STATE Page 6 THE BATTALION Wednesday. February!: Death row inmates release prison guard after 13 hours LIVINGSTON (AP) — A female prison guard was released early Tuesday after being held hostage for nearly 13 hours by two death row inmates who de manded better living conditions and a moratorium on executions. The inmates — who tried to escape more than a year ago'— surrendered without incident shortly after 5 a.m. af ter being allowed to speak with a group of Houston death penalty opponents. One of the inmates faces a March 14 ex ecution date. Prison officials said guard Jeanette Bledsoe, 57, was not injured during the standoff, which began at 4:15 p.m. Mon day. She underwent a routine examina tion at a prison infirmary early Tuesday. “It was a tense situation that ended happily,” Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Larry Fitzgerald said. John Bledsoe, 36, waited through an anguishing night for his mother’s release. “We were totally helpless,” a sleep less Bledsoe said Tuesday morning. “We just sat at a big old table and wait ed for some kind of news.” Bledsoe said the warden gave the family word of his mother’s release be fore sunrise. “Oh, man, it was just great,” he said. “Right now she’s laying in there trying to get some sleep.” Deloyd Parker, executive director of the Houston-based SHAPE Community Center, said, the prisoners “wanted to bring forward issues about the condi tions. Everything from crafts being tak en to no mirror to shave.” “They feel like they are being exe cuted twice,” said Parker, one of the three people who visited the inmates. The inmates also demanded a mora torium on the death penalty immediately because of what they called a lack of due process and effective counsel. They said there were a disproportionate number of minorities on death row, Parker said. Since resumption of capital punish ment in the 1980s, Texas has conducted 206 executions. Two are scheduled this week, including Betty Lou Beets, the second woman to be executed since cap ital punishment resumed in the 1980s. Fitzgerald credited Texas Rangers Capt. Earl Pearson of Houston with helping resolve the standoff. Pearson took over negotiations helped get things resolved peacefully, Fitzgerald said. Meanwhile, the prison was under lockdown. , Bledsoe was grabbed as she was tak ing one inmate back to his cell when he and another inmate overpowered her, Fitzgerald said. One inmate had some how opened his cell door. Ponchai Wilkerson, 28, faces a March 14 execution for the robbery and shooting of a Houston jewelry store clerk. Howard Guidry, 23, is on death row for shooting a woman in a murder- for-hire plot. Investigators were now focusing on where Wilkerson and Guidry got the homemade knife and how the pair over came the guard. Officials suspect the incident may have been planned, Fitzgerald said, and security camera footage of what tran spired inside the prison showed the in mates treated Bledsoe with respect dur ing the ordeal. With one leg shackled, Bledsoe had been seated on the floor in a small cage like room adjacent to death row in the unit. One inmate had the makeshift knife; the other had a 2-foot long piece of metal used by Bledsoe to open the dinner door on each prison cell. Bledsoe has been a corrections offi cer for 39 months. I ler son, Biff, is a cor rections officer at the same prison. In talks with negotiators, Wilkerson and Guidry complained it takes six months to make changes in visitation lists. They also want to be allowed out of their cells for longer than one hour a day. They currently are allowed to be out of their cells for one hour daily to exercise. The standoff was the latest problem at state prisons that correctional officers blame on staff shortages, poor training and low pay. Wednesday. Pump up the volume KIMBER HUFF The Bmi; Gary Blackwelder (I) and Gerald Boyle, both sophomore management majors, select music and adjust the tuning during their radio show, “The Speak Easy.” The show features Christian punk and hardcore, and is aired on KANM 1600 AM every Tuesday afternoon from 4 to 6 p.m. Texas forestry officials reject EPA’s plan to require permits before cutting LUFKIN (AP) — The EPA’s plan to apply the 1972 Clean Water Act to the timber industry is unnecessary, some Texas forestry officials said, because voluntary programs already are effectively reducing forestry-related pollution. Refer to related column on page 1 3. “Most tree farmers are doing an excellent job of managing their forests on their own, without the intervention of the gov ernment,” said Burl Carraway, a forester for the Texas Forest Service. “A top-down, heavy-handed regulatory program can’t match what we are doing with our voluntary program.” Timber interests have been up in arms about a proposal by the EPA to require tree farmers to obtain permits, in some in stances, before cutting timber or replanting near polluted waters. Forestry long l\as been ex empt from the permitting process under the Clean Water Act, falling instead under state oversight. Several hundred land owners were expected to attend a public hearing on the issue in Lufkin on Tuesday night. Scheduled speakers include Rep. Jim Turn er, D-Crockett, state and federal “There is very little evidence that forestry contributes to pollution of our water ways/' — Jim Turner Rep. D-Crockett industry representatives. A meeting in El Dorado, Ark. last month drew more than 1,100 farmers and loggers from Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana. About 3,000 people attended a meeting two weeks ago in Texarkana orga nized by Rep. Max Sandlin, D- Marshall. Turner cosponsored legislation with Sandlin and Rep. Marion Berry, D-Ark., that would bar the EPA proposal. “It would be extremely bur- environmental officials and densome and it would not be cost effective,” Turner said. “There is very little evidence that forestry contributes low lution of our waterways.” Timber is a top crop in Last Texas, employingaboiit ( )L 11 people statew ide with an annual economic impactof$23,Ski lion, said Ron Hutford, executive vice president of the Test Forestry Association. I le said the EPA proposal is nothing more than red tape, “Forestry as the cause of pollutants is less than 3 percent,’ Hufford said. “But this would bring forestry operations! der the point-source category associated with industr charge. It would mean permitting could be required to plat a tree, to harvest a tree, to build a road or totikatitnk stand out.” The EPA rules, which have been live years in the mafa/ig allow states to determine the level of enforcement. ^variety Show 200CMf^ Audition Applications. Available. MSC Town Hall Cube. MSC Student Programs Office. Due February 24. For More Information. Call Sarah & 845.1515 WILEY LECTURE SERIES M emorial Student Center A Different Shade of Red: Chinese Communism and U.S. Foreign IHI warn Policy ****** * * * * * * *• * * * * * * * * * ****** ***** ****** HH February 23,2000 7:00 p.m. Memorial Student Center 201 FREE ADMISSION wlley.tamu.edu ^IJL This program is presented for educational purposes only and does not represent an endorsement of perspective. The views and opinions presented in this program do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of the Memorial Student Center, MSC Wiley Lecture Series or Texas A&M University, CHIC/ toddler, H “theredtoi his pcnch; jumping o just 4, he i deficit disc A slut preschool- no isolated The nu psychiatrii anti-depre: percent hi searchers r nal of the A Experts findings, I drugs in c unknown, powerful c children’s Heath': dence sugj do — that psychiatric her invoh groups for fiavior pro she is hear 4-year-old Prozac. “It’s be er,39, off Althouj reasons fo Zito,the le; fessorofp University possibilitic With ai dren attend pressured form in th also said tl tance in tin Dr. Josi ical Schoo the study r en that tin support p veiy you COME BEFORE 4 P.M. FOR FASTER SERVICE! Little CaesarsRzza CUSTOMER APPRECIATION PAY! COLLEGE STATION 2501 S. TEXAS AVENUE 696 > " , Ol91 THANK YOU! THANK YOU! 696-0191 THANK YOU! THANK YOU! WITH CHEESE AND PEPPERONI No substitutions. Round pizzas only. 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