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The Rural Voice, 1983-07, Page 12PART 1 Ag. grads Where do they go? What do they do? by Alice Gibb Centralia College of Agricultural Tech- nology, located in Huron Park, and more often known as CCAT, seems to run in families. When Joe Vink of R.R. 1, Kirkton, received his graduation diploma this spring, CCAT set a record of sorts. Joe was the fifth member of his family to study at CCAT and while the school has often attracted siblings. this is the first time one family has proved so loyal. Doreen, 23, Joe's older sister, is a 1979 agricultural business management grad- uate of the school. She followed in the footsteps, if not the program, of threee older sisters who took consumer and community studies at the college. Today Doreen is dairy herdsperson on father Theo's farm, milking 86 cows in a double six herringbone milking parlor. The 550 -acre farm involves several family members, but the cows are Doreen's special responsibility - she ensures they get bred, checks on herd health and oversees calving. Bruce Morris, 22, of R.R. 1, Fullerton, is another CCAT graduate who followed in an older brother's footsteps, returning home to a family dairy operation. "My older brother (Don) had gone to Centralia and since I had kind of decided I was going to farm. I wanted to go to an agricultural school," Bruce explains. Centralia was his first choice because its location nearby meant he could come home weekends to lend a hand on the farm. While Bruce toyed with the idea of taking a four-year degree at OAC in Guelph, "I just didn't have the time, I didn't think," he says now. In the two years since graduating, Bruce has married a fellow student. moved onto the home farm when his parents relocated down the road and become a futltime farmer. The Morrises milk 45 Holsteins, have a Doreen Vink, at her lather's farm at R.R. 1, Kirkton: "Going to Centralia was one of the best things I've done. I needed to grow and become independent." PG. 10 THE RURAL VOICE, JULY 1983 12 -sow farrow -to -finish operation and crop about 300 acres, with some of the land cut by the meandering Thames River. Julie Morris met her future husband while she was a CCAT student, but in the college's food services managaement course. rather than an agricultural prog- gram. The former Julie Woodhouse, she grew up on a Meaford-area dairy farm and is now back working at CCAT as a technician in the food services program. After graduating with a food services supervisor's diploma, Julie worked at Brampton's Peel Memorial Hospital, first in the food preparation area, where she checked trays and supervised inventory and then writing diets for patients with special nutritional needs. Although she didn't choose Centralia because of its agricultural specialty, when she arrived at the college, "I couldn't believe the fever for farming" she found among fellow students. Marrying a farmer wasn't exactly planned either - "it was the biggest shock to my father - and to myself too!" she adds with a smile. But now she finds helping with farm chores a refreshing change from her off -the -farm job. Besides, she says, "I've certainly got a real education around here." While the three graduates all value CCAT's career training, they found an equally valuable experience was the first-time experience of living away from home. Although it's hard to believe of the much -travelled Doreen today, she says she was extremely shy in her high school years. After Grade 12, she forced herself to enroll at the college as a resident student, although she lived within easy commuting distance of the school. Her experience was a baptism by fire. While she was one of six girls who enrolled in the agricultural management course, once largely a male preserve, when the class was split alphabetically she found herself the only woman in her half of the class. Looking back, she says, "Going to Centralia was one of the best things I've done. I needed to grow and become independent." That independence was later put to the