The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota (2024)

C6 Saturday, March 6, 2021 Bismarck TriBune 1 NATION-WORLD OBITUARIES Gary Sauve Gary Lee sauve, age 74, of Bismarck, n.D. and Gilbert, arizona, died on Feb. 12, 2021. He was born march 9, 1946 in crookston, minnesota. He graduated from crookston High school and moorhead state university.

Gary is survived by his wife, Bonnie sauve and her chil- dren Troy (claudette) reno, Lisa (Dan) soderberg, and Tra- vis (Lara) reno; his first wife, marilyn sauve and sons shawn (kerry) sauve, Joel (Darlene) sauve; 12 grandchildren, 4 great-grandchildren; he was the eldest of six siblings, sisters sharon sauve and Debra Parrish; brothers Dennis sauve, ran- dy (Gail) sauve, and Les (melinda) sauve. He was preceded in death by his parents, Wilfred and edna mae sauve; mother-in-law Jennie robinson; and sister-in-law Linda sauve. Gary spent five decades in financial advising, investments, and insurance never retiring. an off-the-charts extrovert, he could meet people anytime, anywhere, and in the financial services industry he found his calling he loved the products and he loved to meet people and find ways to serve them. Gary was a person of faith had a love for Jesus, a love for the Bible, and a love for the church.

Over his life he intentionally invested in the lives of people he did this in his personal life, through his business and his career, and through his church. a memorial celebration will be held 11 a.m. June 19, at Bis- marck community church in Bismarck, n.D. Elizabeth Leingang elizabeth Leingang, 103, of mandan, gained her an- gel wings on march 3, 2021. a mass of christian Buri- al will be held at 10:30 am on monday, march 8, 2021, at spirit of Life catholic church, mandan, nD with rev.

Todd kreitinger as celebrant. Buri- al will follow at mandan union cemetery. Visitation will be held sun- day from Pm at Wei- gel Funeral Home with a cath- olic Daughters rosary at 6:45 Pm and Vigil service at 7:00 Pm. Visitation will continue at the church one hour prior to the service on monday. Betty was born on april 20, 1917, the 13th child of Frank and monika (kautzman) Zander.

she grew up in crown Butte, nD. she married Jack J. Leingang on October 22, 1940, and they lived and farmed in st. anthony, nD until 1986. They then moved to mandan and she had lived there ever since.

known as to so many, she was an inspiration to everyone she met. she loved reading, walking, puzzles, and lending a hand. When asked what the secret to a long life is, she said hard and have Go to www.weigelfuneral.com to read full obituary, sign the guestbook, watch the livestream and share memories with her family. Matt Sturn matt (mathias) sturn, 94, Bismarck, formerly of new sa- lem, passed away march 2, 2021 at home, surrounded by his loving family. mass of christian burial will be held 10 a.m.

Tuesday, march 9, at church of st. anne, 1321 Braman Bismarck, with Fr. Wayne sattler officiating. For those attending the service, the family asks that social distancing guidelines are followed and that masks are worn. a service livestream will be available on the funeral website, listed below.

To view full obituary and watch the service lives- tream, go to www.parkwayfuneral.com. Loretta Schantz Loretta r. schantz, 86, Glen ullin, passed away march 4, 2021. mass of christian burial will be held 10 a.m. csT Wednes- day, march 10 at sacred Heart catholic church, Glen ullin.

a will be held 7 p.m. csT Tuesday at the church. a service livestream will be available on the funeral website, listed below. Burial will be held following the service at sacred Heart cemetery, Glen ullin. To view obituary, view the service livestream and to sign the online guestbook, go to www.eastgatefuneral.com.

Rueben Wolf rueben Wolf, 88, of kulm, passed away march 4, 2021 at his home with his family by his side. Fu- neral services will be held 10 a.m. monday, march 8, at kulm Baptist church. Burial will follow at 3 p.m. at the north Dakota Veterans cemetery, mandan.

a livestream of funeral service will be available on the Dahlstrom Funeral service Facebook page. share memories and sign online guestbook at www.dahl- stromfuneralservice.com. Dahlstrom Funeral Home of entrusted with arrangements. James Schmidt James (Jim) roy schmidt, 68, of sun city West, arizona, passed away Tuesday, march 2, 2021, in arizona. Burial will be held at a later date.

