<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8902120064
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
891019
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, October 19, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SNWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo PETER HALEY Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
SHAKEN VICTIMS CAN NEVER FORGET
THE FIERCE GROWLING OF THE PLANET
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SAN FRANCISCO --  Everything he owns is lying at his feet, a bag of clothes, a
bag of cassette tapes, and an electric guitar, wrapped in plastic. "How long
before they get us some place to live?" he  asks. He stares  at the other
victims in the shelter, lying on cots and gulping Red Cross coffee.

  Nobody answers.

  Roman Jones, a thin young musician with wire-rim glasses, was about to step
into  the shower when the earth opened Tuesday afternoon. The floor began to
rumble. The pictures began to shake. Outside on Sixth Street, a crack split
the asphalt, and water began to spurt from it -- like  blood from an open
wound.
  "What the hell is going on?" Jones yelled to his roommate, Jeff Reynolds.
  Reynolds said, "Run!"
  Suddenly, the ceiling fell in on them, they were covered with plaster  and
their feet were racing through the darkness -- where did the lights go? Hearts
beating, they heard screams in the hallway, and all they could think of was
get outside, get outside. They burst through  the lobby, and the ground still
shook. The sidewalk was evil, it was alive, rising. They kept running. "The
faster we ran," Jones says, "the worse it seemed to get."
  He tugs on his shirt and sighs.  An hour ago, he had sneaked into the
building -- under the yellow police barriers -- and grabbed the remains of his
life. And now he waits here, in the dimly lit Moscone Center, which is usually
reserved  for conventions and concerts but today is swallowing the homeless,
the deserted, the people whose buildings are cracked in half or sunk into  the
sidewalk. 
  It is the morning after the night they  can never forget, the earthquake,
the growling of the planet. And it is not over. Here, they  talk about the
Anglo Hotel, their former home, which rose from the sidewalk at least six
inches. Across the bay, on the Oakland side,  rescuers are plowing through the
concrete of  I-880, which collapsed during rush hour. Dogs are sniffing for
survivors. In a nearby town, six people sit holding hands, a silent  vigil for
a friend they believe is still alive, trapped in a building.
  The horror. The survival. How can you make sense of an earthquake? What
strikes you most as you travel these shaken streets  is how such an awesome
force could be both so fast and so fickle. It came during a perfectly glorious
afternoon -- warm sun, warm breeze -- and in 15 seconds, it set this area back
years, maybe longer.  It  razed some buildings to rubble, and left others
untouched. It amused some residents, like a roller coaster ride, and forced
others to drive off bridges to their death.
  "I'm from Philadelphia  originally, man," says Jones, as he sits down for
the long wait. "I don't need this bleep. Damn. I was just getting my life
together."
Bee antennas for lights 
  You live here, you take your chances.  That's what they tell you. But
that was before Tuesday, when "earthquake" meant a rumble in the night and
then back to sleep. We had come to cover baseball, a World Series, and
suddenly, the stadium shook and the place was evacuated and here we were
wandering on Market Street, after midnight, like lost children, no place to
go, no lights, no food. People slept in doorways. On benches. Occasionally
you heard a scream. A siren. A vendor lugged out two sacks of electric bee
antennas -- the kind John Belushi used to wear on "Saturday Night Live" -- and
because they lit up, providing two dots of green  light, enough to see the
face in front of you, hundreds of souls were soon walking San Francisco with
little bee antennas on their heads.
  Crazy. It was paradise gone mad, a lullaby of a city now covered in
shattered glass. The worst quake since 1906? Is that what they said? The night
seemed to last forever, and yet, as long as it was dark, there was hope that
the world would be different in  the morning. That all these pictures,
transmitted on battery-operated TV sets --  pictures of one house leaning into
the next like a drunken sailor, or a 50-foot section of the upper-level Bay
Bridge  collapsed through to the lower level -- would somehow soften in the
morning light.
Body count swells 
  Instead, the images grew starker in the daytime, more real. The body
count began to swell  as police and fire reports came in.  At least 253 lost
in the I-880 collapse. Two killed in a shopping mall crumble in Santa Cruz.
One man killed on the roads when horses broke free from a trailer and  smacked
into his car. 
