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<text id=89TT2862>
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<title>
Oct. 30, 1989: Earthquake!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Cover Stories
Oct. 30, 1989 San Francisco Earthquake
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 30
EARTHQUAKE
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Ed Magnuson
</p>
<p> Even for those born long after San Francisco's great 1906
earthquake and fire, it had become a habit to recall the warm,
breezy conditions during that cataclysm. Looking out a window
from her home in suburban Sunnyvale, Neta Lott remarked to her
husband Byron that the Indian-summer evening of Oct. 17 seemed
like "darned good earthquake weather." Moments later, the
shaking and rolling began. Byron, an electrical engineer, fell
to the floor. Neta tried to get up but remained pinned to her
chair until she rolled onto the floor. "I sat under the desk and
thought I would be buried," she recalled. "I thought, `This is
it. I'm going to die.'"
</p>
<p> To the north in Oakland, auto mechanic Richard Reynolds
glanced at the traffic on the double-decker I-880 freeway across
the street and urged a friend not to drive to night school until
after the rush hour. Minutes later, Reynolds felt "a ripple."
Then a neighbor screamed a warning. He ran out of his shop to
find "the whole goddam ground lifting up." He grabbed a
telephone pole as the sidewalk buckled beneath his feet, and
looked up at a horrifying sight. A mile-long section of the
freeway's upper deck began to heave, then collapsed onto the
lower roadway, flattening cars as if they were beer cans. "It
just slid. It didn't fall. It just slid," said Reynolds. "You
couldn't see nothing but dust. Then people came out of the
dust." But not many. Dozens of cars were crushed in the concrete
sandwich. Officials hoped, against all odds, that most carried
only one person. A mile or so away, engineer Bruce Stephan was
driving home on the upper deck of the Bay Bridge. He gripped the
steering wheel hard as the car bounced up and down, then plunged
toward the water. A 50-ft. piece of roadway had broken off and
fallen onto the lower deck, carrying him with it. "Janice, we
are going to die!" he shouted to his passenger. But something
caught the car, and they were able to crawl out the windows to
safety. Don Laviletta, riding his motorcycle on the upper deck,
described how the roadway bulged and rippled toward him "like
bumper cars--only you could die in this game." The driver of
one car, in fact, was killed in the collapse.
</p>
<p> In San Francisco's yuppified Marina district, Emily Hudson
was startled by the swinging of a chandelier, which struck the
ceiling, then fell to the floor of her apartment. Her
three-story building, with 18 apartments, cracked, splintered
and toppled forward. "I could hear two women trapped in the
apartment below me screaming, then I heard a voice yelling, `Are
you okay?'" the stockbroker's assistant recalled. Shortly after
a neighbor pulled her out of a smashed window into air filled
with gas fumes, she heard three deafening explosions. Then she
saw a "horrible, huge wall of flame." Before the long night was
over, most of an adjacent block containing ten buildings was
incinerated by gas-fed flames that shot 50 ft. into the sky.
</p>
<p> In the resort and university town of Santa Cruz, 75 miles
south of San Francisco, Heidi Nyburg was enjoying the ocean view
as she strolled along West Cliff Drive. When she approached the
Dream Inn, where she works as a desk clerk, her serenity
vanished. "Cars were bumping up and down. People were falling
off their bikes, running everywhere, getting out of their cars.
Women were screaming. It was panic." Blocks away,
turn-of-the-century houses swayed and crumpled. The entire
downtown area, including the Pacific Garden Mall, was
devastated. Three people were crushed to death. Outside Santa
Cruz, the community closest to the quake's epicenter, a corral
collapsed. As six frightened horses ran across a nearby road,
a pickup truck plowed into them; the driver was killed.
</p>
<p> The Salinas Valley town of Hollister (pop. 11,500)
experiences temblors so frequently that some of the townspeople
proudly call it the Earthquake Capital of the World. At 5:04
p.m., 19-year-old Albert Valles was working out in a gym when
he felt the building begin to shake. He ran into the street as
the facade gave way, burying his Jeep under an avalanche of
bricks. "I would have been finished," Valles marveled. No one
was injured. Yet in nearby Watsonville (pop. 23,550), the
Bake-Rite Bakery caved in, fatally smashing a passerby.
