John Harrell was serving his second tour in Iraq, and soon headed
for home, when it happened. Harrell, a Marine machine gun squad
leader, had been selected to go out as a senior leader to show the
relief battalion an observation post. The group was only 200 meters
from the post when an improvised explosive device (IED) detonated
near their vehicle.
“The driver was new, and he did not swerve past it,” Harrell said.
Shrapnel from the blast hit Harrell on the head, the back of the
shoulder, and in his back.
“The lights went out for a second, but then I got my rifle,” he said. “I had a piece of metal sticking three-inches into my brain. I was bleeding profusely, and I took it out and the bleeding stopped. I wasn’t sure if I would live through it. It was all I could do to remain conscious.”
Harrell’s injuries in Iraq would bring him home with a Purple
Heart and several other military awards. It also gave him a new
direction in life. What had begun as a part-time job during college
would now become his chosen course of study at a new college and
ultimately will lead him to a new career.
Harrell was born and raised in Faulkner, Miss. near the town of
Ripley. The 29-year old and his two siblings were some of the first
homeschooled children in the state. ”It was a great
experience for me,” he said. After he finished high school he
went to Northeast Mississippi Community College for a couple of
years studying Business Administration, but he did not complete a
degree. It was during that time that he began working as an auto
mechanic part time.
Early in 2001, he was working in Memphis and decided a military
career might be best. “I was interested in the Marine Corps
and had talked to a recruiter at Northeast. I signed up, but a knee
injury prevented me from going to boot camp right away, so I put it
on the back burner,” Harrell said.
Then Sept. 11 happened. “Nine/eleven changed my attitude. I
thought it was something I needed to do. I was answering a call. I
just wanted to give my service for my country,” Harrell
said.
Even though he had scored highly enough on the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) to have any job he wanted, he opted for the Infantry. “I wanted to go into the Infantry. I had a real commitment to that because of what happened.”
After boot camp and Infantry school in San Diego, Harrell was on
his way to the Middle East. He was involved in the initial invasion
from the southern border and the east, and saw action leading up to
the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime. He also served in
Fallujah, one of the worst areas in Iraq.
“Every time we would go out, there were lots of IEDs and mortars in the areas we were in. I had plenty of near misses while I was there,” he said.
After the IED hit the vehicle Harrell was in, he was transported to
a medical facility in Fallujah. “The first doctors did not
realize how deep my head wound was. There was a lot of swelling in
the brain,” Harrell said. He was sent to Germany and taken
immediately to surgery by an American brain surgeon who was
volunteering his service to the military.
That surgeon recognized Harrell’s situation and basically saved his life. Harrell returned to the U.S., was discharged with a medical retirement, and got married within a week. He moved back to the Ripley area. He and his wife are the parents of a daughter, Leah.
After working for himself as a handyman, he decided he wanted to
return to working in the auto industry. He heard about the Chrysler
College Automotive Program (CAP) at Northwest Mississippi Community
College after asking around at several dealerships. “A couple
of them told me what a good program it was, so I decided to give it
a try,” Harrell said. After speaking with Northwest CAP
instructor, David Yount, he was accepted into the program and began
attending Northwest in August, 2007.
“I really like the program. Mr. Yount is a wealth of
knowledge and the Chrysler program is a good course. It keeps you
busy, and you are always learning,” Harrell said. CAP
students are screened in areas such as work ethic, ACT scores and
grade point average before they can enter the program.
Students spend their first semester in the classroom before they go
to a dealership for a paid internship where they work under a
mentor. Curriculum is constantly being updated to remain consistent
with Chrysler technology. Students in the CAP program complete all
requirements in all technical and general academic courses and will
earn an Associate of Applied Science degree. Chrysler is the only
automotive program that mandates students have an associate degree,
according to Yount.
Some of the classes Harrell took at Northeast will transfer, and he
hopes to complete his associate degree in Business Administration
as well as complete the CAP requirements.
Harrell was named to the President’s List his first semester. Students who complete 12 or more semester hours with a grade point average of 3.75 or better in a four-point system are on the President’s List.
Despite the grades, his injuries in Iraq give him some difficulties.
“The injury has made my processing slow, so this is really experimental for me,” Harrell said at the end of his first semester. “We will see what happens.”
For more information on the Chrysler Automotive Program, go to www.ChryslerCap.com or contact Michael Collins at mac25@chrysler.com.




