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Coach guides Spartans to victory against city rivals
To watch Bill Whitehead and Troy Graefe at their best Friday night was like having a front-row seat for a chess match. No, it wasn't boring. It was strategy at its best. Whitehead, forever a tactician, worked the officials and his Greeley West team to make all of the right moves in the Spartans' 53-41 victory over Graefe's Wildcats. Methodically -- how else would Whitehead approach anything -- the West head coach never once let Graefe see him sweat as the Spartans established play in the paint early in the second period while Greeley Central found itself helpless without much of a perimeter game to respond -- thanks largely to an improved West defense. In the Wildcats' one-point victory over West earlier this season, it was no secret that the Wildcats had one of their best defensive games of the season and were able to take advantage of some key outside shots to send West shaking its heads.
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List of Grammy winners
Album of the Year: "River: The Joni Letters," Herbie Hancock. Record of the Year: "Rehab," Amy Winehouse. Song of the Year: "Rehab," Amy Winehouse (Amy Winehouse). New Artist: Amy Winehouse. Producer of the Year, Non-Classical: Mark Ronson. Pop Vocal Album: "Back to Black," Amy Winehouse. Female Pop Vocal Performance: "Rehab," Amy Winehouse. Male Pop Vocal Performance: "What Goes Around...Comes Around," Justin Timberlake. Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals: "Makes Me Wonder," Maroon 5. Pop Collaboration With Vocals: "Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On)," Robert Plant & Alison Krauss. Pop Instrumental Album: "The Mix-Up," Beastie Boys. Pop Instrumental Performance: "One Week Last Summer," Joni Mitchell.
Michelle Obama, Chelsea Clinton visit same Midlands church
Michelle Obama and Chelsea Clinton. One was on one side of the church, one on the other. And the congregation took note. "I don't know. It was kinda awkward," said Evette Brown. "Well to me I think it shows divide but I think once this is over on Saturday, I think our country will be united because we are all going to come together and rally behind whoever gets the nomination," said Sarah Brown. Pastor Darrell Jackson, who is a senior consultant for the Clinton campaign in South Carolina, says the seating arrangements were no accident. "It is our custom that when campaigns come that we sit one on one side, and one on the other," said Jackson. Neither Mrs. Obama nor Miss Clinton spoke at the pulpit, but after the service they did speak to churchgoers.
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