Mark Alan DEICH
Executive summary
Mark Alan DEICH does not appear by name in the provided search results; available sources instead return near-matches and other “Mark Alan” names — for example, obituaries for Mark Alan DeWald and Mark Alan Perry and unrelated listings for “Mark” in December 2025 calendars and media pages [1] [2] [3]. Available sources do not mention a person named “Mark Alan DEICH” (not found in current reporting).
1. What the search returns: near-matches, not “Deich”
When the exact name “Mark Alan DEICH” is entered against the supplied dataset, results surface several entries that include “Mark Alan” but different surnames: an obituary for Mark Alan DeWald in the Great Bend Tribune (died Nov. 19, 2025) and an obituary for Mark Alan Perry with visitation details on Dec. 1, 2025 [1] [2]. The remaining results are generic December-2025 calendars, entertainment listings and unrelated Mark/Alan combinations [3] [4] [5]. The supplied corpus does not include any item that matches the surname “Deich” or a profile of a person with that exact full name (not found in current reporting).
2. Obituaries the dataset does contain — context and specifics
Two concrete biographical notices with the given middle name “Alan” appear: Mark Alan DeWald’s obituary notes he passed Nov. 19, 2025, and gives birth and educational details in the Great Bend Tribune [1]. Separately, an obituary listing for Mark Alan Perry includes visitation and funeral service timing, with the visitation scheduled Dec. 1, 2025 at Amick-Burnett Funeral Chapel [2]. These items illustrate why a search for “Mark Alan …” returns hits, but they are different people and different surnames [1] [2].
3. Why a search might miss “Deich”: spelling, data coverage and timing
Searches fail for three common reasons visible in the results: (a) close-name matches appear when only part of a name is shared (the dataset has “Mark Alan” but paired with other surnames) [1] [2]; (b) the supplied pages focus on December 2025 events, calendars and entertainment listings rather than a comprehensive people database, so many personal records may be absent [3] [4] [5]; (c) if “Deich” is a rare or misspelled surname in public notices, it may simply not be in the indexed pages here — the dataset does not include it (not found in current reporting).
4. Alternate leads and what to try next
Given the absence of “Deich” in the provided material, reasonable next steps are: verify alternate spellings (Deich, Deitch, Deichl, Deichs), try searching local obituary databases or public records beyond this supplied set, and check social or professional networks where uncommon surnames often appear. The supplied results show that obituaries and local funeral-home pages commonly carry full names and dates [1] [2], so expanding to additional local newspapers and funeral home sites is likely to be fruitful.
5. Caveats, limitations and implicit biases in the provided sources
The sample of pages given here is heavily weighted toward December 2025 calendars, entertainment listings and a handful of obituaries; it is not a comprehensive public-record search [3] [4] [5]. That selection creates a coverage bias: people who do not appear in December event posts or the specific obituaries included will be invisible. The datasets also mix global content (magazine tables of contents, comics solicitations) with localized notices, so absence of “Deich” in this set is not evidence that the person does not exist — only that these particular sources do not mention them (not found in current reporting).
6. Straight facts from these sources you can rely on now
From the supplied pages you can reliably cite that: MusicRow published December 2025 entertainment listings and industry notes (including events on Dec. 8) [3]; the Great Bend Tribune published an obituary for Mark Alan DeWald, who died Nov. 19, 2025 [1]; and Amick-Burnett Funeral Chapel posted an obituary and service information for Mark Alan Perry with visitation on Dec. 1, 2025 [2]. None of these items reference the surname “Deich” [3] [1] [2].
If you want, I can: (a) run alternate-spelling checks across the same dataset; (b) suggest likely public-record sources and funeral-home search techniques to find “Deich”; or (c) assemble search queries you can paste into broader web engines or genealogy databases.