AT 19, THOMAS MAKES HIS DECISION
By Ira Berkow April 27, 1981 The New York Times Archives See the article in its original context from April 27, 1981, Section C, Page 1 - Buy Reprints IT was Draft Day in the ghetto. That's what everyone there called it. On a few days each year, chieftains of the notorious Vice Lords street gang appeared at certain homes on the West Side of Chicago to take recruits. On this summer night in 1966, 25 Vice Lord chiefs stopped in front of the home of Mary Thomas. She had nine children, seven of them boys, ranging from Lord Henry, 15 years old, to Isiah, 5. The Thomases lived on the first floor of a two-story red brick building on Congress Street, facing the Eisenhower Expressway. One of the Lords rang the bell. Mary Thomas, wearing glasses, answered the door. She saw behind him the rest of his gang, all wearing gold tams and black capes and some had guns in their waist bands that glinted under the street lamps. ''We want your boys,'' the gang leader told her. '...