Tuesday, April 15, 2008

HPU National Champs Again

The Honolulu Advertiser

The Hawai'i Pacific University Cheerleaders rock again.

HPU captured their sixth consecutive national title at the National Cheerleaders Association (NCA) and National Dance Association (NDA) Championships in Daytona Beach, Fla., over the weekend.

The HPU Large Co-ed Cheer Team won its sixth straight national title (2003-2008).

The HPU Small Co-Ed Cheer Team (consisting of no more than four male members) won its fourth consecutive national title (2005-2008).

The HPU Dance Team won its third consecutive championship, totaling four titles overall (2004, 2006-2008).

The HPU All-Girl Stunt Group consisting of Erin Watters, Lauren Haines, Nicole Orcutt and Savanna Sibley won first place over all national divisions, while the HPU All-Girl Stunt Group consisting of Tara O'Sullivan, Lauren Loeb, Chelsey Kannan and Heather Turner placed second over all national divisions.

HPU's mascot "Sharky the Sea Warrior" placed second among all national divisions.

The Cheer and Dance Collegiate Championship is the world's largest event with teams from Mexico, Japan and Canada and across the United States.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

FIU Golden Dazzlers Announce Audition Date


The FIU Golden Dazzlers will be holding auditions for the 2008-09 squad at the Pharmed Arena on April 27, 2008.

For complete audition information visit FIU Golden Dazzlers.com

For information on audition clinics click here

Despite Canceled Flight, Dance Team Heads To Nationals

Team members "incredibly grateful" for large grant, private donations

By Kate Shefte
Technician Online

In a time when they should have been putting the final touches on their outfits and routines, the N.C. State Dance team was scrambling to find money for plane tickets. The team purchased their tickets to a national competition in Daytona Beach, Fla., with Skybus, a low-cost carrier that declared bankruptcy late Friday afternoon, and had yet to receive a refund.

"All we're worried about is getting to nationals," Kayla Anderson, a senior in communication, said Sunday. "If we have to walk, we're going to get there."

The team will not have to resort to such desperate measures. Thanks to an outpour of media coverage and public support, the team has raised enough funds to book additional flights on Southwest Airlines and will depart Wednesday morning.

The News and Observer, WRAL and News 14 Carolina were just a few of the media outlets that alerted the public to the dancers' plight, and once the news was out, the donations began pouring in.

"The media coverage has definitely helped," senior captain Lauren Strasser said. "People have called in and wanted to donate and send money to us in checks. The Student Government has tried to help us, and everyone is wanting to help out."

Strasser's father was in contact with Bobby Purcell, executive director of the Wolfpack Club, and Strasser spent most of Monday hammering out details. The team would require even more money in order to purchase tickets at the last minute, but the Wolfpack Club generously donated two times the $3,000 that was initially paid to Skybus.

"It turned out that we were offered $6,000 from him so that we could send the 16 of us that are dancing on the national's stage -- plus our two coaches -- down there tomorrow morning on Southwest airlines," Strasser said. "We're so incredibly grateful for all the help that the Wolfpack Club and Bobby Purcell have given us."

The group of girls left on a chartered bus at 7 a.m. Tuesday morning with State's cheerleading squad, which is headed to Daytona for its own competition this Saturday.

"The only thing that I wish could have been different is that we could all go together, but as long as we get there," senior captain Ashley Beasley said. "It'll be fun. We're really thankful that we can go."

In addition to the help with funds, the team received the support of the NDA, or the National Dance Association. When the group heard about what had happened, they were able to rearrange the team's accommodations.

"They've been working with us with through this whole thing, and the girls that had to go down early because of our situation get to use our hotel room a day early, for free," Beasley said.

According to Beasley, the turbulence that the team has experienced en route to nationals will make them stronger in the competition, saying it added "the extra fuel to our fire."

"I feel like there's a lot of eyes on us now," Beasley said. "All those people, whether they donated 50 cents or $100, want to know that we're making the most of the money they gave us."

