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January 4, 2009
Paralegal taking life in new direction at 67
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She started at $180 a month, and she was thrilled to get it.

That's how long ago it was.

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School photo shows Carolyn Scharf at age 11 in the eighth grade.
She couldn't use an electric typewriter. "In high school, we just had the old manual typewriters. We didn't have calculators either."

That's how long ago it was.

Phones with more than one line? She had no idea how that worked.

When a Charleston law office hired her, she didn't think she'd last a day.

"He dictated a contract. I tried to type it on an electric typewriter. I had K's and L's all through it because I was used to resting my fingers on 'home row.' I thought he was going to tell me not to come back."

He said no such thing.

In fact, she lasted 50 years.

On Wednesday, Carolyn Scharf wrapped up half a century with Pauley Curry Sturgeon and Vanderford.

At 67, age is reason enough to hang it up. But that's not why she's retiring. "I need to do something else," she said. "I want to go back to college."

College? At 67?

In 1998, she started working on a Board of Regents bachelor of arts degree at West Virginia State. "I want to finish that degree," she said. "That's been a goal of mine all my life."

Scharf spent most of her time at the law firm as Arden Curry's right hand. "I was a single mother with a 21/2-month-old son. The Currys made me part of their family. I babysat their children. His oldest son was 31/2 when I came to work. Now he's a partner in the firm. So is his daughter. She wasn't even born yet. Their other son is a dentist in St. Louis.

"Retiring will be like the separation of a family."

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