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Grateful - by Christian Toto, Washington Times 12/16/07
Gridleak's
Auction, Pro Bass Anglers News Ugly Boat Contest, 6/27/07
Belvoir
Eagle Ft. Belvoir, VA. 4/19/07
Organization provides scholarships to families of fallen Soldiers
By Quentin Melson
Staff writer
Pageant Held To Support Troops
Reported by Christina Salvo
csalvo@fox21news.com
(Aired 4-14-07)
When you think of supporting our troops, a beauty pageants is not
exactly what comes to mind, unless you are part of the "Miss
Patriotic Colorado Pageant" benefiting the Children of Fallen
Soldiers Relief Fund.
There are few reasons to smile about war, but when it comes to the
honoring those who fight in war, these girls are nothing but smiles.
The relief fund provides college grants and financial assistance to
surviving children and spouses of soldiers who have lost their lives
in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. So to benefit those families, girls
of all ages walked the stage with bows, ribbons, stripes and stars
displaying their most patriotic outfits in the Miss Patriotic Colorado
Pageant.
Many of the participants had a very personal connection with the
cause, like Iris whose father is deployed in Iraq. There are so many
families out there lost a loved one and we are here to support their
children and those left behind to make sure their futures are as bright
as they wanted them to be.
Entry fees and sponsors helped raise $2,000 for the fund, but the
pageants planner Tiffany Sawyer said though the point was to raise
money, it was not the only thing she hoped to accomplish. She said,
"Pageants for me are fun. Find a way for kids to express themselves
in a patriotic way to give back to other kids who have lost someone
in war."
Planners of the pageant hope this becomes an annual event here in
Colorado and say they would also like to see other states throughout
the nation adopt the event.
This Army
Wife Salutes Military Parents, by Rebecca Logan The Fayetteville
Observer 3/1/07
BIKING IN TRIBUTE NEWS ~
Cyclist
continues trek toward Pacific coast
San Diego trip expected to take about 2 months (BY JENNIFER TORRES
FOR FLORIDA TODAY) 2/28/07
My Hometown News, by By G.W. Pomichter
Staff writer (2/23/07)
MELBOURNE
BEACH - Second-graders at Gemini Elementary School have been tracking
John Cook since he departed their school on his bicycle ride across
the nation.
Mr. Cook is riding across the United States to raise money for Children
of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund.
He calls the ride "Biking in Tribute."
Bicycle
trek follows meaningful purpose
Trip across U.S. to help children of fallen soldiers
BY JENNIFER TORRES
FOR FLORIDA TODAY ADVERTISEMENT
As an avid bicyclist, John Cook is always on the lookout for his
next great adventure.
During the past few years, the Minneapolis man has taken bicycling
vacations to Oregon, Hawaii and the San Juan Islands in Washington.
But on Monday, Feb. 5, Cook will begin a cross-country bike trip
from Melbourne Beach with a greater purpose.
He wants to raise awareness for an organization in which he strongly
believes -- The Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund, which provides
scholarships to children who have lost a parent in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Article
in The Providence Journal 2/26/07
Falmouth
Road Race fund-raising and donations surpass $860,000
Falmouth, Mass., Nov. 8, 2006 – The 34th annual Falmouth Road
Race, presented by CIGNA, raised a record-breaking $861,318 last summer
for 35 nonprofit organizations with its "numbers-for-nonprofits"
program. The figure exceeds last year's tally of more than $750,000
and puts the race above $3 million raised over the past several years.
America Supports You: Group Offers Support to Survivors
By Samantha L. Quigley
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Oct. 31, 2006 – How to pay for a child’s college
education shouldn’t be a consideration for those who lose a
loved one in battle, and one troop-support group is working to ensure
it isn’t.
“We provide financial assistance and college grants to the children
and spouses of the fallen … and severely injured servicemembers,”
Rebecca Campbell, founder of The Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief
Fund, said. “It’s all for different needs, but (applicants)
have to have a financial need.”
The Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund is a member of America
Supports You, a Defense Department program highlighting ways Americans
and the corporate sector support the nation’s servicemembers.
Formed in 2003, The Gaithersburg, Md.-based nonprofit group started
out with an attainable goal. “We wanted to help one child (attend
college),” Campbell said. “But we haven’t stopped.”
Read
full article
Local News
Posted: Sunday, 08 October 2006 9:11AM
Fleet Week Features Blue Angels Flying Team
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (KCBS) -- Crowds are packing the San Francisco
waterfront again today as Fleet Week activities continue.
KCBS’ Tim Ryan was near Fisherman’s Wharf and said most
spectators came out to watch the aircraft. That’s not all people
are up to, though. Military recruiters have flocked by the dozen.
Chief Petty Officer Amanda Myers said that for the Coast Guard, Fleet
Week is a major recruiting operation.
