Showing posts with label Santa Claus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Santa Claus. Show all posts

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Young Girl's Santa Letter Changed Soldier's Life

Santa letter 50 years ago changed lives
The Republic
By Staff Reports
12/23/16

Written by Kim Stover
Our shared wish for an end to armed conflict still resonates, and my Vietnamese doll still stands on my desk, a testament to a young soldier’s big heart and a young girl’s belief in Santa Claus and in goodness itself.
Fifty years ago, the Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal published my letter to Santa Claus, shaping my adult life.
When my second-grade teacher, Judy Williamson Mervine, assigned a letter to Santa Claus, I wrote, “Dear Santa Claus, Please stop the war in Vietnam and give all of my toys to the people there so they will have a good Christmas and if I don’t get any toys I won’t care because Christmas is when the baby Jesus was born in the manger and we have gifts to celebrate Christmas. Kimberly Ann Stover.”

Surprised that my letter asked for something beyond toys, Mrs. Mervine decided to contact the Journal.

The Journal reporter asked me what war was, and I said it was fighting with guns. She asked me if I really believed in Santa Claus, and I said yes, but admitted, “Santa might not get there because his reindeer would get tired.” She also asked if Santa had any toys left over, what present would I want. I said a doll.

The front page of the Dec. 22, 1966, Journal featured the story.

Close to where my family lived, Mrs. Anita Ripley read the article and sent it to her son, Private First Class Jim Ripley, who was stationed near Saigon working as a heavy vehicle driver in Company B of the 69th Engineering Battalion of the U.S. Army.

Then Jim decided to make sure that I got that doll.
read more here

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Soldier in Afghanistan Sends Santa on a Mission in Indiana

Video: Santa gets down on one knee to help soldier in Afghanistan propose to girlfriend
The St. Nick at the Eastland Mall in Indiana surprised Kimberly Roberts with a bouquet of roses and an engagement ring from her boyfriend, Clint Underhill, who is stationed in Afghanistan.
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
BY RACHELLE BLIDNER
Tuesday, December 23, 2014

She must have been on the nice list.

A mall Santa got down on one knee and proposed to an Indiana woman on behalf of her boyfriend, a soldier in Afghanistan, on Tuesday.

Kimberly Roberts sat in Santa's plush green chair at the Eastland Mall in Evansville, Ind., as her mother hit record on a video camera.

St. Nick asked Roberts for her Christmas wish.

"I want my boyfriend to come home from Afghanistan safe," Roberts said of her then-boyfriend, Clint Underhill.

Santa stroked his beard and told her to hold on a second. He grabbed a bouquet of red roses from next to his chair and kneeled beside her.

"Kimberly, our time together has been nothing short of amazing," Santa read off a piece of paper from Underhill. "Not a day goes by I don't realize how lucky I am to be with you."
read more here

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Santa Joins Soldiers in Prayer in Liberia

U.S. Troops Fighting Ebola Epidemic Focus on Progress over Holidays 
Military.com
by Richard Sisk
Dec 24, 2014
Santa Claus and service members bow their heads in prayer during the Joint Forces Command – United Assistance holiday tree lighting event on Barclay Training Center in Monrovia, Liberia, Dec. 18, 2014. U.S. Army photo by Spc. Rashene Mincy
The troops have lit a Christmas tree, received a visit from Santa and even held a "Skype Hanukkah" this holiday season, but the focus for U.S. troops in Liberia during the holidays has been on maximizing the gains they've made against the deadly Ebola epidemic. "It's been a whole lot better of late," Army Lt. Col. David Bowlus, a chaplain with the 2,400 U.S. troops in Liberia, said by phone Tuesday from Monrovia, the Liberian capital.

About five new suspected cases of Ebola have been reported daily in recent weeks, Bowlus said, compared to more than 50 at the end of October. "We're at the point where Ebola is no longer hunting us, we're hunting it," said Bowlus, 43, of Pemberville, Ohio.

For Christmas Day, a Catholic chaplain will be going by helicopter to conduct services at outposts in Liberia for troops serving in Operation United Assistance, the mission led by the U.S. Agency for International Development to combat Ebola, Bowlus said.

Since all faiths are represented in the 101st Airborne Division and other units, the chaplains posted to Liberia have worked hard to accommodate all faiths. "We don't have a rabbi with us," Bowlus said. So they arranged a Hanukkah service via Skype for four Jewish soldiers with a rabbi in Missouri. read more here