Further arrangements pending with eastgate Funeral service. FUNERALS TODAY AND SUNDAY Due to the recommenda- tions regarding coronavirus, funerals may be limited to family only. a private service Todd Schlafman, 55, Wil- ton, 10 a.m., Goetz Funeral Home, Washburn. David Heupel, 21, 10:30 a.m., church of st. anne, 1321 Braman ave, Bismarck.

(Parkway Funeral service) Edwin Deyle, 89, Wishek, 10:30 a.m., st. Luke Lutheran church, Wishek. Livestream available on the Dahlstrom Funeral service Facebook page. Konnie Wightman, 75, 10:30 a.m., church of st. Jo- seph, 108 3rd st ne, mandan.

Livestream available on the YouTube channel. (eastgate Funeral service) Diana Stockert, 66, 1 p.m., Parkway Funeral ser- vice, 2330 Tyler Pkwy, Bis- marck. Livestream available on the funeral home website. Alvina Broste, 87, Bis- marck, 2 p.m., sunne Luther- an church, Wilton. Livestream available on the church Face- book page.

(eastgate Funer- al service) Joanne McCarthy, 69, Go- odrich, 2 p.m., mcclusky Town Hall. Michael Olson, 62, 4 p.m. sunday, Parkway Funeral ser- vice, 2330 Tyler Pkwy, Bis- marck. Livestream available on the funeral home website. STATE OBITUARIES CROSBY Beverly Bummer, 87.

DEVILS LAKE Dawn Dauphinais, 62. FARGO Jose Flores, 88; ruth Ha- gen, 88. GRAND FORKS Harlan Dyrud, 84. GRAFTON Florence Feltman, 102. MINOT elwyn Quam, 72.

ROLETTE Greta monette, 83. DANICA KIRKA Associated Press LONDON The timing be worse for Harry and Meghan. The Duke and duch*ess of Sussex will finally get the chance to tell the story be- hind their departure from royal duties directly to the public on Sunday, when their two-hour interview with Oprah Winfrey is broadcast. But back home in Brit- ain, events have conspired to overshadow the tale of a prince and his American bride. On top of the pan- demic and record economic slump, Prince Philip, 99-year-old grandfather is now recovering from a heart procedure.

CBS announced the pro- gram Feb 15. The next day, Philip was admitted to hos- pital. and Meghan are hugely Pauline Maclaran, a professor of marketing and author of Fever: The British Monarchy in Consumer told The Associ- ated Press. I think that some people who might oth- erwise have supported them will find this just a little bit distasteful, that drawing all this attention to themselves just at this time when Prince Philip ap- pears to be quite seriously Though it is the choice of CBS when to air its pre-re- corded interview, critics are already lining up to deride it as a brand-building exercise by the pair, who left Britain saying they wanted to live a normal life but have been accused of continuing to use their royal status to open doors and make money. The sit-down with Amer- queen of celebrity in- terviews is a chance for the couple to explain what led them to quit royal life, cit- ing what they said were the unbearable intrusions and racist attitudes of the Brit- ish media.

A book about their departure, also alleges that senior royals had little re- spect for Meghan, a biracial former actor, and that court- iers treated her badly. Pre-released clips have already shown Harry talking about his fears that history would repeat itself after his mother, Princess Diana, died in a car crash while pursued by paparazzi. In another clip from the interview, Winfrey asks Meghan how she feels about the palace you speak your truth know how they could expect that, after all of this time, we would still just be silent if there was an active role that the firm is playing in perpetuating falsehoods about the duch*ess replies. is a nickname for the royal family, some- times used with affection and sometimes with a note of criticism. In another pre-released clip, Meghan told Winfrey how it was to have a conversation with the television host without the input of royal minders.

Ahead of the broadcast, relations with the palace are increasingly strained. First there was Queen Elizabeth decision to strip Harry and Meghan of the handful of royal patronages they had retained in the one- year trial period following their departure last year. The couple responded with a terse statement promis- ing to live a life of service a move many in the U.K. saw as disrespectful to the queen, as she usually has the final word. Then on Wednesday, the palace said it was launching a human resources investigation af- ter a newspaper reported that a former aide had ac- cused Meghan of bullying staff in 2018.

