<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9601240233
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960728
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, July 28, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1E
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
ATLANTA '96
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
OLYMPIC AFTERSHOCK
ALL THE GOOD IN US CAN'T STOP AN EVIL HEART
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ATLANTA --  Every plane, every passenger, every suitcase, every seat . .
.

  The silence was what you noticed first. Centennial Olympic Park had been
jokingly referred to as "the party that  never stopped," particularly by those
who tried to sleep in the hotels surrounding it. It thumped. It rocked. It
sang until the wee hours. Hundreds of thousands of people, meeting, drinking,
eating, dancing.

  Suddenly, silence. No music. No cheers. Just stunned looks and darkness
and a voice booming over a loudspeaker, "PEOPLE, PLEASE, LEAVE THE PARK. THERE
IS NO REASON TO PANIC."
  Every  truck, every van, every car . . . 
  Within minutes, the surrounding streets were lit by flashing lights, blue
for police, red for ambulances. They rushed in as spectators rushed out. The
whispers  started. Someone said a band blew up its amplifiers. Someone said an
electrical transformer exploded.
  "I was there," yelled a man in a blue T-shirt, who grabbed me. "I saw a
couple of people go  down bad. This one guy was bleeding across his stomach. I
was on a cell phone with my girlfriend and she said, 'What was that?' And I
said, 'You ain't gonna believe this. Something just blew up.' "
  Inside a knapsack, left by an equipment tower, was the thing that just
blew up: a bomb, the kind you make in your basement, some wire, some pipes,
some gunpowder and a timing device like an alarm  clock or a pocket watch.
There were nails and screws in the knapsack as well, so that when this thing
exploded, those sharp pieces would scatter with enough force to rip flesh,
pierce a skull, blind  an eye, maybe kill someone.
  The FBI calls this "an anti-personnel device."
  And when it exploded, the Olympics deflated before our eyes. Bodies were
put into ambulances, barricades went up, tourists were pointing and running
away. And somewhere, someone was feeling satisfied, maybe even amused. And
that was the scariest thought of all.
  Every box, every package, every shopping bag . . . 
What  price freedom?
  How can you ever be safe? How can you check everything? There were public
gathering areas like Centennial Olympic Park at the Barcelona Games four years
ago and in Seoul four years before that and in Los Angeles four years before
that. No one checked your bags. It would be logistically impossible. Besides,
the last thing you think about at a world party is that someone is watching,
planning to hurt you.
  Such is the nature of terrorism, to make you worry about the darkness of
every corner. And in that way, the pipe bomb that burst here early Saturday
morning, on the ninth day  of these Summer Games, did what it intended. Two
people dead, 111 injured. Everyone on edge. Olympic Park was evacuated and, by
sunrise, looked like an abandoned carnival on some lonely seashore pier.
  Never in history has a bomb this small had this much attention. Pipe bombs
explode with terrible frequency in such places as Belfast, Beirut, Jerusalem,
Sarajevo. Maybe they get a few inches in the  back of a newspaper. But this?
This was in every newspaper and on every TV set, and maybe that pleases the
sick soul who called 911 to warn of the bomb just before it exploded, the man
they couldn't  stop.
  How could you stop it?
  Every handbag, every knapsack, every briefcase, every purse . . . 
What price glory?
  But let's be clear about what happened here and why continuing the Games
was every bit the right decision, even if it seemed a bit insensitive to the
families of the two victims.
  This was not Munich, 1972. In Munich you had terrorists who targeted
Israeli athletes inside  a supposedly safe haven, the Olympic village. They
told the world who they were and what they wanted. They staged their terror
for political purposes.
  This is not the kind of terrorist we tend to  get in America. We tend to
get solitary psychos, deranged losers hoping to throw a little spotlight on
their demented lives. No dogs can sniff these people out. No government agency
can predict their  pattern.
  The coward who left that bomb got to see reaction on TV from Atlanta to
the White House to Moscow to the streets of Paris. Maybe he's somewhere now
thinking, "Whooeee, look at me."
  He deserves no more satisfaction. All the good in the world can't stop an
evil heart from pulling a stunt. But all the stunts in the world can't match
all the good. Right now, these Olympics are stunned,  doused like a campfire
in a thunderstorm. But you have to make a choice. Live on, or live in fear,
frisk everyone, trust no one.
  Every coat, every jacket, every shoe, every pocket . . . 
  The  park is empty as I write this, save for police and dogs and FBI
agents. Across the street is a small concert stage, with a giant Statue of
Liberty, staring straight into the area where these Olympics  were changed
forever. I look at Miss Liberty, and I wonder what she's thinking.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN; OLYMPIC; BOMBING
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
