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- Michael Yon






Halloween Candy for the Troops?



Halloween has come and gone: the costumes are put away, the kids have come down from the sugar high, and the jack-o-lantern is starting to wilt... and there are still pounds and pounds of candy all over the place!  What to do?

Our military men and women deployed around the world always enjoy candy in their care packages, and this is the perfect time of year for shipping chocolate--the cooler weather means it's less likely to melt!  Patriotic kids and parents can send extra Halloween candy to Soldiers' Angels, who will make sure it brightens the day of a service member far from home (please be sure to send "the good stuff,"--no crushed/melted candy or broken/torn wrappers, etc).

Soldiers' Angels asks all Angels to spread the word and get their community involved in sharing their Halloween candy to give our troops a taste of home. 

If you live east of the Mississippi, please ship your Halloween candy to:

    Soldiers' Angels
    112 Greenhill Road
    Ramseur NC 27316
    (Dropoff avail. M-F, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.)


If you live west of the Mississippi, please ship your halloween candy to:

    Soldiers' Angels
    914 Tourmaline Dr
    Newbury Park, CA 91320




Teams & Projects - How to Help

Click here for a list of our many teams and projects!


May No Soldier Go Unloved

May No Soldier Go Unloved is the first in a series of books chronicling the history of Soldiers' Angels.

Learn more here.  Read the literary review!








(from l-r) Major Chuck Ziegenfuss, Soldiers' Angels founder Patti Patton Bader, Deborah Mullen, and Admiral Michael Mullen at the 2008 Soldiers' Angels gala in Washington DC.




  

Jessica Scheu, Miss Teen Minnesota International 2009, is a Soldiers' Angel.

Since being crowned Miss Teen Minnesota International this year, a position she will hang onto until March 6, the 17-year-old has been promoting her platform – Soldier’s Angels – and its message: “May no soldier go unloved.”

In her work with Soldier’s Angels, Scheu adopted a soldier who she corresponds with by writing letters and sending care packages. She also participates in the Ladies of Liberty program, which supports women soldiers during deployment, and the Warriors to Citizens military program based in Farmington.

-- The Savage Pacer Newspaper

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