Creating candy, sipping milkshakes and discovering how we make our world-famous HERSHEY'S Chocolate are just a few ways you can experience the fun at HERSHEY'S CHOCOLATE WORLD! View our year-round hours, seasonal events and virtual tour to plan your perfect day.

Participants in PBGC-trusteed plans can use PBGC's fast, free, and secure online service tool to apply for pension benefits, update contact information, adjust federal income tax withholding, and more. Learn how!


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As Halloween's enchanting spell envelops us in its mystique, and we eagerly summon our inner spirits and specters, let's explore the delectable realm of HAP insurance plans. Just like the variety of candies in your Halloween bag, HAP offers different insurance options, each with its own unique features waiting for you to unwrap. Come with us as we navigate through the realms of HMO, PPO, POS, and D-SNP insurance plans, making comparisons to the treats you enjoy in your Halloween basket.

This Halloween, as you sort through your bag of goodies, remember that HAP insurance plans are as diverse as the candies you collect. HMOs provide straightforward, consistent coverage, just like candy corn. PPOs are like a box of assorted chocolates, offering a range of choices. POS plans strike a balance between structure and flexibility, much like gummy bears. And SNP plans are as special and unique as rare Halloween treats.

So, as you prepare to celebrate Halloween, also take the time to select the HAP insurance plan that best satisfies your healthcare needs. Just as you savor your favorite candies, ensure your insurance plan delivers the right flavor of protection for your health and wellness. This Halloween may your insurance be as delightful as your Halloween candy stash!

Today was an action-packed class, with lots of engagement from my students. We were learning about brainstorming with candy and about the speaking and listening process. It was a perfect way to spend a full moon Friday the 13th together!


To sweeten the task, literarily, I tell them that one group will get the rest of the candy. And then we begin. First, they brainstorm what the candy looks like. I encourage them to be as descriptive as possible. After about ninety seconds, I tell them they can pick the key up and feel it. They brainstorm words and phrases to describe how it feels in their hands, and then, finally, they can put it in their mouth. At this point I tell them to describe not only how it tastes, but how it feels in their mouths.

So this year I decided to have my family come over for a little candy cane Olympics. Two teams, ten candy came games, points awarded for the team that wins each game. Winning team takes home the big prize!

When you say go, players have to spin their candy cane. When the candy cane stops spinning, it will be pointing to one of the four sides (image an imaginary line going from the end out one of the sides). They should grab the item on that side (e.g., red kiss) and bring it back to their spot.

Once the candy cane is over the edge of the table the second player on each team can help call out directions to get the candy cane into the actual cup. This makes it a lot more difficult (and funny) than if the first player simply looked under the table to direct their candy cane.

I throw a Christmas Party for my kids and grandkids every year. We always have it after Christmas so we can enjoy it and not have to rush through so they can go to their in-laws or other Christmas Day visits. I change the theme, food and activities and always depend on your ideas to plan. This years theme was Gingerbread and Candy. We had our Christmas this past Saturday. I used your Candy Cane Olympics games and they all had a great time. We had ages from 2 months to 35 years old and everyone enjoyed the games! We also had a gingerbread house decorating contest that was judged via FaceTime by a favorite aunt who lives on the other side of the country. I was also a lucky winner of the Pro Spin portable table tennis set so we played the Ping Pong Games you had posted also! Everyone had fun and all the adult children were waiting in hopes of winning a set of their own! So I suppose I will be ordering a set for each of them now since I did not include mine in the prizes! Thank you so much for letting me look brilliant and creative year after year!

The retail sale and purchase for storage, use, or consumption of non-qualifying food is subject to the general State and applicable local and transit rates of sales and use tax. Non-qualifying food includes: dietary supplements; food sold through a vending machine; prepared food, other than bakery items sold without eating utensils by an artisan bakery; soft drinks; and candy.

The sales price of or the gross receipts derived from a prepaid meal plan are subject to the general State and applicable local and transit rates of sales and use tax. A bundled transaction that includes a prepaid meal plan is taxable in accordance with N.C. Gen. Stat.  105-164.4D.

