In our third installment of Memorabilia Monday, we are honored to share a piece of memorabilia from the personal archive of Donut Dollie Emily Strange (July 23, 1946 – July 12, 2016). Emily served from 1968 – 69 with the 9th Infantry Division and Mobile Riverine Force in Vietnam.
The “short timers” calendar below is an original from Emily’s time in Vietnam, featuring Snoopy’s doghouse with Snoopy on his way out at the left side margin. Short timer calendars were handed out by the Donut Dollies to the men who were approaching their last 100 days in-country. Each day would be colored in to count down those last 100 days.
We found 5 other short timer calendars in Emily’s archive, including a couple more cartoon versions and a couple others that showed GIs preparing for DEROS (Date Eligible to Return from Overseas). As you can see, the Donut Dollie versions of these calendars were G-rated. Some short timer calendars were designed by the men for the men, which at the beginning depicted an unclothed woman and once each day’s segment was filled in, the woman’s body would be covered.
We are so thankful to Emily Strange’s sister, Peggy Michel, for having the foresight to keep Emily’s Donut Dollie archive and for sharing these materials with us. This collection included photos, slides, training materials, personal writings, poems, and audio recordings. We look forward to sharing more of Emily’s memorabilia to help tell the story of the Donut Dollie’s service in Vietnam.
You can see more of Emily’s materials throughout the bonus features included with the purchase of the Donut Dollies documentary. You can learn more about the Donut Dollies and how to purchase the Donut Dollies documentary at www.donutdollies.com
In our 61st edition of the Donut Dollie Detail, Evelyn explains how a walk and talk interview with a male director at the Red Cross led to her becoming a Donut Dollie, how a routine day in Vietnam could change in an instant and that a trip to Australia following her year in Vietnam led to it being her becoming her home ever since.
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Please meet Red Cross Donut Dollie Evelyn Safford Jacobs…
What prompted you to join SRAO (Supplemental Recreation Activities Overseas) and want to go to Vietnam?
My college advisor had just posted an American Red Cross (ARC) poster that said, “For The Best Year of Your Life”. It caught my eye, it sounded exciting and I was always up for an adventure. I went back to the dorm and wrote away for an application, when It arrived I filled it in and sent it back immediately. I didn’t really know anything about the war. I was conservative, so hadn’t protested, but didn’t tell anyone what I was doing. The ARC flew me to San Francisco for an interview, so I had to tell my parents what I was doing. The interview was very informal, not at all what I expected. I later realized that the interview was the chat with the male director on the walk to the coffee machine and tour of the office. When we sat down again, he asked me straight away, ‘did I want to go to Korea or Vietnam?’ I said, “Vietnam, I haven’t even considered Korea”. I sat there thinking “where is the interview?”, but I guess it was the ability to talk to him with ease.
When and where were you stationed in Vietnam? Did you go by a nickname?
In Vietnam I went by Evie and I was posted to An Khe with the 4th Division in the Central Highlands from October 1, 1970 until we closed the unit in early November. The recreation center had been closed, so it was all Clubmobile runs, meaning that we visited the men out on the firebases and units/companies on base camp presenting our programs. We spent a lot of time with the 173rd LRRPs (Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol) on base. We had a regular run to Pleiku. I was transferred to II Field Force HQ in Long Binh in early November. It was also a Clubmobile unit with no recreation center. We had runs to the big base at Long Binh, and forward runs to the 25th Division units out to Tay Ninh and the 11thACR (Armored Cavalry Regiment) out in Phuoc Tuy Province. We also had an overnight run to the Delta.
I was transferred to Qui Nhon at the end of April, 1971. It was my first experience working in a recreation center, although it closed shortly after I was assigned to the unit. It was an 8 girl unit, but as the center closed we were reduced to a 5-6 girl unit. I stayed at Qui Nhon until we closed the unit at the end of Sept, 1971. We moved to a BOQ (bachelor officer quarters) across town in an old French hotel on the beach for the last 3 months. It was really just a home base, as we had a 4 day/3 night run to Pleiku, and a 3 day/2 night run to Phu Cat AFB (Air Force Base) with an overnight extension to LZ English. So we weren’t in Qui Nhon a lot.
What was a routine day like in Vietnam?
