I visited, more than once, an assisted living home, here in CT, to talk to a 
prominent caller of "back in the day".He told of dancing as a teen.  So many 
young folks did then.  The call was "swing her in the center and kiss her if 
you dare".He stammered and turned red as she poked fun at his shyness.  They 
both ended up on the floor.  They became friends, not 
dates; but he did take her to the Senior Ball, filling in for her steady 
boyfriend, who for some reason, couldn't.
 I still call - by a lady's request - Girl I Left Behind Me: "swing that girl, 
she's a cute little girl, swing that girl behind you - pass 
right thru, and balance too" - her favorite!   Then there's "push her away and 
watch her grin pull her right back and swing her again - 
 push her away and watch her smile - pull her right in and swing her awhile."  
It comes up.
Singing calls are indigenous to the US.  And ubiquitous - back in the day of my 
shy caller.
Bob LivingstonMiddletown, CT

    On Sunday, March 25, 2018, 1:12:51 AM EDT, Rich Sbardella via Callers 
<[email protected]> wrote:  
 
 Hello folks,
I have been calling singing squares for years, and there is one I love by Dick 
Leger titled Billy Boy.  The tag line that is sung during the Promenade is 
"She's a young thing, that cannot leave her mother."
Here is a link to a version of the full song, not within a square.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cKRJuLHU3Qo

My question is, is this song appropriate for the contra dance crowd with the 
tag line above?  (The tag line is the only line that is sung.)
Any Thoughts?
RichStafford, CT_______________________________________________
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