Monday, March 11, 2013

YoGo Factory Frozen Yogurt Franchise Announces Franchised ...

Woolwich Township, NJ (PRWEB) March 11, 2013 - YoGo Factory, a national self-serve frozen yogurt franchise, continues expansion into Gloucester County, NJ, announcing their grand opening in Woolwich Township, Gloucester County, NJ. Woolwich, a franchised store is located at 120 Center Square Road, Woolwich Township, NJ, and will service residence of Swedesboro, Woolwich, Mullica Hill, Paulsboro, other surrounding towns. The store is due to open Friday, March 22nd, 2013. YoGo Factory is located in the same plaza and adjacent to Hand and Stone Massage, Primo Hoagies, Green Tea bar & restaurant. Over 5,000 YoGo Factory shirts are due to be given away and their patrons are anxiously awaiting their new favorite dessert shop with the store projecting well over 1,000 customers on it's first day of business. YoGo Factory has also announced plans for another wave of 15+ stores throughout eastern Pennsylvania. By 2014, company projections expect YoGo Factory to have over 100 frozen yogurt franchises, and 30 company owned yogurt stores throughout the eastern and south eastern United States and additional stores abroad.

The YoGo Factory frozen yogurt company mission is to offer the customer a total frozen yogurt experience. Most stores are much larger than your typical frozen yogurt shop, and offer an inviting feel, filled with multiple family booths, a huge, 50' granite yogurt bar, and both free WI-FI and wall mounted iPads which feature Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and more.

About The YoGo Factory

The YoGo Factory froyo franchise main focus is not just the best tasting, creamiest froyo in the nation, but also is to provide each and every customer a total frozen yogurt experience rather than a "get in, get out" type of experience. The company also prides itself in offering the largest amount of fresh fruit, syrups and toppings, and frozen yogurt flavors in the country, boasting well over 100 toppings and over 75 flavors of frozen yogurt, most non-fat. Franchise, licensing and master franchise opportunities are available through the company website, at http://www.YoGoFactory.com.

Contact:

Ryan Mastro
YoGo Factory Frozen Yogurt Franchise
http://www.yogofactory.com/franchise.php
609-748-9646

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Source: http://www.franchising.com/news/20130311_yogo_factory_frozen_yogurt_franchise_announces_fra.html

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After Newtown: a time for solace

Dec. 14, 2012, will long be remembered in Newtown, Conn., and well beyond. Tears will long be shed. Prayers and comfort will long be needed.

By John Yemma,?Editor / March 10, 2013

Volunteer Stephanie Porzio reads a condolence letter sent to Newtown, Conn.; she is helping to create an archive.

Jessica Hill/AP

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Time is a blanket. It settles over the wars, disasters, and violence of today, softening the contours of the raw and immediate, turning them first into memory, then history, and eventually half-remembered legend. Time itself doesn?t heal wounds. That takes a higher order of thought. But almost without effort, time gentles the present and helps us move on.

Skip to next paragraph John Yemma

Editor, The Christian Science Monitor

John Yemma is Editor of The Christian Science Monitor, which publishes international news and analysis at?CSMonitor.com, in the?Monitor Weekly?newsmagazine, and in an email-delivered?Daily News Briefing. He can be reached at editor@csmonitor.com.

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The world is overflowing with places and dates we vow never to forget: Auschwitz, Hiroshima, Gettysburg. At first, we lay wreaths and feel the rush of memory. Then time?s blanket descends. We mark a month, a year, a decade, but new generations cannot feel the same way we do. Dates that will live in infamy once again become Sundays in early December. Hallowed ground in one era is a pleasant park in another.

Less than three months have passed since that terrible Friday morning at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. G. Jeffrey MacDonald has listened and watched as the pastor and parishioners of the Newtown United Methodist Church comfort one another and lean on a church family that was always there but has now become an even more essential part of their lives. (You can read Jeff's report here.)

The church sits at the entrance to the Sandy Hook village and has a large parking lot. Media from around the world swarmed in after the shooting. From the outset, the Rev. Mel Kawakami and members of the church kept reporters at bay, determined to maintain a community sanctuary. Still, there was a story to tell.?

