More rain causes new flood worries along the Mississippi

Sky Coleman, left, stacks a sandbag as Tyler Hopkins awaits another as a group of 15 middle and high school students from the nearby city of Louisiana, Mo., sandbagged the home of the aunt of a fellow student in Clarksville, Mo., Saturday, March 30, 2019. The Mississippi River reached 32.8 feet Saturday afternoon, entering major flood stage for the first time this spring. It is expected to crest late Sunday at 34.2 feet, more than three feet below the 37.7 foot record of 1993. (Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)

The playground in Clarksville Riverfront Park is flooded in downtown Clarksville, Mo., Saturday, March 30, 2019. The Mississippi River reached 32.8 feet Saturday afternoon, entering major flood stage for the first time this spring. It is expected to crest late Sunday at 34.2 feet, more than three feet below the 37.7 foot record of 1993. (Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)

ST. LOUIS — A wall of rocks and sandbags on Monday protected scenic Clarksville, Missouri, from the surging Mississippi River as spring flooding swamped fields, threatened homes and temporarily shut down a bridge connecting Missouri and Illinois.

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