</p>
<p> It was in such terrifying, surrealistic scenes that
Northern Californians who chanced to be in the wrong place at
5:04 p.m. last Tuesday were jolted into an awful realization:
a major earthquake had struck the Bay Area and its 6 million
residents at rush hour. In 15 interminable seconds, an estimated
100 people had been killed and 3,000 injured, making the quake
the third most lethal in U.S. history.
</p>
<p> Unlike hurricanes, which can be detected as they spawn and
tracked until they expire, earthquakes give no timely warning.
This one's subterranean birth pangs had persisted for decades,
attended only by seismologists helplessly unable to pinpoint
when calamity would strike. When its punch was finally
delivered, it was measured at 6.9 on the Richter scale, a force
not recorded in the U.S. since the 9.2 quake that shook Alaska
in 1964.
</p>
<p> The tremor was felt far beyond the Bay Area. In Reno, 225
miles northeast of San Francisco, University of Nevada student
Laura Mildon saw the clothes in her closet swinging on their
hangers. In Los Angeles, 400 miles to the south, high-rise
buildings swayed and water sloshed out of swimming pools. Jody
Paul, an administrator for a film company working on the 23rd
floor of a Century City tower, felt a gentle movement that gave
her "a really strange feeling."
</p>
<p> In another example of television's ability to create an
instant global community as historic events unfold, some 60
million baseball fans in the U.S. and millions more in countries
as distant as Japan and Australia got details on the California
tragedy long before those who were closest to it. Just 21
minutes before the start of the World Series' third game, the
TV pictures from San Francisco's Candlestick Park started to
jiggle. ABC sportscaster Al Michaels shouted, "We're having an
earth...!" Then the screens went black as power was lost.
Soon the network switched to a rerun of a sitcom.
</p>
<p> The 58,000 high-spirited spectators in Candlestick Park
were at first either confused or nonchalant. Both teams had
finished batting practice. Then a soft, distant rumble grew
louder. "It sounded like rolling thunder," said Peter Rubens,
a winery manager seated in the right-field lower deck. The
stadium shuddered. Light towers swayed. The foul-line poles in
left and right field whipped back and forth. Though expansion
joints at the top of the stadium absorbed the blow, chunks of
concrete fell off, precisely as planned. One dangerous block
crashed into a seat in Section 53. Only a moment before, its
occupant had gone to buy a hot dog.
</p>
<p> When the noise and shaking reached their peak, the
spectators fell silent. After it finally stopped, the relieved
and unhurt crowd broke into a cheer. "That's San Francisco,"
said an admirer of the city. "They cheer an earthquake." A fan
scribbled an impromptu sign: THAT WAS NOTHING. WAIT TILL THE
GIANTS BAT! After the public address system lost power, police
in squad cars used bullhorns to tell the fans that there would
be no game and that they should move slowly toward exits. As
they left and looked north, they could see a plume of black
smoke rising into an otherwise clear sky.
</p>
<p> No matter how blase Californians pretend to be about
earthquakes, this one shook that facade. Lisa Sheeran, a public
relations manager, picked up a rental car in Colma, just off
the San Andreas fault. As she opened one of the doors, the
vehicle bounced up and down. "What's wrong with this car?" she
asked. The rental agent shrugged and said, "I don't know." Then
both watched a wave of undulating earth approach them from a
graveyard at the bottom of a hill. It reminded her of the
ghostly movie Alien.
</p>
<p> When the quake struck, Serina Johnson, 13, and her sister
Corina, 11, were alone in their small apartment across from
Oakland's city hall. "The food started flying off the
refrigerator, dishes started breaking off the wall, the TV
started knocking over, and the windows started breaking and
cracking," said Serina. "I started screaming, and I tried to get
my little sister out of the house. We ran outside. I looked up,
and there was big cracks in the walls. And the building was
coming down." Said Corina: "It was like being in a blender."
</p>
<p> Across the Bay in San Francisco's public library, a chain
reaction rippled through the stacks, dumping 250,000 books into
piles on the floor. At a meeting of water-pollution-control
officials at the Moscone Convention Center, security guard
Charles Scott stood with 200 people at an awards ceremony.