Mike Dillon of Sacramento is with the Children of Fallen Soldiers
Relief Fund. He also uses Fleet Week to offer information and ask
for donations.
"We're a small, grassroots type of group. We don't have some
huge financial backing. It's mostly events like this right here that
we try to raise funds at," said Dillon.
Aircraft will take to the skies from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday afternoon.
War ships will also be open for tours.
Copyright 2006, KCBS. All Rights Reserved.
Thursday, August 31, 2006
Lehi teen singing to help those hurt by war
By Rodger L. Hardy
Deseret Morning News
LEHI — Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson may have Cindy Sheehan,
but Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff has Jaden Bliss.
Who's Jaden Bliss?
She's a 13-year-old singer-songwriter from Lehi who has captured the
hearts and attention of Utahns with her collection of songs honoring
America's soldiers.
Anderson invited Sheehan, who lost her son in the war in Iraq in 2004,
to come and protest Bush's visit. Meanwhile, Shurtleff arranged for
the Lehi schoolgirl to sing her songs at the Freedom Rally in Liberty
Park and Washington Square.
Shurtleff wanted Bliss to sing for President Bush.
Bliss wanted to sing for the family of Adam Galvez, a Marine from
Salt Lake City who recently died in Iraq.
Bliss has been writing songs about patriotism and love of country
since the fifth grade.
"I just wanted our soldiers to know how much I love and appreciate
all the sacrifices they make in defending this country, and I also
want their families to know that I'm thinking of them and that they
are in my prayers tonight. I'm so proud to be an American," Bliss
said.
Bliss began selling her CD door-to-door for $10 and gave the money
to the National Freedom Alliance and the Children of Fallen Soldiers
Relief Fund. She's sold 90 copies.
Her collection includes: "So Proud (To Be an American),"
"God Bless Our Soldiers Tonight," and "Dear Friend,"
available at: www.blessoursoldiers.com.
Dan Lakatos, Montana Mountain Biker races 100 miles for children
of the fallen. Read
the story from the Big Sky here
Clark Pinnacle Raises $125,000 for the Fort Belvoir Chapter of USO,
Chaplain Family Life Center and Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief
Fund with Third Annual Charity Golf Classic
FORT BELVOIR, Va. - Clark Pinnacle Family Communities held its Third
Annual Charity Golf Classic at Fort Belvoir Golf Club today. At the
awards ceremony, Clark Pinnacle presented a $125,000 check to the
Fort Belvoir Chapter of USO, Fort Belvoir Chaplain Family Life Center
and Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund. More than 200 golfers
participated in the four-person scramble, including representatives
from Clark Pinnacle, the Army Residential Communities Initiative office
and the many consulting and subcontracting firms working on the housing
revitalization efforts at Fort Belvoir. In the last three years, the
tournament has raised a total of more than $280,000 for organizations
that support Fort Belvoir families including Army Emergency Relief,
Fort Belvoir Youth Sports and Boy and Girl Scouts. Read
more
Fort Belvoir News
War Orphan Tuition Waivers
Why aren't all 50 states, or, better yet, the federal government,
doing this for the children of those men and women in uniform who've
made the ultimate sacrifice?
Just 5 years old, Brisa Dorff won't start kindergarten until this
fall. But if she stays in Minnesota through college, her tuition should
be covered.
Dorff's father, Chief Warrant Officer Patrick Dorff of Elk River,
died two years ago when his helicopter crashed during a rescue mission
in Iraq. A World War II-era law on Minnesota's books entitles children
of fallen soldiers to free tuition at public universities.
"To me that's a godsend, just knowing that even part of my daughter's
education is paid for," said Brisa's mother, Jamie. "It's
already stressful enough having to worry about my 5-year-old now and
having to worry 13 years down the road on top of that."
From New England to the mountain West, state leaders and university
officials are reviewing decades-old "war orphan" policies
and, in some cases, freshening them to ensure children who lose a
parent in Iraq or Afghanistan aren't shut out.
A revised law covering the dependents of soldiers killed since the
Sept. 11 attacks won approval in Iowa last week. The same debate is
under way in Missouri. Wyoming, New Hampshire and South Dakota all
recently updated their laws in different ways. Full
story here
Leitner-Wise Rifle Co. Inc. donates a portion
of the sales proceeds from their limited edition
Special Forces O.D.A.
By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON (Dec. 8, 2005) — Becky Campbell's son, David, is
in the Army's 82nd Airborne Division.
After her son returned home safe after a tour of duty in Iraq in
2003, Campbell said she decided to help military families who'd suffered
the loss of a loved one.
"I wanted to do something," Campbell said.
So Campbell founded the nonprofit Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief
Fund in October 2003. She said the all-volunteer, nationwide group
provides scholarship money to surviving spouses and children of military
families from all branches of the armed forces.
