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At my daughter's H.S. graduation party, several Ole Miss grads spent a long time teaching our family, (new to Ole Miss) the art of spinning a beer to get it cold. They said it was an important life lesson for visiting Oxford. We spent all summer practicing.
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Now the issue is, you can buy alcohol on Sundays from some stores, but there are all kinds of time limits on when you can purchase what. Bourbon & spirits cant be sold until a certain time, but beer purchases can be sold any time, etc. It makes no sense at all whatsoever. :rolleyes: |
We couldn't have draft beer in Alabama unless the county population was over a certain percentage of German heritage. Three counties qualified but two of them were dry. The one that could have it was Mobile county on the coast. So we used to hit the MS state line for it. They always managed to have kegs at frat parties.
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Dry counties are a foreign concept up here in CT, but dry towns are not. The town next to mine was "damp" until a couple of years ago (restaurants could get liquor licenses, but supermarkets could not sell alcohol, and no liquor stores were allowed) - then they went "wet" and a wine store immediately popped up.
I grew up in NY where supermarkets can sell beer only. I went to school in MA where alcohol is only sold in package stores. Then I moved to CT, where, again, supermarkets can sell beer only - only package stores can sell wine and hard liquor. I was quite surprised when I went into a supermarket in VA and saw wine for sale, and I was again surprised when I went into a CVS in IL and saw a full selection of booze, including hard liquor. BTW, CT was the last state in the US to legalize liquor sales on Sundays. Damn Puritans :p |
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...States.svg.png Blue = Wet Yellow = Mixed Red = Dry What's up with that one county in South Dakota? There's got to be a story there. I also have no idea why LA and WV are gray. |
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LA and WV are gray because primary colors are too bright when you're butt ass hung over. :p |
I don't understand what mixed means. My county is mixed, but I can buy what I want at the same time in my town as I can in Davidson County/Nashville, which is wet.
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I'm wondering if "mixed" means there may be a dry town or township in that county?
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Here's where I got it from. Check out Kentucky: it has counties that are "moist." I really have no idea what that means!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of..._by_U.S._state |
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Historically, county folk tended to vote “dry” while city folk tended to vote "wet". The county almost always had more voters so many small towns and counties remained dry. There is a fairly new law (within the last year or so) that allows Kentucky’s “cities” to vote on off-sale within the city limits - and only residents of the city may vote on the wet/dry referendum. |
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