"Suddenly people were falling off the stage, and the lights went
out," he said. "Then everyone panicked and starting running in
all directions. I screamed, `Don't run, don't run!' But people
were running over each other, and I was knocked down."
Fortunately, no one was seriously hurt.
</p>
<p> San Francisco's high-rise buildings, many constructed in
the past 20 years, proved to be among the safest havens. Built
to strict standards adopted after the 1971 San Fernando tremor,
the buildings bent rather than snapped as the quake rippled
through the bedrock. Not one of them suffered major damage.
</p>
<p> Some of the high-rises, however, swayed in the air,
terrifying their occupants. Mark Ragsdale, a loan officer
working in 2 Embarcadero Center, "knew it was something big"
when he tried to get up from a sofa but was tossed to the floor.
"I wobbled all over, trying to get my footing. It was like
trying to balance on a moving waterbed." Ragsdale walked down
19 flights of stairs and went home.
</p>
<p> Victor Rosen, an Oakland lawyer with a 20th-floor office in
the Clorox Building, was in an elevator at 5:04 p.m. As it
swung and banged violently, he thought "something had been
disconnected." Once the shaking stopped, the adventure was not
over for him and six other passengers. Between floors, the
elevator doors sprang open. Chunks of concrete flashed past. The
cage dropped slowly, then faster, before shuddering to a jarring
stop. The occupants found themselves staring at a plaster wall
somewhere below the 13th floor. No one screamed, but Rosen
conceded that the situation was "very nerve-racking." It took
35 minutes before rescuers hand-cranked the elevator up to the
13th floor and the passengers were able to crawl out.
</p>
<p> The situation was far worse in the Marina, a district of
Mediterranean-style houses built on landfill in the early part
of the century. It was mainly the soft earth that doomed the 60
houses. Still, the Marina devastation would have been worse if
fire fighters had not labored through the night to confine the
inferno to a single large block. Their problem was a lack of
water because so many mains had broken. Using a system of
portable hydrants and hose tenders devised by assistant fire
chief Frank Blackburn, they drew water from the Bay. The absence
of a breeze in an area where 30-m.p.h. winds are common proved
a blessing. "With its earthquakes and construction, this city
is built to burn," said Blackburn, who was hailed as one of the
night's heroes.
</p>
<p> As in so many tragedies, there was no clear pattern, no
consistent explanation for why some people lost everything, in
some cases including their lives, while others were unscathed
by the Great Quake of '89. For one family on Russian Hill, the
only evidence of the disaster was a broken wineglass. Lacking
power and therefore radio or television, they had no idea how
extensive the damage was until their worried son-in-law called
from Darwin, Australia.
</p>
<p> On Front Street, the mortar that binds the terra-cotta tile
and brick skin of the Golden Gate Bank disintegrated into
powder and the southeast corner of the top floor cascaded into
rubble. No one was injured on the street below, but the handsome
structure, erected in 1908, will have to be torn down.
Chinatown, where relatively frail buildings are densely packed,
seemed even more vulnerable to a quake. But Doris Hallanan, a
real estate agent whose car was "bucking like a wild bronco" as
she drove down Grant Avenue, saw only that the street "looked
like a scene from ancient China because it was veiled in dust
and smoke." The area sustained little serious damage.
</p>
<p> At the corner of Sixth and Bluxome streets, however, the
fourth-floor brick wall of a building erected a few years after
the 1906 quake tore loose. "Bricks were falling, and dust was
everywhere," said Charles Pinkstaff, who ran out of a nearby
structure that also rumbled. "Then everything was quiet, except
for water dripping somewhere. I saw a car smashed so flat I
couldn't tell if anyone had been in it." When he got closer, he
saw that the driver had been decapitated. The falling wall had
smashed seven cars, killing at least five people. "I've seen
people die, but nothing like this," said San Francisco fire
battalion chief Jack Bogue.
</p>
<p> The most horrifying scene was in West Oakland, where
screams and smoke issued from the crumbled concrete of I-880.
Beneath the smashed upper deck, some cars had been flattened to
a height of 6 in. As survivors yelled for help, citizens long
divided by race and class forgot their differences in a rush to
assist them. William McElroy, an unemployed boilermaker who had
just reached his home from the freeway, returned to the
disaster. "We couldn't do a damn thing at first because we
didn't have any equipment. We broke into a factory yard and got
ladders. Then two kids came with forklifts from another factory.
