Va. draft fighter gets alternative service sentence ROANOKE, Va. (UPI)- A federal judge yesterday ordered a two-year term of alternative service for Enten Eller, son of a Brethren minister and the first man to be convicted in the crackdown on men who failed to register for the peacetime draft. Judge James Turk said Eller could serve his term at the Veterans Ad- ministration Medical Center in Salem or at another federal facility approved by his probation officer and the court. WHEN ELLER was convicted in August, Turk ordered him to register with the selective service system within 90 days or face sentencing of up to six years in prison. Although federal prosecutors had asked that Eller receive a prison sen- tence as a deterrent to other draft resisters, Turk told Eller "because you are in the formative years of your life and because you have an exemplary record otherwise, the court is con- sidering alternative service in your case." Eller, 20, a physics major with a straight-A average at Bridgewater College, had said he would rather go to prison than violate his religious beliefs, IN EXPLAINING his decision, Eller earlier had said, "I have not registered simply because the U.S. Government has asked me to do something that God would not have me do. Christ's way, the way of love, the way of concern for all people, the way of nonviolent peace cannot be reconciled to involvement with the military which uses killing and destruction, or the threat of such, to achieve its ends." Eller's conviction Aug. 16 was the fir- st since former President Jimmy Car- ter revived draft registration in 1980. Turk ordered Eller :to perform 250 hours of community service and told him to register within 90 days or face a prison term of up to six years. Eller performed the community ser- vice, but steadfastly refused to register. The Michigan Daily-Thursday, December 9, 1982-Page 5 Squads comb Beirut for unexploded bombs BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - American-led bomb squads combing the war-torn Lebanese capital have found 250 different kinds of explosives from 17 countries so far, a U.S. expert said yesterday. "That's an indication, not a total," said Navy Lt. Cmdr. John Hoyden, head of a 13-man team training the Lebanese army in explosives disposal. "WE CAN surface clean, picking up what we can see, within the next year. But when they clear all the rubble, they are going to be finding ordnance for at least 10 years," said Boyden, who is from Virginia Beach, Va. A list of dud and unexploded bombs and shells found in six weeks of work by 40-50 Lebanese soldiers led by Boyden's men includes more than 200 U.S.-made bomblets from cluster bombs, which Israeli forces were accused of using; more than a dozen dud bombs ranging from 500 to 2,000 pounds, and hundreds of mines and grenades. MUCH OF THE weaponry was stored by the Palestine Liberation Organization, which got most of its ar- ms from Communist and Arab gover- nments and on the international market, and by the Syrian army before the June 6 Israeli invasion. It ranges from the most modern weapons to World War II grenades and mines. "We have found about 80 types we've never seen before," Boyden said. "It came from Yugoslavia, West Germany, Spain, Portugal, Czechoslovakia, North Korea, all over the world." Some 3 percent to 5 percent of thej tens of thousands of shells and bombs hurled into the city by the Israelis failed to go off and are highly dangerous, he said. "We found five bombs in an or- phanage, with about 45 cluster bombs in the front yard. tIINDIVIDUAL THEATRES Sth Are of Lberty 761.97" ENDS TONIGHT "DON'S PARTY" At 6:40, 8:30, 10:20 STARTS FRII WINNER ACADEMY AWARD BEST FOREIGN FILM FRI-6:50, 9:15 THE MOST PRAISED AND LOVED ROMANTIC FILM OF THE SEASON! RICHARD DEBRA GERE WINGER AN OFFICER AND A GENTEMAN (R) THURS/FRI-7:20, 9:30 Guatemalans trained AP Photo No parking! Rae Wright, a junior at West Texas State University, may think twice about parking under this no-parking sign in Canyon, Texas. Andropov shakes up Soviet government despite U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) - A U.S. Air Force officer trained 17 Guatemalan military pilots last summer despite the 5-year-old ban on American military aid to the Central American country. A Defense Department statement, issued in response to a question about the training, said Lt. Col. benjamin Castro "on his own time lectured Guatemalan student pilots on in- strument flying and safety" while he was attached to the U.S. Embassy in Guatemala City. THE PENTAGON said the lectures did not violate U.S. policy against aid to Guatemala's military, which has been accused by human rights groups of masacring thousands