<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8902110964
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
891018
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, October 18, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
QUAKE OF '89;; SEE ALSO METRO FINAL CHASER EDITION, 1A
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A FESTIVE ATMOSPHERE RIPPED APART
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SAN FRANCISCO --  I am writing this column in the most frightening
position I have ever been in, some 200 feet above the ground in Candlestick
Park, which just moments ago was shaking as if the  entire stadium were on a
wagon being wheeled over cobblestone. An earthquake, they call it out here,
with some regularity, and even as I type these words, the stadium occasionally
rolls -- aftershocks  -- with the concrete, the steel supports, everything
shaking, as if suddenly there is no such thing as sturdy, not anymore.

  There are people running across the field, players heading for the exits,
grabbing their wives and their families, the festive atmosphere of this World
Series Game 3 suddenly ripped apart. And yet, such is the nature of sports
that when the initial quake hit, at 5:04 p.m.  Tuesday, rumbling the stadium
and swaying the field, some fans roared, they raised their fists, they made
jokes. "It's God. He's a Giants fan!"

  What do you do when the very ground beneath you begins  to tremble, when
you are in the upper bowl of a mammoth stadium with no hope of an exit -- and
suddenly there are reports of cracks in the concrete? I was on the phone with
an editor in my office, discussing  the night's work, when the roller coaster
feeling hit.
  "Tom," I said, "the stadium is . . . moving."
  "What?"
  Suddenly the TV screens went out. The phones were gone. The rumbling
continued  for 15 seconds,  and, in an instant, every little tidbit of
earthquake advice came splashing back. Find an open space. Get away from
overhead. Avoid doorways.
  Stay alive.
It happens elsewhere, right?  Brett Butler was running sprints on the
outfield when the earth began to quiver. "I felt like I was drunk or
something," he says now, holding onto a member of his family. "Then I looked
up in the stands  for my wife. My mother. I was screaming for them, to get out
on the field. I still don't have everybody."
  Suddenly there are no players here, no fans, no reporters; there are just
people, and many  of them are streaming down the ramps, leaping over the
walls. Some are bare-chested, raising their beer cups and screaming "WOOH!"
Others  are crying, running to people with transistor radios, asking,  no
doubt, about the homes of their loved ones.
  I have a little television plugged in my ear and the first pictures are
coming across. They are, for someone who does not live with the daily threat
of earthquakes, terrifying. The Bay Bridge is missing a  chunk; it is dangling
in the water. The Nimitz Highway that runs along the Oakland side of the bay
is split in crooked lines, with cars stacked  up. There are fires blazing and
reports of buildings collapsing and they are now saying it is the worst
earthquake since the big one of 1906.
  On a local radio station, people are calling in, reporting the damage,
defining the breadth of this disaster with every call.
  "This is Sue from Oakland. We really felt it bad here. Our cable TV just
blew out."
  "This is Sam from Napa.  I have a 55-gallon  fish tank in my living room,
and this quake just sent 20 gallons of water splashing all over my dang
floor."
  It is the kind of thing you hear about, but never envision yourself
involved in. It happens  elsewhere, right? You have a cousin or an aunt who
told you about "the time I was in an earthquake." But it was usually a rumble
of the bed, a little shake. Not a stadium rocking. . Buildings don't fall
down, do they?
Players pointing to the sky  Out on the field now, the players are
collecting their loved ones, counting heads, streaming for the exits. "I've
never been involved in anything like this,"  says Pat Sheridan, the Giants
outfielder, who once played in the friendlier confines of Tiger Stadium.
"Butler said to me, 'You never been in an earthquake. You're in one now.' "
  The lights went  out. The network broadcast was lost. Players such as Jose
Canseco and Carney Lansford were pointing to the sky, as if the rumble had
come from the  heavens, and others such as Giants manager Roger Craig  and his
pitcher Mike Krukow were heading for the safest ground, centerfield.
  I can only describe the feeling as the noise of a jet plane, combined with
the shaking of a bumpy bus ride. That is the outside feeling. What you feel
inside depends, I suppose, on your level of courage.
  "LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, THOSE IN THE UPPER LEVEL ARE BEING ASKED TO EVACUATE
THE PREMISES IMMEDIATELY."
  And  that is where I am now. The game has been postponed. The World Series
will wait. Suddenly the story that was the only story on the front pages this
week will have to move over. This is far more important.  There are cars
hanging from bridges and walls collapsed and there were lives lost and
baseball just doesn't seem that important anymore.
  "What are they saying?" people yell. "How big? How bad?"
  "Did you feel that, man?"
  "I am never coming back here. Jesus. Get out of here. This whole thing
could collapse."
  Years from now, I am sure, people will talk about where they were during
this earthquake. It will become a war story, a badge of courage in the sports
world, a yarn that may grow larger and more horrible with each retelling. It
is hard to imagine that now. The realization is that  something harsh and
terrible has just happened here, smack in the center of the nation's biggest
game. I am sitting in an upper deck that is moving, and we may never look at
the World Series the same way. God, how can we?
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
EARTHQUAKE;SAN FRANCISCO;CANDLESTICK PARK;EFFECT;WORLD SERIES;
BASEBALL;CALIFORNIA
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
