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WisDOT asks campaign workers to be safe, obey laws regarding ... Found: 2 Days 19 Hours 18 Minutes ago The Dunn County News - WisDOT asks campaign workers to be safe, obey laws regarding political signs...
Hundreds missing after IkeHundreds still missing after Hurricane Ike Found: 6 Days 4 Hours 34 Minutes ago Leader-Telegram - GALVESTON, Texas - The final hours brought the awful realization to victims of Hurricane Ike that they had waited too long. This storm wasn't like the others, the ones that left nothing worse than a harrowing tale to tell.George Helmond, a hardy Galveston salt, watched the water rise and told a buddy: I was born on this island and I'll die on this island.Gail Ettenger, a free spirit who adopted the Bolivar Peninsula as her home 15 years ago, told a friend in a last phone call: I really messed up this time.Within hours, the old salt and the free spirit were gone as the powerful Category 2 hurricane racked the Texas Gulf Coast on Sept. 13, flattening houses, obliterating entire towns and claiming at least 33 lives.The dead - as young as 4, as old as 79 - included lifelong Galvestonians firmly rooted on the island and transplants drawn by the quiet of coastal living.Seven people drowned in a storm surge that moved in earlier and with more ferocity than expected. Nine others died in the grimy, sweaty aftermath, when lack of power and medicine exacted its toll. Eleven people were poisoned by carbon monoxide or killed in fires from the generators they used in their attempts to survive.Hundreds of people remain missing three weeks after Ike's assault on Texas.Local and city officials are no longer keeping their own count of missing residents, and the estimate varies wildly from one agency to another.According to the nonprofit Laura Recovery Center, about 300 people are missing. Of those, about 200 are from Galveston. However, the number "goes up and down by the minute" as people call in to remove or add names, cautioned Executive Director Bob Walcutt.Some vanished during the evacuation of towns in the storm's path. Many were last heard in desperate, last-ditch calls for help.Immediately after the hurricane, Galveston officials conducted door-to-door searches for survivors and possible victims. But the city is no longer taking an active role in the search, city spokeswoman Alicia Cahill said.Instead, search teams of sheriff's deputies, volunteer firefighters and K-9 search and recovery units have been using airboats and all-terrain vehicles to sift through debris fields, tangled and fetid marshlands, and the rubble left behind by Ike.Bodies could have been tossed anywhere in the marshes, where thickets of trees are littered with the contents of houses. Refrigerators, office chairs and television sets are scattered everywhere - in the mud, in bushes, on treetops."We are definitely looking and are going to do anything we can to find them, but there may not be any answers to be given," said Galveston County emergency management spokesman Colin Rizzo. "There are definitely going to be people from Hurricane Ike that are never found."Gail Ettenger stumbled upon her house in Gilchrist by accident. But once she saw the site on the bay side of Bolivar Peninsula, she knew she would never leave.Ettenger, a native of New Jersey, instilled the house with her own energy and style. The 58-year-old's garden bloomed with vibrant birds-of-paradise.And Reba, an 11-year-old Great Dane hobbled by arthritis, was her baby. Ettenger loved to treat the dog to dinners of chicken and roast beef, recalled JoAnne Burks, Ettenger's neighbor and close friend.Ettenger, a chemist at ExxonMobil, didn't evacuate, reasoning that her house had weathered Hurricane Rita in 2005 without a problem. She also did not want to leave Reba, who could no longer climb into Ettenger's Jeep.Burks and her husband pleaded with Ettenger to change her mind. But she insisted.Hours before Ike made landfall, Ettenger knew she had made the wrong choice. She called Burks and described the water pushing up under her feet, the propane tanks and other household items drifting by her windows, and wondered which would float better: her Jeep or her house.Her voice was shaky with fear, Burks said.Burks spent the next 10 days searching for her friend, calling local, county and state officials without success. She tried the American Red Cross, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, even private investigators."I didn't want her to wind up like the victims of Katrina, who were never found or identified," Burks said.Ettenger's body was found Sept. 23, tossed on a debris field in a Chambers County marsh about 10 miles from her house.Amid the muck and remnants of homes, Burks found a pink leather collar. The name Reba was spelled out in rhinestones.At 72, George Helmond had ridden out many storms and thought he could take on Ike too, neighbor Don Hanson said. "A lot of old Galvestonians are like that."Helmond had been one of the first residents of Sydnor Lane, which overlooks a bayou on one side and a golf course on the other. A retired electrician, Helmond was a die-hard fisherman, a dove hunter and straight-shooter intensely proud of his Galveston roots.At about 10 a.m., Helmond called Hanson, who had already left, to say the water had already slipped over the road and toward his house. The street - the only way out of the neighborhood - was already impassable.At 9:30 p.m., Helmond and Hanson talked for the last time. By then, the water had pummeled through Helmond's garage, crushing the doors and submerging his Cadillac. Hanson begged his friend to grab a life vest at his house or to seek shelter there.But at 2:30 a.m., for reasons no one knows, Helmond got in his pickup truck and drove off at the height of Ike's fury.Neighbors found Helmond's body the next day inside the truck, which had slammed into the white golf course fence. The windshield was shattered.Helmond's home suffered little damage. The water had reached above the first-floor garage, but not inside the house."If he had stayed home and hadn't gone out, he'd be OK, but he panicked," said Hanson, 66. "Life goes on, but I will miss a good friend and I will think about him."Even as Ike bore down on Texas, Jim Devine refused to leave his cream-colored house within sight of the bay in San Leon. Devine had moved to the fishing town after retiring and loved the tranquil way of life there, neighbors said.The 76-year-old Devine drowned when Ike sent water barreling through his house, picking him off the second-story porch and dropping him a block away. Days later, Devine's empty home still bore the scars of the storm - shattered windows, twisted wood, and his boat, the Seabar, jammed under the front steps.His daughter left a warning and a memorial in orange spray paint: "Jim Devine. No Trespassing."...
