Tahoma High School seniors Geoffrey Hoobler and Jared Rust stand in front of the steel nameplate they designed and constructed as a gift to Tahoma National Cemetery.

Tahoma High School seniors Geoffrey Hoobler and Jared Rust stand in front of the steel nameplate they designed and constructed as a gift to Tahoma National Cemetery. Geoffrey and Jared CNC plasma-cut, welded, grinded, polished, and clear-coated the decorative piece, which is on display in the office of Director Tom Yokes at the national cemetery. The boys are students in Cary Collins’s Military History of the United States course and they built their project in Scott Newton’s welding class.