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Dance team looks to gain respect by Jason Huber
Intern Sports Reporter
G
etting the crowd involved at sporting events is not always an easy task. One of the groups that works to achieve crowd enthusiasm and interaction at Appalachian State University is the ASU Elite Dance Team, which performs at home football, basketball and wrestling games and matches. The team has been performing for more than 40 years at Appalachian and were originally known as the Appalettes. The problem the dance team faces that differs from other spirit teams, including the band and the cheerleading team, is that they are not funded by Appalachian in any way. Instead, the dance team raises its own money in order to perform. Since the team does not have enough money to hire a coach, a captain and two co-captains are voted on every year. This year’s captains include junior Alaina Brown and co-captains junior Alyson Grant and junior Courtney Dancy. The team currently has 14 members.
Alex Gates
File Photo The Appalachian State dance team performs on the court during a basketball game last season. The dance team appears at as many home games and matches as they can, despite not being recognized as an athletic team by the university.
Captains have always led the team, but Grant said if the team had the opportunity to hire a coach, it could help them tremendously. “Students should not have to act as coaches,” Grant said. “Even though we enjoy
App State’s Economic Impact
it, it would be less responsibility, and it would open up the door for us to be able to go to camps and learn more knowledge in dancing that we may not currently have.” Girls on the dance team currently have no spon-
sors but work hard during the season and offseason to raise as much money as they can to support the team. This season, one of the only businesses to donate money was the Daniel Boone Inn, and Brown said not
$6.40
billion
Is yielded by each dollar spent
Is the total economic impact to the state of N.C.
by Jordan Boles
billion
Is added to the N.C. economy by ASU grads
Source: EMSI Report
$18 million Is added to the N.C. economy by out-of-state e students
$1.4
$757.8 million
$3.5 million
Is added by on-campus construction projects
SEE DANCE PAGE 12
Service RLC leaves legacy through day of service Intern News Reporter
$1.7
having the higher authority could be the reason for the lack of donations. Most of the money raised has come from family members and friends of the
Was the net benefit during 2012-13 year after tax payers invested $149.7 million Infographic by Malik Rahili
The Service and Leadership Residential Learning Community will host the ninth annual Leave Yosef a Legacy Day on April 11 to serve various organizations through community service. The goal of Leave Yosef a Legacy Day is to help Appalachian State University students realize the importance of student involvement within the surrounding community. The event is hosted to benefit several non-profits in Watauga County such as OASIS, Horse Helpers, the Hunger and Health Coalition and the Humane Society. Leave Yosef a Legacy Day will be held in the Blue Ridge Ballroom of Plemmons Student Union from 10 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. The RLC is located in Cone Residence Hall, which houses the students that are in charge of planning the service day. The event will promote student connections with nonprofits, introducing them to volunteer opportunities that span beyond the day, while also growing the leadership, service and professional skills of the students that plan the event. “I’ve participated in service days, but not necessarily a student-run event,” said Hailey Pister, the chair leader of the education committee for the event. “I feel as though this is more personal, and more about the students learning within these events,
SEE SERVICE PAGE 5