderful and needed gesture, veterans deserve much more than a ‘Thank You.’

A ‘Thank You’ is the least we can do. Sometimes we may get caught up in our own efforts to share our appreciation on Veterans Day. Maybe even allowing ourselves to feel accomplished in our good deed as we verbalize our thanks. Instead, we must remind ourselves to remain conscious of the hardships our vets continue to face.

Some of the sobering truths are that we have lost too many lives and those who return from service are forever changed. Richard Pena, author of Last Plane Out of Saigon has gone to lengths to provide insight into the true costs of wars:


  • About 58,000 American soldiers were killed in Vietnam
  • Approximately 450,000 Iraq and Afghanistan vets suffer from PTSD and/or depression
  • With approximately 345,000 suffering from alcohol or drug addiction
  • Almost 1/4 of veterans are homeless and nearly 50% of these homeless veterans are from the Vietnam era.
These stats are important realities to consider. This Veterans Day do more than thank veterans, take additional means to show your gratitude. In Texas we have the Texas Lawyers for Texas Veterans an entity, which provides legal and clinical aid to veterans. If you know of veterans who could benefit from TLTV, please follow the link above for more information. Help veterans get the assistance they deserve.

When we think about aiding our future veterans we can help by providing a needed voice to the fight against unnecessary wars. Richard Pena goes in depth in Last Plane Out of Saigon about the difference between wars of necessity and wars of choice. One of the primary messages detailed in Last Plane Out of Saigon is to understand the difference and remain vigilant in speaking out when the drums of unnecessary wars begin to beat.

Our Veterans deserve a thank you every day of the year. November 11th is just one day of the 365 that we should make an effort to show our appreciation for those who put their lives at risk to protect us.

Thank you veterans for your service. Today and every day.

Related Links:
Texas Lawyers for Texas Veterans

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Greece: Explore the Birthplace of Western Civilization

11/10/2015

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Author of Last Plane Out of Saigon, Richard Pena, is leading another Legal Delegation Abroad! This time he is going to Greece to explore the birthplace of western civilization and uncover more on the current Greek financial crisis. Delegations that Richard lead are the perfect opportunity to become immersed in the culture of a remarkable place. Do not miss out on your opportunity to visit Greece!

The delegation starts February 27th and goes through March 7th. There is a shorter program offered, which also begins on February 27th and will go through March 4th. Feel free to download and view the proposed itinerary. For more information visit the Greece delegation website: Explore the Birthplace of Western civilization. Richard is excited for this year's delegation and gladly extends an invitation for you to join him!


Related Links:
Proposed Itinerary
Explore the Birthplace of Western Civilization website
Enroll

Academic Travels Abroad
Past Legal Delegations
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National Hispanic Heritage Month

10/15/2015

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Thursday, October 15th marks the end of National Hispanic Heritage Month. The official month takes place partially in September and partially in October, with celebrations beginning on September 15th. It is important to continually recognize and celebrate Hispanic heritage, and we feel that as the last day of the official month we would share a post in honor and celebration.  Last Plane Out of Saigon would especially like to recognize veterans with Hispanic roots who have served our country.


​General Alfred A. Valenzuela
from the U.S. Army speaks to the importance of recognizing the efforts made by Hispanic Americans as our Nation’s defenders:

Last Plane Out of Saigon, paints a canvas that illustrates that Hispanics and Americans all bleed RED. Whether drafted, volunteered, or convinced that the Army is better than going to jail, the 1% of 300 million Americans served their nation with pride and patriotic service. Hispanic Americans are and have been a key catalyst to defending this nation. Scores of KIAs and MIAs have been highly decorated for their action on the battlefield. They are to be commended."  
                                                                               - General Alfred A. Valenzuela, U.S. Army
As a fellow veteran, Hispanic American and author, General Valenzuela’s remarks serve as the perfect reminder to celebrate all Americans who serve. Both General Valenzuela and Last Plane Out of Saigon author Richard Pena celebrate their Hispanic roots every day and especially this month.
If you are interested please check out General Valenzuela’s book No Greater Love: The Lives and Times of Hispanic Soldiers. 
Click here to learn more.
​


​Related Links:
General Alfred Valenzuela
National Hispanic Heritage Month
Photo Link
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    Christiane Calloway
    Attended the University of Texas at Austin where she majored in Advertising. She is currently the Marketing Director for the Law Offices of Richard Pena and the book Last Plane Out of Saigon.

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