Geez, I wouldn't want to be stuck in an elevator overnight. Not a great set up if you all needed to use the bathroom.
All I remember is that the birth rate skyrocketed nine months after this event!
Quote from: Hal on November 10, 2010, 02:20:49 AMAll I remember is that the birth rate skyrocketed nine months after this event! This is now considered an urban myth...From Wikipedia...The myth of the blackout baby boomA thriving urban legend arose in the wake of the Northeast Blackout of 1965, in which it is told that a peak in the birthrate of the blackout areas was observed nine months after the incident. The origin of the myth [1] is a series of three articles published in August 1966 in the New York Times, in which interviewed doctors told that they had noticed an increased number of births.The story was debunked in 1970 by J. Richard Udry, a demographer from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who did a careful statistical study that found no increase in the birthrate of the affected areas.
Quote from: Critter on November 10, 2010, 02:12:52 AMGeez, I wouldn't want to be stuck in an elevator overnight. Not a great set up if you all needed to use the bathroom.I never use elevators...this give me one more good reason not to!
Quote from: Kathy on November 10, 2010, 02:20:40 AMQuote from: Critter on November 10, 2010, 02:12:52 AMGeez, I wouldn't want to be stuck in an elevator overnight. Not a great set up if you all needed to use the bathroom.I never use elevators...this give me one more good reason not to!Geeze..how I have one more reason to be freaked by elevators. I've been afraid of getting stuck in one for years - I've seen too many movies I think.. Anyway, now I have to worry about that and having to go to the bathroom too. All the more reason to avoid them...and tall buildings.
the Great Northeast BlackoutThe blackout began during rush hour, trapping 800,000 people in New York's subway and thousands more in office building elevators.