There were very few routine days in our days in Vietnam, except for runs to the big support bases like Long Binh where we went from one company to another doing our programs. We usually did 6 programs a day. Our job was to boost the morale of the troops. A program consisted of an introduction, a few starter jokes and challenging activities to engage the men, followed by the main trivia game based on a new topic each week. We wrote programs and swapped them between Red Cross units in-country. Each game had a method of scoring, which often involved active participation. The most successful program I wrote was on Motorcycles. I knew nothing about motorcycles, but the men at the recreation center at Qui Nhon supplied all the questions and answers. We would wind down by having a chat as we distributed short timer calendars and puzzles.
Out in the field we would give out goodies sent from Red Cross chapters back home (ie. cards, mirrors, soap, beer can openers, etc.). On the forward runs, we fit in with the conditions. At An Khe, my very first visit to an outpost was on top of a cleared mountain. It was cold and wet. I remember an air mattress floating in a foxhole as we walked around and talked to the men. We may not have done a program due to the conditions. If we did, we would gather the men in one spot, set up our props on sandbags and do a program.
Any routine day could change in an instant. Like the day a GI hitched a ride in our chopper, and over Mang Yang Pass decided he was going to end it all by jumping out. The gunner grabbed him and they saved him. Or the day our Chinook broke down and we set down in an open field with no protection. Or the day we missed the C-130 flight, so we went up to the tower and hitched a chopper ride to Pleiku. Or the day we got caught in an awful thunderstorm on the way back from Ban Me Thout in a fixed wing aircraft. Or the day we flew back to An Khe and the cloud was so thick we couldn’t get down to the chopper pad, so had to fly back to Lane Valley and wait till the cloud lifted. Or the day= our chopper pilot set us down at a remote location and said to go over and ring the bell at the gate, then took off immediately. We got the short shift (in very plain language) by the officer who answered the bell. We later realized it was a secret CIA base in Laos. I was with the unit director and she had stern chat with pilot after we had to sit unprotected in a village for an hour waiting for him to come back.
Some days we would take a mike boat (a mechanized landing craft) up the Mekong River or we would go out in a jeep, but mostly we flew by chopper. One day we flew out to a Navy ship off the coast of Qui Nhon. When visiting the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, we would fly all day with Col. Valentine and his kelpie dog. He would visit all his units, and we would do a program while he worked with his command. We would often serve lunch after our midday programs, then sit on the sandbags and eat with the men. If we were on base, we would eat with men at their company mess hall.
I was there late in the war, so we had to deal with the drug problem as well. Sometimes we would start a program only to realize that the whole back row of men were totally stoned. We would just carry on like nothing was wrong.
Did you ever have any “close calls” either on base or in any vehicles?
Yes, early in my first weeks in-country flying out of An Khe, a rocket missed the chopper skid by a mere meter. The pilot took evasive action as we dove to a low level along the tree line. A number of times, we could see tracer fire coming towards our bird. Once when we were flying over open rice paddies in the delta, suddenly we were taking fire.
The worst time was a rocket attack at our Qui Nhon base. I woke when the first rocket hit and my fan fell on top of me. My roomie was screaming at me to hit the floor and to pull the mattress over myself. One of the five rockets landed right outside our hooch window. I saw the flash of fire. I remember gripping the concrete floor and praying, “Dear God, please don’t let the next one hit us”.
Were you ever injured in Vietnam?
No, other than having the worst case of (Hong Kong) flu I’ve ever had and a wisdom tooth out, there was nothing. I always say, “I had a lucky war”. My number wasn’t up.
What was it like to visit the soldiers in the hospitals?
I can only recall one scheduled visit to a hospital at Phu Cat Air Force base and they were all non-war related injuries. I did visit a couple guys I knew who’d had surgery at Long Binh. We did visit a Vietnamese hospital in the Phuoc Tuy Province. It shocked me how basic it was. The families were squatting under the beds and cooking whilst looking after the patient who was a family member in the ward.
The II Field Force HQ had a drug amnesty center just down from our compound. A few times, we went down and visited it. That was a real eye-opener to watch guys in various stages of withdrawal from heroin. And it shocked me when I would recognize someone.
How was the transition returning home to the United States?
I didn’t go home to the US. Another Donut Dollie, Dibby and I hopped an an R & R flight to Sydney, Australia after we signed out in Saigon. We spent the first 2 weeks in Australia in Sydney. We met some American G.I.’s who had migrated to Australia. One of the guys, said to us, “Nobody wants to know about Vietnam. And nobody wants to hear about how we do things in America.” So I took his advice. (At that stage, life in Australia was fairly basic.)
