“I think it was a great display of the diversity of the state, the issues affecting those in the state, and a voice for the will of the people. With so many different people involved, representing so many various identities and organizations, we truly displayed the essence of collective liberation that #UTDiversityMatters believe in.” Johnathan Clayton, senior and member of UT Diversity Matters Coalition >>See page 4 for a full story on the UT Diversity Matters Coalition rally in Nashville.
Ashley Boles, sophomore in kinesiology, opens while the rest of the BOSS Dance Company become the background. Alex Phillips • The Daily Beacon
BOSS Dance Company brings the rhythm back to UT JoAnna Brooker Contributor
The members of the BOSS Dance Company rehearsed in the Clarence Brown Theatre on March 7, 2016. Alex Phillips • The Daily Beacon
Volume 131 Issue 38
As one of the top five student-run organizations on campus, BOSS Dance Company was founded to set an example in self-sufficiency. In fact, that is what they stand for; BOSS is an acronym for Building Opportunities for SelfSufficiency. Why does a student organization feel the need to be entirely self-sufficient? BOSS has a reason. In 2008, the University of Tennessee cut the Dance department due to budget cuts. Unwilling
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to let the spirit of dance die, in 2010, the Dance Society at UT created BOSS Dance Company to provide students with both technique classes and opportunities to perform dance for the general public. Six years later, BOSS Dance Company has nearly doubled in size, and with a company made up of over 40 freshmen alone, dance is definitely alive and thriving. “A lot of people thought BOSS wasn’t going to make it in the first year, maybe two,” ballet choreographer for BOSS Lindsay Bacon said, “but everyone’s surprised we’ve made it six.” See BOSS DANCE COMPANY on Page 5
Wednesday, March 9, 2016