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- <text>
- <title>
- (1980) "God, I Want To Live"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 00202><article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- June 2, 1980
- COVER STORY
- "God, I Want to Live!"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Mount St. Helens explodes, spreading death and destruction in
- the Cascades
- </p>
- <p> "Vancouver, Vancouver, this is it!" The frantic warning was
- radioed at precisely 8:31 a.m. on that fateful Sunday by Volcano
- Expert David Johnston, 30, who had climbed to a monitoring site
- five miles from Washington State's Mount St. Helens in the
- snow-capped Cascade Range, 40 miles northeast of Portland, Ore.
- He wanted to peer through binoculars at an ominous bulge
- building up below the crater, which had been rumbling and
- steaming for eight weeks, and report his observations to the
- U.S. Geological survey center in Vancouver, Wash.
- </p>
- <p> Seconds after his shouted message, a stupendous explosion of
- trapped gases, generating about 500 times the force of the
- atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, blew the entire top off Mount
- St. Helens. In a single burst St. Helens was transformed from
- a postcard-symmetrical cone 9,677 ft. high to an ugly flattop
- 1,300 ft. lower. Clouds of hot ash made up of pulverized rock
- were belched twelve miles into the sky. Giant mud slides,
- composed of melted snow mixed with ash and propelled by waves
- of superheated gas erupting out of the crater, rumbled down the
- slopes and crashed through valleys, leaving millions of trees
- knocked down in rows, as though a giant had been playing pick-up
- sticks.
- </p>
- <p> At the moment of the explosion David Crockett, 28, a
- photographer for KOMO-TV in Seattle, stood on a logging road at
- the base of the mountain. He heard a huge roar and looked up
- to see a wall of mud rushing toward him. Because of the
- terrain, the flood divided into two streams that passed on
- either side of him. Seeking desperately for a way out, Crockett
- kept moving along the road, speaking into his sound camera to
- record his impressions of the scene. Said he: "I am walking
- toward the only light I can see. I can hear the mountain
- rumble. At this very moment I have to say, `Honest to God, I
- believe I am dead.' The ash in my eyes burns my eyes, burns my
- eyes! Oh dear God, this is hell! It's very, very hard to
- breathe and very dark. If I could only breathe air. God, just
- give me a breath! I will try the radio. Mayday! Mayday! Ash
- is coming down on me heavily. It's either dark or I am dead.
- God, I want to live!"
- </p>
- <p> Crockett did live; a rescue helicopter plucked him off the
- mountain ten hours later. But Johnston was never heard from
- again. His campsite was strewn with boulders, broken tree
- trunks and ash with the consistency of wet cement. By week's
- end at least 18 people were known to have died in the eruption;
- at least 71 were reported missing and feared dead. Among them
- was Harry Truman, a crusty 84-year-old who lived with 16 cats
- at a recreation lodge near Spirit Lake, about five miles north
- of the peak. He had refused to leave weeks ago, he had told
- national television audiences, because, he said, "no one knows
- more about this mountain than Harry, and it don't dare blow up
- on him." Harry was last seen on Saturday evening, watering his
- lawn. Today the site of his camp is a steaming mass of mud and
- water.
- </p>
- <p> Air Force and Army National Guard helicopters lifted 130
- survivors to safety. Officials doubted that this count would
- go up; the last person found alive on the mountain was flown out
- on Tuesday. By Red Cross count, mud slides destroyed 123 homes
- in the town of Toutle and its surrounding area, along with
- bridges, roads and all other signs of human habitation.
- </p>
- <p> The eruption of Mount St. Helens, which began in a minor way
- on March 27, was the first in the continental U.S. since the
- Cascades' Mount Lassen, 400 miles to the south, spit up a shower
- of mud and stones in 1914. Had last week's explosion occurred
- in a heavily populated area, the loss of life would have been
- awesome. Geologists estimated that St. Helens spewed out about
- 1.5 cubic miles of debris, a blast on about the same order of
- magnitude as the one in A.D. 79 from Italy's Vesuvius, which
- buried Pompeii and Herculaneum with ash and mud.
