82 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 1,1979 Tina Bucher - in everything she does By SUSAN KAUFFMAN Staff Writer Tina Bucher, a tall, slender Solanco High School senior has the natural talent, training, and interest in journalism to equip her with the necessary skills to write award winning essays, articles for the school newspaper and even cover meetings and local events for other news publications. Recently, her essay concerning the operation of the Underground Railroad in Lancaster County was selected the winner for a contest conducted by the Southern Lancaster County Historical Society. Tina spent con siderable time researching, writing and documenting the historical accounts of families, the locations of farms and buildings, and the routes by which slaves were tem- porarily housed and then moved along their search for personal freedom. At least one local newspaper picked up her report and printed it in serial form for several weeks. Generally, however, Tina’s journalistic works have been printed in the Solanco “Quill.” In addition to this type of reporting, she has had a year’s work at reporting the activities and business which progressed at the Solanco FFA meetings during her junior year as chapter reporter. She was selected in May to the office of County FFA secretary to record the minutes of the quarterly meetings for the 1979-80 school year. In her local chapter, however, Tina will be drawing upon some skills other than purely literary.- She was elected chapter president in May of this Spring. Throughout the coming school terms she will preside over the monthly, evening chapter meetings and delegate responsibilities to various committees. 11113 office of presidency has come after the mmplptinn of three years of FFA projects and studies. Tina recalled that when she was a freshmen she was one of five girls among approximately fifty greenhands. To date, she says three of the girls have remained in the FFA program. As a greenfaand, Tina carried a project of a Holstein calf and a project for a pleasure horse. Her parents, James and Ozella Bucher, along with her older brother .Tim, have operated a Holstein dairy farm for many years. It was a natura' decision for her to choose a Holstein for her first project It was also natural for her to choose the pleasure horse because she had had some experience with the Lan- Chester Pony Club prior to entering high school. However, after one year with the pleasure horse project, Tina decided to discontinue it because it required poses junior yearling Guernsey heifer, Lindenhof Flash Div Eulene. The cow was the recent reserve grand champion at the Southeast Regional FFA dairy show. actively involved participation in more horse shows than she wished to keep up with. As a sophomore, she carried the same Holstein project and added a Guernsey calf and two acres of corn to her project list. As a junior, Tina continued with the two dairy animals and the com project and at the South East Regional FFA dairy show earlier this Summer, August 21, her junior yearling Guernsey placed first in her class, took junior ci'ampion honors and was selected Reserve Grand Champion. Recalling the judge’s comments about her animal, Tina said her junior yearling exhibited outstanding size in comparison to the others in her class as well as any would her age. Lindenhof Flash Div Eulene, Eulene as Tina calls her, was purchased from Dick Linde, a well known'Guernsey breeder in the Southern end whose records are state winners. “Dr. Fredd suggested that I buy one from Dick Linde if wmesfpad tA/ctes I wanted to buy a Guernsey for a project m my sophomore year, so I did,” Tina explained. “Next year I plan to have a dairy herd project which requires three animals as a minimum,” Tina added. “By November, I hope my Holstein has a heifer calf. Last year she had a bull!” Tina helps with the morning milking and washes up after the evening milking in addition to taking care of her project animals. But her real enthusiasm for dairy animals came in the competition of participating on the Solanco Dairy Judging Team. Tina went out for the preliminary training and trial judging as early as her Freshmen year and successfully studied and practiced her way into a position on the dairy team. Year after year, Tina has kept her position on the team which has traditionally been very selective. After the Farm Show activities have been finished each Winter, the How I would dread this weekend when I was m school. The official end of Summer was here, and regular school hours would shortly enforce me to give up my easy-going way of life. When the school bells would ring for the last time in June, how ecstatic I would appear. That long Summer stretched before me, and how I loved the thourght of not having the daily routine of school enforced upon me But all too quickly June would end and July would be upon me. But still I was smiling because July is a long month, and there was always August to enjoy. But July always flew by. and when I saw August staring me in the face, I'd start to get the first few ' * Tina works diligently at her project book, one of the many record books she keeps for projects as ' well as those she maintains for chapter and county FFA elected positions. adviser starts with local bam meetings and practices. Later on in the school year, the group takes a tour for a few days to a number of outstanding dairy herds in several surrounding states as well as Pennsylvania for more exposure for the young people to dairy cattle. In early April the final dairy judging team is selected. Tina said she really enjoys the competition and even giving the oral reasons although she says she feels a bit nervous on the outset. Between the FFA meetings, the dairy club meetings and her school work which she'had to dear away each week, Tina went out for the varsity softball team. “I was not one of the outstanding players by far, but I hope to improve this year! ” she quipped, Tina has been a member of the national honor society at Solanco for three years attesting to her academic qualifications. She sees a future which will probably in clude a college education, but she is not certain yet what field to study and has consequently not thought much about selecting a college. “I intend to work for a year before going to college.” “I am not ready for college yet,” she explained. “My one real hobby —. or the one that I am most in terested in is country music,” she .confessed em phatically. “I would like to dream that a number of years from now I might be working in the business end of country music.” Neglecting to mention that she plays the piano, the guitar and the banjo as well as sing herself, Tina prefers at this point to emphasize others’ musical productions. Although Tina Bucher has no long range plan neatly laid out before her, she has a number of past accomplishments and presently active talents including writing and music and dairy judging. And with the local chapter and county FFA offices for the coming school year, one can be assured that she will not be idly spending her time. flutters of apprehension in my mind. The only redeeming grace of August was that it held my birthday, and even that would have been gladly traded for a few extra days of freedom. August is a terrible month, it zooms by with the rush of a superjet, and leaves you hanging on the terrible brink of that horrid holiday--Labor Day Weekend-otherwise known as the last days of liberty from school. While everybody else was happily engrossed in picnic plans and special ideas to celebrate the date, I would mope. I’d head to my favorite secret spot in the barn, throw myself down on the hay, and silently hate whatever fate so quickly tore away my Summer vacation. It just wasn’t fair. Summer was never long enough, and I wasn’t ready to go back to school. But no matter how I fought it, the holiday would end, and there I would be, bright and early, standing at the bus stop, muttering. And the giant yellow transportation to scholarly intentions would come and gobble me up, and I was powerless to prevent it. But by the middle of October I would finally be reconciled to the the fact that there was only about 150 more school days until the next Summer vacation, and that one, I would assure myself, just had to last longer