Ralls County Herald Enterprise, May 22, 2014 • Week 21 Regional

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Ralls County

Herald-Enterprise

“The County Paper” - An Area Tradition Since 1865 - Ralls County, Missouri USPS 454-720 Vol. 149, No. 21 • New London, Missouri 63459 • 28 Pages • 3 Sections • 50 Cents

FOR BREAKING NEWS AND INFORMATION, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE!

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Mark Twain High School graduates 45

GREENLAWN MEMORIAL WEEKEND HOMECOMING

Greenlawn Memorial Weekend Homecoming will be held on Sunday, May 25, at 4:30 p.m., for Music Jam Session and Social; 5 p.m., Program: Presentation of a miniature (HOscale) Model Replica of the Historic Greenlawn Community; 6 p.m., Carry-in dinner (Each family brings a dish). The event will be held at Greenlawn Chapel, located three miles north of Perry on Route J. Questions - call Ron Leake at the Ralls County Historical Society (573–248-6147).

ROCK AND MINERAL SHOW

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at Mark Twain Lake would like to invite you to the GEM City Rock and Mineral Show at the M.W. Boudreaux Memorial Visitor Center on Saturday, June 7. Members of the GEM City Rock Club, based out of Quincy, Ill., will be showcasing their collections from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free. The M.W. Boudreaux Memorial Visitor Center is located on Rt. J just south of the Clarence Cannon Dam. If you’d like more information, please contact us at email marktwaininfo@usace.army. mil or call 573-565-2112.

THIS ‘N THAT Meet and Greet will be held from 5:30 -7 p.m. Thursday, May 22, at the Saverton Community Building. Oak Hill Community Center will hold a music night Saturday, May 24, at 6:30 p.m. The center is 8 miles south of Hannibal at the junction of Rt. T, Rt. N and Oak Hill Road. A snack bar will be available with a light supper. Come to play, sing or just listen and enjoy the fellowship. All are welcome. You may call 573221-8624. Balloon release and veteran’s ceremony will be held at Pleasant View Cemetery in New London at 12 p.m. Monday, May 26. If you would like a balloon to release for your loved one please contact one of the following numbers and give the name you’d like to memorialize: 573-9853241, 573-985-7311, 573-221-6877, or 573-985-3083. Veterinary Clinic will be held from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturday, June 7 at New London City Hall.

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ABOVE - The Mark Twain High School 2014 graduating class. RIGHT - Kaitlyn Young was Salutatorian and Mackenzie Grossmann was Valedictorian of the MTHS 2014 graduating class.

Forty-five members of the 2014 graduating class of Mark Twain High School walked across the stage to receive their diplomas at the 2 p.m. commencement ceremony Sunday, May 18. The high school band played “Pomp and Circumstance” as they marched in and took their seats on the stage. Class president Ethan Clark gave the welcome and Superintendent Deanette Jarman introduced the speakers; Kaitlyn Young, Salutatorian, and Mackenzie Grossmann, Valedictorian. The senior song, “We Run This Town” played as the se-

niors were handed a single red rose which they then presented to their mothers in the audience. There were a lot of hugs and a few tears before the seniors were back on stage. Jake Moss, MTHS principal, then called each senior’s name and board president Pete Hilgenbrinck presented each graduate with their diploma. Clark came forward and the graduates changed their tassels. The stage exploded in a riot of colored graffiti as more hugs were given and hats retrieved before marching out to “Triumphal March” from AIDA.

The 2014 graduates are John Adair, Ethan Anderson, Brandon Banks, Kyley Barnes, Trenton Bishop, Aaron Boleach, Andrew Borders, Ryan Bosley, Senise Burton, Douglas Camden, Ethan Clark, Haley Clarkson, Alicia Cole, Morgan Couch, Kelsey Dameron, Shay Elledge, Mandy Ellis, Brandon Essig, Chloe Flavell, Jada Ganaway, Cynthia Gates, Rylee Gooding, Mackenzie Grossmann, Dalton Hawkinson, Dustin Hays, Matthew Hiner, Beau Hodges, Savanna Johnson, Aaron Lamont, Colton Leake, Dugan Lipp, Clayton Majors, Ellen Martin, Melanie Mc-

Court, Brittany McCurdy, Derek Meranda, Aaron Miller, Mariah Mittag, Harliann Richards, Eric Robbins, Kylie Spinner, Nathan Wilson, Kymberly Woodhurst and Kaitlyn Young.

“I ALWAYS WONDERED WHERE GUITARS COME FROM” Perry native Don Rust has hand-crafted over 400 guitars for musicians, local and famous alike. Inside each guitar Don Rust builds are the words, Rust, Ursa, IL USA. And up till a couple of years ago that’s the only way you could contact Don. He didn’t have a website or Facebook. What he did have, and still does, is a wide network of musicians, fledgling and famous, who spread the word about the quality of Rust’s craftsmanship. Behind his modest house in Ursa is the shop. Nothing distinguishes it as anything but a typical shed in any backyard in the Midwest, except the painted words Rust Guitars on the door. But inside is magic. Like Jim Henson’s creature shop or George Lucas’s studio ordinary objects are bound together to create an acoustic masterpiece. Here wood, glue and steel strings are crafted into an instrument not only beautiful to look at but a real joy to play. You can buy a Rust guitar

but the only time he’s known of anyone selling one was when a guitar turned up in a pawnshop. “Musicians are like that,” he smiled. A man bought one then tried to track Rust down with only the address stamped inside the body. “He scolded me about not being on the Internet,” said Rust. “But he found me. I’m the only Rust in Ursa.” Rust made his first guitar in 1973. Since then he has built over 400. How did he get to this point? Rust was raised in Perry and is 1962 a graduate of Mark Twain High School. He worked at a service station while going to school. “All the mechanical things I learned came in handy when I joined the Air Force,” he said. He asked to be in electronics and because the test “was 90% logical and mechanical, I made a high score.” Rust credits the Air Force with much of his success in his post-

Don Rust plays one of his guitars in his home in Ursa, Illinois.

military career. Rust was by his own admission, a poor student. “I didn’t care,” he said. “I always said there’s a thin thread in life that can pull you one way or another. The Air Force absolutely changed my life forever. That’s where I got to playing the guitar. And I got a great education, and because of

that I was able to have a lucrative career in electronics.” While working at Motorola and Broadcast Electronics he began to do some woodworking. “I always liked woodworking and I liked working with

u Continued on Page 3A

Continuing The Tradition Of The Ralls County Record, The Center Herald, And The Perry Enterprise


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