Sunnyview Cemetery seeks landmark status for former potters field Found: 1 Week 5 Days 8 Hours 30 Minutes ago The Northwestern - A stately black gate and two handsome brick columns mark the entrance to what was once a humble potters field, the final resting place for 485 souls of the poor, unwanted or insane laid to rest between 1888 and 1956....
Skateboarders battle overcast skies to win prizes Found: 1 Week 5 Days 9 Hours 48 Minutes ago Stevens Point Journal - Mike Kenowski stood next to the fence surrounding the Plover Skate Park. His said his favorite trick is an overcrook, after winning a new skateboard and trophy Saturday at the Extreme Scene Skateboard Competition.Kenowski placed first in the 15 and up category.
He and others participated in the competition, braving both overcast skies and several bees to win new skateboards and sweatshirts.
Tom Collins, a program coordinator at the Plover Unit of the Boys Girls Club, said the purpose of the event was todevelop a partnership between the Boys Girls Club and the skate park. The club and the park are next to each other.
(To) let them know we do appreciate them, he said. It creates a good community between here and there.
He said the turnout was good for a secondary date, estimating about 30 kids participated in the fifth year of the event.
Read more in Mondays Stevens Point Journal....
Webb fund helps schools Found: 1 Week 6 Days 10 Hours 45 Minutes ago Reedsburg Times Press - REEDSBURG—The Reedsburg Common Council voted Monday to grant more than $24,000 in Webb Fund dollars for an embroidery machine, playground equipment, a portable sign and the renovation of a baseball field.Following recommendations made earlier that evening from the finance committee, the council let Webb Fund money do what applicants said the Reedsburg School District was unable to — cover the cost of purchasing a new embroidery machine at Webb Middle School and playground equipment ... ...
News briefs: Man charged with theft for beer game Found: 2 Weeks 8 Hours 56 Minutes ago Wisconsin State Journal - Man charged with theft for beer game A drunk man needing a table for a game of beer pong tried to steal one from the Memorial Union, then led an officer on a foot chase after he was spotted, according to charges filed Wednesday. Zachary J. Raff, 22, told police he doesn't remember how he got into the Union, where an officer spotted him about 2:15 a.m. on Sept. 9 taking a table from the locked ... ...
'East Side Album' preserves neighborhood stories Found: 2 Weeks 9 Hours 13 Minutes ago Wisconsin State Journal - As a community center opens in an East Side historic building, an East Side history club opens the pages of its new book to reveal stories, photos and recipes reflecting the neighborhood from the 1930s to the 1970s. The Goodman Community Center, previously known as the Atwood Community Center, opens Saturday in the former Kupfer Ironworks building at 149 Waubesa St. There, the East Side History Club will begin selling "An East Side Album: A ... ...
Mayor Dave's weekly whereabouts: Dining with the denizens Found: 2 Weeks 3 Days 1 Hour 5 Minutes ago The Daily Page - A few weeks ago, I gave Mayor Dave Cieslewicz the business in this space for not meeting with JM and Nichole of Eating in Madison A to Z fame, as he promised he would. You might notice that just such a meeting is scheduled for this week. Pen 1, Sword 0, huh?...
Marquis slam leads Cubs over stumbling Mets Found: 2 Weeks 3 Days 11 Hours 7 Minutes ago The Post-Crescent - NEW YORK If the New York Mets miss the playoffs after another late collapse, theyll look back and bemoan a pair of improbable homers that contributed to their demise....
Copter wreckage holds clues Found: 2 Weeks 4 Days 9 Hours 2 Minutes ago Kenosha News - Copter wreckage holds clues...
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