of Indian peasan- ts in its war against leftist guerrillas. Guatemala's government has denied the massacre accusations. "It has long been considered a responsibility of all qualified U.S. pilots - civil and miltary - to assist host- . aid ban nation aviators in understanding and complying with international safety procedures," the Pentagon said. But congressional critics said the lec- tures may have violated a ban on security assistance, including military training, to countries which are "gross and consistent" violators of human rights. Attending the Rose Bowl? MOSCOW (AP) - Heads aren't exac- tly rolling, but there are clear signs that Yuri Andropov, the new Soviet Com- munist Party chief, wasn't bluffing when he promised to shake things up. For years, former Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev complained bitterly that things didn't work, often castigating his ministers and top of- ficials publicly. Rarely did he follow up with dismissals. BREZHNEV died Nov. 10 after 18 years in power. In the weeks since An- dropov succeeded him, there have been several major changes in the gover- nment, the lastest of which came yesterday when Tass announced that minister of Rural Construction Stepan Khitrov was replaced by Viktor Danilenko, one of six deputy ministers. The only major change in the ruling hierarchy was the elevation of Geidar Aliev, 59, from non-voting to full mem- bership in the ruling Politburo. He had been party chief in Axerbaijan and his career had been focused on security work in the KGB, which Andropov headed for 15 years. But many Western diplomats and Soviet sources said the Aliev promotion had been decided before Brezhnev's death and was not directly ordered by Andropov. LAST MONTH, in his first major speech as party chief, Andropov said, "Apparently the strength of inertia and adherence to old ways are still at work. Moreover, some people, perhaps, just do not know how to set about doing the job." Since then, the railway minister has been fired, the chief of the Young Communist League has been promoted to head the state publishing committee, and the man who held that key job has been named as head of the Central Committee's propaganda department. For 12 years, Boris Stukalin was the chairman of the State Committee of Publishing Houses, Printing Plants and Book Trade - dictating what books could be published in the Soviet Union the training said Lt. Col. Benjamin imported. ON MONDAY, he, was replaced by Boris Pastukhov, 49, who led the 38- million-member Communist Youth League, Komsomol, for five years. Stukalin, 59, was promoted to the post of chief of the Central Committee propaganda department, replacing Yevgeny Tyazhelnikov. There was no official announcement of Stukalin's promotin, but Tuesday night he was identified by his new title in a television report on a celebration devoted to the forthcoming 60th an- niversary of the Soviet Union. THE SOURCES said Tyazhelnikov was being demoted and would be sent to Romania as ambassador to replace Vasily Drozdenko who died Nov. 3. Inexpensive housing accommodations are available In the UCLA Residence Hall, December 27 through January 2 LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE > For Reservations Judy Hine UCLA Conference C 1-213-825-5305 . . 7_ t ,/ r :i Call r Office A Wallet stolen in W. Quad A West Quad resident entered her room at 6:30 p.m. Monday evening and found a 6-foot 3-inch male burglarizing her room, police said yesterday. The woman had left her room unlocked when she went to visit a friend, accor- ding to police, and when she returned the man fled, taking her wallet con- taining about $25. Police said they have no suspects. Detroit teen held for Ann Arbor purse-snatching A 14-year-old Detroit male is being held by police for allegedly stealing a purse at 7:40 p.m. Monday evening from a woman on the 2500 block of Packard Road. Police said the victim, a 29-year-old Ann Arbor woman, and her three-year-old son had just left the Apex drug store in Georgetown Mall when the suspect attacked her. He allegedly sneaked up behind the woman, according to police, knocked her son to the ground, and took her pur- se. The suspect was apprehended later in the area, they said, and the woman's purse was recovered. -Dan Grantham FOR YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING CONVENIENCE, OPEN MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 9:00 P.M., SATURDAY TIL 6:00 P.M. :::":::::::::;. ..:.......:.. d i>iiiiii" n{"iii:at{:::. ..:::':":::a.:.....t ":>:">:: (I 8 .... :....::.:: ..: -i:::a{im::?:::S v..,...., fi'i,$;.r.; ":::!t4::J>:::>ii:i:' '.: ..>:4::: ". :::.:. 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