In this country, the problem is that they can't join in with Freshers' Week pub crawls and such like. But your drinking age is 21, so the one problem I can think of doesn't apply in the US (or rather, it applies to all college students). So what is the problem? Do you have to be 18 to register with a doctor by yourself or something like that?
Raising the driving age to 18 was nuts in Continental Europe, but it would be utterly crazy in the spread-out USA. Governments...
which I can see being impractical in those cases where the students travel halfway or entirely across the US to go to university. If the parents are even remotely nearby, it can't be that much of a problem, but if the parents are in Florida and the 17-year old studies in California...
And why was it "nuts" to raise the driving age to 18? I don't see anything wrong with it in Europe, although I agree in the US it'd be impractical in most places.
New Orleans hotelier offers to host prom cancelled in Mississippi
- 14/03/2010 01:29:40 AM
535 Views
Sort of seems opportunistic really
- 14/03/2010 02:00:54 AM
214 Views
Given the nature of the people involved, I highly doubt they're willing to go to NOLA.
- 14/03/2010 03:31:33 AM
206 Views
- 14/03/2010 03:31:33 AM
206 Views
Re: Given the nature of the people involved, I highly doubt they're willing to go to NOLA.
- 14/03/2010 04:13:18 AM
196 Views
- 14/03/2010 04:13:18 AM
196 Views
Aren't high-school graduands generally 18?
- 14/03/2010 10:34:20 AM
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Prom is in early April - so statistically, only about 25% of students will have turned 18...
- 14/03/2010 03:40:26 PM
173 Views
That's probably off by a good deal, closer to 50%
- 14/03/2010 04:48:07 PM
194 Views
Ah, yes, that would make a difference.
- 14/03/2010 04:56:19 PM
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School years by birth year? That's far too logical and orderly for an English-speaking country!
- 14/03/2010 11:10:27 PM
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It's pretty arbitrary, but you have to consider the ramifications at the college level
- 15/03/2010 12:05:28 AM
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What are the "noticeable difficulties" with having 17-year-olds on campus?
- 15/03/2010 08:19:24 AM
174 Views
Mostly, I can only think of problems relating to sex.
- 15/03/2010 12:38:06 PM
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What on earth have students' sex lives got to do with the college?
- 15/03/2010 12:52:03 PM
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I was just suggesting it as a possible reason, there's no need to get persnickity.
- 15/03/2010 05:45:43 PM
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I didn't mean to be persnickety. I was just trying to understand.
- 15/03/2010 08:39:20 PM
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Well, they aren't legal adults...
- 15/03/2010 01:05:33 PM
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Because it means you can't pass your test until long after you've started your "independent" life.
- 15/03/2010 08:44:33 PM
197 Views
Depends on the country, I would imagine.
- 15/03/2010 08:53:40 PM
163 Views
Ah, good to know. Not quite as nuts as I thought then, at least in Belgium
. *NM*
- 15/03/2010 10:42:51 PM
60 Views
. *NM*
- 15/03/2010 10:42:51 PM
60 Views
All countries I'm aware of have "driving age" mean the age you can take the test
- 15/03/2010 10:24:16 PM
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Huh, maybe I was wrongly assuming everywhere was like here.
- 15/03/2010 10:33:50 PM
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in the states
- 15/03/2010 10:44:11 PM
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Here they recently changed the system too, so I'm not sure on the details, but...
- 15/03/2010 10:55:13 PM
152 Views


*NM*