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REALMS OF BEAUTY The Wilderness Areas of East Texas By Edward C. Fritz Photographs by less Alford An informative and beautifully illustrated guide to five wilderness areas of East Texas, with all the information a reader needs to visit, understand, and enjoy these -unique wildernesses. Includes a self-guided two-hundred-mile tour in these living museums of natural diversity as well as fifty-five richly colorful photographs of these special places. $9.95 paperback EVERY SUN . THAT RISES Wyatt Moore of Caddo Lake Edited by Thad Sitton and James H. Conrad Photographs by Stan Godwin and Jim Cammack “. . . one of the most rewarding books of the season. . . . There’s so much more to this fascinating book than I can mention in a brief review that I urge everyone to investigate Wyatt Moore and his Caddo Lake.” Lee Milazzo, Southwest Review Winner of the 1985 Otis Locke Award, . presented by the East Texas Historical Association. $17.95 hardcover $8.95 paperback Now in bookstores 41r Io University of Texas Press BOX 7819 AUSTIN, TEXAS 78713 Weapons plant gate near Amarillo changed the morning of the action,” Belisle said. Protest organizers were still “pressuring [authorities] for movement toward Class C” just before the demonstrators took their place on the pavement, Belisle said. When Carson County Sheriff Connie ‘ Reed approached the sit-in on the morning of August 10, he informed participants that jail time was possible. “I’m afraid that some of you may have been misled, or misunderstood what the charges would be,” Reed said as he ordered the group to disperse. The protesters had gathered the day before at the Amarillo Center for Peacemaking to discuss’ the sit-in and get non-violence training. The possibility of jail time for the action was discussed at the meeting, but local organizer Les Breeding said in a television interview that day, “rather than being jailed, we’ll be charged with disorderly conduct, which doesn’t have a jail sentence, but has a fine.” The number of protesters who were willing to risk arrrest shrank as the possibilty of jail time was discussed. An Oklahoma lawyer had visited Hinshaw on behalf of the protesters one week before the demonstration, Hinshaw said. “I pulled the statutes off the shelf and opened them to the page and assisted him in becoming informed on the matter,” Hinshaw said. “He knew absolutely what the law was.” “They are feeling like if they make the penalties strong enough, people won’t do actions at Pantex anymore,” said local activist Cindy Breeding. But Hinshaw disagrees, saying local authorities have allowd the level of protest at Pantex to go well beyond “what some other authorities would feel is reasonable. “We feel a bit put-upon,” Hinshaw said. He said Carson County gets “no taxes from that government plant. We don’t feel that we should spend a million-and-a-half dollars and put everybody under a circus tent and prosecute.” Hinshaw said allowing some level of protest at Pantex “has been a workable solution.” Neither Hinshaw nor the protesters’ current lawyer, Tim Hoffman, would discuss specifics of the current plea bargain talks. But Belisle said the same terms are being offered’ for each of the seven sit-in participants who were arrested. “We recognize that some people will choose to pay the fine and some will not as a matter of political conscience,” Belisle said. Those who will not pay the fine may be allowed to work-off the sentence in jail. The case, is set to go to court in April. ANDERSON & COMPANY COFFEE TEA SPICES TWO JEFFERSON SQUARE AUSTIN, TEXAS 7S131 !ill 453-1533 Send me your list. Name Street City Zip THE TEXAS OBSERVER 13