LETTERS IN BRIEF
“A.8.C.” writes at length on familiar ' lines in dealing with the noise caused by open motor exhausts at all hours of the day and night, and enters a plea for immediate and sustained action by the authorities to stamp out this nuisance. A plea for uniformity in the teaching of the simple steps and turns in all popular dances is made by “Tile Trot,” who contends that each teacher has his or her. own idea of how the steps and turns ought to be done. The correspondent urges that the teachers should get together and do something to standardise the teaching of the simple steps and turns, and so make dancing the joy it should be to those who go in for it, but yet do not K reach the advanced or expert stage. Teachers would, it is urged, gain from such uniformity, as more people, both young and old, would learn.
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Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 22, Issue 210, 1 June 1929, Page 13
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155LETTERS IN BRIEF Dominion, Volume 22, Issue 210, 1 June 1929, Page 13
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