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Still shaken students crack their books, worry about school buildings

By Liang Chen (Global Times)

08:31, April 25, 2013

Students in several areas hard hit by the Lushan earthquake, including Baoxing county and Lushan county, returned to classes on Wednesday, five days after the quake killed 196 people and injured 11,470.

The local government ordered high school students, especially 12th-graders who will write the national college entrance examination, or gaokao, in June, to resume classes. In Baoxing, 186 12th-graders were asked to resume studies in their original classrooms on the fourth floor of their school, which caused worries among students. "I'm happy but I'm also worried that an aftershock could happen anytime and cause casualties," Zong Xiu, a student at a senior high school, told the Global Times.

Zong walked softly, saying she is afraid a heavy step might cause a new round of aftershocks.

"The classroom is at the top of the building and I am afraid I won't have enough time to escape if an aftershock happens," a student who asked not to be named, told the Global Times.

School officials said the classroom building is safe. "Except the dormitory, all other buildings, which were rebuilt by the Hainan provincial government after the Wenchuan earthquake in 2008, remain safe for students, according to an inspection by architecture experts after the quake," Zhu Shenyue, an official from the local education bureau, told the Global Times.

There was no damage to the main structure of the buildings and a lot of people took shelter in the buildings after the quake.

Zhu said local students in other grades might resume their classes in several weeks.

The sight of students reading has brought some comfort to residents, who say they are happy to see them studying again.

In Lushan, 12th-graders were sent to a university in Chengdu, where they will be provided with a better environment to prepare for the gaokao. Students in other grades are taking classes in tents and as their school buildings have not been declared safe.


Touching moments:

Daily life of quake victims in Sichuan

High school students prepare for exam in tent

Rescuers struggling to reach every household

Soldiers bring hope to earthquake-hit region

First night after deadly earthquake

Rescuers work hard at quake-hit area in Sichuan


>>>Quake-hit China grows in pain

The principle of sparing no efforts to save lives cannot be more stressed. No minute or even second should be delayed during the "golden rescue period" in the first 72 hours after the quake.

>>>Pilot cancels wedding to participate in quake relief

When the 7.0-magnitude quake happened, Zhang Shangnian, a pilot from an aviation brigade of Chengdu Military Region, was about to hold his wedding.

>>>Nurse returns to work after losing mother

Just likes other medical staff, she was busy with rescuing people injured in the earthquake in SW China, but no one knew her mother just died in the quake.

>>>Wedding ceremony without bridegroom held on schedule

Zhuo Jia, the bridegroom, is a solider of the Chengdu Military Region; he had to leave his beautiful bride behind to participate in earthquake relief.

>>>An injured girl's smile moves many

"Your smile makes the entire world beautiful,” a photo of a smiling girl with bandage on her head has moved so many Chinese netizens.

>>>Teenager saves mom with his bare hands

The mother moves away a precast slab weighing over 50 kilograms alone to save her son in the earthquake. She said she did not know where her strength came from.

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