
RESCUE WORKERS WORK IN DIM LIGHTING SEARCHING FOR SURVIVERS OF ITALY's WORST EARTHQUAKE IN 30 YEARS
young woman alive from a collapsed building about 42 hours after the main ITALY EARTHQUAKE struck the mountainous region. Eleonora Calesini, a 20-year-old student, was found alive in the ruins of the five-story building in central L'Aquila, said her grandfather, Renato Calesini, in the seaside town of Mondaini.
"She's safe!" he told The Associated Press, adding that her father had gone to devastated city in the snowcapped Apennine mountains to try to locate the student, who wears a hearing aid. She reportedly had an arm injury but was in good condition otherwise.

A CAR IS BURIED UNDER THE RUBBLE OF THE ITALIAN EARTHQUAKE
included four students trapped in the rubble of a dormitory of the University of L'Aquila, the ANSA news agency reported.
Rescue crews gave up gingerly removing debris by hand and brought in huge pincers that pulled off parts of the dorm roof, balconies and walls, showering debris down.
"Unless there is a miracle, I've been told (by rescuers) that they probably are dead," university rector Ferdinando Di Orio said.
A strong aftershock of the ITALY EARTHQUAKE at 7:47 p.m. rained debris on screaming residents and rescue crews, who ran from the site.
"I want to go home! I want to go home!" screamed a woman identified only as Patrizia after chunks of facade rained down on them from a badly cracked building.
Her hands trembled as rescue workers gave her a cup of water. Her boyfriend, Agostino Paride, 33, an engineer, said they had driven to L'Aquila from Civitella Rovedo, some 45 miles away, to bring food and clothes to relatives in a tent camp.
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