Thứ Bảy, 22 tháng 3, 2008

Missouri levee holds as river crests

VALLEY PARK, Missouri (AP) -- Residents' trust in their community's new levee was justified Saturday as the earthen wall protected their town from the Meramec River, bloated by heavy rain that caused flooding across the Midwest.

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A couple poses for a picture Saturday at an intersection taken over by the Meramec River in Fenton, Missouri.

The Meramec crested about midday at 37.8 feet -- its record there is 39.7 feet -- the National Weather Service said. That was about 3 feet below the top of the levee.

Upstream in Eureka, the river crested several hours earlier at 40 feet, below that town's record of 42.9 feet.

The high water pushing against the other side of the Valley Park levee didn't bother customers at Meramec Jack's bar and grill, where owner Tracy Ziegler was pouring cold beer Saturday morning.

Ziegler, 47, had been confident all along that the levee would hold.

"I haven't even lifted my computer off the floor in the office," said Ziegler, who bought the bar in 2005, just after the Army Corps of Engineers finished the levee a few hundred yards away. "Why would they spend $50 million if they expected it to fail?" she said.

Flood-weary residents of Missouri, Arkansas and Ohio also were fighting to save their homes after heavy rain pushed rivers out of their banks. See what's going on in some hard-hit areas »

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