Volume 10, Number 12 · June 20, 1968

The Draft and Its Opposition

By Florence Howe, Paul Lauter
The Draft? A Report Prepared for the Peace Education Division of the American Friends Service Committee

Hill and Wang, 112 pp., $1.25

How to End the Draft: The Case for an All-Volunteer Army
Congressmen Horton, Schweiker, Shriver, Stafford and Whalen, edited by Douglas Bailey, edited by Steve Herbits

National Press, 145 pp., $2.95

Bitter Greetings
by Jean Carper

Grossman, 205 pp., $5.00

The New Draft Law: A Manual for Lawyers and Counsellors
edited by Ann Fagan Ginger

National Lawyers Guild, 140 pp., $10.00

1001 Ways to Beat the Draft
by Tuli Kupferberg, by Robert Bashlow

Grove, n.p., $0.75

How to Stay Out of the Army: A Guide to Your Rights Under the Draft Law
by Conrad J. Lynn

Monthly Review and Grove Press, 130 pp., $1.25

Why the Draft: The Case for a Volunteer Army
by James C. Miller III, et al.

Penguin, 197 pp., $1.25

National Lawyers Guild Practitioner, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Summer, 1967): Special issue on Selective Service

National Lawyers Guild, 53 pp., $1.00

Manual for Draft-Age Immigrants to Canada
edited by Mark Satin

House of Anansi (Toronto), 128 pp., $1.00

The Draft: A Handbook of Facts and Alternatives
edited by Sol Tax

University of Chicago, 497 pp., $12.95

During the last few years critics have been calling for reforms of the draft or for its end, some suggesting in its place either a volunteer army or a system of national service. The Marshall Commission Report, [1] for example, proposed ending college deferments and calling men by lottery, rather than through the idiosyncratic decisions of some 4,000 local draft boards. In the current political campaign, each candidate has had at least to acknowledge the widespread hostility to the draft by proposing major revisions (as Rockefeller did when he called for a lottery) or its eventual elimination (as Nixon and Kennedy have done—to begin after the war, to be sure). But the draft has continued, substantially unaltered, largely because it permits the President to wage war by administrative decree.



Review, 7450 words

To read the full text of this piece, please choose one of the following options:

If you are already a subscriber to the Review's electronic edition, please sign in:

To subscribe to the electronic edition, please press the button below.

I agree to the terms and conditions for this service.

To purchase access to this article for $3, please press the button below.

I agree to the terms and conditions for this service.


Search the Review
Advanced search