6 THE CAROLINA TIKES SAT., FEBRUARY 6, 1981 Eagle Defeat Kills Tourney Hopes t - . . . f ltfXJ,basketbalI Tell. on hard times the past: week they suffered CIAA defeats thus pla,: ing their CIAA tourney hopes tar limbo.- They , fell last, Wednesday to' s Va. State 66-65, 75-74 to Shaw on Friday,-47-36 to '.Fayettcviae St. on Sun--day " and 80-62 to Winston-Salem on Tues day, February 2. Va Stats 66, NCCU 63 Darrell. Stith, Jerome Whitaker, and Cliff Strau&hn combined for 42 points in leading Nor- thern Division leader Virginia State to a 66-65 squeaker over NCCLL The Trojans raised their conference mark to 7-3. They were 11-3 overall. fkth teams shot 49 per cent from the. floor but the Eagles were guUty of 28 turnovers to the Tro jans 22. Darnell Evans, a sophomore guard from Wilmington, led ail scorers with 19 points. Charles .Klurphy added 1 1 for Central and Doug Taylor 10. , VSlie 66)Stith 17, Lee 2, Pratt 5, ThreaK Carter 4. Sinujghn iO, .Whitakef 15. Buth J, Wood 2. Dixon 2. NfcCU (65) Taylor 10. Jen nette. Murphy l ,.Fauitc 5, Evans ty. Qakiey 2, Dyson 8, Hughey 1, Winston, Griffin 9, Gay. V Halftime : Va State 34-33. SW 75, NCCU 74 RALEIGH Victor Blakey hit a rebounded shot at the buzzer lifting thev Shaw Bears to a come-from-behind 75-74 win) over NCCU at: Spaulding Gym. The Bears raised their mark to 5-7. They, were , 7-9 overall. Sammie Stuckey led all scorers with 25 points, including three three-point goals. ; Blakey had 18 and Lester Harris 13. Darnell Evans and Charles Murphy led Cen tral with. 20 points apiece. Willie Jennctte added a dozen. The Eagles led by 74-67 with 5 minutes left in the game before eighf pofnM NCCU (74) Evan 20. Taylor 6. Oakley 4, Jennrtte 12. Mur phy 2Q, Faucette It Griffin 9; Dyson I. Shaw (75) Stuckey 25, Blakey 18. Harris 13, D.Tanner I, B.Taimcr. Byers, Lacy 2, Sheppard 2, Woods 10, Tyson 4. Halftime: NCCU 4f 38. FaySt47,NCCll36 FAVETTEVILLE -Bonny NtcNeil did it again for the third time this year, He paced Fayetteville State with 17 points, 4 assists and 5 re- . ' '"" ' 'iuimi.iuiuiminLi.ii. ijuijuuimwuii i 11.1. ,.,., 1 in... ,.,..1111. . 11. ,11,1 , -. v '.1 J FSU Cage Coaches; Nab L CIAA Honors ;. FAYETTEVILLE Virginia Union Universi-: Jake Ford, head basket- ty Livingstone College, oau Guwn rycucvurc ani St. AugUSttnc'S Ul- State University for the .w ,r past two years, and Mt.. r0ach Edwards, who ' at one time this season ' ., ' Subscribe To The Carolina Times UJll loaay , ut V 682-2913 Help Vantcg T FOR SALE Doberman, .Poman-. nlans. All AXC, seven weeks reasonable. Pup-" 'py Paradise, No. 2, Jeait Crocker, Ph, SS5-.8SS4 Selma, NC ! Yvonne Edwards, head ! women's - basketball coach at the same institu tion, have been named CIAA "Qoaches of the Week", according to in- ' formation, released from , the .Office of the Com missioner of the CIAA in Hampton, Virginia. - Ford and Edwards, both- graduates , of , Maryland Eastern ( Shore, are making strong bids with their squads for conference honors this year. The CIAA of fice cited Ford for his achievement of 100 col legiate victories recently which included an upset win (81-59) over na- tionally ranked and previously , unbeaten Virginia Union Universi- feeled off ten straight victories without'a loss, was cited for the "CIAA Coach of the Week" .honor for the second , time this season. Her Lady Bronco team is cur- -rently ranked, ; 13th na tionally h the NAIA polls and she leads the southern divisjpn of the : conference V with an unblemished- 6-0 mark and is 13-1 overall. ; Coach Edwards is a : native of Cambridge, , Maryland. Coach Fofd, a former professional basketball ' player with the Seattle Supersonlcs and a native of Georgetown, South Carolina, is in his third 1 season at the Bronco ty. Ford, whose Bronco : helm and was coached by squad is 6-2 in tne league Joe Robinson of and 11-3 overall, has Livinstone CoUege.Tord won riveconsecuuve defeated Livingstone league contests that in-; College recenUy, 56-48, eluded triumphs over for his i01st collegiate Bowie StatCi 'North ' wjn Carolina Central, t Lady Broncos Upend Lady Eagles 90-82 WHO'S GOT Til E BALL, is what Durham High's Kip leathers is saying a he looks over his right shoulder. "I've got it," said Hillside's Steve McCor- mick, but in the end, it was Durham High I bat won the game. Photo fcSHaMiyfleH