- </p>
- <p> As it was, the eruption blew down 150 sq. mi. of timber worth
- about $200 million, caused an estimated $222 million in damage
- to wheat, alfalfa and other crops as far east as Missoula,
- Mont., and buried 5,900 miles of roads under ash. Clearing them
- could cost another $200 million. The blast created a 20-mile
- log jam along the Columbia River that blocked shipping between
- Longview, Wash., and Astoria, Ore. Volcanic mud carried by the
- river choked the harbor of Portland. Officials estimated that
- the ports would lose $5 million a day until dredges could clear
- a new channel through the silt, which in some places reduced the
- depth of the harbor from 40 ft. to 14 ft. Not all the long-range
- effects of the blast, particularly to the region's ecological
- balance, can yet be calculated. For example, the eruption
- killed a million fingerlings (baby fish) in a hatchery at
- Toutle, and there were fears that ash on the leaves of plants
- would interfere with photosynthesis, the process by which plants
- turn sunlight into nutrients.
- </p>
- <p> As winds carried the eruption's debris northeast from the
- shattered mountain, thick layers of ash, looking like dirty
- snow, fell on eastern Washington. Yakima, a town of 50,000
- located 85 miles east of the volcano, experienced midnight at
- noon. The mining and ranching communities of the Idaho
- panhandle and western Montana turned into ghostly towns in which
- nobody could move about the dust-choked streets without surgical
- masks or some substitute: handkerchiefs, bandannas, even coffee
- filters strapped over nose and mouth with rubber bands.
- Schools, factories and most stores and offices closed. Highways
- were closed and airports were shut down because of near zero
- visibility, stranding thousands of frightened travelers. Mail
- deliveries were halted. Electricity was curtailed until workers
- could clean ash from generators.
- </p>
- <p> Closer to the mountain, the eruption blasted twelve miles of
- the once pristine north fork of the Toutle River into a lifeless
- moonscape. Herds of black-tailed deer, bobcats and cougars used
- to swarm through the valley's hemlock and Douglas fir; elk still
- wandered in hopeless confusion through the ashen desolation.
- The river and its source, Spirit Lake, once teemed with
- steelhead trout and Chinook salmon. All were destroyed by the
- eruption. TIME Correspondent Paul Witteman was one of the first
- journalists to see the area by helicopter after the blast. His
- report:
- </p>
- <p> "The Huey chopper, piloted by National Guard Captain Harold
- Ward, went up the south fork of the Toutle, which had turned
- into a caramel ribbon, toward the peak, still shrouded in clouds
- of steam and ash. The mocha-colored terrain appeared
- otherworldly, a madly undulating landscape. The trees looked
- as if they had been strewn across the foothills by a careless
- child. As we passed over Baker Camp, a logging base, we spotted
- a pickup truck, a dead child lying face upward in the back.
- Ward swung the Huey over a huge mudhole that had once been
- Spirit Lake, a body of water so clear that it mirrored St.
- Helens like a reflecting pool, then did slow loops around
- another pickup truck on a nearby ridge. The truck's passenger
- must have had a perfect view of the terrifying blast. Seconds
- later, both passenger and driver were dead, probably from the
- heat and poisonous gas. As the Huey made another pass, the peak
- spouted ash 14,000 ft. into the atmosphere, a mini-replay of
- Sunday's monster explosion."
- </p>
- <p> Within four days the worst was over--maybe. The dust had
- settled in the heavy-fallout area, roughly from the ruptured
- peak to as far east as Montana. Fine ash particles, mostly
- glasslike silica, had spread in a gigantic, banana-shaped arc
- in the stratosphere across the nation and will slowly dissipate
- into invisible clouds after blowing round the world several
- times. Outside the Northwestern U.S., people will probably
- notice nothing more than some spectacularly colorful dawns and
- sunsets over the next several months.
- </p>
- <p> But there was a possibility of another natural disaster. A
- 200-ft. wall of mud and ash from the volcano prevented the
- waters of Spirit Lake from flowing into the Toutle River. Local
- officials feared at first that the dam might suddenly give way,
- sending backed-up water and mud flooding through the riverbank
- towns of Longview, Kelso and Castle Rock, menacing the lives of
- 50,000 people. By the weekend, however, water was slowly
- seeping through the mud-and-ash plug, and pressure on the dam
- had eased.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, there were further rumblings from Mount St.
- Helens, indicating that molten rock was once again moving inside
- the mountain. Geologists hoped that the monstrous blast had
- vented sufficient gas to prevent another major eruption. But
- they simply do not know enough about volcanoes to make any firm
- predictions.