The team placed tenth last year at Nationals, with only the top five earning the chance to have their routine performed on national television.

"We're hoping that we can tell everyone that supported us to watch us on CBS in about two weeks," Beasley said.

Beasley's mother, who had intended to fly to Daytona and see her daughter, is now unable to make the trip. With two additional airlines shutting down in the past week alone, the trend does not seem to be correcting itself.

"It's affecting a lot of people across the country, and we're obviously not the only ones," Beasley said.

Red Hotz Dance Team To Compete At Nationals

By KEVIN COPP
Red And Black.com

Club sports teams at the University do not have the financial advantages of varsity teams, but as the Red Hotz competitive dance team leaves for the NDA National Championship, it will be especially shorthanded.

Of the 23 teams competing in its division in Daytona Beach, Fla., the Red Hotz is the only one without a coach.

The 12-member squad has a captain, Kate Nichols, a co-captain, Orian Edelman, and two lieutenants, but the lack of a coach poses logistical problems even in running a routine practice.

The team practiced for the final time before Nationals on Sunday night, with Nichols cuing up the CD, running to her spot in the formation, dancing and trying to critique the routine when it finished.

If it sounds impossible, that's because it is.

Without someone objective to judge its routine, the Red Hotz, more than any other squad at Nationals, must rely on teamwork and individual responsibility.

"I might lead it and get us going, but we all make corrections, we all help each other, and we all make the changes we need," Nichols said.

"It's a group thing, so I never feel like it's all on me."

Unlike most conventional sports, members of the team lack the benefit of getting to judge themselves against the competition on a weekly basis, so their focus has been internal as they try to improve their fourth-place finish in 2007.

"We're definitely ready to go," Nichols said. "It's a very different dance this year, which is a good challenge. We have a lot of variety in this routine."

As the Red Hotz prepare to compete against the likes of Southern Methodist, Western Michigan, West Virginia and 20 others, the hostilities of traditional rivalries will not be present in Daytona.

"There's a mutual respect among all the teams," Edelman said. "It's not a bitter competition. We're all proud of each other."

The Red Hotz will compete in the Open Division I championship, and its preliminary routine will be at 11:14 a.m. Thursday.

Live scoring and a video Webcast are available through Varsity.com. If the Red Hotz team finishes in the top 13 in Thursday's competition, it advances to the finals, which will be held Friday and televised on a tape delay on Fox Sports Net.

The theme for the Red Hotz's 2008 routine is "work," but the Daytona weekend will bring some long-awaited relaxation, win or lose.

"It's a nice treat for a hard year of work," Edelman said.

ISU Competing At Nationals For First Time

By Ben Corn
Indiana Statesman

The Indiana State University Sparkettes will be competing in their first Nationals competition this week.

Tammy Schaffer, the director for the Sparkettes, said this will be a learning experience for the Sparkettes.

"We only know competition through what we've seen on the computer," Schaffer said. "We're going to see how it works. A competition dance team is very different (from a performance dance team)."

Senior officer, Lacey Lindauer, said she has higher goals than just finding out what the competition is like.

"We want to at least make it to the finals," Lindauer said.

The Sparkettes entered as a video bid, which means they weren't at camp and instead sent in a video and qualified for the competition.

The Sparkettes have been getting ready for the competition since August but, with responsibilities at football and basketball games and other appearances, the Sparkettes have just started to really focus within the last month.

Junior officer Whitney Nord said the team is ready to compete.

"We didn't get excited until the past couple of weeks," Nord said. "We're starting to peak now."

Schaffer said the Sparkettes will perform a dance very similar to the style they perform for the ISU community on a regular basis, but it will be done at a "higher level."

Nord said one thing that makes it exciting for the Sparkettes is the fact that they will be performing for an audience that isn't pro-ISU, necessarily. She said that at an ISU sporting event, for example, the applause isn't necessarily earned by the Sparkettes, because it can be earned by the sports team in the same venue.

