It was hard to tell what the Palmetto Boys' and Girls' State
delegates were more excited about -- the inauguration of their newly
elected officials or the presence of the opposite sex.
The joint ceremony on the State House steps Friday marked the
culmination of a weeklong immersion into the political process for
1,300 rising high school seniors. The Citadel-based Boys' State and
the Columbia College-based Girls' State were meeting for the first
time.
It had been a week full of serious business. Students honed their
public speaking and leadership skills as they debated issues, ran
for office and organized mock political parties, courts and
legislatures.
But teens will be teens, and some spirit of social mixing also
filled the air.
"Ever since we got to The Citadel, a place with no air
conditioning, all we have thought about was air conditioning and
you, Girls' State," Boys' State governor Duy Nguyen announced to
raucous cheers.
Even Gov. Mark Sanford jokingly asked the crowd "if this was a
leadership program or a dating service?"
The event also featured plenty of patriotic songs, speeches and
the solemn swearing-in of the Boys' and Girls' State officials, who
were escorted down the State house steps with their real-life
government counterparts. The delegates' parents proudly watched,
video cameras rolling.
The annual leadership camp is sponsored by the American Legion
and American Legion Auxiliary.
Girls' State governor Anna Ready, from Emerald High in Greenwood,
called the week "unforgettable."
"It's such an honor to do something that I love and have a
passion for," she told the crowd.
Speeches from the student governors and lieutenant governors were
followed by a motivational speech from Sanford, who urged the teens
to chart their own course and dream big.
The week was an empowering experience for many of the politically
savvy youth.
"For the first time ever, I realize that we're young, but we're
mature, and we understand state politics," said Nguyen, a rising
senior at the Governor's School for Math and Science in H .
Nguyen said he went into Boys' State with his sights set on the
governor's position.
"I was aiming high," he said.
As a gubernatorial candidate, Nguyen promised to cut back on
government bureaucracy, increase terrorism prevention and give more
control to local school districts.
Boys' State lieutenant governor Desmond Body said the week of
campaigning taught him the value of perseverance.
"You need to always try," the Rock Hill High student said. "I ran
for everything and always failed until now."
Carol McGrady said Girls' State was an invaluable experience for
her daughter, Marice, a rising senior at Richland Northeast
High.
"I knew she had a wonderful time when she didn't call home,"
McGrady
said.