What happened on your birthday?

What’s Your Vietnam War Draft Lottery Number?

The Vietnam War draft lottery ran from 1969 to 1972. If you were born on October 02, would your number have been called?

  • Vietnam War 1969 Lottery
    CalledDrafted
    125
  • Vietnam War 1970 Lottery
    Not CalledNot drafted
    191
  • Vietnam War 1971 Lottery
    CalledDrafted
    76
  • Vietnam War 1972 Lottery
    Not CalledNot drafted
    128

Read on to learn more about the Vietnam war draft lottery.





more events on October 2

  • 2001

    NATO backs US military strikes in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks.

  • 1990

    Flight 8301 of China’s Xiamen Airlines is hijacked and crashed into Baiyun International Airport, hitting two other aircraft and killing 128 people.

  • 1980

    Congressional Representative Mike Myers is expelled from the US House for taking a bribe in the Abscam scandal, the first member to be expelled since 1861.

  • 1970

    Kelly Ripa, actress, producer, co-host of Live! with Kelly and Michael TV talk show.

  • A plane carrying the Wichita State University football team, staff, and supporters crashes in Colorado; 31 of the 40 people aboard die.

  • 1967

    Thurgood Marshall, the first African-American Supreme Court justice, is sworn in. Marshall had previously been the solicitor general, the head of the legal staff of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and a leading American civil rights lawyer.

  • 1964

    Scientists announce findings that smoking can cause cancer.

  • 1959

    The groundbreaking TV series The Twilight Zone, hosted by Rod Serling, premiers on CBS.

  • 1951

    Sting (Gordon M.T. Sumner), singer, songwriter, musician, actor; lead singer and bass player for the band The Police before launching a successful solo career.

  • 1950

    The comic strip Peanuts, by Charles M. Schultz, makes its first appearance in newspapers.

  • 1949

    Annie Leibovitz, photographer whose subjects include John Lennon and the Rolling Stones.

  • 1945

    Martin Hellman, cryptologist, co-inventor of public key cryptography.

  • Don McLean, singer, songwriter guitarist, best known for “American Pie,” his tribute to Buddy Holly and early rock ‘n’ roll.

  • 1941

    The German army launches Operation Typhoon, the drive towards Moscow.

  • 1938

    Rex Reed, actor and film critic; co-hosted the At the Movies TV show.

  • 1937

    Johnnie Cochran, high-profile African American lawyer whose many famous clients included O.J. Simpson and Michael Jackson.

  • 1933

    John Bertrand Gurdon, English developmental biologist who shared Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (2012) for the discovery that mature cells can be converted to stem cells.

  • 1931

    Aerial circus star Clyde Pangborn and playboy Hugh Herndon, Jr. set off to complete the first nonstop flight across the Pacific Ocean from Misawa City, Japan.

  • 1909

    Orville Wright sets an altitude record, flying at 1,600 feet. This exceeded Hubert Latham’s previous record of 508 feet.

  • 1907

    Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd, Scottish biochemist who won Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1957) for his work on nucleotides, nucleosides, and nucleotide coenzymes.

  • 1904

    Graham Greene, novelist (The Power and The Glory, The Heart of the Matter).

  • 1901

    Roy Campbell, poet (The Flaming Terrapin).

  • 1900

    William A. ‘Bud’ Abbot, comedian, the straight man to Lou Costello.

  • 1890

    Julius Henry ‘Groucho’ Marx, comedian, one of the five Marx brothers (the others being Chico, Harpo, Zeppo and Gummo).

  • 1879

    Wallace Stevens, poet.

  • A dual alliance is formed between Austria and Germany, in which the two countries agree to come to the other’s aid in the event of aggression.

  • 1871

    Cordell Hull, Secretary of State for President Franklin Roosevelt.

  • Morman leader Brigham Young, 70, is arrested for polygamy. He was later convicted, but the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the conviction.

  • 1870

    The papal states vote in favor of union with Italy. The capital is moved from Florence to Rome.

  • 1869

    Mahatma Mohandas Gandhi, political leader of India and pioneer of nonviolent activism.

  • 1862

    An Army under Union General Joseph Hooker arrives in Bridgeport, Alabama to support the Union forces at Chattanooga. Chattanooga’s Lookout Mountain provides a dramatic setting for the Civil War’s battle above the clouds.

  • 1847

    Paul von Hindenburg, German Field Marshall during World War I and second president of the Weimar Republic.

  • 1535

    Having landed in Quebec a month ago, Jacques Cartier reaches a town, which he names Montreal.

  • 1263

    At Largs, King Alexander III of Scotland repels an amphibious invasion by King Haakon IV of Norway.