Rep. Alexander Pirrie, Republican of New York State, drew the first number in the 1969 Draft Lottey. The prize could be death. |
Note: Two
and a half years ago I started a memoir series about my experience with the
Draft, courts, and eventually prison during the Vietnam War which first
appeared in the The Third City and were
afterword re-posted here. The post went
up over a period of almost 4 months and many people—probably most—never connected
to the story intact. So over the next
few days I am re-running the pieces—with a bit of tinkering here and there—seriatim. Follow along if you will. Of course this also allows me to take a few
days break from brand new posts so that my wife and I can get away for a long
weekend vacation.
If
you were a young guy in the 1960’s
your life plans and prospects pretty much revolved around the caprice of your
friends and neighbors at your local Draft
Board. Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon
Johnson had backed into what even Douglas
MacArthur had warned the nation to avoid at all costs—a land war in Asia.
By
the time I turned 18 and was subject to the beck and call of the Selective Service System in 1967, the Vietnam War was raging and demanding
more and more fodder for the stalemated carnage. Rather than call up National Guard troops or Reservists,
as in earlier conflicts, the Army
had depended on the Draft to keeps its ranks filled since the Korean War. Now even the once elite, all volunteer Marine Corps was in such dire need that
draftees were also becoming Leathernecks.
I
dutifully, if resentfully, fulfilled my obligation and registered for the
Draft. I was issued a Draft Card which I was told to keep on
my person at all times under penalty of law.
At
the time I had an alleged humor column
The
Wind from the West in my school newspaper at Niles West High in Skokie. I wrote a bitter, decidedly un-funny column
about the war and the draft. It got past
the official sponsor, but the shit hit the fan when the principal, Nicholas T. Manos, saw it in
print. I was pretty much an official
pariah the rest of my senior year and some small school scholarships I had won
for Forensics and drama were revoked.
Despite
my bitching, I was safe because I was college
bound. My local Draft Board handed
the coveted 2-S student deferments
out liberally. If I stayed in school
there was a good chance I could avoid a call to arms for four years—longer if I
went on to graduate school—and hopefully the war would be over.
Of
course those 2-S deferments sent many young men scampering to campuses that
they would never have otherwise darkened.
After other deferments for physical and mental disabilities and the like,
healthy non-college bound single men were almost all doomed to be called.
Between
my St. Patrick’s Day birthday and my
arrival at Shimer College in Mt. Carroll, Illinois the next September, I grew more involved with the Anti-war movement. I marched in a giant April march in Chicago
that ended with a rally at the old Coliseum
addressed by the Rev. Martin Luther King. My little high school group, the Liberal Youth of Niles Township (LYNT) put on a program Up
Tight About the Draft? In August
I was a delegate to the New Politics
Convention where I met Dr. King in person and encountered serious radicals
and anti-war leaders.
I
arrived on campus a committed radical.
Between bouts with the Great
Books and discovering the delights of marijuana
and assorted hallucinogens, I did
what I could for the movement out in isolated Carroll County. When I heard
that the Second National Day of Resistance
was going to collect Draft cards to be returned to the Selective Service
System, I sent my card with some other students who drove into Chicago for the December 4 demonstration.
I
happened to be home on Spring break when I got the letter from my Draft Board
threatening me with prison. My Mom
reacted by locking herself in the bathroom and becoming hysterical. To calm her down, I wrote a letter asking for
my card back. I felt like a traitor and
a heel. Meanwhile I toyed with the idea
of becoming a Conscientious Objector,
but never turned in a request when I realized I was not a pacifist, just opposed to this particular war.
Once
again safe with my 2-S, I returned to Shimer for one more semester after my
summer adventures at the Democratic
Convention in Chicago. Then I moved
to the city and transferred to Columbia
College, got involved with the Industrial
Workers of the World (IWW), and
got deeper and deeper into the Movement.
In
1969 the Selective Service System decided that because of the great disparity
between how local draft boards issues deferments, to institute a national lottery to make the system
“fairer.” Young men around the country
paid rapt attention on December 1, 1969 when officials in Washington drew birth dates out of a glass bowl for everyone born
between 1944 and 1950. That was me, one
of that first wave of Baby Boomers.
The
lower the number of you birthday,
the surer and faster you would be drafted. Those which high numbers probably
would not be called at all. Some guys
will forever remember their number. I
don’t. It was somewhere north of 100 and
south of 150. I was not in immediate
danger, but my number would almost certainly be called before my window of eligibility expired at the
end of 1971.
By
1970 I had dropped out of Columbia and gone to work as an offset pressman. Then I was
elected General Secretary-Treasurer
of the IWW and later worked on the Chicago
Seed. I assumed that I was subject to being called
up, but I never heard from the government.
After a while, concern that I would be drafted faded away. I assumed that somehow, miraculously, my
number had been passed over.
I
was wrong. I got the dreaded call to
report for induction in December of 1972.
Next time: Turning down the invitation.
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