bounds as tne Southern Division leading Broncos thumped the Eagles for the third time this year 47-36 at the Cumberland County Arena, ; Fayet- -teville saw its mark rise to 8-2. They were 13-3 overall. Fayetteville raced from an 11 -all tie mid way the first half with a : 28-2 run and kept Cen tral at bay for the re mainder of the game. Charles Murphy was Hughey. Fay Stat 47 Parson 9, McNeil 17, Rusted 5. Cowing. Blackwell 4, Robinson 6, Singleton 6. HalfUme: Fay State 29-18. W-Salem80, NCCU 62 WINSTON-SALEM - Therman Greene Tyrone Grandberry and Kevin McCray combined for 66 points in leading Winston-Salem to an .80-62 win over North . Carolina Central at the C. E. Gaines Complex. The., third place Rams are Greene had a game high 30 points hitting 1 1 of 21 field goals and 8 Of 10 free throws. Grand berry and McCray each had 18 points for the Rams. -! Charles Murphy and Duane Griffin had 16 points apiece , for the Eagles. Darnell Evans ,had 10 points. NCCU (62) Evans 10, Taylor 2, contest in Durham. ?Sf J"SB . furony . The game J saw FAYETTEVILLE Concetha Smith and Dianthia Morris combin ed for 51 points in leading the Fayetteville State Lady Broncos to a 90-82 win over North Carolina Central in the Cumberland County Arena on Sunday, January 31. The Lady Broncos are 8-0 in the CIAA, 16-1 overall. Central dropped to 4-4, 4-5. Smith led all scorers with 28 points and Mor ris added 23. Fayet teville had defeated Cen tral 98-50 in an earlier Lady Eagles fall behind 48-30 at halftime before battling back to the final margin of eight points. Mary Simpson and Piedra Solomon had 18 points apiece for the Lady Eagles. Jackie Pin nix came off the bench to ; net 16. Veronica Stewart .and Sharon Jones added 14 : points apiece for the Lady Broncos. NCCU (82) Simpson 18, Solomon 18, Thompson 2, Cox 2, Judklns 9. Plnnut 16. Morris 7, McUurin 5. Abel 4, Carr. Fay St (90) Strtnpflsld 2, . Sttwsrt 14, Smith 28. Morris 23. Jones 14, Butler 2, Drayton 7. CITY OF DURHAM North Carolina Job OpportuRitiss ; . f Automotive Paris Managsi; ! Starting Salary $15,576 S Establishing and maintaining an automotive parts Inven , tory and purchasing automotivi parts. CoUegs degree in business or public administration and two years ex-. perience In purchasing or inventory control for 9 goverft mental agency and two years exporience in purchase of automotive parts and supplies, . , 5 '-';;-"::''.; racquetball required. ' : , :C' - .C:r-.-l DEADLINE DATE; February 5, 1882 -. : CivU Preparednis ' : -StaMtag Sa'$18 -932Jv " Administers the cttycouaty civil defense organization, training operations and readiness plan, B.S. with major course work in public or business administration and three years experience In civil defense planning or ad-, ministration. : 1 . ft DEADLINE DATEf February 12, 1982 CERTIFICATION (IF REQUIRED) MUST BE INDICATED ON APPLICATION. ONE POSITION PER APPLICATION ONLY. For mformatiofl and application contact: Personnel Office, First Floor , CUty HaH ;. ; . 101 City HaU Plaza Durham, N.C. 27701 Telephone: 919683-4214 An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. Child Development Teacher Completion of college course work In early childhood . education, preschool educationchild development or i related field and two years of experience teaching. preschool children; or an equivalent combination of , education and. experience. Experience teaching in a child development research environment preferred. Experience teaching one-year olds preferred. Ex cellent oral and written communications skills,' Occa sional travel within a fifty mile radius. Salary range; 13,644 - 20,448. For an application please contact the Employment Division, 111 Petttgrew Han, UNC, Chapel Hill, NO 27514. