Monday, September 10,1984AThe Battalion/Page 5 by Scott McCuliar cw, rv 600PM&SZ, \ 0H, T Chirr r semse... SEtfSE. {STAND IT. IfJCKEPIBLE. GUILT \ISSUlMG AVP Msuisffz. WhlC{£T5 you wokk for the)to m. CArtPVf foUCEL, THOZlL^TWSC DON'T lou? J VICTIMS... (as frdi other d s tocos Rosyndi nistry, A nshipbs rest of tk nt." teacheui nd Tta t said, “lit e that (ft nber tat e direcw liemistni [>een (ta v merabffl go, O'C* ) be badi in,” O'Ca o maiivii that U jlace dx unds oil To Russia with religion: second visit for Graham plans tof lie Uni'® lue in'® for Rt* jivirot® or's ftn 1 - that model of ; ay in thd arid's Fii United Press International MOSCOW — The Rev. Billy Gra ham returned to Moscow Sunday for a 12-day tour and defended his con troversial statement made during a 1982 Soviet trip that there was “a measure of religious freedom” in the officially atheistic nation. The American evangelist, upon arrival at Moscow’s airport, told re porters he had been misinterpreted two years ago during his first trip to the Soviet Union to preach. “I said then that 1 found a mea sure of religious freedom in the So viet Union, more than the average American has been led to believe,” Graham said. “I still hold to that. “People said I was naive and was not fully briefed about the Soviet Union but that was not true. I was : BRAZOS fgT • VALLEY ^ ; GOLF woefully misinterpreted.” The remark cost the 65-year-old Baptist preacher some credibility but he made a comeback in Britain ear lier this summer when he addressed huge crowds in several provincial cit ies and, despite fatigue and illness, pressed ahead with a trip to South Korea. He also accepted another invita tion to the Soviet Union from Rus sian Orthodox and Baptist churches, which asked him to visit Moscow, Le ningrad, Tallin and Novosibirsk in Siberia. Graham will be allowed to preach — but only inside churches — in the Soviet Union, where there are be tween 500,000 and 1 million Baptists and as many as 60 million Orthodox. Asked in London whether he was concerned the churches would be packed with KGB security agents, Graham replied: “No, they are the people I’m trying to reach.” Asked if he hoped to convert So viet citizens, Graham replied that “whether you call it conversion or re dedication,” he hoped they would receive Christ into their hearts. Graham was greeted at the airport by Metropolitan Filaret of Minsk, a senior member of the Russian Or thodox hierarchy dnd by Andrei Kli menko, president of the All Union Council of Evangelical Christian- Biiptist Churches. Both Orthodox and Baptists have been affected by official restrictions on religious practice, which range from harrassment to overcrowded churches. Inmates paroled too early United Press International DALLAS — Every month some Texas prisoners go free before their sentence is served because officials do not enforce a law that requires felons who used deadly weapons to serve at least a third of their sen tences, a newspaper reported. The early release of prisoners who committed violent crimes stems from a record keeping problem that prison officials concede they rou tinely overlook, reported the Dallas Times Herald in a story published Sunday. State representatives passed a law in August 1977 that required violent criminals to serve at least a third of their sentences and have extensive supervision upon release. The law applied to all inmates whose crimes were committed after the law was passed. However, incomplete prison re cords are allowing some inmates to be released early and allowing others to avoid the close supervision law makers intended. Prison officials do not have an ac curate count of the number of such violations but concede they happen frequently, the Times Herald re ported. During the past five months, at least 21 armed robbers or other criminals who used deadly weapons since 1977 were paroled earlier than the law allows, the newspaper re ported. Prison officials say the lack of standardized county criminal re cords and limited personnel prevent them from contacting state courts to obtain the dates of inmates’ crimes if the data is missing from prison files. “That would be the logical thing to do,” said S.O. Woods, director of classification for the Texas Depart ment of Corrections. “But I don’t have the staff to do that.” The unwarranted releases — and the explanation given for them — do not sit well with some Texis officials. State District Judge Ron Chap man of Dallas, who recently alerted parole officials that they were about to release a murderer four years early, said Woods’ explanation “doesn’t impress me very much.” He said parole and prison officials “are kind of making a farce of the entire (sentencing) process ... by ig noring the law as it’s written in Aus tin. “Any time a public official or agency is not following the law, it’s a problem.” John Byrd, the executive director of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, said he would study the cases of premature releases found in the Times Herald study and issue warrants to re-imprison any former inmates he believed were paroled before they were legally eligible. “Maybe we need to be more pre cise in this particular area, but I’m assuming at this point that there’s not a major problem here,” Byrd ~ said. m PATRICK® >tou owe It to your feet ™ STABIL Other Styles $42 87 ^ Tfothfitate Prices effectiv Sfynvts CteHtev Prices effective thru Sept. 15 2023 Texas, Townshire Center 779-8776 Parkway Medical Clinic 2604A South Texas Avenue 693-0202 or 693-0204 Open Seven Days a Week-No Appointment Necessary General Medical Care, Minor Emergencies, Immunizations, Laboratory and X-Ray Facilities 20% Discount to TAMU Students! 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Freshmen and Sophomore photos for the 1985 Aggieland yearbook will be taken at the Yearbook Associates office Sept. 10-Oct.12. The office is located at 1700 S. Kyle behind Culpepper Plaza. Photos vyill also be taken at the Pavilion Oct. 15-26. Both studios are open weekdays only, 8:30-4:30 (closed 12-1). ' w