We put pallets on them, lifted them up like stretchers and
brought people down." Heedless of aftershocks that continued to
rumble, ghetto youths perched atop ladders, peering into 18-in.
gaps between the layers of concrete to help mostly white
commuters climb to safety. Said McElroy: "In time of disaster,
people don't ask your color. They just ask for help."
</p>
<p> Patrick Wallace, a worker in a local paper plant, shinnied
up a tree to reach the fallen highway. He saw two women dead in
a flattened auto. Then he heard "one little whimper" from the
backseat. Pinned beneath a slab of concrete and the body of his
mother was Julio Berumen, 6. His less seriously injured sister,
Cathy, 8, also lay there. For nearly an hour, Wallace struggled
to free the boy. Once he felt movement. "But it turned out it
was just the clothing sliding from his body."
</p>
<p> Arriving fire fighters finally managed to pry Cathy loose.
Then doctors who had rushed to the scene from Oakland hospitals
made a tough decision. "The mother is in the way, O.K.?" said
intern Daniel Allen. "We're going to take a chain saw through
the body to get to him." Even after that macabre operation, the
boy was still trapped. Only when trauma surgeon James Betts
amputated his right leg could Julio be freed. "He was moving and
crying out," Betts explained later. "We couldn't just leave him
there."
</p>
<p> When Oakland Mayor Lionel Wilson declared that there could
be no more survivors in the fallen freeway, dogged rescue crews
ignored him and searched on. For a brief moment on Wednesday,
their determination seemed to pay off when a faint voice was
heard in the rubble. But it turned out to be from a CB radio.
</p>
<p> On Thursday, as the stench of decaying bodies wafted over
the debris, officials gave up and called in equipment to lift
off the slabs. The next night, engineers attached a cable to a
pillar at a particularly fragile point of the wreckage to test
the structure's ability to sustain the weight of more workers.
The rubble shifted, opening a larger gap. It was a prelude to
a miracle.
</p>
<p> Shortly after 6 a.m. on Saturday an engineer climbed into
the newly exposed space to evaluate the test. He was
astonished: something had moved inside a silver Chevrolet
Sprint. Excited rescuers crawled cautiously closer. They found
a man, alive and semiconscious, still strapped into the front
seat. When a paramedic shouted, the man moved his head.
Struggling gingerly for five hours, they extricated Buck Helm,
57, a shipping clerk, who managed to wave an arm as he was
lifted to a waiting ambulance amid the cheers of exultant
searchers. His condition was described as critical but stable.
He had survived 90 hours in what for so many others had been a
tomb.
</p>
<p> By then, early estimates of as many as 250 fatalities had
begun to look far too high. Only 34 bodies had been extracted
from the rubble as of Saturday, and officials theorized that the
freeway death toll might not exceed 85, still a catastrophic
number.
</p>
<p> In Santa Cruz concern for a possible survivor touched off
a clash between citizens and police at the devastated Pacific
Garden Mall. Betty Barnes and other workers at the Santa Cruz
Coffee Roasting Co., a boutique coffee shop, ran out when the
walls began to tumble, but one employee remained behind. "I
heard a quick scream to my right, where she was," Barnes
recalled. "I know she's in there." Friends of the missing woman
held hands, weeping and calling out her name, as rescuers probed
through the shambles. Finally convinced she could not have
survived, they gave up late Tuesday night. That was too soon for
the woman's friends, who taunted and pushed the workers,
pleading with them to look again. They threatened to dig into
the dangerous wreckage themselves. Police arrested five people.
Late Wednesday the body of Robin Ortiz was found.
</p>
<p> For the most part, however, the predominant mood was a
relieved euphoria. For the millions who came through the quake
without a scratch, the experience was akin to a roller-coaster
ride: a few moments of terror followed by sheer exhilaration.
"I've felt all the earthquakes since I've lived here, and this
one was the best--my best near death experience," declared Los
Gatos bike-shop employee Ray Blair.
</p>
<p> The joy of survival produced unaccustomed cooperation and
civility. On the night of the quake, there were only 25 arrests
for vandalism in San Francisco, down from the usual 100 or so,
though such arrests were a low police priority that evening.
