Program
Welcoming
Kenny Carr and The Tigers performance
Thorne Compton, USC Bicentennial Executive Committee Chair
Alex English, Master of Ceremonies, USC Board of Trustees
Capital City Chorale Performing Arts Foundation performance
John R. Stevenson,  former superintendent of Richland School District One
Kenny Carr and The Tigers performance
Elaina Betts, Richland School District Two
Susan Aude Fisher, WIS News         
Kenny Carr and The Tigers, Kelly McGlenn (as grandmomma) and the Cross Barriers performance
Kenny Carr and The Tigers performance
Emily Dixon, Richland School District One
Capital City Chorale Performing Arts Foundation performance
Kara Monk, University of South Carolina
Kenny Carr and The Tigers performance
Angela Ewing-Boyd, Palmetto Project
Kenny Carr and The Tigers performance
We wish to acknowledge our honored teachers:  Evangline Mance (Alston School, Summerville),
                                 Michele Shamlin (Fulmer Middle School),  J.  Bruce Carlock (Erskine College), Carol
                                 McAlpin (Dreher High School),  Annette Walker (Lower Richland High School)
Sponsored by the USC Bicentennial Commission and College of Education's Museum of
                                 Education with support from the University of South Carolina’s African American Studies
                                 Program, Department of English, Multicultural Student Affairs, Women’s Studies Program,
                                 and special funding by  Dr.  John Hawley.
CAROLINA SHOUT!: Thoughts and Reflections 
by William Ayers, University of Illinois-Chicago
I knew I would be there from the start, because Craig Kridel had asked me to be there
                                 and I always try to do what Craig Kridel asks me to do.
And I figured it would be different because, well, because Craig Kridel is always
                                 and every time a bit of a surprise for me, and because he wrote to tell me that the
                                 SHOUT would be special, and also because when he called to update me on things, the
                                 SHOUT was always and urgently upper-case, even if he whispered it, even if he slid
                                 it in sideways and slow. THE SHOUT.
But, CAROLINA SHOUT?
I had no idea.
It began as it should have begun—old friendships renewed, some time to catch up and
                                 catch on, good connections remembered and remade. There was conversation, then, with
                                 students and faculty from the University of South Carolina, with schoolteachers from
                                 nearby cities and towns, with a few guests from far away. We were coming together
                                 on some common ground—in celebration of teaching and teachers, certainly, and in recognition
                                 of the ethical dimension of this most propulsive calling of callings—we were creating
                                 a shared vocabulary to mark this moment as unique and to carry us beyond as well,
                                 and we were—each of us, I think—wondering and wandering.
CAROLINA SHOUT!
The first happy shock for me was meeting Louise DeSalvo who is as smart and feisty
                                 close up as she is in her many fine books, but also sassy and sexy in person. Louise
                                 talked about writing our lives as acts of assent and affirmation, as participatory
                                 and potentially liberatory events, as sometimes subversive but also at their best
                                 authentic and authenticating. She talked about knowing our students to the extent
                                 that they want to be known—no more—and about resisting the perverse and pernicious
                                 stance of “Let me find out all about your life while I’m busy avoiding finding out
                                 about my own.” Louise embodied for me doing education in a dangerous world—education
                                 as emancipation. She found ways to embrace and challenge those of us around her with
                                 a single gesture, and watching her quick and critical mind at work took my breath
                                 away. I was entirely enthralled. 
SHOUT! SHOUT!
Meeting Cleveland Sellers after a span of more than thirty years—a lot of water under
                                 that bridge, a whole lot of water—also took my breath away. I remembered Cleve as
                                 a brilliant and courageous field secretary of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
                                 Committee (SNCC), a teacher and an organizer who embodied a belief in the ability
                                 of ordinary people to accomplish extraordinary things whenever they name the obstacles
                                 to their freedom and join hands in a collective effort of repair. Cleve was about
                                 simple justice then, the right of people to make the decisions that affect their lives,
                                 the vision of a humanity united in cooperation and peace. And now here he was a professor,
                                 an historian, but still with his mind and his heart and his eyes set on freedom. Seeing
                                 him reminded me of the danger of looking backward with a kind of anesthetizing nostalgia—even
                                 if the intent seems beneficent—when there’s so much more to be done, and we talked
                                 about rejecting the construction of “the sixties” as a straightforward narrative with
                                 a message of obvious progress and a neat conclusion. There’s so much more to be done. 
SHOUT!
The evening was wet and drippy, and we ducked under newspapers or umbrellas rushing
                                 to coffee and dinner and then off to the big event: gospel choirs, step teams, shout-outs
                                 for teachers and teaching, soloists, and Kenny Carr and the Tigers.
Kenny Carr is a big man with a big smile and big heart. When we met, he gathered me
                                 into a big hug and squeezed hard. My breath left me again. He was strong and spirited
                                 and full of energy, ready to shout.
The hall was filling up and the air crackling when Craig Kridel passed me a hand-held
                                 mic, and I delivered my well-rehearsed line: “Welcome, friends, to CAROLINA SHOUT!
                                 Kenny… Hit it!”
The Tigers hit the down beat in full growl, and suddenly we were soaring with horns
                                 blaring into thin air—clapping, stomping, moaning, swinging, shouting out loud. The
                                 rhythm had a point—a celebration of teachers who changed our lives, their spirits
                                 summoned and their lives praised—and a counter-point—art that erupts, disrupts, touches
                                 our souls and our dreams, carries us across boundaries and borders into places we’d
                                 never before imagined. I felt transformed, sweat mingled with tears, your slap echoed
                                 in my head, my stomp joined with your step, and my blood quickened.
CAROLINA SHOUT!
CAROLINA SHOUT!
Thank you, Carolina, thank you.