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The Rural Voice, 1983-09, Page 12PART II AG. GRADS Where do they go? What do they do? by Alice Gibb There's a special spirit about the University of Guelph "aggies" - a camaraderie that lingers long after they've left the Ontario Agricultural College and go on to careers. It was that very feeling that drew Mary Lynn Elder, 26, of London, now a Royal Bank agrologist, to OAC in the first place. Doug Richards, 27, a fellow '80 OAC grad, now farming at R.R. 3, Brussels, is another believer in the ag- gie spirit which he says ensured that many of his former classmates have become "lifelong friends". Jane Sadler Richards, 26, Doug's wife, agrees. That special feeling is one reason she's returning to the University of Guelph for graduate studies. While Doug Richards, like many B. Sc. (Agr.) graduates, is putting his education to the test on the farm, his story isn't exactly the typical return to the family farm tale. Doug was an urbanite who grew up in Burlington, attended a large city high school, and always intended to study physical education at a Toronto or Kingston university, and eventual- ly teach. Farming wasn't anywhere on the horizon, but when Doug was a high school senior, his father decided to abandon his job in industry and fulfil a lifelong ambition to farm. After buying their Brussels' area farm, the Richards crammed in novice farming courses at the Univer- sity of Guelph and chored weekends on neighbour Howard Martin's farm to get some valuable hands-on ex- perience. While his parents were establishing their weaner pig operation, Doug took a year off to work in a ski shop in Western Canada and consider his options. Then, in addition to apply- ing to universities in Kingston and Toronto, he also mailed off an ap- plication to the University of Guelph. The university accepted him and Doug abandoned his teaching career to study animal science. Doug became active in class politics, ending up as class president PG. 10 THE RURAL VOICE, SEPTEMBER Jane Sadler Richards and Doug Richards in his final year - and started a challenging part-time job in the school's meat science wing, working the abattoir. Jane, known as a "cropper" in OAC slang, grew up on an Ottawa Valley farm that raised purebred herefords and sheep. Unlike her future husband, she knew from Grade nine on that she wanted to go to the University of Guelph and that she wanted to study crop sciences. "I guess the farm had an influence," she explains simply. Unlike many ag. students who enrol 1983 at the university with an veterinary medicine, Jane's was always the land. Mary Lynn Elder was one of those Guelph students who originally plan- ned to pursue veterinary studies. When she got to university, Mary Lynn says "it seemed like a large percentage of kids were going into either animal science or crop science, so I decided maybe I'd stay clear of those and go into something else." The something else was agricultural economics, and extension education with an area of emphasis on agri- business. eye on interest