Countless residents grabbed flashlights to direct traffic at
intersections where signal lights had stopped. In the seedy
Mission district of San Francisco, a woman carrying two
flashlights, precious as gold under the circumstances, overheard
two men discuss stealing one. In a rare spirit of camaraderie,
they refrained.
</p>
<p> Many hotels allowed the newly homeless, or those too
frightened to stay in their insecure buildings, to camp out in
their lobbies. At the darkened Stanford Court, complimentary
caviar and smoked salmon were served by candlelight. The motive
was not mere generosity: the comestibles would have spoiled
without refrigeration. At the Mandarin Oriental, a manager
explained, "We're doing our best to give our guests first-class
comfort, even while bedding them down in the lobby." The
expense-account Seven Hills of San Francisco Restaurant served
a free sidewalk lunch to anyone who passed by. Bankers in
three-piece suits munched chicken wings beside bearded homeless
men.
</p>
<p> Everywhere people yearned for news of what had happened
around them. On downtown California Street, a crowd gathered
around a woman equipped with a tiny battery-operated TV.
Playing anchorwoman, she relayed the news to those who could not
see her screen. When truncated copies of the San Francisco
Chronicle appeared at 7 a.m. Wednesday, people threw quarters
at the sellers and shoved one another to grab a copy.
</p>
<p> On the morning after, some of the giddiness lingered.
Entrepreneurs appeared on the streets, hawking $20 T-shirts
with the slogan I SURVIVED THE QUAKE OF '89, and shops
announced half-price earthquake sales. But the mood turned to
grimness as the extent of the destruction became clear.
Officials estimated that property damage could mount to $10
billion or more, probably surpassing the losses from Hurricane
Hugo. Throughout the quake zone, residents awoke to a crazy
quilt of destruction in which some buildings were leveled while
neighboring structures survived intact. In San Juan Bautista the
125-year-old home of restaurant consultant Becky McGovern is
situated only 100 ft. from the San Andreas fault. Although it
bounced "from one side to the other," the house did not fall
down. At Mariposa House Restaurant in the same town, owner
Barbara Kuhl said her building "did the Shimmy, Shimmy Ko-Ko
Bop, but we didn't lose a thing." Her porch, however, had "gone
out to meet two little old ladies" arriving for dinner.
</p>
<p> Others were not so fortunate. Their frustration boiled into
anger in the Marina district, where residents who tried to
inspect their ruined houses were barred by police. After a
shouting match with Mayor Art Agnos, a compromise allowed
residents with escorts to enter their homes briefly to collect
whatever they could before the buildings were torn down. "Our
poor little lives are right here on the sidewalk," said Patrice
Gehrke, loading a pickup with furniture and ferns. Diane
Whitacre hoisted a drawing board on her shoulder so she could
get on with her free-lance work. "The most important thing to
me was the stuff I need to make a living," she observed. "Life
does go on."
</p>
<p> By Wednesday most of San Francisco had returned to near
normal. The BART mass-transit system, which suffered only minor
damage to its tunnel beneath the Bay, resumed normal service,
and airports in San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose were
operating again. The surest sign that the crisis was over:
baseball commissioner Fay Vincent announced that the World
Series would resume Tuesday night if local officials decide it
could be done safely.
</p>
<p> Now comes the long work of reconstruction. Engineers say it
may take four weeks to repair the Bay Bridge and up to 2 1/2
years to replace the wreck of I-880. Until the repairs are
completed, 343,000 commuters will face a traffic nightmare as
they are forced to use alternative routes. But the rebuilt
structures are likely to be stronger than those they replace--strong enough, it is hoped, to survive the dreaded Big One.
</p>
<p> It is sure to come, someday. Knowing that, Californians
have a choice: either to move to an area less prone to quakes,
which few are likely to do, or to make the best preparations
they can to deal with them. In that sense, there was something
miraculous about the Great Quake of '89. Except for the
catastrophe on I-880, the loss of life was remarkably small
considering the area's population and the power of the tremor.
If last week's quake was a dress rehearsal for police, rescue
workers, support services and citizens, they performed
admirably. And they learned enough to be even better prepared
for that long-dreaded day when the earth trembles again. </p>
</body>
</article>
</text>