"Then the boy seemed silently disappeared from the Saigon newspaper village. No one knows the fate of What about the special reporter later"
There's also a comment saying that someone worked with him in San Francisco later on.
"That young reporter, also known as Hole M Cuong. Me and Cuong, worked in a San Francisco Wash Lab in 1977 until 1981, when I On vacation, I still work there and now I have the pleasure of mastering the Pentax-shaped machine that Cuong used to take pictures of at that time."
Perhaps someone more familiar with Vietnamese names could work out if he pops up somewhere else.
[0]: https://www.quinhon11.com/2016/08/lo-manh-hung-phong-vien-ch...
We also know his father was AP photojournalist Lỗ Vinh so possibly the Associated Press or NPPA might have a lead. 13 results here from his father: https://newsroom.ap.org/editorial-photos-videos/search?query...
> he probably would have preferred to go to school and play with his friends.
Not all kids want to do kiddie things. At 10yo or so, if I had the competence and choice between doing actual work for 8 hour at my dad's office, and going to school with the other kids, I'd totally have chosen the former.
I don't think kids should work or skip school, but their personal preference is probably more varied than we account for.
Yeah, for 1 day… then you'd know what it was about and would have preferred the less boring alternative.
There's an expression I've heard here that amounts to "If you lose your job, start a business". People prefer steady jobs, but if that's not available, you either start a business or join the family one.
A side effect is that when I go to industrial markets, a lot of the shopkeepers are working for family, and aren't really being "paid" per se. So they can be a bit cranky at times, there are indeed places they would rather be. So I make sure to have my order ready and zero questions :)
I'm actually setting up a family business in Vietnam right now. Many families have one, but mine does not. I've got relatives coming back from jobs overseas and I want to offer them something better than being a receptionist for USD 250 a month. Or at least something in addition to that.
For all our gripes in the modern world, we have it really really good.