Page 136 - CBA 1993 YEARBOOK
P. 136

 The Sport of Cheerleading
any people still support our athletes, they
don't consider the themselves are serious ath­
letes who compete with other
cheerleading
squad as a "team" and their squads in competitions
M
athletic
contribution
a
"sport." Yet, the cheerlead­ past five years, the CBA
ers work as hard as any oth­ cheerleaders have partici­
er sports team. In tact, they
are the only team whose sea­
pated in the LeMoyne com­
petition. Each time, they have
son lasts from August until been victorious in both the
March.
Much of their hard work
cheer and dance divisions.
So the next time you hear
goes unnoticed. They are at people say they think of
every football and basket­ cheerleading as only a side­
ball game; they are the line show at the games, tell
team's most faithful fans. Not
only do the cheerleaders
132 Academy
throughout the year. For the
them . . . to think again.
Varsity Cheerleading: Row 1; S. Kaminski,
K, Tucci, L. Tornabene, A. Wangerman. Row
2; L. Lucas, C. Finelli, S. Gormel, B. De-
Lorenzo, K. Luckie-Anderson.


































































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