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- THE WEEK, Page 13NATIONUntimely Family Ties
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- Clinton's spell of good press ends as his draft record resurfaces
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- Bill Clinton was one day into a new offensive -- accusing
- George Bush of planning to gut programs for the elderly,
- veterans and students -- when a fresh disclosure about his draft
- status forced him to play defense again. The Los Angeles Times
- said that in 1968 his uncle Raymond Clinton managed to delay the
- new college graduate's Army induction.
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- Now deceased, Raymond was a Hot Springs, Arkansas,
- businessman and a Republican with political connections. His
- lawyer, Henry Britt, also a Republican, served as a principal
- source for the Times piece. According to Britt and a surviving
- member of the local draft board, Raymond lobbied board members
- on his nephew's behalf. He also secured a place in a Navy
- reserve unit, though Bill never applied for the opening. The
- story appears to explain why Clinton remained a civilian for 10
- months, though classified 1-A. The following year he obtained
- a formal deferment by agreeing to join an ROTC program in which
- he never enrolled. Clinton ultimately avoided service by drawing
- a high number when the lottery system went into effect.
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- While candid about his opposition to the Vietnam War,
- Clinton has also insisted he never received special treatment.
- So when the story broke Monday, he appeared momentarily rattled.
- Initially, he said "everyone involved" in the account is now
- dead, which is inaccurate. Then he alternately denied the import
- of the piece and maintained that he had already explained his
- behavior fully. Until Friday, his aides claimed Clinton was and
- is unaware of his uncle's activities -- whatever they might have
- been. But then came a report in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
- quoting a retired naval reserve officer, Trice Ellis Jr., as
- saying he himself had told Clinton of Raymond's efforts in March
- of this year. The candidate conceded that the report was true.
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- The latest challenge to Clinton's credibility not only
- diverted attention from his aggressive campaign message but also
- gave the opposition a new opportunity to attack. "He is going
- to have to come clean," huffed Dan Quayle, mauled himself in
- 1988 because he had found sanctuary in the National Guard.
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