Fewer consumers plan to celebrate Halloween this year. Less than two-thirds (61%) of consumers say they will celebrate Halloween this year, down from 65% who said the same last year. However, 12% of shoppers are still undecided, which could bring participation above 2022 levels.

Candy will remain the top purchased item for Halloween. Four in five celebrators (80%) say they will purchase candy this Halloween. Consumers say the most important decision factors are price (65% of buyers) and special promotions (44%).

Shoppers are more likely to buy value or store brands for trick-or-treaters and name brands for themselves. Among candy buyers purchasing for themselves, 27% say they will opt for premium or high-end brands, 63% for mid-range or popular brands, and 20% for value or store brands. When purchasing for trick-or-treaters, 15% say they will opt for premium or high-end brands, 58% for mid-range or popular brands, and 31% for value or store brands.

Candy purchasers are looking for variety. 70% of Halloween candy buyers say they will purchase variety packs, followed by chocolates (53%) and gummy candies (29%). Only 1 in 5 (22%) of candy buyers plan to purchase full-sized candy bars.

Most consumers will opt to shop in-store for their Halloween items. Over half (56%) of shoppers expect to purchase their Halloween supplies from mass retailers like Walmart and Target, 44% plan to purchase from grocery stores, and 33% plan to buy from club stores such as Costco and Sam's Club. 18% plan to shop at online retailers.

Halloween spending will be on par with last year. Nearly a third of shoppers (30%) expect to spend between $26 and $50 on their holiday items, with less than a fifth (18%) planning to spend more than $100.

October sees more than its fair share of candy sales. According to Numerator TruView data from 2022, 11.9% of annual candy sales take place in October, neck-in-neck with December (12%). Chocolate candies account for over half of candy sales in October, experiencing a 1.7x boost compared to other months.

In my experience, most of the little children will pull the candy out of their bags as they walk away and either read it aloud or give it to their parents to read. The only ones who have turned up their noses at the notes are the ones too old to be trick-or-treating in the first place. ?

LaLa Lunchbox and LaLa Breakfast are fun meal planning apps for kids and parents. They empower children to make healthy choices and help families save time and money. Kids select foods for their meals with fun monsters, colors and sounds (and a completely customizable Food Library) and those choices turn into a handy grocery list for parents. Mornings can be stressful; mealtime shouldn't be.

If, at our request, you send certain specific submissions (for example contest entries) or without a request from us you send creative ideas, suggestions, proposals, plans, or other materials, whether online, by email, by postal mail, or otherwise (collectively, 'comments'), you agree that we may, at any time, without restriction, edit, copy, publish, distribute, translate and otherwise use in any medium any comments that you forward to us. We are and shall be under no obligation (1) to maintain any comments in confidence; (2) to pay compensation for any comments; or (3) to respond to any comments.

Here's the deal in my house: Halloween candy can stick around until Christmas. Yep, that's right. They can have a candy from their bucket once a day if they choose but as of December 25, whatever is leftover is thrown out. Stale. Garbage. I say this because just when I thought I was done with candy for a while, this morning I noticed Valentine's Day decorations and candy everywhere. And next to that? St. Patty's Day stuff.

But back to the Halloween candy... the Candy Fairy takes some of my kids' candy on Halloween night in exchange for a little gift - but that still leaves them with a bucket of candy. Here's the funny thing: after about November 10, my kids don't even ask for Halloween candy. They're back to their usual dessert/treat requests. (Right now, my kids are all about Cuties, which are mini dairy-free ice cream sandwiches or mango sorbet).

This year I chucked the Halloween candy on December 24 - a day early - when the stomach bug started to go 'round in my house. (I won't bother with those details, but suffice to say, the last two weeks have not been relaxing). That day, the kids watched me empty dozens of candies into the garbage without a word, as they have in years past, and I wondered - why didn't I do this a month ago? Maybe our Halloween tradition should be October 31 until Thanksgiving? Maybe earlier? 2351a5e196

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