.: Adolescent Dating Top Related Articles

1). The “Stag Line”: A Cape Breton Dance Hall etiquette (part of Cape Breton Social Culture)
The “Stag Line”, a male high school dance etiquette, was certainly indigenous to Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia Canada. Remember those Cape Breton school dances in the 1960s? The community hall or gymnasium would be dimly lighted by a few flood lights. Whether the music was delivered by a jukebox, a DJ or live band, the use of a color organ and strobe light was prevalent – you had to have colored lights pulsing to the beat of the music.
Article tags: stag, dance etiquette, cape breton, stag line, social dance etiquette, 1960 dance, adolescent dating, fonz

2). A pre-cursor to Paint Ball? - Lee Hawker – a 1960s Cape Breton Adolescent Hide-'n-Seek Game
There are segments of sociology, found perhaps only on Cape Breton Island, that need to be recorded, if not studied. The game of “Lee Hawkers” is such a segment; a common summer night cry of “1-2-3 Lee Hawkers” heard from the woods surrounding the New Waterford neighbourhood of Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. This game of modified hide-and-seek involving two teams was part of teen years in the mid-1960s.
Article tags: teen game, cape breton game, cape breton culture, lee hawkers, hide and seek, 1960 team game, adolescent dating, teen dating, paint ball, cape breton socialogy

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