May I respectfully disagree with Michael, Bree and Joyce? And offer an analogy? 
 Every five or six years I tell the Odyssey to the students at my school, one 
book per week, over the course of the school year. I do make a few alterations 
and omissions befitting my audience. And of course I could choose a different 
story. But teachers, parents and students seem to cherish this classic 
story--and deservedly so, I think!  My minor alterations allow me to pass on a 
great classic to my audience. Similarly, callers who cherish a classic dance, 
and feel an alteration will allow them to present it an audience, should be 
allowed to do so, in my opinion. Of course the authors of the dances may feel 
differently about this!

Looking at contra history, haven't classic dances much older than 3-33-33 
evolved in the past century or two, and aren't they called and danced regularly 
today with those alterations?

Richard


On Jun 20, 2013, at 6:10 PM, Joyce Miller wrote:

> Exactly. And if it can't be taught effectively to a certain group, choose 
> another dance.
> 
> On Jun 20, 2013, at 2:35 PM, Bree Kalb <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> I agree with Michael. Especially in the case of a classic.
>> 
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Michael Barraclough <[email protected]>
>>> Sent: Jun 20, 2013 5:25 PM
>>> To: [email protected]
>>> Subject: Re: [Callers] Tampering with a classic again 3-33-33
>>> 
>>> There are thousands of contras.  If one doesn't work, why not try
>>> another one instead of altering that one?
>>> 
>>> Michael Barraclough
>>> 
> 
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