- </p>
- <p> Four days after the blast, President Carter decided to inspect
- the devastated area. After a night in Portland, he climbed into
- the first of a flotilla of eight helicopters, packed with
- Cabinet officers, Senators, Congressmen and local government
- officials, including Governors Dixy Lee Ray of Washington and
- John Evans of Idaho. From the air Carter could not see the
- still-smoking peak of Mount St. Helens. It was hidden by rain
- clouds. But as his chopper flew at treetop level, he was
- astonished by the colorless landscape.
- </p>
- <p> After his 1-hr. 15-min. tour, Carter excitedly told reports:
- "The moon looks like a golf course compared to what's up there."
- At a meeting with townspeople in Vancouver, the President was
- being briefed by experts on the economic damage of the eruption
- when Governor Ray interrupted. "This is all very interesting,"
- she said, "but the top priority is people." Replied Carter:
- "What do you need specifically?" Ray spelled out her answer:
- "M-O-N-E-Y." In fact, before leaving Washington, D.C., Carter
- had declared the mountain's vicinity a federal disaster area,
- making residents eligible for low-interest federal loans to
- rebuild their shattered houses and businesses. In addition, he
- rather oddly suggested that residents might eventually make some
- money from the catastrophe. Said he: "People will come from all
- over the world to observe the impressiveness of the force of
- nature. I would say it would be, if you'll excuse the
- expression, a tourist attraction that would equal the Grand
- Canyon."
- </p>
- <p> Mount St. Helens is something of a baby among volcanoes. It
- was born a mere 37,000 years ago, which is scarcely more than an
- instant in geological time. The mountain last erupted in 1857,
- when the area was an uninhabited wilderness. Last week's blowup
- ranked as middling, as volcanic eruptions go. But the people
- who stumbled off St. Helens' slopes, or were plucked to safety
- by helicopters, told tales that rivaled wartime survivor
- stories.
- </p>
- <p> If the blast had occurred 24 hours later, it could have wiped
- out a crew of some 200 Weyerhaeuser Co. loggers who were to
- begin felling trees at 7:30 a.m. Monday. Many of the loggers
- lived with their families near the north fork of the Toutle
- River. Logger George Fickett was at home when the mountain
- erupted. Said he: "I heard the goldangest noise, like someone
- upending a bunch of barrels down the road. There was a roar,
- like a jet plane approaching, and a lot of snapping and popping.
- Those were the trees. We got out fast."
- </p>
- <p> On the mountain were several geologists, hikers and campers.
- Those that rose with the sun reported that the morning was
- exceptionally quiet; no birds sang. Oddly enough, when the
- mountain blew, many of the survivors never heard the explosion,
- perhaps because concussive waves can travel faster than sound;
- by the time the sound reached them, they were too shaken to
- notice it.
- </p>
- <p> Bruce Nelson and Sue Ruff, from nearby Kelso, had pitched
- tents at the Green River campground with four young friends. On
- Saturday they hiked through what Ruff called "an enchanted
- forest of moss and pine" and then set up tents 30 miles from the
- peak. On Sunday Nelson, Ruff and Terry Crall were beginning
- morning chores when they felt a searing wind. Recalled Nelson:
- "We were just cooking breakfast when my buddy said, `Oh my
- God, the mountain blew!'" Ruff added, "We saw this thick
- yellow-and-black cloud rushing toward us. I remember thinking,
- `I should take a picture of it.' Then I thought we'd better
- hide."
- </p>
- <p> Crall raced into a tent to wake Karen Varner, and Nelson
- wrapped his arms around Ruff as trees fell around them and hot
- ash rained down. Said Nelson: "We were buried. Then Sue and I
- started digging our way out of the ash, which was so hot that
- it burned our hands. Our mouths were full of mud. I told Sue
- we were going to die, and she said, `Nonsense.'" As they
- crawled out from under the trees and ash, they began to gag from
- the gases in the air and had to cover their mouths with their
- sweatshirts; stones hailed down and raised bumps on their heads.
- </p>
- <p> When at last the darkness began to lift, Nelson and Ruff began
- looking for their friends. They saw nothing but ashes and logs
- where Varner's tent had been; she and Crall later were found
- dead. The two other members of the camping group, Dan Balch and
- Brian Thomas, were alive--barely. Burned skin hung loose from
- Balch's shoulders to his hands, and he was in shock. He was
- unable to walk. Thomas, wearing only the longjohn bottoms in
- which he had been sleeping, was lying dazed under a log. Nelson
- and Ruff hauled him out, helped him walk to an old mine shack
- nearby and built over the entrance a barricade of logs to
- protect their friend from any further ash falls.
