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Myanmar police also fired rubber bullets to disperse protesters in Yangon, after the country's ambassador to the United Nations broke ranks to make an emotional plea for action against the.

Affresh® coffee maker cleaner is specially formulated to descale your coffee maker and fight build-up that can increase brewing time, affecting the taste of your coffee. Each tablet is easy to use. Each tablet is easy to use. Rubber Ninjas is an experimental 3D ragdoll fighting game by Matteo Guarnieri of Rag Doll Software. It is currently available for Mac OS X and Windows. The game features ragdolls of many sizes and shapes, fighting bare handed or with a variety of different weapons. Myanmar police fired rubber bullets to disperse protesters in Yangon on Saturday, after the country's ambassador to the United Nations broke ranks to make an emotional plea for action against the. The Stamp Stampede is a non-profit organization of over 75,000 Americans legally stamping money to help build the movement to stamp Big Money out of Politics.

Mike Moore The Journal Gazette

Angola senior Hannah Knoll, left, guards Garrett junior Nataley Armstrong in the second quarter of the IHSAA girls 3A sectional championship in Garrett on Saturday.

Mike Moore The Journal Gazette

Garrett sophomore Bailey Kelham shoots the ball in the second quarter against Angola during the IHSAA Girls 3A Sectional Championship in Garrett on Saturday.

Mike Moore The Journal Gazette

Garrett junior Faith Owen looks to pass the ball in the second quarter against Angola on Saturday in Garrett.

Mike Moore The Journal Gazette

Angola senior Hannah Knoll shoots the ball in the first quarter against Garrett during the IHSAA Girls 3A Sectional Championship in Garrett on Saturday.

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GARRETT – Angola and Garrett had already met twice this season, splitting the NECC regular-season title and the conference tournament title.

On Saturday night, Angola won the third and most consequential fight of year, 40-36, to claim the Garrett sectional championship and stay alive in the Class 3A state tournament.

“I think it feels pretty good,” Angola coach Nick Burlingame said. “Obviously they're a really good team and they've got a lot of talent. But so do we. It was kind of battle – whose conference is it? Whose sectional is it? Our girls stepped up and got it done tonight.”

Although the Hornets (19-5) jumped out to a 10-2 lead early in the first quarter, the tide seemed to turn midway through the first quarter. Garrett's Faith Owen hit a 3-pointer to tie the game at 10-10, and a bucket by Morgan Ostrowski put the Railroaders (20-3) up 12-10.

The Hornets had the ball at the end of the first quarter, but failed to get a shot off. And the Angola slump continued well into the second quarter: a 3-pointer by Bailey Kelham put the Railroaders up 20-10, and Garrett was at that point on a 18-0 scoring streak.

Angola's Riley Pepple finally stemmed the bleeding with a 3-pointer, and in doing so ignited another run, this time for Angola, which scored nine straight points before Garrett's Taylor Gerke hit a free throw at the end of the half to give the Railroaders a 21-19 advantage heading into the locker room.

“Really, it was just keeping our heads in the game, keeping our composure, being tough through it. We knew they were going to go on a run. Waiting for the next play, that's what kept us going.” Angola senior Hanna Knoll said. “We honestly needed to get them in foul trouble, we needed to attack the basket and made sure we closed out on shooters, especially towards the end. With it being close, we needed to make sure we had a hand up.”

In the opening minutes of the second half, Angola's Megan Nisun quickly erased the narrow Garrett lead, tying the game at 21-21, and a 3-pointer by Kylie Caswell put Angola back in the lead.

Kelham hit two more 3-pointers, including one from the corner right before the 3rd quarter buzzer that put her Railroaders up 29-27. But she would foul out with 5:41 to play, just moments after Angola's Nisun picked up her fifth. Without Kelham in the game, the Railroaders hit just one field goal in the fourth quarter, and their five made free throws wasn't enough to hold off the Hornets.

Knoll led all scorers with 16 points, while Kelham scored 15 for Garrett and Nataley Armstrong had 13 for the Railroaders.

The Hornets are now set to face Norwell (21-6), who beat Bellmont 41-35 to win their sectional on their home court on Saturday. The regional semifinal will be held at Bellmont next Saturday at 10 a.m.

vjacobsen@jg.net

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Money Out Voters In

Money in politics and barriers to voting are two sides of thesame coin — or dollar bill — they both deny the voice of the people.

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A non-profit org of over 100,000 Americans

Our representatives have been bought and paid for by morally bankrupt billionaires and corporations. The Stampede is a non-profit org of over 100,000 Americans legally stamping dollars to protest big money in politics and roadblocks to voting for minorities, students, disabled, and low-income people.

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Why are billion dollar corporations paying zero in taxes?
Why are people working full time and still living in poverty?

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Why are we paying such outrageous prices for prescription drugs?
Why are private prisons profiting from mass incarceration?
Answer.

“Because our votes get drowned out by legalized bribes, and a bunch of us are blocked from voting.”

It’s not gonna be easy.

But sustained protests by the people have forced huge changes before. It ended slavery. It got women the vote. It passed the Voting Rights Act. It passed gay rights. The key is to make your voice heard.

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“I stamp because Campaign finance is the reform that could make all other reforms possible, and its time for major reforms in Hawaii. After all, elections should be won with big ideas, not big donations.”
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“I stamp because I’m really concerned about what's happening in our government -- with the diverging gaps in wealth and power, I’m concerned about our democracy -- that we're losing it. We have to stand against this corruption.”
Valerie E.Maryland
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“I stamp because It's really important to point out that there is too much money in politics, and stamping is a great way to have a conversation -- it's a conversation starter about money in politics. People don't understand how our government is bought right now, but just by bringing it to their attention it's a wake up call.”
Warren L.Washington
“I stamp because I care about my grandchildren, and I care about their opportunities. I don’t have to do this. I choose to do this.”

Stamped bills stay in circulation for 2.5 years and are seen by over 800 people as they get passed from hand to hand. If you stamp 3 bills a day for a year, that’s about 1 million impressions. Every time someone reports seeing a stamped bill it gets added to the leaderboards.

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