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All American in the news...

Team Ukraine - 6 p.m. 8/14/07 - Bill Gallagher Report FOX2 News

All American receives a "Call To Action" to help a youth Ukraine Baseball team in need of team shirts. True to form, All American stopped their current production in order to create and donate t-shirts for this worthy cause...

 

Free Detroit Tigers T-shirts draw
hundreds to Sterling Heights facility

PUBLISHED: July 28, 2004

By Amanda Lee
Macomb Daily Staff Writer


 

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Macomb Daily photo by David Dalton

Gloria Bouffard of American Screen Printing gives a free T-shirt to Julie Green and her children, Samuel, 6, and Boaz, 1. The giveaway was part of a promotion run by the Sterling Heights business as part of its pledge to give 10 percent of proceeds back to the community.

Hundreds of people braved a steady rain Tuesday to wait in line to receive a free T-shirt from a Sterling Heights screen printing business.

"When I read about it I thought it was a great idea," said Tammy Winston of Sterling Heights as she ushered her son into the building. "It's nice to see a business do something like this."

All American Screen-Printing gave more than 300 Detroit Tigers-inspired shirts to residents as a way to reward the community.

Owner Christine Delvecchio said she tries to sponsor promotions like this as often as she can.

"To me, it's just kind of a nice, cheerful thing to do," she said. "We like to be able to say that we give something back to the community whenever we can."

The shirts, one touting the Detroit Tigers and the other honoring Tigers catcher Ivan "Pudge" Rodriguez, flew off the table at the Mound Road business faster than workers could keep up.

"I couldn't believe it when I saw so many people lined up outside," Delvecchio said. "I was surprised. People really want to get behind this team, though."

This isn't the first time Delvecchio has donated T-shirts made at her business. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks she helped put care packages together with specialty shirts for American armed forces members.

"That's what I really get excited for," she said. "Anything I can do to bolster the troops I like to do. This was just something we came up with last week."

Delvecchio encouraged those getting the shirts to wear them to upcoming games.

"This isn't something you see every day," said Dan Lawrence of Clinton Township as he picked up a shirt for his teenage son. "For people to give something like this away shows that there are good people out there and everything isn't all negative."

Lianne Mathie, who has worked at the business for the past year, said she had never seen anything like Tuesday's promotion.

"I think it's great that someone would do something like this," she said. "It just shows how big a heart (Delvecchio) has. She really likes to give back to the community. I think that's the most important thing to her."

 

The Source
November 30, 2003
Local woman makes free shirts for troops

By ANN ZANIEWSKI - Staff Writer


 

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Christine Delvecchio of American Screen Printing.

She's not a famous singer or comedian, but Christine Delvecchio has been lifting the spirits of troops overseas for the last two years.

Delvecchio, owner of All American Screen Printing & Embroidery, makes patriotic T-shirts for men and women serving in the Middle East and other parts of the world.

She has just finished another batch of care packages, and she's offering them for free to anyone who wants to send one to a friend or family member in the military.

Each package includes a T-shirt, a bookmark with an inspirational prayer, a letter from Delvecchio and a note of thanks written by an area child.

People who bring a current military photo to the All American Screen Printing and Embroidery store in Sterling Heights or Chesterfield Township can pick up a package.Beginning Nov. 30, the packages will be available for one week, or until the supply of 1,000 runs out.

"I was lucky to be born here, and it's important for me to say thank you. A lot of people feel thankful," Delvecchio said. "It's important for me that they know that people here appreciate them."

Delvecchio started making shirts for the military in fall of 2001. Her business was booming, but she found herself searching for more out of life. She wanted to make a difference in the lives of others.

"Financially, I was prospering, but I didn't feel satisfied," she said. "I thought 'I'm a T-shirt lady. What can I do to make a difference?'" When terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center, she came up with an answer.

Delvecchio immediately printed several thousand "I love New York" T-shirts and sold them locally, raising about $120,000 for the Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund. She then made 300 patriotic red, white and blue T-Shirts and delivered them to Selfridge Air National Guard Base that November, where they were distributed to service men and women.

