澳门二分彩

Let鈥檚 Dance

NOVAdance partners with the B+ Foundation to support families of kids with cancer nationwide

By Meg Maxwell

A hip-hop dancer performing on stage surrounded by a group of Villanova students
The fun, and the dancing, continued well after the sun went down at this year鈥檚 鈥淓mbrace Each Adventure鈥 dance marathon, with students break dancing under the moonlight on an outdoor stage at Mendel Field. (Photo: Noah Seng DeLong)

Moving from the confines of the Jake Nevin Field House to three separate outdoor locations, NOVAdance鈥檚 8th annual 12-hour dance marathon looked different this year鈥攂ut was just as successful as ever.听

Complete with games, food trucks and lots of dancing, the year-end fundraiser brought the student group鈥檚 2020-21 fundraising campaign total to nearly half a million dollars: .听

But it鈥檚 the cause, not the dollar amount, that matters most, agree Co-Executive Directors McKenzie Mix CLAS 鈥21 and Katie Connolly CLAS 鈥21. All of the proceeds benefit the (pronounced 鈥淏e Positive鈥) Foundation, the largest provider of financial assistance to families of kids with cancer nationwide.听

鈥淲e do set goals each year,鈥 McKenzie explains. 鈥淏ut whether we come close to those goals, hit them or exceed them, all of that money helps families who need it.鈥 With the average B+ Foundation grant totaling $1,000, that means this year鈥檚 NOVAdance fundraising has the potential to impact as many as 481 families.听

Since 2013, the Villanova student group has raised more than $2.46 million for the B+ Foundation鈥攁 remarkable feat that B+ recognized this year by awarding a research grant in NOVAdance鈥檚 honor. The two-year, $150,000 grant supports the work of Sofia de Oliveira, PhD, a researcher at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York who is studying fibrolamellar carcinoma (liver cancer).听

And the work continues. During this unpredictable year, NOVAdance stayed true to the 鈥渂e positive鈥 mentality and reimagined its most popular events. Silent discos鈥攄ance parties where music is piped directly into headsets worn by participants鈥攚ere moved outside to the plaza around the Oreo. Students went 鈥渃anning鈥 virtually, sending appeals to friends and family through email and social media. And a full third of the Villanova undergraduate population鈥2,000 students鈥攕igned up to participate in this year鈥檚 鈥淓mbrace Each Adventure鈥 dance marathon in some capacity.

鈥淲ho knows? The NOVAdance of the future might always look more like this one,鈥 Katie says. 鈥淢aybe this unusual year was the opportunity for growth that no one saw coming in the first place.鈥

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