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BYU DANCE CAMPS
shake your booty at a dance workshop
PROVO, UTAH
I could have spread my wings and done a thousand things I've never done
before.
—Eliza Doolittle, My Fair Lady
10 | If, like Eliza Doolittle, you could dance all night and still beg for more, consider en-
rolling in one of Brigham Young University's Dance Camps. For more than 25 years, BYU
has been offering summer dance instruction in ballroom, ballet, tap, and other popular dance
forms. The price for a five-day workshop is less than you'd pay for an eight-week Arthur Mur-
ray class that only meets Thursday nights. And in your free time, you can explore Salt Lake
City and the beautiful Wasatch Mountains.
The Adult Ballroom Dancing Camp, directed by Lee and Linda Wakefield, 18-time win-
ners of the British Formation Championships, includes up to seven hours of daily dance in-
struction, a midweek banquet, and a closing awards ceremony and showcase where you show
off what you've learned. If you're paying attention, you will have learned international jive,
American-style tango, the cha-cha, the rumba, the waltz, and the West Coast swing.
Tuition for the dance camps ranges from $189 for the three-day tap camp to $390 for the
five-day ballroom camp. Packages for food and housing can be arranged on campus for $71
for the three-day camp to $175 for the five-day package.
WHILE YOU'RE THERE
BYU's Harold B. Lee Library, ranked fourth by the Princeton Review on its Great
College Library list, has more than six million items in its collections, contains 98
miles of shelving, and can seat 4,600 people.
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