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<UID>
9002090783
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
901021
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, October 21, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
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<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
OAKLAND'S STEWART IS A GENUINE MVP
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
OAKLAND --  There was an awkward moment here a few weeks ago, after the
A's won the pennant. Dave Stewart, their star pitcher, was brought to the
interview podium along with American League president  Bobby Brown. At least
300 journalists were crushed in a tight crowd. They wanted to ask Stewart
about the game. Brown, who held a trophy in his arms, stepped to the
microphone first.

  "Before we get  to any questions, I want to announce that the MVP award of
this series goes to the man behind me . . . Dave Stewart!"  And nothing. Dead
silence. It was a moment for applause, but no one applauded, because
reporters have this thing about applauding; it makes them seem like fans. "No
cheering in the press box," goes the rule. And so Stewart took the trophy and
stood there, in uncomfortable silence, like  a man who'd wandered accidently
into the ladies room.

  It was a humbling moment -- much like this whole World Series has been for
Oakland. But I remember looking down and seeing my hands poised to  clap.
Maybe I should have clapped anyhow. Some things, after all, are more important
than rules and trophies. 
  One year ago, the earth shook in this bay area. Homes were crushed.
Highways collapsed.  People were alive one moment and dead the next. It was
the most horrific kind of tragedy, the random kind, good people, bad people,
healthy, sick, didn't matter. You were in the wrong place, your life  was
over.
  That night, and for many nights thereafter, Dave Stewart journeyed to the
collapsed Nimitz Freeway, where workers tried to rescue bodies from the awful
wreckage. He talked to those workers.  He cheered them up. He patted them on
the shoulders and said keep the faith. He always waited until 3 or 4 in the
morning, because that's when his presence would cause the least distraction. 
  He  wasn't there for autographs. This was not about showing how good a guy
he could be. Stewart's reasons for those post- midnight visits were
wonderfully simple: Oakland was his hometown.
  He felt an  obligation.
Disaster brought out the best
  I, too, was here during that earthquake. I felt Candlestick Park wobble like
an old drunk. I saw four-story houses swallowed by the earth, until the roofs
were at street level. I saw bridges snap in two, cars dangling over the water,
and people lined up at relief shelters, all kinds of people, the poor, the
wealthy, the bleeding, all of them suddenly united by tragedy. I remember
sitting down in one of those shelters, so stunned by it all, and a Red Cross
worker came up with a towel and soap. "Here," she said, "you can use this."
  The horror from that  week is etched in my mind, the rubble, the cars
crushed like soda cans, streets covered with so much broken glass that at
night, in the moonlight, they looked like lakes. And yet what stays with me
most  is not the destruction, but the survival.
  I have never witnessed such civic pride as in the crumbled moments after
last years earthquake. Barriers seemed to break down. Rich people who might
otherwise look away from the poor were dishing out soup and handing out bread.
Restaurant owners posted signs that read "Needy can eat free." Hotels normally
exclusive now had dozens of strangers sleeping in their lobbies. 
  And I remember thinking: "Is this what it takes to make us behave the way
we always should? An earthquake?"
He deserves some applause
  It is part of the reason I now salute Stewart.  Although he was right there
during the tragedy, he has never needed tragedy to motivate him. Long before
the earthquake, and long before he was the famous pitcher, he was calling high
schools in the Oakland area, asking whether they wanted him to come and speak
to the kids. Today, he is involved in seemingly countless charities, and the
more he helps, the more people seem to ask. He keeps saying  yes.
  You meet a lot of creeps in this business. You also meet a lot of phonies,
guys who act nice and talk about charity, but only because their agents told
them to. Once in a while -- a great while,  unfortunately -- you meet the real
thing.
  Dave Stewart was the A's starting pitcher Saturday night in the World
Series. Because of deadlines, I must file this column before the game begins.
So by  the time you read it, the A's could be history or still breathing, and
Stewart could be a winner or loser.
  You know what? It really doesn't matter. That's the biggest legacy of the
day the earth  shook; we all learned what's really important. For me, Stewart,
more than any other athlete, put it all in perspective. And the next time
there's a chance to clap for the guy, I'm gonna do it. I'll apologize  to my
colleagues later.
  Mitch Albom's new book, "Live Albom II," a collection of his columns, is
available at area bookstores or through the Detroit Free Press.
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