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Marsman Diang recalled frantically digging into the mud Friday for his five nieces and nephews. Four were found dead, wrapped in a bedsheet. One was pulled out barely breathing and did not make it to the hospital alive. The children's father, Diang's brother, left to work in Japan two months ago to raise money for the kids' education. He heard about their deaths in a phone call from Diang. "He couldn't talk. I heard him weeping with his wife when I called to tell them that their children were gone," Diang said. About 700 U.S. Marines and sailors on land and at sea were helping out with the relief effort. Before Tropical Depression Parma struck Oct. 3, the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, based in Okinawa, Japan, had been helping in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Ketsana, which caused massive floods in and around Manila on Sept. 26. That storm killed some 337 people. After making landfall, Parma roared back and forth across the north for a week and dumped 27 inches (685 millimeters) of rain on Oct. 8
-- more in one day than the monthly average.
[Associated
Press;
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