Cheerleaders redefine on-campus spirit

City College’s cheerleaders are doing more than just cheer at football and basketball games, and they are involving themselves in more than athletics.

By Matthew Gomez
The Guardsman

City  College’s cheerleaders are doing more than just cheer at football and  basketball games, and they are involving themselves in more than  athletics.

As much as they already do around campus, they hope to do even more.

While  they enjoy supporting the school’s athletes, the cheerleading squad  also wants to support the students and City College itself.

“We  try to be as involved as we can,” said captain and president Nazdira  Hamden. “We kind of do a little bit of everything on campus.”

Cheerleading  isn’t an official program at City College. As a club, the cheerleaders  must do their own fundraising to take trips and put on events, Hamden  said.

They  ran a booth at FRISCO Day April 29, where some of the cheerleaders  welcomed visiting high school students and hoped to recruit a few new  faces.

At  the spring concert held last weekend at the Diego Rivera Theatre, they  performed a new routine for the attendees, Hamden said.

Cheerleader  Angela Jensen, who was at Frisco Friday, said she was also very  involved with the other cheerleaders during Breast Cancer Awareness  Month. They held a raffle and donated half of the proceeds to the  National Breast Cancer Foundation.

“We are kind of trying to reach out to all students, not just athletics,” Hamden said.

She also said that a group of cheerleaders attended the March in March rallies in Sacramento last year.

From  cheering for the athletic teams to being a face for City College, their  efforts were noticed by the Inter Club Council, which presented them  with an excellence award.

“Being on the team helps you learn how to be part of a team family,” said Chelsea Chace, who began cheering this semester.

Email:
mgomez@theguardsman.com