Dibby and I started a working holiday. I went to cattle station (a working cattle ranch) and Dibby went to a sheep station working as a Mother’s help. So the adventure went on. We eventually travelled around the Australian Outback on a bus tour and spent 6 weeks backpacking around New Zealand. I met an Aussie and found out they were in need of teachers, so I began a long teaching career. Life went on. I rarely talked about Vietnam until 1987 when the first welcome home march was held in Sydney.
What would you like people to remember and understand most about the women who served?
I always say we were young and naive, and had no idea what we were getting into. We were just “the “girls from next door” who the American Red Cross sent to Vietnam to boost the morale of the troops. We offered a “touch of home in a combat zone” to “the boys who became men” who were called to serve their country. We were the big sisters to those 18-19 year old kids. It changed our lives forever, just like it changed theirs.
Looking back, we were unique women. We were willing to step out of our comfort zones. There were many natural born leaders and high achievers amongst us. The majority of us got on with life after Vietnam, but we realize that it was an experience that we would never ever repeat. And we share a unique bond with all our Donut Dollie sisters, no matter which year we served.
How do you feel Veterans think of your time having served with them? Have any veterans expressed their feeling to you directly?
I’m only in contact with a couple American veterans. One says, I saved his life by getting him out of the field. At the end of our program when he’d answered every question (despite us trying to handicap him), I said to him, “What is a smart guy like you doing in the field!” Apparently, the officers heard me, and took notice of him and he was offered the company clerk’s position back in the rear.
In Australia, I’m generally accepted as ‘one of them’. I was fortunate to visit Nui Dat, the Australian base, several times as we had an artillery unit on the perimeter. So when we talk, they realize that I’ve been there and I can understand the Vietnam experience. Often a wife will say to me, “I’ve just heard him talk more about Vietnam to you than I’ve ever heard”.
I recently went back to Vietnam. I hired a private tour guide who took us out to Long Binh, Bien Hoa, Nui Dat and Vung Tau. He knew the area well. One of the things I realized was that as Donut Dollies we mostly flew everywhere and often didn’t really know where we were on a map or how far we were away from our base.
I’ve done a lot of public speaking as part of ANZAC Day services (our Memorial Day – Australian and New Zealand Army Corps). I now get very emotional when I march and speak at ANZAC services. I went to the Welcome Home march in 1992 in our nation’s capital, Canberra, and to the Vietnam Women’s Memorial Project dedication in 1993 in Wash, DC. Both were huge events for me.
What is your fondest or most interesting memory of Vietnam?
The Long Binh unit got special permission to present a Bob Hope skit to all our troops in the field during the week before Christmas. I was the Sergeant Major who couldn’t dance and Sally was the hot Lt. who could. Roseanna was Bob Hope complete with golf club and jokes. The other 2 girls had pretty dresses. We were to present 7 shows per day for 7 days straight out in the field. We only had 2 failures, due to no power and a hot LZ. We did our dialogue then sang a Christmas carol with the guys and finished up having a dance with a few of the guys. During the skit, Sally (as the Lt.) would ask, “Where did you learn to dance?”, and my punchline reply was, “I went to shake and bake school!” That wasn’t scripted, it just came out of my mouth the second or third show and became one of the most laughed at lines in the skit. Shake ’n Bake was a quick chicken breading product that was popular at the time and referred to Sergeants who went to school to become one, rather than rising through the ranks the hard way. The enlisted men called it ‘Shake ’n Bake School’.
P.S. – After my time in the SRAO program as a Donut Dollie, I remained in Australia. I married my Aussie in 1972 and started teaching for the New South Wales Department of Education. I enjoyed a full time teaching career for 42 years and still do substitute teaching a few days a week due to a teacher shortage. Being a Physical Education teacher, I became heavily involved in Sports organization in both the schools and community. I’m still actively involved in administration of community basketball, and surf lifesaving and play masters field hockey. We’ve lived in beautiful Crescent Head overlooking the Pacific Ocean for the last 42 years. My son is also a PE teacher in western NSW (New South Wales). He and his wife have 2 sons.