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY AFFIRMATIVE; AC TION EMPLOYER. f i'' V " , Orlllia 16, Faucette 2. Gaddy 2. Hughey , Dyson 3, Winston, mtM td'rn:r-Wvsg,r 3-, 5-1 1 and are beset Oy WatUn, 3 Lyncjl WoMck r a six-game losuig streak. . Halftime: IICCU 39-34. the Tovat Hatfflme 'nAU W 4 an -uic omy wmuuuure ,Soherri Divisloh " 10-6: W-Salam "8u, "" h"h. - overall. Cem NCuu (3ei cvans 7, Tayur a, Oakley. Jennette 2, Murphy 11, House, Griffin 8, . Faucette, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill MPan RaclfPthnll W8l'1- P " Settetary(lli) Back On Top Fay St 48-30 EDDIE ROBINSON GETS STAGG AWARD By Collie J. Nicholson , HOUSTON, TX Eddie Robinson, a name as familiar as any in the sport, has received the American Football Coaches . Association's highest award. The Grambling coach (Continued From Page 5) the 1982 recipient of r j IhA nrcl inratno A mac COMMENTARY: years ago, is prospering again. ' Most Americans love to root for the little guy and as new faces are add ed to the NCAA Tpurney, they can root for' Small Time U. to knock off oneof the ma-; jor powers. Sports, like lite, Alonzo Stagg trophy, an annual honor emblematic of coaching proficiency, distinctive service and significant contributions in a variety of capacities field. Robinson i. recipient of i which dates the "th u-d to becomes stale if things year, out trus ooesn i seem o be the case with NCAA. Basketball. ....thank goodness. v of the plaque presented to Coach Stagg at the 1939 meeting of the AF CA in Los Angeles, com memorating his fifty years of service to toot ball. "It's purpose," as stated then, "is to . perpetuate the example and .influence of Amos Alonzo Stagg, and is to be conferred annually upon the individual, group or institution whose services have been outstanding in the ad vancement of the best in terest of football." Stagg coached college football for 52 years and was the winningest coach of all times (314-199-39) until Bear Bryant of Alabama surpassed him last fall with a 315-80-17 career standard. Robinson carefully nurtured an impressive football dyna- at Grambling and rently trails only Bry , Stagg and Glenn S. "Pop" Warner (313-106-32) in the number of victories compile in the long, col orful history of college football. V An incurable optimist and a strict disciplinarian, Robinson has served as a coaching catalyst for 39 years. He is a leader by example and enjoys high pro . minence in the strong Southwestern Athletic Conference with his overall 291-98-13 record. Off the field, his con tributions are equally numerous. In 1976, he served as president of the AFCA, the only black coach to act in that capacity and held a similar post with the National Associaiton of Intercollegiate Athletics, serving as president in 1967. Robinson has sent more players into pro urn irtrdbdLI i LJMt'-,r-"V nnnnra S) Give yo'iv parties plenty of good taste ' wzm Laiiada Dry Vocjsa in the com -Tement. economical 1.75-liter party size. CANADA IW OTKA . South Carolina State, sitting atop . the Mid Eastern : Athletic Con ference standings going into .last weekend; squandered a golden op portunity to put a stronghold on the regular season cham pionship: The Bulldogs had a 6-1 conference record, but lost a 76J3 overtime game to Delaware State Friday, and dropped a 72-62 decision to Howard Saturday night. As a result, SC State fell to 6-3. in the con ference, and into second place behind the North Carolina A&T Aggies, who went up to 6-1 in the MEAC after beating Howard 62-50 on Fri day), and Delaware State 85-66 on Saturday. Howard's weekend Split moved the Bison in to third place at 5-3, replacing Florida A&M (3-2), 60-59 losers to Bethune-Cookman Saturday. The Wildcat's one-point victory pushed them into fifth place with a 2-4 family mark. Delaware State dropped info sixth spot at 2-5. The University of Maryland-Eastern Shore Hawks, back into the MEAC after a two-year absence, remained winless in the conference ajt 0-6. They lost 64-53 to NCA&T and 62-58 toSC State earlier last week at , home. v NCA&T has now taken giant strides in quest of a second straight ' regular season crown and a first round bye in the MEAC's Eleventh Annual Basket ball : Tournament scheduled for March 5-7, at the Winston-Salem Memorial v Coliseum. Super sophomore Joe Bi-' nion was spectacular in the'three league victories hitting 23 points and 12 rebounds against ; Howard -'mi .picking up ' fcotbd! thaa 'toy other coach in the country. His te?ros ftave 'won 14 SWAC titles and he has been enshrined in Jhe ,NAIA, Pop Warner and t S'igar Bowl; Hal!s ,cf 1 Fame. 11 points and ten re bounds in the Delaware State win, James Ander son, the Aggies fine junior guard; hit 16, 15 games. Defending MEAC Tournament champion . Howard, suffered through an ineffective second half performance in Greensboro, but defeated SC State handi ly, without star forward James Ratiff, who had 19 