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Saturday, April 25
The Indiana Daily Student

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Earthquake in south Italy

At least ten children killed in strong quake

SAN GIULIANO DI PUGLIA, Italy -- An earthquake jolted south-central Italy on Thursday, sending a nursery school roof crashing down on a class of preschoolers during a lunchtime Halloween party. At least 10 children in the school and two women in nearby homes were killed.\nDriven on by faint voices coming from the rubble, frantic rescuers worked into the night to save more than a dozen children who remained trapped after the 5.4 magnitude quake struck the Molise region, shaking the town of Campobasso and surrounding villages northeast of Naples.\nSan Giuliano Di Puglia, a village of 1,195 people, was the hardest hit. Anguished parents kept a vigil outside the yellow schoolhouse, where 56 children had been celebrating Halloween when the quake struck. Workers guided by flashlights and floodlights carried six dust-covered children and a teacher from the rubble after night fell. They were sent to nearby hospitals.\nSo far, 26 children and three teachers have been rescued. Italian news reports said about 20 children and one adult remained in the rubble 12 hours after the quake struck.\nThe bodies of 10 children and two adults were being housed in a makeshift morge at the town's sports center, where family members came to identify the dead, carabinieri officials outside the center said.\nApplause burst from the tense crowd after one difficult rescue late Thursday. Residents cried, "Giovanni! Giovanni!" when the little boy was brought out on a stretcher.\n"As soon as he came out he called me 'Papi' like he always does," the boy's father told RAI state television, which did not give the man's name.\n"I immediately saw he was in good condition. He told me there are many other children still alive, a little shocked but still alive, so the hope is still there that they can save more."\n"I thank God for this gift he has given me," he said.\nRescuers used cranes, blowtorches and their bare hands to claw at the debris Thursday night, removing roof tiles and slabs of concrete while listening for the faint sounds of children trapped inside.\n"That's what we're basing the search on. We're still hearing voices," Police Col. Antonio Ianuzzi said late Thursday.\nOne girl named Lilia told Italian television from her hospital bed, where she had her left hand in a small cast, that the children were drawing Pinocchio pictures, getting ready for their Halloween party, when the quake struck.\n"I heard it crumble, and we screamed," she said. She said she hadn't heard news her friend Melissa. "She wasn't near me. I didn't even hear her voice. I don't know if she's still alive."\nParamedic Antonio Licursi, covered in dust as he emerged from the pit, said he believed at least another dozen children were still trapped.\nTearful parents stood nearby, blocked from the site by a police barrier, sometimes calling out the names of their children. Others waited at nearby hospitals.\n"They were all together in the school because they were having a Halloween party," said Tonino Scarlatelli, an official in the Molise regional president's office.\n"Many buildings have collapsed throughout the village, we fear there might be other victims outside of the school," he added.\nRescue teams poured into the tiny village from nearby regions, and Premier Silvio Berlusconi arrived late Thursday to follow the developments firsthand.\nSome of the rescued students told Italian television that older children from the village had come to their class Thursday to teach them about Halloween, an increasingly popular holiday in Italy.\nWhile dozens of children were inside the school at the time of the collapse, others had moved out to the garden for the festivities, perhaps saving lives, news reports said.\nScarlatelli said five children had been killed. Provincial police said at least two women were killed in homes near the school.\nThe school, built in 1954, had been renovated several times over the years, private TG5 television said. Structures near the school remained standing, but some had large cracks in them. Elsewhere in town, the quake toppled entire buildings.\nThe government's forestry department conducted an aerial survey and said about 70 percent of homes in the area were damaged, with collapsed roofs or cracked walls, the AGI news agency said.\n"The scenario is devastating," AGI quoted forestry Cmdr. Luigi Falasca as saying. "Fortunately, the damage is limited to a restricted area."\nThe quake's epicenter was in Campobasso, about 50 miles northeast of Naples and about 140 miles southeast of Rome.\nThe initial temblor was followed by at least two aftershocks, one with a 2.9 magnitude and another with a 3.7 magnitude -- all with their epicenter around Campobasso, said Marco Ludovici, an official with the Civil Defense department in Rome.\nThe temblor was felt across the Adriatic in Croatia, particularly on high floors of apartment buildings, the Croatian Seismological Institute said.\nAlso Thursday, a 3.7 magnitude quake hit Mount Etna, the Sicilian volcano that began erupting Sunday. No damage was reported.\nThe National Institute of Geophysics and Vulcanology in Rome said the two quakes were not connected. The island of Sicily is about 275 miles southwest of Campobasso. The Etna quake was related to the volcano's activity, officials said.\nIn 1980, an earthquake in the area of Naples killed 2,570 people and left 30,000 homeless in the southern Campania and Basilicata regions.

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