An official of the national United Methodist Church reached out to Jeff, who has written about religion for many years (see his Dec. 24, 2012, cover story, ?The new face of faith?), knowing he would be respectful and trustworthy. His report ? and Melanie Stetson Freeman?s sensitive photographs inside the church ? is an intimate look at a faith community working through pain, sorrow, and questions engendered by crisis.

One of the church members told Jeff that Newtown had always seemed like Sesame Street to her ? safe, diverse, kind, intelligent, happy. That was turned upside down on Dec. 14. But the essential qualities of the community haven?t disappeared. They are manifest in the kindness of a customer paying for everyone?s coffee at Dunkin? Donuts, the simple act of looking in on a neighbor, the care and discretion people exercise in deciding whether this is or is not the moment to speak up on the issue of gun violence.

We often see news reports of packed churches the Sunday after a tragedy, Jeff notes. And that?s usually where the story ends. News moves on. ?But there?s so much more to it,? he says. ?Church is a safe space for people to confess, to cry, to feel the presence of sanctuary, to reinterpret the meaning of powerful symbols, to find deeper meaning in hymns and sacraments.? Some of this can be done alone; more needs to be worked out in community, which is what a church is when it is at its best.

Valentine?s Day, Feb. 14, was especially hard in Newtown. Lent, which is approaching its midway point, is a hard season by definition and has been made harder by a cold, snowy winter. Ahead are anniversaries and birthdays and more tears. Good Friday will be 15 weeks to the day. Only 3-1/2 months will have passed by Easter Sunday. Spring and summer will come. But the gentling blanket of time takes time.

?America is a ?move on? society,? Jeff notes. ?We don?t like to sit with things. We need to sit with things.??

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/VALbYMB1fR4/After-Newtown-a-time-for-solace

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No. 5 Georgetown beats No. 17 Syracuse 61-39

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Georgetown coach John Thompson III was noting all the ways ? and there were many ? in which his team's lopsided, Big East-closing victory over Syracuse was significant, when a familiar baritone voice rose from the back of the interview room.

"Kiss Syracuse goodbye!" interrupted Thompson's father.

John Thompson Jr. coached Georgetown to a regular-season title in 1979-80, Year 1 of the Big East, and his son took the Hoyas to the final regular-season title before the conference undergoes massive changes, emphatically ending the rivalry against Syracuse with a 61-39 win Saturday.

On an afternoon that Otto Porter Jr. didn't make a field goal until the second half, No. 5 Georgetown held No. 17 Syracuse to its lowest scoring total in 558 Big East games ? and its fewest points in any game since a 36-35 victory over Kent State on Dec. 1, 1962, back before shot clocks and 3-pointers. It also was the series' biggest margin since Georgetown beat Syracuse by 27 in 1985.

"It's special because the Big East, as we have known it, is ending," Thompson III said. "Georgetown won the first one, and now Georgetown's won the last. So that means a lot."

Porter finished with 10 points, but the national player of the year candidate contributed in plenty of other ways, as usual, with eight rebounds and seven assists. With Syracuse focusing on Porter, Markel Starks scored 19, and freshman D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera had 15 points, five rebounds and five assists for the Hoyas (24-5, 14-4), who will be the No. 1 seed at the Big East tournament next week in New York.

"I don't want anything to get clouded: It's not over. We hope to go up to New York and play well and win that. And then we hope to play well and win the NCAA tournament," Thompson III said. "I'm not saying we've accomplished our goals, by any stretch of the imagination."

Try telling that to Georgetown's fans.

When the game ended, they stormed the court ? even though the favorite won ? and it took a while to clear them away so Georgetown could have a brief ceremony celebrating its title in the last year of the league as it's currently constituted. Georgetown's players even cut down the nets.

The Hoyas have won 12 of their last 13 games, including two wins against Syracuse; Porter scored 33 in a victory at the Carrier Dome on Feb. 23. It's the Hoyas' first two-game sweep of a season series over the Orange since 2001-02.

Syracuse (23-8, 11-7), which had been hoping for a double-bye in the tournament, was led by Michael Carter-Williams' 17 points. But the Orange shot only 32 percent from the field, including 1 for 11 on 3-point tries, and lost for the fourth time in their last five games.

