Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. “Is there a Santa Claus?” Parents await the question with quiet dread. Parents await the question with quiet dread. When their ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows (Left) Kelly Bowron with her daughter and son, Leo, (right) in Christmas ...
In 1897, a little girl named Virginia asked a question: Is Santa Claus real? The New York Sun answered her with an editorial cherished ever since. Editor Francis ...
In December last year I caught a nasty virus that rendered me completely mute for weeks, unable to squeak out a sound. I carried a pad of paper with me everywhere, scrawling out requests and answers ...
In September 1897, a letter arrived in the newsroom of The Sun, one of New York's great newspapers of the day. The author was a child whose "little friends" had been questioning something close to her ...
It is the most reprinted newspaper editorial in the English language. It has been translated into approximately 20 languages and adapted as a movie, television special, and musical. It is “Yes, ...
AI is the new Grinch that’s stealing Christmas. Nervous laughter was Kelly Bowron’s visceral, hysterical response to her son learning the truth about Santa Claus Tuesday — courtesy of a Google search.
Parents await the question with quiet dread. When their child comes home from school and makes that horrid inquiry, they know that innocence is ending. The joy and wonder of childhood passes far too ...
Editor’s note: In a returning Christmas Eve tradition, the Daily Journal presents the famous newspaper piece, “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.” It was written in 1897 by Francis P. Church, the ...