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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2008 6:07 pm
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WEEK IN REVIEW
Saturday


Everett celebrates in style
Addition of 19,000 residents to Marysville may ...
Gap in Centennial Trail won't be fixed soon
Friday


Everett man's face a portrait of patriotism
Don't be a slowpoke in left lane, police say
Man's death a stark reminder of food allergy risks
Thursday


Plan your fun for the Fourth of July holiday
Everett caretaker arrested in theft from elderl...
If you think gas costs hurt now, just wait
Wednesday


At Russian-style bath house in Everett, clients...
Everett teen remembered as standout at school
Report on Lake Stevens Marine's death to be con...
Tuesday


Stackable houses could be a model for builders
Straighter path open for drivers on Highway 9
Everett School District chooses interim leader
Monday


Young candidate makes a bid for the Legislature
Cell-phone law tough enough? Ask New Jersey
Airline takes tour of Paine Field
Sunday


Hospitals worry as they care for more low-weigh...
Hundreds of fish tunnels need to be unclogged
In tests, racer zips to 400 mph
 

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Published: Thursday, May 15, 2008

Cracked dam latest concern in China

HANWANG, China -- Soldiers rushed to shore up a dam cracked by this week's powerful earthquake, and rescuers came by helicopter and ship Wednesday into the isolated epicenter but still were forced to dig for survivors with their bare hands.

Nearly 26,000 people were still buried in collapsed buildings from Monday's 7.9-magnitude earthquake, and the death toll of almost 15,000 was expected to climb as relief operations spread into the mountains of Sichuan province. The quake triggered landslides that blocked roads to hardest-hit areas.

Even as the rescue effort seemed to gather momentum -- speeded by clearing weather after two days of rain -- caring for tens of thousands of people made homeless across the disaster zone have stretched thin the government's resources.

Homeless victims begged for aid on roadsides, and people settled in for a third night in a growing sprawl of refugee camps littered with garbage. In Hanwang, a town in one of the hardest-hit counties, survivors stood hoping for handouts from cars, jostling with each other to reach to one vehicle where a passenger passed bottled water out the window.

The official death toll rose Wednesday to 14,866, and in Sichuan province another 25,788 people were buried and 1,405 were missing, provincial vice governor Li Chengyun said, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

Xinhua said about 2,000 soldiers were sent to repair "extremely dangerous" cracks in the Zipingpu Dam upriver from the earthquake-hit city of Dujiangyan.

The government said late Wednesday that experts had inspected the dam and declared it safe, according to a statement broadcast on state TV and posted on the Sichuan province's government Web site.

Still, another report said the reservoir behind the dam was being emptied to relieve pressure on the structure.

Help also began to arrive by helicopter and on foot in some of the hardest-to-reach areas, where some victims trapped for more than two days under collapsed buildings were still being pulled out alive. Leveled hospitals forced doctors and nurses to treat survivors in the street. Helicopters dropped food and medicine to isolated towns.

1. Gap in Centennial Trail won't be fixed soon
2. Man, woman arrested in Sultan homicide
3. Addition of 19,000 residents to Marysville may wait
4. Everett celebrates in style
5. Man arrested at scene of suspicious fires in Marysville
6. Government's mixed messages on carrying ID
7. Darrington schools wrestle with drastic cuts
8. Raben's debut a big hit with AquaSox
9. Big yacht business shipshape
10. Centralia man attacked while trying to save puppy
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Red, White, and Blue: Parade photoalbum
World famous, and headed to Everett
The man in charge
A lifetime of happiness
Three new administrators join SCC
Adefua opens Edmonds concert series
Changing of the guard for the Timberwolves
Lou Gehrig's has new opponent in Team Peggy
Road toward red-light cameras paved in LFP
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

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