"A blip," Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim called it.

He waxed on and on about the history of the Big East and his school's storied matchups against Georgetown.

"It's been an unbelievable rivalry, and you don't remember one game or two, you remember the total package," Boeheim said.

This regular-season finale was the schools' 89th meeting overall (Syracuse leads 48-41) ? but the last time they will face each other in the regular season as Big East foes. Syracuse is heading to the Atlantic Coast Conference, and Georgetown is one of seven schools splitting away to form a basketball-centric league that will get to keep the Big East name.

By game's end, Hoyas supporters were taunting the Orange with chants of "A-C-C!" Among the announced attendance of 20,972 ? the largest crowd at a Georgetown home game ? were members of Georgetown's past who helped turned games against Syracuse into events, including Patrick Ewing and Alonzo Mourning.

Playing in what might have been his final home game ? he has not said whether he'll return to school for his junior year or declare for the NBA draft ? Porter was the center of attention. When spectators arrived, they found on their seats gray placards with blue type proclaiming, "Player of the Year Otto Porter Jr." During pregame warmups, some fans loudly chanted, "Ot-to! Por-ter!" One person held up a sign reading, "Porter for Pope."

More than 12 minutes into the game, Porter had yet to attempt a shot. But he made his presence felt in other ways at both ends of the court. On the game's opening possession, he blocked C.J. Fair's runner from behind. He later had a steal. He set the screen that freed up Starks for a 3, part of the junior guard's strong start in which he scored Georgetown's first eight points. Smith-Rivera scored Georgetown's next eight.

Porter didn't even try to shoot a field-goal until 7:46 was left in the half, missing a 3-pointer from the corner.

He shrugged off a question about his quiet, 0-for-2 role in the first half, saying: "We were up at the time."

It was apt that there would be lots of defense, given the Big East's reputation. Georgetown and Syracuse both allowed opponents under 60 points per game this season, and they showed why Saturday. With 2? minutes left in the first half, they had combined for more turnovers (14) than field goals (13).

Porter's only points in the first half came on a pair of free throws with 23.9 seconds left that gave Georgetown its biggest lead until then, 25-18.

Porter got going a bit eventually, and his turnaround jumper made it 50-31 with under 8? minutes left. That was pretty much that, as the Hoyas started milking the clock when they had the ball.

When Porter headed to the sideline in the final minute, he and Thompson III hugged.

Afterward, Boeheim said he thinks Porter should be the No. 1 overall pick in the next NBA draft.

"Normally people in this league start saying stuff like that when they want your best player to leave," Thompson III said with a smile. "Since they're leaving, I don't know why he's doing it now. But I agree with him."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-5-georgetown-beats-no-17-syracuse-61-190711912--spt.html

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Libyan congress temporarily suspends sessions over security

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libya's General National Congress has temporarily suspended its sessions due to security concerns after a violent protest that left its members barricaded in a meeting room for several hours and a gun attack on its leader's car.

The congress had been due to hold a session on Sunday but congress leader Mohammed Magarief said that meeting as well as Tuesday's would be canceled. He said the lack of a secure meeting hall was also one of the reasons for the suspension.

"We will not meet under pressure or while being threatened," Magarief told a news conference late on Saturday. He did not say whether the suspension would last beyond Tuesday.

Gunmen in a crowd of Libyans demanding that lawmakers pass a bill barring former associates of ousted dictator Muammar Gaddafi from power shot at Magarief's car last Tuesday.

Magarief was driving away from a building on the outskirts of the capital Tripoli where lawmakers had gathered to vote on the bill when the unknown assailants shot at his car.

Protesters had stopped him and about 100 congress members from leaving for several hours.

Congress members were forced to move from their headquarters in February when it was occupied by wounded former rebel fighters demanding compensation for injuries sustained in the 2011 war.

The group of about 30 left the building on Tuesday but damage still remains in the hall. Magarief said it needed some repair work before members could meet there again.

Insecurity persists in Libya, and politicians, state buildings and oil installations have become a focal point of protests as the government struggles to impose order on a vast and divided country awash with weapons.

