LizzieMaine
Bartender
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Technically, but by 1942 the draft boards were tightening up the rules considerably. Sole support was interpreted to mean no other source of income for the family -- which, in turn, would be interpreted as the wife being incapacitated from going to work, no relative able to provide support, etc. Once they started to take a hard line, it became very difficult to get such an exemption. Interestingly, DiMaggio's only rival as the top player in the American League, Ted Williams, spent most of 1942 trying to avoid service by the same argument -- and he, at least, had some justification for it: his mother was ill, and he was supporting her, along with his wife and baby daughter. But too bad, said the draft board, into uniform you go. And despite the fact that Williams went on to be a Navy fighter ace, he also held a deep grudge against Selective Service for the rest of his life. And while the papers were rough on DiMaggio, they absolutely savaged Williams -- and he never forgot it.