The draft numbers for 1965 were part of the U.S. military draft system established during the Vietnam War era. In that year, the Selective Service System assigned lottery numbers based on birthdates, with the first draft lottery held on December 1, 1969, for men born in 1944 to 1950. However, in 1965 specifically, the draft was still based on classifications rather than a lottery system, and the numbers were assigned to registrants based on their age and deferments. The draft continued to evolve throughout the Vietnam War, impacting many young men in the U.S. during that time.
1965
there were no numbers in 1968
A U.S. Draft Card.
George Haffner, selected by the Colts.
I know they drafed quite a few in October of 1965
1965
The most common form of a demand draft is a check. Checks have account numbers, not docket numbers. Other demand drafts may or may not have account numbers, but not docket numbers, unless there is a legal action that ordered the demand instrument.
No, the MLB Draft started in 1965, Lou Brock was picked up by the Cubs in 1961 and later acquired by the St Louis Cardinals
There was no Selective Service Lottery (numbers) in 1953. The Draft Lottery began in 1969.
draft laws
Pitcher Bill Burbach from Wahlert High School in Dickeyville, Wisconsin in the 1965 MLB amateur draft.
Draft numbers on a bank statement can typically be found in the transaction details or descriptions of individual entries. Look for terms like "check number," "draft number," or "transaction ID" next to the transaction that corresponds to the draft. If the draft was processed electronically, it may be labeled differently, so check the entire transaction line for identifying information. If you're having trouble locating it, consider contacting your bank's customer service for assistance.