home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 28
-
-
- When the earth began to tremble, TIME staff members in San
- Francisco found themselves living the story they would report.
- Lee Griggs and Dennis Wyss were squeezed into an open-air press
- box in the upper deck of Candlestick Park, awaiting the start
- of the third game of the World Series. "I heard a low rumble,
- and my first thought was that the Giants fans were stamping
- their feet in unison," Wyss recalls. An instant later, the
- stands began rocking back and forth. A native San Franciscan,
- Wyss was sure an earthquake had struck. So was Griggs, who as
- TIME's Tokyo bureau chief in the 1960s had experienced a score
- of them.
-
- Griggs did his best to reassure his neighbors in the press
- box, most of them out-of-town sportswriters more conversant
- with split-fingered fast balls than the Richter scale. But both
- Griggs and Wyss became concerned when stadium light towers began
- whipping back and forth. Says Wyss: "The stadium kept swaying
- faster and faster. I thought, how much more can it take before
- it caves in? I felt utterly helpless. Then it stopped."
-
- When Griggs returned to his apartment downtown, he found
- that his wife Jean had broken out candles and flashlights and
- filled tubs and basins with water. Says Griggs: "We've spent 14
- years in the Third World on assignment for TIME, and you presume
- power and water failures as a way of life in many places."
-
- San Francisco bureau chief Paul Witteman was on the phone
- in his office on the 19th floor of Two Embarcadero, overlooking
- the Bay Bridge, when the quake hit. "The building began to sway
- gently, then more rapidly," Witteman reports. "The phone
- connection was broken, and then the severe shocks began." With
- the elevators out of service, Witteman walked down 398 steps to
- the ground. It was only when he got to the street and saw the
- blown-out third floor of the adjacent Golden Gate Bank building
- that he realized the ferocity of the earthquake. He pulled out
- his notebook and began reporting this week's cover stories.
-
-