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The Augusta News-Review August 13,1983
SUPPORT
THE
NAACP
- M H II II M 11
Williams Memorial
Child Care Center
Is
Now Accepting Applications
For Enrollment!
*The Center serves children ages 5 months to
5 years.
•Hours of operation are 7:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
•Planned curriculum and nutritious meals are
provided.
For more information please call 733-9430 or
1 come by the Center at 163015th Street.
RED STAR LUNCH
e 533 9th Street
Augusta, Georgia
724-2068
Every day Buffet, $5, all-you-can-eat and tea refills.
Breakfast Special: 2 eggs, sausage patty, grits, toast &
jelly and coffee with refills, $2.10. Shrimp, French fries,
coleslaw, $3.99. Whole chicken, $5.95 with potato salad
or French fries. 12” Large Combination Pizza $3.99.
Many other specials!
Open 24 hours to serve you.
VACANCY
Hotel Accommodations at $lO a day
Special Weekly Rates!
f
u Gwen Thurmond
Cal Thornton * • fa,
' «.- A ® NEWS V k
\
■ \
“TIW
1
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Sonny Burroughs
7p.m.-Mid
»
Page 2
Law Corner
Right to remain silent
by E. Ronald Garnett
When an individual is
taken into police custody,
before any .wwmbbb
questioning
can take |||
place, cer-| ;
tain rights
and warn- W-'*
ings must be
explained to
the subject. .g’W J
These rights ■
and warnings are com
monly called the Miranda
Warnings, after the
famous Supreme Court
case of Miranda vs.
Arizona which sets forth
guidelines for police in
terrogation.
These rights are:
•That the individual
has the right to remain
silent and does not have
to make any statement at
aU.
•That the person has a
right to talk with an at
torney before making any
statements, and to have
that attorney present
while making any
statement.
If the individual does
not have the money to
employ an attorney, he or
she has the right to have
one appointed by the
court free ot charge to
represent them. One has
the right to talk with the
attorney before making
any statement and to
have the attorney present
WALFORD’S
FOOD & GAS
jSPUR STATION|
| OPEN 24 HRS. I
U—.... —J
722-8087
1127 Twiggs St.
Ralph Walford, Owner
before making any state
ment, and to have the at
torney present while a
statement is made.
If the individual
requests an attorney, no
questions will be asked
until the attorney is
present, and the in
dividual can decide at any
time to exercise these
rights and not answer any
questions or make any
statements.
•That any statement
made by the individual
can and will be used
against him in a court of
law.
In non-legal terms, the
law states that when a
person is arrested he does
not have to say anything
to the police, and he may
have a lawyer to represent
him even if he cannot
pay.
It should be noted,
however, that these rights
normally apply only
when an individual has
been taken into police
custody and questioned
concerning the crime for
which he is being held. So
if one has an encounter
with a police officer
where there is no
custodial interrogation,
these warnings will not
usually come into play.
BENN I EFI ELD RECORDS & ELECTRONICS
723 SHADRACK STREET
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA 30830
open nightly - Monday-Saturday until 11:00 PM
Sunday from 1:30-8:30 PM
Stereo(s), AM/FM-8-track tapes, Cassette(s) B/W and color TV-sets(s),
Solid state, C.B. radio(s) and other Electronics
404-554-3833
Professional Repairs
W
~J||fe-; 7
:^B' '■ ■
Aiexcia LaFranz O’Neal
Father attended Paine
Black sculptor honors Harold Washington
Editor’s note: Hunt’s
father attended Paine
College. The Hunt collect
ion was mentioned in the
July Reader’s Digest.
For most of his life,
Richard Hunt appears to
have been too busy to
worry much about
tradition.
At any given time,
Hunt and his two assist
ants are working on up to
a dozen bronze and steel
sculptures in a 74-year
old “recycled” electrical
sub-station at 1017 W.
Lili St.
Hunt’s creations have
ranged from a 20-by-40
foot monument to the
Rev. Martin Luther King
Jr. in downtown Mem
phis to the “McDonald’s
World” piece he’s doing
for the fast-food chain’s
suburban Oakbrook of
fice.
When he’s not in his
factory-like studio, Hunt
is an active board mem
ber of perhaps a half
dozen prestigious cultural
Augustan receives
Gulf scholarship
TUSKEGEE INSTI
TUTE, Ala—Aiexcia
LaFranz O’Neal, a junior
chemical engineering
major at Tuskegee In
stitute and Miss Tuskegee,
has been named recipient
of a 1983 Gulf Honors
Scholarship.
Robert Dewlen of
Gulf’s exploration office
in New Orleans recently
presented Ms. O’Neal her
two-year scholarship.
Dewlen also serves as the
scholarship coordinator
between Gulf ’ and
Tuskegee, and he makes
periodic visits to the
school to discuss
agencies, including the
American Academy in
Rome and the
Smithsonian Institution’s
National Museum of
American Art.
Over the past 20 years
or so, he’s been a visiting
professor at 15 univer
sities from California to
Connecticut. Along the
way, he picked up six
honorary degrees (in
cluding one from his
alma mater, the Chicago
Art Institute).
But the 48-year-old
North Side sculptor long
ago learned how to carve
out time for the things he
considers really impor
ant.
And he hopes he may
have just started a new
Chicago tradition.
He recently unveiled
the design for a medallion
commemorating the elec
tion of Mayor Harold
Washington.
In between his other
projects, Hunt worked
from April to late last
month on the clay,
plaster and epoxy designs
curriculum needs and ■s.
consult with Ms. O’neal »
about her career plans.
The scholarship
provides 80 percent of all
tuition and room and
board costs, guarantees
Ms. O’Neal a summer job
with Gulf during her
junior and senior years,
and gives the Department
of Chemical Engineering
an unrestricted SIOOO
grant.
A native of Augusta,
Ms. O’Neal was elected
by the students of
Tuskegee Institute to ser
ve as “Miss Tuskegee”
for 1983-84.
! that will now be made in-
> to dies at Philadelphia’s
s Franklin Mint, the
i nation’s largest private
f medal-maker.
The front of Hunt’s
> rendering shows a por
! trait of Harold
- Washington backed by
> radiating lines taken from
: the candidate’s campaign
t button design.
The reverse features
> scored of threadlike lines
> merging into what ap
pears to be a “strong
I rope” and spreading up
! ward into a “winged sym
: bolos a reborn
: Chicago.”
Bronze medallions will
sell for $25 each, and a
solid gold version will go
for sl,ooo*(plus another
SIOO for postage, han
dling, tax and insurance.)
Hunt added that
Washington personally
critiqued his design.
“He thought I made
him look a lot better than
he really is,” Hunt grin
ned. “Artists don’t often
hear that kind of com
plaint?’