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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!morrow.stanford.edu!sep!steve
- From: steve@sep.Stanford.EDU (Steve Cole)
- Newsgroups: ca.earthquakes
- Subject: Re: San Francisco Earthquake 89
- Date: 19 Nov 1992 07:59:52 GMT
- Organization: Stanford Exploration Project
- Lines: 46
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1efhhoINNose@morrow.stanford.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: taal.stanford.edu
-
- A couple quick stories from my experience, including one near tragedy
- and one bit of humor.
-
- I lived in a house in Palo Alto with friends, a couple and their
- two children (a 2 year old and a 2 month old at the time). But
- at the time, I was housesitting for some neighbors who were away,
- so my friends had temporarily put the 2 month old's crib in my room.
- The only damage in the house was from a fairly large glass-framed picture
- that fell into the crib, shattering. Jeffrey had been in
- there napping about a half hour earlier. It was my fault that
- the picture wasn't secured to the wall better. It wasn't very close to
- my bed, and even though it was glass, it wasn't all that heavy. So I
- hadn't worried about it. It was almost a very costly mistake.
-
- The humorous side comes from friend Scott (the father of the kids)
- who works at Apple. At Apple, it is common for people to have all
- sorts of bizarre objects decorating their offices, perched on top
- of the walls between cubicles. When the earthquake happened, Scott
- moved away from his window, toward the center of the building. When
- the shaking stopped, he passed by his desk on his way out of the
- building. He wondered why his blinds were still flapping, then
- realized that his window had popped out. He also noticed a large
- beach ball he had put on top of a partition wasn't there. When he
- got out of the building and made it to his car, which happened to
- be parked just below his office, the beach ball was there on
- the ground. So he put it in his car and headed home.
-
- I was at Stanford on the 4th floor of the earth sciences building
- during the quake. The sound the building made as it shook was
- frightening, a rumbling or grinding sound. Outside, I headed
- for home, thinking of Margaret and the kids, and knowing that
- Scott was much farther away than I was. (And besides, we were
- told not to go back into the building until it was checked).
- Coming around the corner, the sight of Margaret and the kids safe
- on the sidewalk was a big relief. Alan, the two year old,
- recounted his experience for me: "Earthquake goes shake, shake
- shake. Alan sits on curb." (as his mother had told him to do).
- They had been outside. Scott got home about two hours
- later (cracks in 280 had forced everyone to drive around on
- the shoulder in one place). We scavenged among the kids' toys for
- batteries for my portable TV and got it working, saw the sad
- pictures coming in from around the bay, and thought of our own
- close call.
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- Steve Cole (steve@sep.stanford.edu, apple!sep!steve)
- Department of Geophysics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305
-