- </p>
- <p> Then Nelson and Ruff began what turned into a 15-mile, ten-
- hour trek away from the mountain, over what Nelson calls a
- "white-hot desert" of ash. They soon joined up with a 60-year-
- old man. The three kept up their spirits by singing bawdy songs.
- In late afternoon they heard helicopters overhead and waved some
- of their clothes to stir up a dust cloud large enough to attract
- the pilot's attention. They were rescued, and choppers soon
- carried out Balch and Thomas as well.
- </p>
- <p> Roald Reitan, 19, and his friend Venus Dergen, 20, of Tacoma,
- Wash., had been camping next to a good fishing hole in the
- Toutle River, about 23 miles downstream from Spirit Lake. They
- were awakened by a rumbling noise from the river, which was
- covered by felled trees. The pair ran to Reitan's car, but water
- from the rising river poured over the road, preventing them from
- driving away. Then a tide of mud crashed through the forest
- toward the car. Reitan and Dergen climbed to the roof of the
- car. That got them above the mud, but only momentarily. The
- mud slide toppled the car over the bank and into the river.
- </p>
- <p> Reitan and Dergen leaped off the roof and fell into the river,
- by now a boiling mass of logs, mud, pieces of a collapsed train
- trestle and what Reitan described as "hot bath water." Said he:
- "I thought we had had it. Venus was stuck between logs, and
- disappeared several times. I kept climbing over logs to reach
- her. We were lucky that the logs opened up and I could pull her
- out." The two were carried about a mile down the river before
- a family of campers spotted them and heard Reitan calling for
- help. It took the rescuers about 45 minutes to crawl across the
- mud and logs and pull Reitan and Dergen to safety.
- </p>
- <p> Mike Moore of Castle Rock, Wash., his wife Lu and their two
- daughters, four-year-old Bonnielu and three-month-old Terra
- Dawn, were on a hike along the Green River trail, about 13 miles
- north of Mount St. Helens, when the volcano erupted. "The sky
- turned as black as I've ever seen, and ash and pumice fell on
- us like black rain," said Lu Moore. "Then the air pressure
- changed, and our ears went pop, pop, pop."
- </p>
- <p> The family scrambled into a nearby shack, waited two hours and
- emerged to find themselves in a wasteland of ash and fallen
- trees. They started off to find their car, but the trail had
- been obliterated, and they had no idea where to look. So they
- pitched a tent and settled in for what turned out to be a
- 30-hour wait, munching on survival rations from their packs and
- sleeping on the ash. Around noon on Monday, an Air Force
- helicopter pilot spotted them. Said the pilot, Sgt. Earl
- Edwards: "The area they were in looked like somebody had
- dropped the Bomb. I was shocked to see anybody there alive."
- </p>
- <p> Farther away from the mountain, Northwesterners who were never
- in any danger heard what many at first thought were sonic booms
- and then saw a spectacular--and frightening--drama in the
- sky. Said Harvey Olander, a retired geologist who now cultivates
- a 40-acre apple orchard outside Yakima: "I was working on an
- irrigation ditch. The sky got dark, and I thought we had a
- hailstorm coming. Then it got deathly still, and all you could
- see through the darkness was the purple-pink glow of sheet
- lighting." Said Chuck Taylor, a reporter for the Tri-City
- Herald in Pasco, Wash., who was at the Hanford nuclear complex
- 140 miles from St. Helens: "It looked exactly like a tornado
- bearing down."
- </p>
- <p> In Spokane, Wash., Jean Penna, 32, a corporate assistant at
- the Sheraton-Spokane Hotel, was driving to Seattle when she
- decided to stop first at her mother's home a few blocks from her
- own. Said she: "In the time it took me to get from my apartment
- to my mother's house, it went black. All of a sudden this powder
- began to fall, just like snow. It was 75 degrees outside and
- pitch black." When she left her apartment complex, she said,
- several of her friends were sunbathing. "You've got people out
- there sunbathing," she marveled, "and the sky starts falling."