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Four Sisters, Two Decades of Wisconsin History

From UW Badgers.com

Four sisters. One university. One UW Spirit Squad tradition.

For nearly two decades (1989-2008), a daughter of Joseph (Joe) and Rose Jaucian (HOW-shin) has walked the streets of downtown Madison, attended class near Bascom Hall, relaxed at Memorial Union and sported a UW Spirit Squad uniform.

All four J’s—Jennifer, Josette, Jaimee and Jackie—attended the University of Wisconsin. The sisters, who share a common interest in the sciences, also share a love for performing. Upon arriving on the UW campus, each sister tried out and joined the UW Spirit Squad. The two eldest cheered, while the younger pair danced.

A 14-year age gap separates the oldest sister from the youngest. Jennifer (Jaucian) Siu, a wrestling cheerleader from 1989-92, is 36 years old. Jackie, a member of the UW Dance Team from 2004-08, is the youngest at 22. Josette (Jaucian) Scheer, who cheered from 1992-97, is 34, and Jaimee, who danced from 1999-2003, is 26.

Growing up, the age disparity between the two oldest and the two youngest children, made it difficult for the four girls to develop similar interests, or to even establish a close relationship. When Jennifer left home to enroll at the UW in 1989, the two youngest girls were under the age of 10, and were interested in children’s activities, not Badger athletics.

“By the time I was in college, they were still in elementary school,” current UW Spirit Squad Director, Josette, said. “They were pretty young, so there wasn’t really a close bond between all of us. Back then, we (Jennifer and I) were in our own world, being college students and having fun. We’d go home to visit and hang out with the girls, but there was such a different interest level.”

At the toddler age of three, Jackie began figure skating. By the time she was eight years old, the youngest Jaucian was training and competing in Indianapolis. At the very same time in a different place, her three sisters, too, were absorbed in their own competitive activities.

The Beginning

Joe and Rose Jaucian opened countless doors of opportunity for their daughters when they left the Philippines for the United States in 1974. At the time, Jennifer was three years old, Josette was just six months old and the two youngest had not been born. The Jaucians, who had yet to discover the Wisconsin Badgers, wanted an improved life for their children. Once in the United States, the then-family-of-four settled in Middleton, Wis., where they lived until Josette left for college in 1992, and then moved to Illinois. Somewhere along the way, Bucky Badger became an honorary seventh member of the family.

“Even though my parents did not attend the UW, they are committed Badger fans for life,” Jaimee, now a dance therapist in Chicago, said. “They came to the U.S. from the Philippines to give us a better life, and that’s exactly what they did! They allowed us to choose our own paths, and encouraged us along the way. I will forever be grateful for the opportunities they opened up for us.”

It was also Joe and Rose who first introduced their two oldest daughters to dance, and in turn, performance.

“They always instilled a love of dance in us,” Jennifer said. “When we were younger, Josette and I were very active in a local Filipino dance company. I think that had a lot to do with our interest in dance and cheerleading.”

Jennifer was the first to perform, cheering for wrestling matches and football games in high school. A gymnast, Josette competed through freshman year of high school before switching to cheerleading.

“Once I hit high school, my sister, who was three years older than me at the time (she was a senior when I was a freshman), was into cheerleading and I decided that I wasn’t going to get too far in gymnastics and moved over in cheerleading,” Josette said.

While parents Joe and Rose played a major role in encouraging their daughters to pursue their dreams, eldest sister Jennifer believes she played some role in her sisters’ interest in both cheerleading and the Badgers.

“I like to think I had a big influence on my sisters,” Jennifer said, “but they may not agree. Josette is three years younger, and I was actually her cheerleading coach when she was in high school. It was really fun to see her make the transition from gymnast to cheerleader. I also remember Jaimee and Jackie, who were probably nine and four years old at the time, coming to my wrestling meets and playing in the bleachers.”