Delvecchio has since made and sent nearly 20,000 shirts to American troops in Iraq, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Bosnia and other countries around the world. With the shirts, she includes sweet, hand-written letters penned by children from local school groups that have toured her shops.

Lt. Col. Mike Greiger of the 127th wing of the Michigan Air Guard said the shirts really help boost troops' morale. "She wanted to make sure that we were appreciated, even though we weren't with our family or community," he said.

Greiger met Delvecchio at Selfridge in 2001. He took several shirts to Kuwait in July and distributed them to troops who had just boarded a plane that was making its way back to the U.S. "You're living in tents and trailers surrounded by 10-foot walls of sand," he said. "The troops really appreciated them. It put a smile on their faces."

Delvecchio is looking for names and addresses of units stationed overseas, as well as school groups who want to tour her store and contribute letters.

Care packages can be picked up at both All American Screen Printing and Embroidery locations. The Sterling Heights store is at 42496 Mound, and the Chesterfield Township store at 46534 Gratiot. Care packages can be picked up beginning Nov. 30.

 

The Source Newspaper
April 6, 2003
A Personal ‘thank you’

 

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Air Force Sgt. Jesse English offers gratitude for non-profit organization’s work.

Most of the thank yous that Christine Delvecchio receives are in the form of letters, E-mails or even photographs.

But on March 28, the gratitude came in the form of a visit from United States Air Force Sgt. Jesse English, one of the first of thousands of military personnel who have received a special care package.

Delvecchio is not only the president of All American Screen Printing in Sterling Heights, but heads up the All American Patriots, a non-profit group that has sent out thousands of care packages to troops deployed to the Middle East since Sept. 11.

And English, who has spent two assignments totaling eight months in Afghanistan, said the troops are more thankful for the care packages than Delvecchio even realizes.

“In some instances it was almost like Christmas time” he said, of the arrival of packages and T-shirts, which say “For those about to rock, we salute you,” and depict symbols for the different branches of the military. “Some people didn’t believe it. They said ‘What’s the catch?’“

Included in the care packages are a T-shirt, soldier’s bookmark and a thank-you letter from a local child. English, 31 said he responded to the letter to let the children know what they had written was significant, telling them, “you encourage me a lot to continue.”

They weren’t just mailing out a random letter,” he said. “They were sending it to someone who gives a damn.”

English is a special tactics weather man for the Air Force. His intensive training included four years of college-level meteorology school condensed into one year, in addition to military free fall, combat, and water survival schooling.

English is often the first to arrive at a site of a military occupation. He parachutes in, often assigned to a troop of Army Green Berets because they don’t have weather-trained troops. He can then observe and forecast weather in the area, briefing commanders on things like the best way to bring planes in depending on cloud ceiling and visibility.

He said his brother was also Air Force and led him to the work. Living in Alaska at the time, English sold everything he could and traveled far just for the opportunity.

“The fact that I got to work with Special Forces is what drew me to it,” he said.

He said his military work has been exciting. He has traveled to many foreign countries, many of which he landed in after hopping out of an airplane.

When people ask why he would want to jump out of a perfectly good plane, he has a quick answer for them – “To find out if we have perfectly good parachutes.”

Special Forces work in four month rotations. English is currently biding his time at Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Harrison Township, waiting to see if he will be deployed to Iraq. On one hand, he said he would be happy to start his work toward becoming a U.S. marshal. On the other, he said he wouldn’t mind being overseas as part of the current fight.

In his occupation, if they move into new areas and don’t have a weatherman, he could get a call.

“You have to go where you are needed and that could change in a day,” he said.

The thank yous from the more than 11,000 troops who have received packages keep pouring into Delvecchio’s office. The photos are in a small gallery in the business’ front office. Small labels adorn their frames, giving an infantry number, location, soldier’s name or plane type. One photo depicts a troop holding a torn piece of cardboard with the Magic Marker-ed words “Thank you Christine.”

