John Lenehan, now 88, is no stranger to Fordham. He started college there in 1956.
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Most students don their cap and gown for pomp and circumstance after four or maybe five years. But in this case, well, he took his time.
Lenehan, a veteran of the Korean War, intended to finish college. But had to quit when he got a good job out of town.
"I was short 28 credits," he said.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE | 87-year-old heading back to school to finish degree at Fordham University
87-year-old heading back to school to finish degree at Fordham
Still, he had a successful career and a beautiful family, but there was just something missing. One morning, at 86 years old, he made an announcement to his wife.
"'I'm going back to Fordham,'" Lillian Lenehan remembered him saying. "OK. What a good idea."
So Lenehan asked the school if he could come back.
On Friday, Lenehan rang the bell at a ceremony for veterans graduating this year, all a bit younger. And on Saturday, he finally gets his diploma.
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"It's never too late," he said.
That need to tidy up lose ends, to honor the lifelong pursuit of knowledge, is just hard wired in some. Just a few years ago, six years ago to the day, in fact, Eyewitness News anchor Bill Ritter, who was kicked out of a Southern California university because of an anti war protest in 1972, his passion as big as his hair, got his college degree.
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His family was there that day, and Lenehan's will be there Saturday. There's a lot to celebrate.
"It took 65 years, but I finally get it tomorrow," he said.
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