Tuesday, February 15, 1934 Daily Nebraskan Page 5 ilniform drinking age worth a cry At some point in the late 1060s, when thousands of young men were being drafted to fight in Vietnam, the country became embarrassed about the check erboard of laws that ruled the lives of 18, 19 and 20-year-olds. A young man was old enough to die for his country, but not old enough to vote in it. A Marine could return from the Mekong Delta and then ?t carded at hh hometown bar. In that climate, support grew for a uniform age of responsibility. In 1971, the voting age was lowered Ellen Goodman to 18 and in the next few years many states lowered the drinking age to 18. In retrospect, it seems odd that we simply accepted the draft as the baseline, the duly designated point of adulthood. Instead of raising the military age, we lowered everyt hing else to match it. We were embar rassed about the wrong thing. Nevertheless, we allowed 18-year-old3 to drink legally and openly. Soon, the lethal combination of alcohol and gasoline, drinking and driving, inflamed the fatality statistics. Gradually now, states have been raising the drink ing age again and watching the accident rates go down. Today only four states still allow 1 8-year-olds to buy all kinds of alcohol. In 1 1 states the legal drinking age is 19, in six states it is 20, and in the rest it's 21. But there are sti3 a number of different laws coex isting side by side, border by border. This patch work, as the President's Commission on Drunk Driv ing pointed out, becomes an absolute incentive to drink and drive. In Spokane, Wash., for example, 19-year-olds have to drive if they want to drink. They have to drive to the strip of waiting bars over the border in Idaho.Then they have to drive home. Now there are two bills wending their way through Congress which would establish a national drinking age of 21. Some have opposed this legislation as an example of federal intrusion. But surely the border traffic in search of a six-pack is a kind of interstate commerce. The need for uniformity seems obvious. But there is a legitimate controversy about raising the age barrier again. For openers, there is nothing magical about the number 21. If we were concerned solely with safety, we could reasonably ban the sale of booze to anyone under 22 or 25. On the ether hand, we could forget about drinking and raise the driving age to 21 an idea which appeals to me enor mously as the parent of a 15-year-old. More importantly, there is the notion of a single age of responsibility. Isn't it rather insulting to tell a bona Fide voter that he or she isn't old enough to belly up to the bar? I see the contradiction. Yet despite all the talk about a single age of adulthood, there are all sorts of uneven laws regulating the uneven process of mat urity. Today, in many states, you can become "eman cipated" from your parents by becoming a parent, even at 1 5. In most states you can get married with parental consent before you can vote. On the other . hand, you cannot become a member of the House of Representatives until you are 25 or a U.S. senator Advertising Manager The Daily Nebraskan is accepting applications until 4 p.m.- Feb. 21 for Advertising Manager. The position .runs from May, 1984 through May, 1985. Applicants should have relevant sales experience and academic preparation in advertising, marketing or management. The ad manager must be a student at UNL. Applicants should see Dan Shattil, No. 34 Nebraska Union. R1 T fl Duly ft UNL does not discriminate in its academic, admissions or employment programs and abides by all federal regulat ions pertaining to same. -0.lL-A!JvK? J r Li. n n o n. p. - I ,,.L.... , r ,t,enrvthnt TTTiV3 A Order tickets now, and get in on I ICIC 11"-; w.'v . , ore brand new to town, but know . rs lArpcffp like vou ve never r- r s ii thnt have ? ? -k L , " . J lk CZZTi ZdeWm across the WRESTLING 7 ''lA"""""' country, ana uiuui iu . v t - they're goinq to give you a workout ' you II never torget. ;en pros that if y ( . J, , ' ,y1 : "r" ' , but know , iv A t premiere thtfs going to have ve never VrHTr the sports world buzztng. c 1984 USA Pro Wrestling, Inc. until you are 30. In thb case, the dangers warrant raising the drinking age. The number 21 h no more or less than a familiar compromise figure. I have no illusions that well stop young people from drinking entirely. Nor will we stop them from lying about their age although perhaps we can raise the lying threshold from 16 to 19. Yet it's been estimated that we can save 1,250 lives each year with a new minimum age for legal drinking, and that's worth a try. 1SS4, The Boston Glob Newspaper Coni?apyU'sLIr.2tsa Post Writers Group Crockett's Lounge Wants you to join in the fun every Wednesday and Thursday night ! Wednesday: LADIES' NIGHT 4-7 Happy Hour with V4 price drinks and free hors d'oeuvres 8-10 All Margaritas and Daiquiris only $1.50. 10-1 2 Late Night Happy Hour with yA price - drinks Thursday: HAWAIIAN NIGHT Free hors d'oeuvres . Free Lei's Prizes for the best Hawaiian costume Both nights from 8-1 dance to top hits and videos with Tim Marshal. IF I "P.UtOuMifl 3201 Pioneers Blvd .-Lincoln 488-5990 y I s TUO EHOADUAY HITCH cotcr Hero Id ... end Iho boys written and directed by Athol Fugard Thurti;y, February 23 st Cpm This emotionally charged drama follows a young white student's transformation from innocent childhood to poisonous bigotry in 1 950 South Africa. AgnooofGd starring Peggy Cas? ' O -an Strasberg Saturday, FebrvV- at Epm A spellbinding ama about a young nun who gives birth in a convent and whose child is mysteriously murdered. Individual Ticket Sslss Tickets on sale to everyone for the two plays. Individual tickets for the Beaux Arts Trio and Alvin Ailey on sale only to UNL Students February 13-17. On sale to others beginning February 20. Beaux Arts Trio . - piano, violin & cello with the support of the Nebraska Arts Council Saturday, March 3 si 6 pm Program includes Schubert, Mozart, and Shostakovich 25th Anniversary Season Akin Alloy American Danoo Thoairo A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program Thres Performance Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday f!srch 5, 6 & 7 et pm Supported in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts CI BALL MALL 11 uH Box Off'.cs (11-5, Mon-Fri) 113 Music E!dg. 11th & R 472-3375 r University 1 1 ( ) ct Nebrsska y....i Lincoln 1 L,: S