PLEASE NOTE: THERE ARE 60 PREVIOUS EDITIONS OF THE DONUT DOLLIE DETAIL AND 2 EDITIONS OF OUR MEMORABILIA MONDAY FEATURES THAT CAN BE SEEN HERE, JUST SCROLL DOWN TO READ EACH (AT THE BOTTOM, YOU’LL SEE A LINK TO GO TO THE NEXT PAGE OF DONUT DOLLIE DETAIL FEATURES)
Please join us on Wednesday, March 16th at 6PM ET for a Facebook Live chat with the Donut Dollies Documentary director, Norm Anderson Amandi and the film’s co-producer and archivist, Jim Gardner. They will be discussing the film and the generosity of many Donut Dollies who shared items from their personal archives. You can view the first two installments of our new Memorabilia Monday feature at www.donutdollies.com/category/donut-dollie-detail
Please go to our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/thedonutdollies and view the post at the top. Please go their ahead of time and click on “Interested” or click on the down arrow next to it to open the menu and click on “Going” if you plan to attend this chat. Either way, you’ll receive a notice informing you when the chat is ready to go live. If you wish to share this post with family, friends, Donut Dollies or veterans, please copy the Facebook link above, which you can post on your own facebook page or send via email.
In our second installment of Memorabilia Monday, we present multiple patches received in Vietnam by Donut Dollie Linette (Linnie) Stone. She served in the Red Cross’ SRAO program (Supplemental Recreation Activities Overseas) at Pleiku (October, 1966 – February, 1967), Long Binh (February, 1967 – June, 1967) and Lai Khe (July, 1967 – November, 1967).
Many Donut Dollies were gifted patches and pins from the men they visited on military bases, firebases and on their return home, which they proudly affixed to their boonie hats. In the years following Linnie’s service, she would do public talks about her service in Vietnam and you can see she displayed her patches on the back of her Donut Dollie uniform top.
There are 18 different patches in this photo and what we’d like to ask is for any Donut Dollies or veterans to help identify the units for each patch (numbered 1 – 18 from top row left to bottom row right). Also, if you have a Donut Dollie story to share relating to any of these unit patches, we hope you’ll share them in the comments below.
We thank Linette (Linnie) Stone for her service and for sharing her memorabilia with us. We’re proud to have included portions of our interview with her in our award-winning documentary, as well as the bonus features. You can learn more about the Donut Dollies and how to purchase the Donut Dollies documentary at www.donutdollies.com
Today we start a new feature focused on the history of the Donut Dollies, we call it Memorabilia Mondays. All throughout the creation of our award-winning documentary on the Donut Dollies, we have been pleasantly surprised by the outpouring of vintage photos and film shared with us for our film, as well as memorabilia, most of which has only been seen by the Donut Dollies themselves.
We are beginning this feature with the letter from the Red Cross, informing the women who were interviewed for consideration for the Supplemental Recreation Activities Overseas program, that they had indeed been accepted. There is so much information packed into this letter, which obviously would have been a lot to take in by the new SRAO members, including annual pay, training location, necessary immunizations, uniforms, IDs. We can only imagine that this would have been quite overwhelming, as they were to report for training just over 2-weeks from the date on the letter.
This letter was shared with us by Diane Diggs Byrd, who served in Vietnam at II Field Force in Long Bien in 1968. We thank Diane for sharing this letter with us and allowing us to share it with you. We featured Diane in our soon to restart feature, The Donut Dollie Detail, just over a year ago, and we’d like to suggest you read her story of service in Vietnam by following this link – www.donutdollies.com/donut-dollie-detail/meet-donut-dollie-diane-diggs-byrd We believe you’ll find her story quite interesting.
Please check back each Monday for a new piece of vintage Donut Dollie memorabilia and feel free to comment. We’d also like to ask you to share this post to help spread the word about the Donut Dollies.
The director of the Donut Dollies documentary, Norm Anderson Amandi, sat down recently for a conversation with Mark G. Auerbach, host of the “On The Mark” show on WCPC15 and 89.5fm/WSKB (Norm’s interview starts at the 28:18-mark in the video below). They discussed the story of the Donut Dollies and the origins of the film, which began with Norm filming his mother, Dorset, who’s featured in the film over the last 25-years. He further explains how attending Donut Dollie reunions and meeting other Donut Dollies spurred him on to make this award-winning documentary.