Last week, unknown assailants stormed the building of the private al-Assema television station in Tripoli, abducting its owner and other staff members. They were eventually released within 24 hours.

(Reporting by Ali Shuaib; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Alison Williams)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/libyan-congress-temporarily-suspends-sessions-over-security-185110354.html

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Libyan congress temporarily suspends sessions over security

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libya's General National Congress has temporarily suspended its sessions due to security concerns after a violent protest that left its members barricaded in a meeting room for several hours and a gun attack on its leader's car.

The congress had been due to hold a session on Sunday but congress leader Mohammed Magarief said that meeting as well as Tuesday's would be canceled. He said the lack of a secure meeting hall was also one of the reasons for the suspension.

"We will not meet under pressure or while being threatened," Magarief told a news conference late on Saturday. He did not say whether the suspension would last beyond Tuesday.

Gunmen in a crowd of Libyans demanding that lawmakers pass a bill barring former associates of ousted dictator Muammar Gaddafi from power shot at Magarief's car last Tuesday.

Magarief was driving away from a building on the outskirts of the capital Tripoli where lawmakers had gathered to vote on the bill when the unknown assailants shot at his car.

Protesters had stopped him and about 100 congress members from leaving for several hours.

Congress members were forced to move from their headquarters in February when it was occupied by wounded former rebel fighters demanding compensation for injuries sustained in the 2011 war.

The group of about 30 left the building on Tuesday but damage still remains in the hall. Magarief said it needed some repair work before members could meet there again.

Insecurity persists in Libya, and politicians, state buildings and oil installations have become a focal point of protests as the government struggles to impose order on a vast and divided country awash with weapons.

Last week, unknown assailants stormed the building of the private al-Assema television station in Tripoli, abducting its owner and other staff members. They were eventually released within 24 hours.

(Reporting by Ali Shuaib; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Alison Williams)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/libyan-congress-temporarily-suspends-sessions-over-security-185110354.html

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

AT&T reaffirms commitment to unlocking cell phones

MIAMI (Reuters) - Tiger Woods's sharp putting helped him to a share of the five-way lead at the WGC-Cadillac Championship on Thursday after he got lessons on the practice green from one of his opponents. Woods worked with Steve Stricker, one of the game's best putters, for over an hour on Wednesday and it clearly worked as he shot a six-under 66 at Doral, with just 23 putts in his round, including a 38-footer for birdie on the fourth hole. "Whatever he says, I'm going to do. He's one of the best putters that's ever lived," Woods said after his round. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/t-reaffirms-commitment-unlocking-cell-phones-014703142.html

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FBI to investigate hate crime reports at Oberlin College

CLEVELAND (Reuters) - The FBI has opened an investigation into possible civil rights violations after reports of hate speech at Oberlin College in Ohio, one of the first U.S. schools to integrate black and white students, a school spokesman said on Friday.

The investigation by the FBI's Cleveland office follows Oberlin's decision to suspend classes and activities for the day on Monday and hold campus-wide discussions after a report that a person wearing a Ku Klux Klan costume was seen near its Afrikan Heritage House residence hall.

"Based on the college's ongoing conversations with them and the evolution of our investigation, the FBI is initiating an investigation of the bias incidents that have occurred on the campus," Oberlin spokesman Scott Wargo said in an email.

A school-wide Peace Week had just begun when Oberlin canceled classes for the day.

School officials said in a letter to parents on Monday that they were investigating incidents of hate speech on campus over the last several weeks, "including racist, anti-Semitic, and homophobic defacing of posters that were advertising events and programming."

The letter to parents also said offensive postings had appeared via untraceable accounts on popular social media sites.

Wargo said Oberlin was "cooperating closely with the FBI in its investigation."

FBI Special Agent Vicki Anderson said she could not confirm or deny any ongoing investigations because of the agency's policy.

Oberlin, a private college with about 3,000 students, provided co-education for men and women from its inception in 1833. It has been regularly admitting students of color since 1835.

(Editing by David Bailey; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fbi-investigate-hate-crime-reports-oberlin-college-174856761.html

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