After 30 years spent as a human resource manager, Alvin Webre accepted a company buyout and headed off into the sunset of retirement. However, the much slower pace of retirement had Webre looking around for something to fill the too-idle days.
His children were grown and living their own lives. His rescue dog, Cosmo (named for the Seinfeld character Cosmo Kramer), kept him on is toes, but he needed more.
Webre pulled out his college transcript from the Ā鶹ŹÓʵappĻĀŌŲ and noticed a pattern.
āI had a lot of accounting courses from UNO,ā said Webre, who attended the Ā鶹ŹÓʵappĻĀŌŲ for a year in 1978. āI figured Iād just close the gap and get a degree in accounting. Iāll repurpose myself.ā
On Friday, Dec. 8āfour days shy of his 74th birthdayāWebre will be among the hundreds of students participating in the Ā鶹ŹÓʵappĻĀŌŲ fall commencement ceremony at the Lakefront Arena.
āI will be graduatingāif I pass these last two classes,ā Webre said with a laugh. He currently has two As and figures he will be āOKā if he gets a B on his exams.
Webre, who is taking final exams, is set to earn his second bachelorās degree. He received his first degree in business and finance in 1971 from what was then the University of Southwestern Louisiana, now called the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
After graduation, Webre served in the Air Force for a seven-year stint, a portion of which included flying missions as a navigator aboard a B-52 bomber during the Vietnam War, he said.
āMy unit was assigned to U-Tapao, Thailand to fly sorties to north Vietnam, Hanoi and Haiphong,ā Webre said. āI have well over 1,500 hours in the air.ā
When hearing loss threatened to ground him, Webre opted to leave the military for civilian life. He became a āone-man bandā as a regional human resource officer for FedEx based in New Orleans. A decade ago, he took the company buyout and retired at 64.
āI didnāt know what to do with myself,ā Webre said. āNo business meetings. No crisis. No conference calls.ā
He has always enjoyed teaching and learning and had taught training courses as part of his HR duties, Webre said.
He decided to enroll at UNO nearly four years ago and has worked hard and studied even harder, Webre said. Part of that drive comes from his military training that instilled a sense of structure and desire for excellence, he said.
The other part comes from a desire to set an example for his five grandchildren who think it is great that āGrandpa is in schoolā just like they are, Webre said.
āThey ask, āGrandpa, do you have teachers that make you work a lot?ā I said, āYeah.ā āDo you take tests?ā I said, āYeah.ā āHave you failed any tests?ā I said, āNooo, and I donāt want you failing any tests either!āā
While Webre finds numbers fascinating, his accounting courses became increasingly difficult as he progressed through the degree program, he said.
āMuch to my dismay, I found out that as you go along, it gets a lot tougher,ā Webre said. āMy advice to students is that when you feel discourage, pick yourself up and keep on going, because thatās the only way youāre going to realize success.ā
Meanwhile, just as many of his fellow graduates are doing, Webre is considering his next steps.
āEither I take the CPA exam, or I get my masterās degree in tax accounting,ā Webre said. āIād like to get a CPA and go back to work because retirement just isnāt for me. I canāt just sit around the house.ā
There is one decision Webre already has made regarding his UNO diploma.
āIām going to give it to my grandchildren,ā Webre said. āSo that they can always remind themselves that no matter how old you are, you can always achieve something, and you should never quit.ā