  "I saw five bodies myself," said Ronnie McAuliffe, a bearded man with a
Chicago Cubs cap who lives in the Mission District. "A wall of a building over
near Townsend Street  collapsed on these five cars, just buried them in a
pile. I jumped in and started pulling bricks from there --  you know -- trying
to get them out."
  He sighed, then shook his head. 
  "They were  dead, all right. Police came and took them."
  California, falling down. All around the bay area Tuesday, people were
walking, no particular destination, just walking, looking, seeing cracks in
the  middle of a townhouse and garage doors smashed into the cars beneath
them. It was arbitrary destruction, as if the devil said, "Eenie-meenie-miney
. . . crunch." 
  Near the Marina area, streets were  blocked off with yellow police
barriers. It was here that the fires raged most fiercely, fires that could not
be put out quickly Tuesday night for want of water that was lost when the
quake broke the mains.
  Vic Giannini, a 71-year-old retiree, was watching TV when he felt his house
rumble. For some reason he went to the window and looked across North Point
Street just in time to see a four story  apartment building "crumble like an
accordion."
  He points to it now and scratches his white hair. It is the strangest thing
you ever saw. The building is collapsed and resting atop a gray Ford Tempo.
It looks as if the house had been built around the crushed car. The roof is
only 20 feet from the sidewalk.
  "Are you saying that's actually the second floor of the building?" someone
asks Giannini.
  "No, no," he says, "that's the fourth floor. The other three are crushed
beneath it."
Buildings sink; sidewalks rise 
  There are pictures like this across the bay area. Houses that have
simply sunk into the earth. Sidewalks that rise two feet, to a point, as if an
giant arrow is sticking up from beneath the concrete. Hotel lobbies lit by
candlelight; stranded guests sleeping on the couches.  Cars hanging off
bridges.
  California, falling down.
  "How bad you get it, Vic?" asks Frank Battaglia, a thick- eyebrowed plumber
who, he says, has been living here for years.
  "Pretty bad,"  comes the answer. "Everything upstairs is a wreck. Go up and
see."
  Battaglia goes up into the house, then emerges a few minutes later.
  "Hey, Vic. My wife would give anything if our house looked as good as yours
right now. She'd kiss you, she'd be so happy."
  "Yeah?"
  "She'd kiss you. You wanna see destroyed? My place is destroyed."
  "Yeah?"
  "Yeah. I'll show you destroyed. Come  and see my place, you wanna see
destroyed."
  They both turn and look at the apartments that are squashing the gray Ford.
It is warm now, like the day it happened, warm and quiet. Were it not for the
distant fire engines, it might be another perfect day.
  "Hey, Frank," says Giannini, not taking his eye off the destruction. "I
won't be needing those pipes fixed no more."
Some looting; more kindness
  And the survival continues. Yes, there were stories of looting --
surprisingly few -- but there were also sterling examples of humanity, people
opening their homes to strangers, cable cars riding  through the streets,
announcing: "If anyone needs a ride somewhere, to find their families, the
transportation is free." Restaurants donated food and plates to the Red Cross
shelters. People came with  blankets and blood for the hospitals.
  There is something about disaster that draws people together, and there is
something about it that makes us wonder why, what is the reason, who is trying
to  tell us something? Can it really be that this stuff just happens? You live
here, you take your chances?
  Outside the shelter, on Mission Street, three street people are squatting
against a building,  their palms open. I drop some money in their hands and
the middle one, a big man with deep blue eyes and wild white hair stuffs the
money in his pocket.
  "Did you feel the earthquake?" he says. "I  was going out to buy a jug of
wine. And the street started shaking. And I said to myself, 'Wait a minute.
I'm not loaded yet.' "
  He wags a finger. "You know what I say? I say that one day, the big  one is
gonna come, and this whole place will slide into the sea. We'll all meet
there, down below, no rich and no poor, just people."
  I stare at him and walk away. A police car rolls by, and up ahead  is
another yellow zone, another sunken building, another life to rebuild.
  "We're all gonna meet there," the crazy man yells again, but by that point
I am up the street and walking fast.
CUTLINE:
Junior  Gail sits with her belongings on a sidewalk in the Marina district of
San Francisco on Wednesday. Her family was forced to move.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
EARTHQUAKE;CALIFORNIA;SAN FRANCISCO;ANECDOTE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
