Full at 
http://blog.cheapmotelsandahotplate.org/2010/07/13/a-lucky-man-episode-2/
 
III. 
 
Like everyone else, Clyde Yassem remembered what he had been doing on December 
7, 1941.  Sleeping.  His parents and two of his younger brothers rushed in to 
awaken him and tell him the news.  He didn’t think much of it at first, but as 
what happened became clear, he could see that it had electrified the town.  
People talked of little else, and within a few days, young men were driving, 
taking the train, or hitchhiking to the next town up the river to the military 
recruiting offices.  A patriotic fever swept the nation, and everyone was now 
paying attention to events in Europe and Asia.  There were no 
Japanese-Americans in Clyde’s town, but the many families of German ancestry 
found themselves suspect by their neighbors.  Some teenagers had vandalized the 
German Beneficial Union club, after a report in the big city paper said that 
the GBU was a hotbed of homegrown Nazis. 
 
So many young factory workers were enlisting that the management began to keep 
workers on the job for ten and sometimes twelve hours a day, something it 
hadn’t done since 1929.  Thanks to the new federal law, hours over forty a week 
had to be paid at time and one-half the regular hourly wage rate, and this 
meant that the men, including Clyde, were bringing home record paychecks.  But 
Clyde was as caught up in war fever as anyone else.  He had a good number and 
might not have been called up in the draft the government had initiated.  But 
he wanted to join up and fight the Japs.  So, in May 1942 he visited the naval 
recruiting office.  A friend had told him that you had a better chance to 
survive in the Navy than in the Army or Marines.  He just made the weight 
minimum, and when the doctor asked him about the red marks on his knuckles, 
which were scars left from the tuberculosis which had attacked his bones as a 
child, he told the doctor that he had fallen.  Remarkably, the physician didn’t 
probe further....
                                          
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