- </p>
- <p> For all the devastation, however, the long-range effects--if St. Helens does not explode again--are likely to be less
- drastic than was at first feared. Great though its force was,
- the explosion was not so powerful as many volcanic eruptions of
- the past, nor did it spill out gases as noxious as those released
- by the more famous killer eruptions of history. Scientists
- predicted that St. Helens will cause little long-range damage
- to human health and the world's climate.
- </p>
- <p> People exposed to the dust, even hundreds of miles away,
- suffered temporary discomfort: dry and itchy noses, throats and
- eyes. Reported a resident of Missoula: "I feel like someone
- popped my eyeballs out and rolled them around in a sandbox."
- But most of the ash particles were too large to lodge in human
- lungs and permanently scar them. Moreover, the dust did not
- stay in the air long enough to cause silicosis, which is a lung
- disease that miners, masonry workers, sandblasters and toilers
- in similar occupations get from breathing dust-laden air over
- long periods of time.
- </p>
- <p> The volcano is also producing fallout, literally. Geologists
- noted that Mount St. Helens is venting radioactive radon gas in
- greater quantities than any "hot" discharge from Pennsylvania's
- crippled Three Mile Island nuclear plant. Fortunately the gas
- has a short half-life (3.8 days) and quickly climbs high into
- the sky before it can affect people.
- </p>
- <p> Volcanic dust in the upper atmosphere reflects sunlight away
- from the earth and lowers temperatures. The cloud released by
- the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia was so dense that it
- made 1816 in much of the U.S. "the year without a summer."
- Nothing comparable is likely to happen because of Mount St.
- Helens. Meteorologists estimate that its cloud of ash will
- reduce world temperatures by only a tiny fraction of a degree
- Fahrenheit--a deviation that will be too slight for people to
- notice.
- </p>
- <p> The economic effects will be somewhat greater, but not
- catastrophic. Though trees worth at least $1 billion were
- flattened--including 4% of Weyerhaeuser's total timberlands--executives expect to salvage about 80% of the logs by sawing
- those not badly scorched into usable lumber. Sportsmen who
- venture into what was once prime fish and game area on the
- mountain's flanks will find nearly all life wiped out within a
- 15-mile radius of the crater. The rivers and state-run fish
- hatcheries near the mountain have been ruined as breeding
- grounds for steelhead trout and Chinook salmon. Said Mike
- Wharton, an employee of the Washington State department of
- game: "We've lost millions of fish." When might the area
- recover? Replied Wharton, 28: "Not in my lifetime."
- </p>
- <p> Crops within three miles of the crater were destroyed.
- Downwind, in a triangular swatch stretching 200 miles to the
- east, about 10% of the crops suffered some damage from the dust.
- Several fields of alfalfa and wheat in eastern Washington were
- flattened by the weight of ash. When wetted by rains, like
- those that fell four days after the blast, ash on the ground
- forms a thick cement-like glop that young shoots may be unable
- to break through.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the overall damage to wheat in Washington, Idaho and
- Montana, and to Washington's abundant cherries and apples, is
- likely to be minor. Alfred Halvorson, a soil expert at
- Washington State University, believes farmers will lose no more
- crops than they would to a "very heavy dust storm." Some
- scientists feared at first that the ash might produce a
- devastating acid rain, but tests showed that the dust is about
- as acid as orange juice. The ash contains no more sulfur than
- ordinary rainwater does.
- </p>
- <p> Any shortfall in Washington wheat production should be made up
- by bumper crops expected in Oklahoma, Texas and the Plains
- states. Though wheat prices rose a bit on the Chicago Board of
- Trade last week, at a time when they normally would be falling,
- traders were worried not about the St. Helens eruption but about
- drought in North Dakota.
- </p>
- <p> Except in the immediate vicinity of the mountain, livestock
- escaped almost unscathed. State officials advised ranchers to
- put out fresh hay so that cattle would not eat the dusty forage
- in the fields. Ranchers were also told not to move their herds
- to avoid increasing the cattle's breathing rate and thus their
- intake of silica-laden dust. Breeders protected valuable race
- horses by keeping them inside barns with towels over their
- noses.
