<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8902120280
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
891020
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Friday, October 20, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
LET'S DEDICATE SERIES TO THE HUMAN SPIRIT
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SAN FRANCISCO --  Sure, you play the World Series. In its place. In its
time. But you play it, you return to normal -- the same way people here are
slowly returning to work, to life as they knew  it before the ground began to
tremble Tuesday afternoon.

  It is part of the recovery. This earthquake that killed hundreds and left
thousands homeless was something none of us will ever forget, not
journalists, not baseball players. We came for a sporting event; we wound up
living through disaster.

  But people who today scream for the World Series to be canceled and
forgotten -- as if that  is the proper thing to do -- are, I believe,
confusing glitter with human spirit.
  One of the first traditions of mourning, in almost any religion or
culture, is that it is a finite thing. It does  not go on forever. Yes, it is
true, as  commissioner Fay Vincent said, "Our modest little game" is
insignificant compared the devastation that took place here. And no games of
any kind should be played  as long as there are bodies missing, or if a single
police officer or ambulance would be diverted from a rescue operation.
  But Vincent's suggestion to eventually continue play -- whenever the
cities  say that crucial operations are complete, be it next Tuesday, next
Friday, or whenever -- is a good idea. A fair idea. Baseball, after all, did
not cause this tragedy. In a small way, it, too, was a  victim.
  Now. I understand those who seek to cancel the event. They say: "How can
there be games when something this tragic has occurred?" I had the same
reaction in 1972, when terrorist gunmen stormed  the Olympic village in
Munich, killing 11 Israeli athletes and coaches.
  But that was different. That was human horror, the firing of bullets, a
brazen display of man's cruelty to man. To continue  an event that celebrated
"brotherhood" in the shadow of Israeli blood seemed, to me, the height of
insensitivity.
  What took place here Tuesday was not comparable. This was a natural
disaster, nobody's  fault, nobody's breakdown in security. And everyone was
affected. Bob Welch, scheduled to pitch that night for Oakland, lost his home
in the Marina area. His 10-week-old son was with a baby-sitter nearby,  and
Welch and his wife suffered the unthinkable worry for hours on the jammed
highway before finding the child was safe.
  They dig out. They go on.
Perhaps the tone troubles
  And so must we all.  Ask yourself this: Would you mind the resumption of
baseball next Tuesday if it were the regular season? If it were just another
game for the players, the same as another day at the office for bankers or
advertising executives?
  I'll bet the answer is no.
  Which means what probably bothers you about the World Series, if anything,
is the tone. The glitter of it all, which seems callous compared  to bodies
pulled from the wreckage of highway I-880.
  Fine. Good point. But the burden then falls on those who present the game
-- not the game itself. The game itself is merely baseball. Nine against
nine. Pitch, hit and field. All the razzmatazz is media and fan created.
  The athletes deserve to finish their season, and the victims of the
earthquake deserve not to be forgotten. Both can be accomplished  if we keep
this thing in proper perspective. Turn down the glitz. Forget any victory
parades. Begin each game with a moment for the victims. Show footage of Red
Cross volunteers as well as footage of  Will Clark's home runs. Skip your $10
bet and send the money instead to the disaster relief funds.
  And when you see that crowd gathered in Candlestick Park next week as it
was Tuesday -- when the  TV announcer said, "There's an earth . . ." --
remember just how frail life can be, and how lucky we all are for a diversion
like a baseball championship. How at any time, through the howl of nature,  it
can be taken away.
  Learning. That, too, is part of recovery.
Hardly a perfect world
  In a perfect world, we would all drop everything and be digging out San
Francisco and Oakland, 24 hours  a day. But in a perfect world, there would be
no office work done once Mt. Saint  Helens erupted, and businessmen would
cancel meetings and fly south to the Carolinas, to help victims of Hurricane
Hugo.
  This is not a perfect world. Often the best we can hope for is
perspective. In its own small way, the World Series is still important. "Maybe
a week from now, we can provide a little escapism for  the people here,"
Giants catcher Terry Kennedy said. By the time they resume play, the gruesome
chore of counting the dead should be over. The long climb back will have
begun.
  It is human nature  to take part. To be honest, having spent the last 48
hours writing about the devastation of this beautiful city, the last thing I
want to do today is cover a baseball game. But I also know this: today  is not
tomorrow.
  And tomorrow is what everyone lives for now. Tomorrow, when life is
better. The most inspiring part of this tragedy has been the indomitable
spirit of the survivors, who jumped  into rubble and fed strangers and
bandaged wounds.  They call that human spirit, the best part of us. And the
World Series, put in proper perspective, can be a small symbol of its
tenacity. Let us  hope we do it the right way.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
WORLD SERIES;BASEBALL;GAME;SAN FRANCISCO;COLUMN;EARTHQUAKE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