Norm also spoke of the project’s connection to the Western Massachusetts community, which includes himself, his mom and his film production partners, Jess Hill (Producer) and Jim Gardner (Co-producer & Music Supervisor). Also part of the Western Mass community at the heart of the Donut Dollies documentary is the inclusion of music from 12 musicians and bands with ties to Western Mass, which just last week led to a film festival nomination for Best Musical Score.
Once you see the film (www.donutdollies.com), we believe you’ll find that there is a true sense of community that is at the heart of the Donut Dollies documentary… from the courageous women themselves, the men who bravely served and sacrificed, and the dedication to home, heart and creativity. We hope you enjoy watching this interview with Norm.
We are excited to announce that the Donut Dollies are featured in this month’s issue of Homeland Magazine in honor of Women’s History Month. This national magazine features articles on topics of interest to today’s veterans, transitioning service members, military personnel, spouses and families. The director of The Donut Dollies documentary, Norm Anderson Amandi, spoke with Homeland Magazine about the Donut Dollies and the making of our film.
In addition to the interview focused on the Donut Dollies, there are several other women-focused articles in the issue. You can read this interview at https://issuu.com/adminhlm/docs/homeland_march_2022/10 We ask you to please share this article with veterans, Donut Dollies and veteran organizations you may know.
Yesterday we were honored to screen The Donut Dollies documentary at the Beaufort International Film Festival in South Carolina as part of their Honor & Duty category. We had a great turn out of nearly 150 people who laughed and got emotional while learning about this little known story of the American women who served during the Vietnam War. We were equally honored to have Vietnam Donut Dollie (1967-68) Martha Fondren Spisso join Jim Gardner (co-producer) and Ron Tucker (BTIFF host) for a Q&A session. Please feel free to share this video and we look forward to your comments.
We thank Ron Tucker and his team for including The Donut Dollies in this year’s film festival, as well as the members of the Beaufort community and the local military community for attending. #bftfilmfest
You can purchase The Donut Dollies documentary at www.donutdollies.com, with your option to download/stream the 87-minute film or get the DVD (in March, 2022), both which include 35-minutes of bonus features with previously unseen interviews, memorabilia, photos and film footage, along with a nearly 15-minute photo montage depicting a few hundred Donut Dollies who served in the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
On Saturday, February 26th, The Donut Dollies documentary will be screening in two locations in the U.S. and this is the second of two announcements. See yesterday’s post about our screening in Madison, WI.
We’re happy to announce that The Donut Dollies documentary is an Official Selection of the Beaufort International Film Festival (SC) as part of their Duty & Honor category and will be shown on Saturday, February 26th at 2:00 PM. The screening will take place at the USCB Center for the Arts, 805 Carteret Street, Beaufort, SC 29902 and tickets are available through this link – bit.ly/DDDocBeaufortTickets To purchase your tickets, click on the green “Tickets” button and scroll near to the bottom for the screening block noted as Block #3 (Sat. Feb. 26, Time: 2:00 PM) USCB CFA
In addition to being an Official Selection, we are happy to announce that our film’s Co-producer & Music Supervisor, Jim Gardner has been nominated for the Best Musical Score award. He will be attending this screening to take part in a Q&A session and looks forward to being joined by any local Donut Dollies who can attend.
Thanks go out to Ron Tucker and his team for screening The Donut Dollies for the Beaufort audience.
On Saturday, February 26th, The Donut Dollies documentary will be screening in two locations in the U.S. and this is the first of two announcements. Check tomorrow for our second announcement.
We’re honored to be included as part of the University of Wisconsin Madison’s series, “A Piece of Vietnam”. The Donut Dollies documentary will be screened on Saturday, February 26th at 7 PM at UW Cinematheque, 4070 Vilas Hall, 821 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706.
Author and Vietnam veteran Doug Bradley, who is featured in our film, will be in attendance at this screening to share some of his memories of the Donut Dollies. We do hope that some of the Donut Dollies who live in the Madison area will attend this screening and stand to be recognized and if a Q&A session takes place, we hope they’ll join in to share some of their experiences.
This screening is free and open to the public on a first-come, first-seated basis, with doors opening 30-minutes before showtime. For any questions including wheelchair access, please write info@cinema.wisc.edu or call 608-262-3627 24-hours ahead.
We thank UW Cinematheque’s Director of Programming, Jim Healy and his team for screening The Donut Dollies for the Madison audience.