Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Santa's On His Way: Military Helps Kids Follow Fabled Flight

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Dec, 2016 01:11 PM
    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Tens of thousands of children from around the world plan to call the North American Aerospace Defence Command to ask where Santa is, and starting Saturday they will get a cheery answer about the mythical route from a real person, not a recording.
     
    The wildly popular NORAD Tracks Santa operation is launching its 61st run at Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado. Volunteers will answer phone calls and emails and post updates about Santa's storybook world tour on Facebook and Twitter.
     
    Navy Lt. Cmdr. Paul Noel said 1,500 volunteers answered nearly 141,000 phone calls and more than 2,800 emails last year. The NORAD spokesman is quick to say his name really is Noel.
     
    Here's a look at the Christmas tradition:
     
    HOW DOES IT WORK?
     
    Starting at 4 a.m. MST Christmas Eve, children can call a toll-free number, 877-446-6723 (877-Hi-NORAD) or email noradtracksanta@outlook.com to ask where Santa is on his fabled journey.
     
    Volunteers sit elbow-to-elbow in conference rooms at Peterson Air Force Base, NORAD's home, answering phones and checking computer-generated maps projected onto big screens. First lady Michelle Obama traditionally answers calls via a remote hookup, but Noel said it was not yet known if she will participate again this year.
     
     
    Elsewhere at the Air Force base, volunteers update NORAD's website (www.noradsanta.org), Facebook page (facebook.com/noradsanta) and Twitter feed (@NoradSanta).
     
    Last year, the website had 22 million unique visitors, Noel said.
     
    Volunteers work in shifts, taking the last calls at 3 a.m. MST Christmas Day.
     
    WHY DOES NORAD 'TRACK' SANTA?
     
    It started in 1955 when a Colorado Springs newspaper ad invited children to call Santa Claus but accidentally listed the number for the hotline at the Continental Air Defence Command, NORAD's predecessor.
     
    Air Force Col. Harry Shoup took a call from a child and thought he was being pranked. When he figured out he was talking to a little boy, he pretended he was Santa.
     
    More children called, and Shoup instructed airmen to play along.
     
    It's now a tradition, beloved by kids and the military. Volunteers range from generals and admirals to enlisted men and women, who sometimes report for telephone duty in military uniform and a Santa hat.
     
     
    WHAT IS NORAD?
     
    The North American Aerospace Defence Command is a joint U.S.-Canada operation that defends the sky over both nations and monitors sea approaches. It's best known for its Cold War-era control room deep inside Cheyenne Mountain — now used only as a backup — and for NORAD Tracks Santa.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    This Cop Never Forgets a Face; Has Recognized Over 850 Criminals

    This Cop Never Forgets a Face; Has Recognized Over 850 Criminals
    Andy Pope, a Police Community Support Officer for West Midlands Police, in the UK, has come to be known as memory cop, thanks to his incredible photographic memory, which has helped him successfully identify over 850 suspects in the last four years.

    This Cop Never Forgets a Face; Has Recognized Over 850 Criminals

    Chinese Man, 30 Gets Breast Implants To Improve Chances Of Finding A Job

    Chinese Man, 30 Gets Breast Implants To Improve Chances Of Finding A Job
    Convinced that women have more job opportunities than men, a 30-year-old Chinese man decided to get breast implants to increase his odds of finding employment.

    Chinese Man, 30 Gets Breast Implants To Improve Chances Of Finding A Job

    Beware! You May Soon Lose Your Job To Robots

    Beware! You May Soon Lose Your Job To Robots
    Automation threatens 69% of jobs in India, 77% in China, according to a World Bank research which says that technology could fundamentally disrupt the pattern of traditional economic paths in developing countries.

    Beware! You May Soon Lose Your Job To Robots

    How A Patient's 'crazy' Request For A New Womb Made History

    How A Patient's 'crazy' Request For A New Womb Made History
    This was nearly two decades ago, when the Swedish doctor Mats Brannstrom was training to be a physician abroad.

    How A Patient's 'crazy' Request For A New Womb Made History

    Swapping Spit: How Much Cocaine Can Actually Be Passed Through Kissing?

    TORONTO — Is it possible to ingest cocaine by kissing someone who has just snorted the powerful stimulant drug? Enough that its chemical signature would show up on an athlete's doping tests?   

    Swapping Spit: How Much Cocaine Can Actually Be Passed Through Kissing?

    Adolf Hitler Was Drug Addict, Veins Collapsed Due To Injections: Book

    Adolf Hitler Was Drug Addict, Veins Collapsed Due To Injections: Book
    According to Norman Ohler, an award-winning German author, the Fuhrer became addicted to a heroin-like substance called Eukodel which was prescribed following a nervous breakdown in 1944.

    Adolf Hitler Was Drug Addict, Veins Collapsed Due To Injections: Book