points and eight re bounds against NCA&T. Guard Rodney Wright led Howard with 16 points and four assists at SC State, while Bernard Perry chipped in 17. Forward William Hill sparked the Hornets with 22 points in theirs win over SC State, and guard Jeffrey Gumbs kept Delaware State as close as it was against NCA&T with 22. Center John Wright led the Hornets in the Utica win with 19 points. SC State forward Gregory Wilson, who leads the MEAC in field goal accuracy, had 20 points against UMES, 13 in the Delaware State loss, and 16 more in the Howard contest. In the battle for Florida, Bethune Cookman won the war of. . late free ; throw pressure to hold off FAMU FAMU center Mike Toomer hit both ends of a one-and-one to draw within a single point with 16 seconds re , maining in the game, but Elijah Wells did the same to send B-CC tip 60-57 at the : 11 -second mark. With four ticks left on the game clock, F AM LPs All-MEAC guard Darrell Spence made it 60-59 on a lay-up, and the Rattlers ' stole in inbound' pass; but a FAMU player was called for a foul. . Conference action picks up again Friday, February s, with FAMU at DelState, B-CC at Howard; and Saturday with FAMU at UMES,: B-CC at DelState, and SC State at NCA&T? On Monday, February 8, B-CC will play at ' UMES while ' FAMU" visit ftc'-vard. ' Part-Time and ; Full-Time Positions Completion of high school course work and one year of clerical experience: or ah equlvalrnt combination of . edocation and' expariencr. Varied skills' and knowledges of these positions are: medical ter minology, dictaphone, strong typing skills, statistical typing, Magcard, bookkeeping, accounting and good public contact. Salary range: $9,264 - $13,644, Part-time positions may have morning or afternoon hours. Part-time salary range: $4,632 6,822. Secretary (IV) Completion of high school course work and two years of clerical or secretarial experience; or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Necessary skills include good typing and knowledge of the French language. Salary range: $10,524 - 15,612, For an application please contact the Employment Ofvision, 111 Pettigrew Hall, UNC. Chapel NiU, NC 27514. .: ; 962-2991 EQUAL OPPORTUNITYAFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER r Maintenance Mechanic ill (Equipment Repair Specialist) Completion of grammar school course work and three years of progressive experience to the performance of tasks associated with a wide variety of mechanical or building trades; or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Experience In the repair, -maintenance, and Installation of medical, and laboratory related equipment such as 'autoclaves, sterilizers, water stills and centrifuges Is required, Journey level plumbing, jnechanical and eJectrlcaT controls experience nrefejd. - The eprsoo placed In this position must posses strong technical and com munication skills and the ability to supervise and train ' skilled and semi-skilled employees in equipment repair. Salary range; ,.$1392 -19,54?. l 6r , r Maintenance Mechanic IV , Completion of Jug!) school course work land three years of journey level ; experience ; in general maintenance and plumbing, welding, mechanical and equipment rtfpair including one year in the supervi? ston of skilled, semi-skilled or unskilled employees, or an equivalent combination of education and ex perience. The person placed in this position will be i working supervisor In a multi-trade shop. Journey level work experience In the sheet metal, roofing, uv sulatloh and welding I require. Salary range?' $14,256 21,43?. f';-f ' ; ..r.'S For an application please contact the Employment Division, 111 Pettigrew Hall, UNC, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. EQUAL QPPORTUNinAFpiRllSATiyi AC TION EMPLOYER. . , . . , . f I 'I, .wanted:;, y . 10-Ten Married Couples, nigh school or better education T with children or (child), bttag a home, have I nrssentl job position, traaspsrtsn, wlliing to train for r.:' career. (Full or cirt tot) for SO days.' (Potential Inscst ' after training Si.OOQ to J5.CS3 per month). Tou must live within (50) miles of Durham, N.C." write to: lit:-, Jones, P.O. Box 11708, Durham. N.C. 27703 to set up soon you will be etia tQ start U blrfd. (Qfisr expires 19

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