"We're a grassroots organization not affiliated with anybody
in the government. [We're] just a lot of people wanting to help the
families," said Campbell, a resident of Gaithersburg, Md.
Thus far, the group has helped six families of deceased servicemembers,
distributing more than $26,000 in scholarship funds, Campbell said.
She said her group receives donations from public and private sources
from across the United States. She said her group also co-sponsors
fundraisers for servicemembers' families, such as 5-kilometer runs.
Campbell said her organization plans to provide more college grants
in January, bringing the total of distributed funds to more than $36,000.
Read
more here
GI Jobs, 11/2005
Real Hoboken, CFSRF is named Charity of the
Month

Real Hoboken, CFSRF is named Charity of the Month
Monday, October 3, 2005
By JOHN PETRICK
STAFF WRITER |
|
HOBOKEN - Saturday night is often date night for a single
young woman in Hoboken. Not for Christina Attardo. At least, not for
now.
"This is Brian's second tour in Iraq. I met
him last November, before he went back the second time. It's been
a very intense, very tough year," said Attardo, 26, who stood at the
door of a trendy Hoboken bar and restaurant selling raffle tickets
as young singles drank, mingled and watched the football game during
happy hour.
Read
more
America Supports You:
'Nashville Star' Winner Gives to Military Families
America Supports You: 'Nashville Star' Winner Gives to Military FamiliesBy Steven Donald Smith American Forces Press Service
|
| WASHINGTON, Aug. 28, 2005 - Brad
Cotter, the 2004 winner of USA Network's singing contest "Nashville
Star," will donate a portion of the proceeds from his new single, "An
American Dream," to the Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund.
Twenty-five percent of the song's profits, both from
CD sales and Web site downloads, will go to the nonprofit organization.
The fund provides a wide range of assistance to the children and
spouses of servicemembers who have been killed or injured. It assists
families with housing, utilities, medical expenses, groceries,
clothing, school tuition and supplies, and any other expenses to help
alleviate their need, said Rebecca Campbell, the organization's
founder.
The song and financial contribution to the fund are Cotter's way to give back to servicemembers and their families.
"This project is just our little way of giving
back. I am truly blessed to have the privilege to grow up in such a
wonderful country," Cotter said. "They deserve nothing less than our
whole-hearted and undivided support."
Complete
story
Help for Troops with College-age Kids
Aug. 22, 2005
Troops with college-age kids should know there are people ready to help with college tuition.
The Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund was founded in 2003 to raise college tuition for the children of servicemembers killed in the war on terrorism.
But now it aims to do even more through financial assistance to the children and spouses of troops who have been killed or injured.
The organization began collecting donations in May 2004 and has raised a little more than $85,000, according to its founder, Rebecca Campbell.
To keep costs down, Campbell said she does a lot of the work from her home, like designing the Web site, printing, advertising and mailing.
The organization is made up of all volunteers and it is open to families in all 50 states.
It started taking applications from military families for financial assistance in June and has given out several grants.
From Federal News Radio
Fund Helps Children and Spouses of Troops
By Steven Donald Smith
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Aug. 14, 2005 – Rebecca Campbell started
the Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund in 2003 to raise
college tuition for the children of servicemembers killed
in the war on terrorism.
The fund has since expanded to encompass other financial needs.
It now aims to provide a wide range of assistance to the children
and spouses of troops who have been killed or injured.
"These funds may be awarded to applicants of U.S. military
families who are in need of assistance with housing, utilities,
medical expenses, groceries, clothing, school supplies and
other expenses deemed necessary in order to provide them with
some support and alleviate their need," Campbell said.
She said she feels a real need for this type of allocation
because of the financial void often experienced by a death
in a military family. "Often, when a loss occurs in these
families, what was a two person income becomes one. The financial
hardships placed on these families are very difficult to deal
with," she said.
CFSRF raises money through direct donations and fundraisers.
The organization began collecting donations in May 2004, Campbell
said. Full
story here
Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund Gives Awards
By Special to America Supports You
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1, 2005 - The Children of Fallen Soldiers
Relief Fund recently announced the recipients of the following
awards: Read
more
Team Member of the Week
The Children of Fallen Soldiers Relief Fund
was named Team Member of the Week in America Supports You
Newsletter, 5/10/05 edition.
As of today there has been less than 300 messages to our military
from the State of Maryland, please post your message to service
members serving overseas and tell them how you support them
at America
Supports You! May is National Military Appreciation Month,
Memorial Day, Armed Forces Week and this is a good time to
honor our veterans!
Links to other stories:
Brad
Cotter, American Music Channel
Go to the Archives to read about more of CFSRF in the News!
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Copyright © by CFSRF All Rights Reserved.
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