A combat veteran, English was grateful for Delvecchio’s “thank you,” which he said was obviously heartfelt.

“You can’t hear it enough, people’s thanks,” he said. “It’s the simple things that mean the most.”

During English’s visit, the business was a flurry of activity. A local Boy Scout troop was making T-shirts and touring the business. Patriotic T-shirts were being sold to raise money for the Patriots and volunteers were coming and going.

Caroline Dipzinski, a Sterling Heights resident, had just begun volunteering for the Patriots that day.

“I think it’s great,” she said. “It’s a very, very good thing. We are all Patriotic.”

Dipzinski, who got an autograph on a hat from English, has two sons-in-law in Iraq. Neither of her daughters has heard from them since they were deployed. James Parker is a two-star Army general and Navy Cmdr. Greg Fenton is on the U.S.S. Roosevelt. Her son fought in the Gulf War.

“We pray a lot now and keep our eyes glued to the news,” she said.

Representatives of the Korean War Veterans Chapter 256 also showed up to welcome English and pledge support to Delvecchio.

“It’s good,” said Richard Charbonneau, of the operation. “We’re going to back her up all we can supporting the troops in Iraq.”

Both Charbonneau and Jay Bradmon said they would have liked to receive the same packages while they were fighting.

“It would be like Christmas,” Bradmon said.

“A lot of GIs when we were fighting would have loved something like that,” Charbonneau said.

Delvecchio estimates that she works 60-70 hours a week, with most of her time going to the Patriots. Jan Howell, All American’s business manager has picked up a lot of slack. Delvecchio still has a list of 62,000 servicemen and women to whom she could send packages.

When she gets to a point where she asks herself why she is doing what she is doing, halting her businesses financial growth and even using some of her business income to pay for the care packages, she looks at the spiritual payment it has given her. She hopes to teach her twin daughters, 10 and 13-year-old son to be good people.

She also said she sometimes compares the feeling of getting a new, imported car to the feeling of helping other people and one falls short.

“What it’s done for me morally, and the feeling of loving people and caring for people is more satisfying for me than any new step in my business,” she said.


 

Macomb Daily
September 11, 2002
Rolling up her sleeves



 

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Small businesses fuel the economy. They also kept the relief embers burning.

Chiropractors offered free examinations and hair salon owners offered free cuts and manicures for a donation to the American Red Cross. One salon, BoRics Hair Salon in St. Clair Shores, raised $105,000 for the Twin Towers Orphan Fund.

One small business that it still giving is All American Screen Printing, owned by Christine Delvecchio.

Following the attacks, the single mother of two and her graphic artist, Sara Gale, designed a T-shirt that would commemorate the attack victims and raise money for their families.

The white shirts read, “You can break America’s heart but you will never break our spirit!” followed with an “I love New York” message featuring a heart split down the middle.

The goal was to sell 1,000 shirts.
 

When people in Sterling Heights heard what Delvecchio was doing they rushed to help. Hundreds of strangers worked side by side, boxing and bagging shirts.

“I even had a doctor on the press,” said Delvecchio.

At one point she encouraged volunteers to sign a roster so she could thank them later, but it remained blank.

She’ll never forget what they did.

Once Delvecchio reached her goal of raising $100,000, the fund-raiser evolved into a community project. School children who tour the facility to see how T-shirts are printed are encouraged to write letters to the military personnel serving overseas. Each month Delvecchio ships a box of T-shirts to a military base overseas. She encloses letters from the children and a note explaining the gift. Delvecchio has always donated 10 percent of her company’s profit to charity.

Now Delvecchio’s nights are spent answering the letters that she receives from Americans fighting overseas.

“I don’t see any end to it,” Delvecchio said, “because there’s always going to be men and women sacrificing their life for their country. God bless them for being there, and shame on anyone who forgets them.”



 

Macomb Daily
May 9, 2000
Casino supply jobs for people,
work for businesses



 

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Employees of All American Screen Printing in Sterling Heights show off a few of the shirts they are producing for Motorcity Casino in Detroit.