- </p>
- <p> Probably the most lasting and pervasive effect of the
- eruption, outside the immediate area of Mount St. Helens, will be
- the monumental nuisance of the cleanup. Volcanic ash fell in
- amounts estimated at eight tons per acre in the Moscow-Pullman
- area of Idaho, 300 miles from Mount St. Helens, and 350 lbs. per
- acre in southwestern Montana, roughly 400 miles away. The fine,
- gritty ash drifted into everything: aircraft engines, sewage
- and water treatment plants, tractor gears, washing machines.
- One official at Washington State University warned homemakers
- to use only detergents when washing clothes because soap might
- mix with ash in the water, forming a sludge that would
- hopelessly clog the outlet hoses of automatic washing machines.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout Washington, Idaho and Montana, officials cautioned
- motorists to stay off the roads except for emergencies because
- the passage of an auto stirs up clouds of dust that blind other
- drivers. Motorists also were advised to clean air and oil
- filters every 20 or 25 miles. Some drivers tied pantyhose over
- their cars' air filters to help keep out the dust. Nonetheless,
- insurance companies will soon be deluged with claims from the
- owners of countless autos whose windshields and finishes were
- pitted by the ash.
- </p>
- <p> On streets and in backyards, the ash is also a headache.
- At the airport in Spokane (pop. 250,000), which was covered by
- half an inch of dust, a neon sign said: REJOICE, IT IS ASH
- WEDNESDAY. City officials requested citizens to hose down the
- streets in front of their houses, and the city council passed
- an ordinance requiring residents to get rid of the ash in ten
- days or face fines and short jail sentences. Said Evelyn
- Erdely, 20, a student at Spokane Falls Community College: "I
- have a cough, I'm sneezing a lot and I feel icky. My dad is out
- with the hose washing off the house all the time."
- </p>
- <p> In Pullman (pop. 21,000), students from Washington State
- University jammed the Barley and Hops tavern for "eruption
- specials," $1 pitchers of beer. In Yakima, which was coated
- with half an inch of dust, the owner of an auto body shop
- jokingly put ash on sale for 50 cents per gal. but got no
- takers. Hosing or shoveling the ash was only a slightly more
- effective way of getting rid of it. Complained Yakima Mayor
- Betty Edmondson: "Wet ash turns into a slurry that is just
- about impossible to shovel."
- </p>
- <p> One of the hardest-hit towns outside the immediate vicinity
- of the volcano was Ritzville, Wash. (pop. 2,000). A current of
- warm, dust-laden air from the west collided with cold air from
- the east and dumped 5 in. of ash on the town. Reported TIME
- Correspondent James Willwerth: "If Spokane looked like an
- ashtray, Ritzville looked as though it had been hit by an
- avalanche. The town was caked in dust and mud. Streets had
- 2-ft. drifts. On South Adams Street, Mrs. Erma Miller's once
- meticulously landscaped ranch-style house looked as if it were
- in a desert. The lawn had disappeared almost completely.
- Branches were broken from two formerly flowering hawthornes.
- There was a 4-ft. drift on the patio. Said Mrs. Miller, leaning
- on her snow shovel: `You ought to see the inside. You can't
- keep the dust out.'
- </p>
- <p> "Within hours of the storm, 2,500 stranded motorists sought
- refuge in Ritzville. Schools and churches were turned into
- shelters; 81 people slept on the floor of Perkins Restaurant,
- and many families took in strangers for a night or two. On
- Tuesday morning Adams County Sheriff Ron Snowden let 75
- motorists try to drive out, after a compressor at the firehouse
- was used to blow the cars air cleaners free of dust. Only 20
- made it. Twenty-five returned to Ritzville. The rest were
- stranded on the highway and had to seek refuge at a rest stop.
- During the worst of the storm, cars could run only about half an
- hour in the Ritzville area before stalling.
- </p>
- <p> "Adams County Auditor Kim Yerxa estimated that cleaning up
- Ritzville and the rest of the county will cost $2 million: the
- annual budget is only twice that sum. To clear Ritzville's
- streets, Sheriff Snowden directed a fire truck to spray the ash so
- that a road grader could push it into 3-ft.-high dikes. They, in
- turn, were shoveled up by road crews. But Snowden predicted that
- it would be a year before the town is free of ash."
- </p>
- <p> For months ahead, residents of Ritzville and a large slice of
- the Northwest will have to live with the ash, a visible reminder
- of the titanic forces of nature that shape the earth. To volcano
- experts Mount St. Helens may be a baby and its eruption second-
- rate. But to the people in its path it was a catastrophe.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-