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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1963)
lonitions of the Yugoslav Earthquake! How can you explain these strange incidents in which survivors sensed the impending disaster before it struck? By PEER J. OPPENHEIMER "TT T henever there's a disaster, VV there are premonitions!" That's the opinion of Dr. Zarco Hantchef, chief medical officer for the International Red Cross, who was sent to Skoplje, Yugoslavia, the day after an earthquake destroyed that capital of Macedonia and killed almost 2,000 persons on July 26. I interviewed Dr. Hantchef in Geneva, Swit zerland, shortly after he returned from the dis aster scene. A medical doctor, former university lecturer, and Red Cross executive since 1949, he told me of three widely diversified incidents to prove his point. "While the most intricate seismographs gave no indication whatsoever of the coming earth quake," Dr. Hantchef said, "the wild animals in the zoo were the first to sense approaching trag edy. Shortly before midnight they became ter ribly excited. The lions started to roar, elephants trumpet, jackals squeal. One water buffalo swayed crazily from side to side as if he were going mad. This had never happened before, and the keepers were mystified." But the animals weren't the only ones to sense the danger. "There was a 17-year-old girl whose bedroom was on the second floor of a three-story apart ment house," Dr. Hantchef told me. "Shortly aft er midnight she rushed into her mother's bed room on the street floor and complained she couldn't sleep, that something terrible was about to happen. She said she would feel safe only if she could stay with her mother. "The older woman wasn't about to put up with such nonsense and ordered the girl back to her own room. Mind you," Dr. Hantchef pointed out, "European children are brought up to obey, yet the girl refused to do as she was told. Final ly, the mother had no choice but to let the girl stay with her. "Five hours later the first rumble shattered the house. The building collapsed, and every hu man being in it died except the mother and daughter. Their room alone escaped destruction." P bob ABLY the most amazing account of premo nition that Dr. Hantchef related to me involved a Belgian wife who woke up in her room at the Macedonia Hotel four hours before the quake, got dressed, and left the building. She walked up and down the street for a while, feeling some thing was terribly wrong. Suddenly she rushed back to her room on the second floor and excited ly shook her husband awake. She begged him to get dressed and leave the hotel because there was going to be a quake. He told her she was silly and to get some sleep. She tried, but half an hour later got up and again walked out of the building. 'When she re turned, she again awakened her husband and pleaded with him to get dressed. The scene repeated itself once more, but this time he offered a compromise: since they'd planned to leave the hotel about 8 o'clock the next morning, he agreed to set the alarm for 6. At 5:10 the wife got up for the fourth time. She went into the bathroom, but no sooner had she entered when something made her race back to the bedroom and shake her husband awake. "Let's get out of here," she screamed. He sat up in bed and upon his wife's insistent prodding reached for his clothes just as the quake struck! Seconds later the hotel crumbled into a pile of debris. Out of 180 persons who were staying there, only 56 survived. "Had the woman remained in the bathroom," Dr. Hantchef recalled, "she would have been crushed to death. Had she followed her original intuition, she and her husband could have avoided the ordeal of being buried under the debris for almost 60 hours before being rescued." What caused these premonitions T As a Red Cross official, Dr. Hantchef has visited the scenes of many disasters. And it is always the same: some of the survivors, animal and human, had sensed beforehand the approach of sudden death. Yet nobody has ever learned the source of their frightening glimpse into the future. It. V I . ' V. ...--v;1 if. it. zz. jaw Vv u J;. A ' A: .1 Dr. HanUkef (left) and a Red Crou colleague etand amid Skoplje rubble. Muted railroad station clock (right) record the moment of dieatter a S:li a. tn. COVER: Richard Fox, IS, who delivert the New Haven (Conn.) Register-Courier, hat an ardent helper titter Mary Lou, 8. They were caught by Oacie Sweet to salute Na tional Newspaperboy Day next Saturday. Family Weekly I October 1 J, IMI UOHAao f. OaVWOW PrmUtmt mod PaUUUr WAim C MITWl Vm FraMnl MnUCX a OKWO Ad rtMmt Director MOtlON HUkHK INnetor PHMt Ration, Swt all aaWblng inynkullam to ranllr WMkly, 1S1 N. Michigan Av.. Ckieas I, III. AMm all lai wiluillaiu abmt aallarial halwn la rani It Waakly, M L Jarii S, Now Tot a. N. Y. ml, toard of Edtan V. NfTN Mttw Im Chill toasn mzoiatoti iw sdutr MUa DYHTM Art Ditmtm MlUUm Dt PIOfT ri KdiUr cl.l,n Afcrarara. Afda tkMI. Hal tanaM. SOOn, MC, in H. MUX Ao, CMcaga 1, IS. AS rtafc