31 December 2020

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Froid/Lake Girls Aim To Battle  Near Top Of League Standings

Froid/Lake Girls Aim To Battle Near Top Of League Standings


After coming a game away from the state tournament last season, Froid/Lake’s girls basketball squad shoots to be a threat again this time around. The Red Hawks return four starters from a season ago. The team will miss the ability of All-State performer Sydney Labatte, who graduated last year. “Losing Sydney Labatte is a huge blow, but we have young girls with experience,” Coach Lance

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RMC Installs Patient Call Light System

RMC Installs Patient Call Light System


The patient’s call-light has evolved since the days when Florence Nightingale suggested the need for bells with valves that stayed open to alert nurses about which patients needed assistance. Today, the need for communication between a nurse and their patient is just as important as it was back then. The ability to do so has just gotten a lot more high-tech. Recently, Roosevelt Medical Center

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Irving Wittmayer

Irving Wittmayer


Irving Eugene Wittmayer, 76, died Dec. 11, 2020, at his home in Westby. Born on July 19, 1944, in Crosby, N.D., he grew up in the Westby community, attending Daneville Country School and Westby Schools. He often reminisced of days on the farm with his big brother, Lovell, life in a oneroom country schoolhouse and playing football, basketball and track in high school. His fondest memory was the purchase of his first Harley Davidson motorcycle as a teenager, which was just the beginning of his often eccentric and rebellious endeavors. After graduating in 1962, and a brief time working on the oil rigs, he attended Eastern Montana College in Billings, earning a degree in secondary education. Upon graduation from college, he held teaching and basketball coaching positions in Rapelje and Bainville before returning to Westby to farm in the 1970s. He was a renowned fur trapper with an extensive trap line throughout the ‘70s and ‘80s. He perfected the skill of skinning and tanning his own hides and eventually made jewelry. His coyote coat was one of his prized possessions. In 1978, he married Michelle Melgaard. Together, they raised three children. He was a very dedicated father and brought a lot of quirkiness and laughter to their home. He enjoyed playing softball and bowling in Grenora for many years. His quick wit and unique and silly ways of experiencing the world will forever carry on in his children and their friends, grandchildren, nieces and nephews. Never one to sit idle, he kept meticulous bookkeeping in his office and learned the art of refinishing antique furniture. He helped build new addition to his family home and it was filled quickly with his refinished treasures discovered over the years. The couple also shared a rural mail route. Many residents of Westby cherished the kindness and special deliveries to their doorsteps for well over 30 years. He is survived by his children, Krisena Curry of Laurel, Heidi Wittmayer of Westby and Levi Wittmayer of Williston, N.D.; five grandchildren; brother, Lovell Wittmayer; and sisters, Julie Pierce and Ruth Brown. He was preceded in death by his wife, Michelle Wittmayer. Cremation has taken place and graveside services are tentatively planned to be held on July 3 at the Daneville Cemetery, followed by a celebration of life at the Wittmayer place in Westby.