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89 year old finally receives college degree


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89 year old Charlie Ball of North Little Rock, seen here with his family, received his degree this weekend, 71 years after he stsarted college.
World War II veteran finally receives his degree
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Updated: 5/12/2012 4:33 pm Published: 5/12/2012 4:27 pm
RUSSELLVILLE, AR - Charlie Ball has made good use of his first 89 years. He served his country as a World War II fighter pilot. He was successful in business ventures as varied as dry cleaning, real estate and insurance. He has perfect attendance for weekly Kiwanis Club meetings after 62 years with the organization. He and his wife of 57 years, Dora, raised two sons and have been blessed with five grandchildren.

Today, Charlie Ball has another reason to be proud, his college degree. Charlie was one of the more than 1000 students receiving their degrees in Arkansas Tech commencement ceremonies.

It was a long-time goal for Charlie Ball he only recently realized was within reach. A few months ago, Ball saw a television advertisement for the Arkansas Tech University Accelerated Degree Program, which offers individuals with 60 or more transferable credit hours an opportunity to complete a bachelor’s degree within 18 months. He made note of the telephone number in the ad and called to see what he would need to do to complete his degree. After a review of his transcripts, Ball learned he had already accumulated enough hours to graduate with the Bachelor of Professional Studies degree in public relations.
The 89-year old North Little Rock resident walked with his fellow members of the Arkansas Tech Class of 2012 during a 2 p.m. commencement ceremony at John E. Tucker Coliseum in Russellville, today, Saturday, May 12.

“I really couldn’t believe it,” said Ball when he learned he had earned a college degree. “I had to call a couple of times and make sure.”

Ball’s path to college graduation began 75 years ago with a newspaper route. The Batesville Guard paid him $5 per month, and for 32 consecutive months he used every penny of those earnings to pay off a $160 trumpet from Shook Music Company in Batesville.
It turned out to be a good investment. Ball used that trumpet to earn a spot with The Continentals, a dance band at nearby Arkansas College (now Lyon College). He parlayed that experience into a music scholarship at Arkansas Tech, and in the fall of 1941 he arrived in Russellville.

Ball joined a dance band named The Techsters and took a job raising and lowering the flag outside Williamson Hall for $5 per month. If one of his dance band gigs took him out of town, he would sub-contract the flag duties to his roommate for 25 cents per day.

“Five dollars…that was good money back in those days,” said Ball. “Before the war in 1941, no one had any money.”

Those carefree college days were interrupted in December 1941. “I remember we were all sitting in the old armory (now known as the Stroupe Building) when (Franklin D.) Roosevelt said the only thing we have to fear is fear itself,” said Ball. In a matter of weeks, Ball was in Texas learning how to be a fighter pilot for the U.S. Army Air Forces.

“When you’re 19 years old, there isn’t such a thing as danger,” said Ball. “You don’t know danger. You got in your fighter, said your prayer and took off. You didn’t think anything about it. I didn’t.” After two years of training, Ball was deployed to England in 1944. His job was to clear the way for bombers as Allied forces secured victory in the European Theater.

Ball returned to Arkansas Tech on the G.I. Bill after the war. He transferred to the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville to study electrical engineering. There he returned to the dance band scene as a member of The Collegians. “When I was young and playing in those dance bands, I was really just going to school on the side instead of the other way around,” said Ball.

He completed the course work in his major field of study, but he stopped short of graduating so that he could move to North Little Rock and join his father, Cecil, in a dry cleaning business. Ball spent two decades in that field before transitioning to a second career as a real estate broker and insurance agent. These days he keeps himself busy by working part-time at a North Little Rock pharmacy.

Now, 71 years after he first enrolled at Arkansas Tech, he has his college degree.

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Lilred - 5/13/2012 7:22 AM
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My family and I belong to the Kiwanis and know Charlie very well. Charlie was awarded perfect attendance for 62 years of dedication. Charlie is an example to us all and we are all so proud of him!!!! Thank you Charlie for giving us all hope and showing us that age has no value. "You're never to old to accomplish your dreams".

Babyarm - 5/12/2012 6:42 PM
0 Votes
Gives me hope to do things for myself as well. I am at retiring age but under the 89 years old so world look out here I come.
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