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Tuesday, August 9, 2011

As state nears centennial, 800 'been there'


Will Miles Clark turns 107 next week — four years before his current driver’s license expires. Clark, who said he still gets behind the wheel, is one of a growing number of centenarians in Arizona, which had 832 people over age 100 in the last census. (Photo courtesy Max Clark)

By NICK NEWMAN
Cronkite News Service

WASHINGTON – There was no way Will Miles Clark was going to let his family stop him from driving over the new Hoover Dam Bypass last year, but he did make one concession.

The 106-year-old Oro Valley resident agreed to let his son ride shotgun.

Clark, who turns 107 on Aug. 17, said it wasn’t long before other motorists started “going bonkers” at the sight of a centenarian behind the wheel.

Maybe they should get used to it: Clark represents a growing wave of Arizona residents over age 100, according to the 2010 U.S. Census. It said there were 832 centenarians in the state in 2010, a 27 percent increase from 2000.

Gerontologists offer different explanations for the increase in Arizona’s oldest of the old.

Anne Morrison, director of education for the University of Arizona’s Center on Aging, thinks it has something to do with what the state’s centenarians have been through in their long lives up to this point.

“Once they’ve hit 85, the healthy ones have shown they’re strong enough to overcome problems,” Morrison said. “If something hasn’t taken them before that, they’re good beyond 100.”

She said the elderly Native American population is especially resilient. Other experts pointed to advances in medical technology, as well as the climate. Morrison said something simple as the lack of colder weather can help lengthen a life because there are fewer accidents involving falls.

It’s not just an Arizona phenomenon. Dennis Garvey, director of the Center for Successful Aging at Yavapai College in Prescott, pointed to the birthday shout-outs Willard Scott does on NBC’s “Today” show.

“A long time ago, he used to do birthdays for anyone at 65. Then it rose to 80,” Garvey said. “But soon, he had to increase it to 100. There are so many people 85 and over in this country, that it’s not a celebration any more.”

While the number of centenarians have changed, so too have the 100-year-olds themselves.

“They’re starting to experience the vulnerabilities of aging, but they’re camping, hiking, biking. It’s a huge bonus to the state,” said Melanie Starns, assistant director of the Arizona Department of Economic Service’s Aging and Adult Services division.

And whether it’s Clark — a big fan of Google — or others using Skype, iPhones or iPads, even the most aged aren’t living like they used to.

“I see so many older people trying to see menus at restaurants by using their iPhone and iPad lights,” Starns said.

Clark said he learned how to use a computer for the first time for his 105th birthday and found too many things to Google to stay bored. He said he got rid of his encyclopedias in favor of the search engine.

“I look some crazy things up. I look up someone in sports, or learn about an artist,” he said. “The other day, I was thinking about the people who come here to see birds, and I looked up the hummingbird capital of the world. Did you know it’s in Arizona?”

Clark, who drove with his wife until she died at age 103, rode in a a horse-and-buggy as a child in rural Iowa. The Model T was popular when he was studying dentistry at Creighton, and he retired from practice the year after President Kennedy was shot. He’s seen the invention of cars, televisions, refrigeration, nuclear weapons and airplanes.

“But the most amazing thing is these cell phones,” said Clark, who plans to drive to Creighton with his family to be honored at the dental school this month.

“I think about those kids with those things, and they can show pictures,” he said. “And that texting: how do they drive and do that at the same time?”


SIDEBAR: Older growing

The number of Arizona residents age 100 or older rose 27 percent from 2000 to 2010.

Age 100-104: 598 residents in 2000; 772 in 2010

Age 105-109: 42 in 2000; 53 in 2010

Age 110 and up: 14 in 2000; 7 in 2010

Total 100+: 654 in 2000; 832 in 2010


Source: 2010 Census

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