Both Jaimee and Jackie agree that while growing up, their biggest role models were Jennifer and Josette, who they wanted to emulate. But while their older sisters concentrated on cheerleading in high school and college, the two youngest sisters chose a different route—competitive figure skating. To supplement figure skating, Jaimee and Jackie also took dance classes, which eventually led to dancing in high school and later at Wisconsin.

“I remember going to wrestling meets when I was younger to watch my older sisters cheer,” Jaimee said. “Jackie had the little cheer outfit and had a UW cheer-themed birthday party in kindergarten. I definitely looked up to them because it seemed like they did it all: excelled in school, pumped up the crowd, had tons of friends and just knew how to enjoy life and have a great time!”

Choosing the UW

The chances of four siblings attending the same university, pursuing the same extra-curricular activities and taking the same courses while working toward similar degrees seems slim-to-none, but that was not the case for Jennifer, Josette, Jaimee and Jackie. While each opted to attend the UW for different reasons, collectively, they simply loved what the University of Wisconsin represented.

Jennifer, the first to attend the UW in the late ‘80s, thought she was lucky to have such a great school so close to her Middleton hometown.

For Josette, education was the primary reason she selected the UW, but its proximity to home was also an important factor.

“I think just growing up in Middleton, a ton of my friends were coming here (to the UW), it was just down the road, it was more convenient and I knew it was a good school,” she said.

Jaimee, who was raised in Champaign, Ill., knew she wanted to go to a Big Ten school, and chose Wisconsin largely because of its well-known history and traditions.

“It was familiar and exciting to me,” she said, “and I knew that being a part of the dance team would be a great way for me to make friends, survive college and continue doing what I love.”

When it was finally Jackie’s turn to leave home, her decision was easy, as the youngest Jaucian never considered an alternative. Growing up in Illinois, she was dubbed the “Wisconsin Girl,” as her preferred clothing-of-choice, Wisconsin Cardinal & White, reflected her inner Badger.

“My parents had a huge impact (on me),” Jackie, who will graduate next year with a bachelor’s degree in zoology next year, said. “They raised me on Wisconsin sports and turned me into a huge Badger fan growing up. My parents always encouraged me and pushed me to work hard on my dancing, so I could make the team here.”

Life on the UW Spirit Squad

While to outsiders, the story of four sisters who all attended Wisconsin and joined the UW Spirit Squad may seem unique and interesting, to the four sisters, their “story” isn’t so much a “story,” but is the only life they have ever known.

The Jaucian sisters have nearly been a part of every significant wrestling, football and/or basketball achievement at Wisconsin over the last 20 years. And while each sister lists “lifelong friendships” as the best part of their UW Spirit Squad experience, it was not a challenge for them to recall a favorite sporting event memory at Wisconsin. The challenge proved to be just picking one.

Jaimee’s favorite memory as a cheerleader took place early in her career at the UW’s final football game of the season in 1999, her freshman year at Wisconsin.

“It was a night game against Iowa and Ron Dayne broke the rushing record, which led to him winning the HeismanTrophy,” she remembered. “Some guy streaked the field and I never felt more excited to lead thousands of screaming fans! We went on to win the Rose Bowl, and even got to dance on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.”

And then there was the 2003 UDA Nationals in Orlando, Fla., her senior year, where after months of preparing a jazz routine to a Prince mix, the UW Dance Team placed second, their highest-ever finish at that time.

“I’ll never forget the rush I felt dancing on that floor with 13 other amazing dancers and close friends, feeding off of everyone’s energy, giving it my all and feeling like ‘we did it,’” she added. “To this day, when random people find out I was in that Prince dance, they say, ‘I saw that dance on ESPN and loved it!’ It’s rewarding to know that what you’ve done and have accomplished, has also impacted someone else out there. People look up to you and are inspired by you, and you don’t even realize it.”

Josette, who is now in her eighth year as Sprit Squad Director at the UW, best remembers the 1994 Rose Bowl when she was a cheerleader.