One of the authors of Omid Scobie, compared the re- cent commentary about Harry and Meghan in the British media to the Salem Witch Trials, while noting Americans have had more sympathy for them. His tweet linked to a discussion on the U.S. television pro- gram including comments from Meghan McCain, a conservative columnist and daughter of the late U.S. Sen. John Mc- Cain.

think we ignore the elephant of the room that probably a ra- cial angle to McCain said. a lot of rac- ism directed at this woman, in a lot of different ways she threatens a lot of people in the patriarchy. It just looks like they are bullying her in the It was all supposed to be so different. At the time Harry started dating Meghan, the British public seemed smitten with the beautiful young woman who starred for seven sea- sons on the U.S. television drama When they married in 2018, newspa- pers were filled with opti- mistic stories about how the energetic couple would help make the monarchy relevant for a new, multi- cultural Britain.

But less than two years later they decamped to North America. After a brief stay in Canada, the couple settled in home state of California, buying a house in the exclu- sive Santa Barbara County enclave of Montecito that reportedly cost more than $14 million. Among their neighbors: Oprah Winfrey. Then came deals with Netflix and Spotify, re- portedly worth millions. The commercial deals and headline-grabbing amounts are uncomfortable for the royal family, which has devoted itself to public service as a justification for its wealth and privilege.

The queen, among the rich- est people in Britain, has spent her life supporting charities, cutting ribbons at hospitals and traveling the world to represent her country. main thing that the royal family is so good at is serving the nation, serving the nation and the Commonwealth, basically serving us rather than serving royal historian Hugo Vickers told ITV News. sorry, if sitting in an $11 million mansion in Cali- fornia and making fantastic deals, that is trading in on your royal heritage. And all wrong, Britain waits for Harry and side of the story Couple is popular but royal split has been controversial MATT DUNHAM, ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of the royal family gather July 10, 2018 on the balcony of Buckingham Palace in London, with from left, Prince charles, camilla the duch*ess of cornwall, Prince andrew, Queen Elizabeth II, Meghan the duch*ess of Sussex, Prince harry, Prince William and Kate the duch*ess of cambridge. NINA AGRAWAL Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES It took 10 years for Jamaal Mu- wwakkil, who grew up in Compton and was the first in his family to go to col- lege, to navigate his way through the California community college system and ultimately transfer to UCLA.

attended all the community colleges and worked all the he said during a recent webi- nar, recounting the classes he took at Cerritos, East L.A., Santa Monica, Coast- line and L.A. City Colleges, all while working various full-time jobs, including at Foot Locker, Disneyland and unfortunate that my scenario is very common for first-generation Black college Muw- wakkil said. Even after earning ad- mission into UCLA, Mu- wwakkil struggled to feel welcomed, unfamiliar with the setting of a major research university. Today he is a Ph.D student in lin- guistics and a University of California student regent. But his success is far from the norm for Black students in California.

A new report by the Campaign for College Opportunity, a nonprofit group that advocates for broader college access, found that while Black students are succeeding in higher education at higher rates than before, there is a long way to go before they achieve parity with their white peers or with goals set by state policy makers and education leaders. The differences begin literally in infancy, when Black babies have higher mortality rates than white babies. Across California, Black children dispropor- tionately experience food and housing insecurity, involvement with the fos- ter and criminal justice systems, and school dis- cipline. the time Califor- students arrive at the threshold of college, their inequitable experiences translate into significant disparities in the rates of college readiness and at- tendance by the report says. Seventy-seven percent of Black students who be- gan high school in 2016 graduated in 2020, com- pared to of white students who began at the same time, according to California Department of Education data cited in the report.

Out of that en- tire class of almost 28,000 Black students, fewer than one in three met the course eligibility require- ments for admission to either the California State University or University of California, compared to almost half of the class of white students. The Black students who do go to college are under- represented at the Cal- ifornia State University and University of Califor- nia and overrepresented at for-profit private colleges, where they are less likely to complete degrees and more likely to borrow money to finance their education and to default on their loans. Report: Blacks still lagging whites in college success BISMARCK MEMORIAL Serving Bismarck and Surrounding Areas For OVER 100YEARS 733 Memorial Highway Bismarck 701-223-1757 Hours: Monday 10-6T-W-Th 9-5 Fri After Hrs. Sat. by appointment.

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