Appellant was convicted of refusing to be inducted into the armed forces in violation of 50 U.S.C. App. § 462.
1. He contends that the Government failed ,to prove that he was called for induction in the order set out in 32 C.F.R. § 1631.7. He has, however, produced nothing to suggest that he was called out of turn.
1
Under these circumstances the presumption of regularity of Board action prevails. United States v. Baker,
2. Appellant contends that the order of induction signed by the clerk of the Board was not a Board order.
2
The contention is without merit. United States v. Doran,
3. There was basis in fact for the Board’s rejection of appellant’s claim of conscientious objection.
See
United States v. Corliss,
4. The information which appellant furnished to the Board did not establish a prima facie case for a minister’s exemption. Appellant never claimed such an exemption before the Board and, indeed, in his classification questionnaire affirmatively disclaimed that exemption.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. We find no merit in appellant’s contention that testimony of the Board clerk to the effect that oldest men were called first establishes that the call was without regard to delinquents and volunteers. Taking the testimony in context, we read it as excluding reference to delinquents or volunteers.
. Appellant also contends that the order was signed not by the clerk but by an “acting clerk,” a position not authorized by the regulations. The record establishes that, however the official may have characterized herself, she was at the time in question the clerk of the Board.
