Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jul 2000 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: TONY CZUCZA TECHNO RAVE DRAWS MORE THAN 1 MILLION Dancers From All Over Cram Berlin Streets For World's Biggest Street Party, Love Parade BERLIN -- More than 1 million people danced to the booming beat of techno music Saturday at the annual Love Parade, turning central Berlin into a sea of sweaty bodies, shaggy pink outfits and shrill whistles. High-spirited youths from across Europe and beyond jammed the route through the Tiergarten park for the world's biggest techno rave street party, uniting behind its theme of music as a peaceful, globe-spanning force. ``It's cool, it's outrageous and everyone is having a good time,'' said Andrew Lin, a 21-year-old from New Jersey who dropped in on the party during a European trip. Organizers said they fell short of their goal of attracting 1.7 million people to Berlin. But there was a simultaneous parade for the first time in Leeds, England, to underline this year's motto of ``One World, One Love Parade.'' Colorful floats and hair More than 50 truck-drawn floats pumped out pounding beats as traffic ceded to a mass of bobbing orange- and green-haired youths, often in the skimpiest attire, clustered around the landmark Victory Column on the axis leading to the Brandenburg Gate. ``It doesn't matter what country you come from,'' said Dutchman Bern Schneidisch, 20. ``We all party.'' With beer and party drugs fueling much of the action, the ``parade for respect, tolerance, communication between peoples and love'' also had its usual glitches. Police said they detained more than 100 people -- about a third for selling drugs -- mainly ecstasy -- others for buying drugs, theft or vandalism. Medics helped some 600 of the ``ravers'' who had collapsed by mid-evening - -- though the trend was lower than last year because temperatures barely reached 68 degrees. During the Love Parade, a fire broke out in a subway train, leaving about 30 passengers suffering from smoke inhalation. The train with 350 people aboard had stopped at a station when the smoky blaze broke out, sending passengers fleeing into the street. Authorities were investigating. But the party mood prevailed as many ravers headed off for a long night in Berlin's techno clubs after the parade. Change over years To help with the aftermath by cutting down on garbage, city officials required drink sellers in the party zone to charge a deposit for beverage cups for the first time. That was just one sign that the event has come a long way since its 1989 debut as a public birthday party for Love Parade founder Matthias Roeingh - -- better known as ``DJ Dr. Motte'' -- and 150 friends on western Berlin's main shopping boulevard. Now the parade has corporate sponsors, pumps $125 million into the local economy and has copyrighted its name. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart