


Moderator: Menolly
Oh so true. Let's revisit this in Denver, shall we?CovenantJr wrote:I can also be dead when Aliantha wants me to be...
Jenn and I have been talking about this.aliantha wrote:Or the location of any bars in Bloomington, Indiana, which did not card in the late '70s.
Yes, but the legal age varied from state to state. I remember in high school, Indiana's drinking age was 21, but 18-year-olds could cross the state line into Michigan to buy alcohol legally. Of course, I was 17 then.Menolly wrote:Jenn and I have been talking about this.aliantha wrote:Or the location of any bars in Bloomington, Indiana, which did not card in the late '70s.
Wasn't drinking age legally 18 for a few years back then?
My sister, and Damelon too most likely, since he was born the same year, got caught in the raising the age farce.
aliantha wrote:Yes, but the legal age varied from state to state.
I had also forgotten about the states loosing their federal highway funding if they didn't raise the legal drinking age. I do remember groups tying the younger age to more teen accidents.aliantha wrote:I remember in high school, Indiana's drinking age was 21, but 18-year-olds could cross the state line into Michigan to buy alcohol legally. Of course, I was 17 then.I didn't turn 18 'til December of my freshman year in college, at which point I was nowhere near the state of Michigan. That would've been 1975. I think the deal was that states were in danger of losing their federal highway funding if they didn't raise the drinking age to 21. The idea was to limit the number of teens dying in traffic accidents, IIRC.
Yeah, I remember that. The extra 15 mph made the from New York to Florida drive so much quicker, or so it seemed when we had relatives drive down, compared to when we did it when we lived on Long Island when I was a kid.aliantha wrote:You may remember that the feds pulled the same scam, at about the same time, to knock the speed limit down to 55 mph on interstate highways. I remember in high school driver's ed, going 70 mph on I-94, a couple of weeks before the lower speed limit went into effect. I believe that was all about saving gas, tho, not about keeping people from killing themselves on the highways by going too fast. Tho that turned out to be a nice side benefit.
I don't know for sure, but I think they all caved.Menolly wrote:Do you know if any states stood up to the federal government and took the loss of highway funding?
...uh-oh...aliantha wrote:I don't know for sure, but I think they all caved.Menolly wrote:Do you know if any states stood up to the federal government and took the loss of highway funding?
My mom's house is 3 blocks from the Michigan state line. So it was not much of a road trip for kids to go up there. (BTW, I had totally forgotten about all this....)
I figured out last night why CovJr is making such a big deal out of corrupting my daughter with drunken watermelon. You're not 21 yet either, are you, Rog?