GREAT story!
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/a...ut-dollies-is-solved/ar-AARc6sa?ocid=msedgntp
“What I’ve wanted to do all this time was just to say, ‘Thank you,’” Roberts, now a 75-year-old retired computer sciences professor who lives in a Pittsburgh suburb, told the Dollies via Zoom the other day.
He might have said more, but he couldn’t. He was too overcome with emotion to continue. He dabbed tears with a tissue.
What he learned over the next half-hour of conversation was that he wasn’t the only one with a need to express appreciation.
“Oh, Jim, thank you, thank you,” Hejl Roussel told him. “Fifty years later to hear you say, Thank you,” with such emotion — it’s so meaningful. I just feel like, ‘Wow. Wow. We made a difference.’ ”
© Jim Roberts
An unidentified “Donut Dolly” is shown visiting U.S. Army troops at the regional forces camp in the village of Dong Xoai, Vietnam, in 1971. For decades, Army veteran Jim Roberts has been searching for the two women who visited his team that day so he could thank them. Sitting on the right (full face) is Capt. Jim Rice, leader of the Mobile Advisory Team. Partially seen is the unidentified escort officer who was accompanying the Dollies on the tour.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/a...ut-dollies-is-solved/ar-AARc6sa?ocid=msedgntp
“What I’ve wanted to do all this time was just to say, ‘Thank you,’” Roberts, now a 75-year-old retired computer sciences professor who lives in a Pittsburgh suburb, told the Dollies via Zoom the other day.
He might have said more, but he couldn’t. He was too overcome with emotion to continue. He dabbed tears with a tissue.
What he learned over the next half-hour of conversation was that he wasn’t the only one with a need to express appreciation.
“Oh, Jim, thank you, thank you,” Hejl Roussel told him. “Fifty years later to hear you say, Thank you,” with such emotion — it’s so meaningful. I just feel like, ‘Wow. Wow. We made a difference.’ ”
© Jim Roberts
An unidentified “Donut Dolly” is shown visiting U.S. Army troops at the regional forces camp in the village of Dong Xoai, Vietnam, in 1971. For decades, Army veteran Jim Roberts has been searching for the two women who visited his team that day so he could thank them. Sitting on the right (full face) is Capt. Jim Rice, leader of the Mobile Advisory Team. Partially seen is the unidentified escort officer who was accompanying the Dollies on the tour.