NewsDecember 28, 2016
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Nearly 80 years after he dropped out of high school, Walter Rolley Jr. of Columbia has his diploma, at age 97. The Columbia Missourian reported Rolley wore a royal blue cap and gown last week in receiving his diploma at the historic J.W. "Blind" Boone Home. Columbia Public Schools superintendent Peter Stiepleman read a quote by Frederick Douglass in honoring Rolley: "Without a struggle, there can be no progress."...
Associated Press

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Nearly 80 years after he dropped out of high school, Walter Rolley Jr. of Columbia has his diploma, at age 97.

The Columbia Missourian reported Rolley wore a royal blue cap and gown last week in receiving his diploma at the historic J.W. "Blind" Boone Home. Columbia Public Schools superintendent Peter Stiepleman read a quote by Frederick Douglass in honoring Rolley: "Without a struggle, there can be no progress."

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Rolley left high school in 1937 to go to work. A few years later, he joined the Army during World War II. He never went back to finish his education.

State lawmakers in 2001 adopted a statute known as Operation Recognition, which grants honorary high-school diplomas to veterans and civilian prisoners of war.

Information from: Columbia Missourian, http://www.columbiamissourian.com

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