“The Badgers hadn’t been very successful and were just starting to get better and better every year,” she said. “Just to be a part of that and all the excitement … the whole state of Wisconsin was excited to go to the Rose Bowl. That was definitely the highlight of my cheering career. In my position now as director, it has been exciting to see both football and basketball become so successful, and to be nationally ranked and recognized.”

A Family Tradition

Although it was not deliberate, the Jaucian sisters have created their very own family tradition. A family who at one time hadn’t paid any attention to Badger athletics, quickly became immersed in the Wisconsin Badger culture.

By the time Jennifer completed her stint with the wrestling cheerleading squad after three years and Josette finished her four years of football and basketball cheerleading, parents Joe and Rose were dedicated Badger fans, as were Jaimee and Jackie. Joe, in fact, could be designated “Biggest Fan” in the family, as he now tracks Badger chat rooms conversations, follows Badger blogs, discusses incoming recruits and knows everything in between.

“I remember my first year cheerleading in 1993-94,” Josette said. “My older sister was done and in medical school here, and the youngest two became Badger fans because of us. They knew all the players, would come to all my games and would stand outside the McClain Center trying to get autographs (from the players).”

The six of them were hooked, and still are. Despite their UW Spirit Squad days coming to a close (Jackie’s last performance was on March 5 at the men’s basketball game vs. Penn State), the four sisters will remain loyal Badger fans for life and look forward to passing on their Badger pride to their growing family.

A practicing OB/GYN physician in Seattle, Jennifer is married to Gregg and together they have three-year-old Aidan (who already knows Bucky and shouts ‘Go Badgers’) and seven-month-old Kaila. Josette’s husband Derek (a former UW swimmer) proposed at a football game in 1996 using the UW cheerleaders to spell out “Josette, Will You Marry Me?” with their signs. Together they have three-year-old twin girls, Natalie and Madelyn, and are expecting another girl in the fall. Jaimee recently got engaged to fiancé, Jude.

“I think we have all definitely developed a love for Badger athletics and enjoy games and the whole atmosphere,” Josette said. “Even though no one will be actively participating in the game anymore besides me with my job, they will all still want to come to games and be a part of it.”

The Jaucian family even has personalized bricks outside the Shell near Camp Randall Stadium, as Jackie says, “to imprint our legacy” at Wisconsin. Ultimately, though, the bond among four sisters and their family is something that can’t be physically represented.

“The stories and memories that we share (are the best part of this tradition),” Jaimee said. “Not only are we sisters, but we all went through the UW Spirit Squad, so we’ll always be connected through a common love for performing. Even though we are all spread out in age, we can recall the same events and venues that we cheered/danced at, the times we polkaed with Bucky and how the spirit squad has evolved.”

“The best part is that the four of us share something special that other people don’t quite understand,” added Jackie. “All four of us know that feeling of what it’s like to cheer on the Badgers in front of the greatest college sports fans in the nation!”

Erin Starck

UST Dance Team Auditions Start Monday, April 7

St. Thomas.edu

All sessions will be held in the third-floor gymnasium of O'Shaughnessy Hall athletic building, which is located next to the stadium at the corner of Summit and Cretin avenues on the St. Paul campus. Arrive early and in appropriate dance attire.

Audition Schedule

6:30-9:30 p.m. Monday, April 7
6:30-9:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 9 (first round cuts)
6:30-9:30 p.m. Friday, April 11
Interviews will be held at a time to be determined Saturday, April 12
Noon-5 p.m. Sunday, April 13 (final audition)
General requirements

Candidates must bring these items to the first day of auditions:

Individual photo – a current head shot or full body shot; can be dance-related or a photo of you in street clothes
Dance résumé – list your dance history and accomplishments
Candidates will be evaluated on a high level of overall flexibility, extension, control and body awareness. Along with individually performed skills, each candidate will be required to execute three across-the-floor combinations learned at auditions.

Routines will be taught on audition days one and two, Monday and Wednesday, April 7 and 9. Each routine is approximately one minute in length. Candidates will perform in small and large groups and will be evaluated on conformity to style, attention to detail, ability to quickly learn material, performance and overall execution.