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                   Exercises     
                          
                  
					Darwin-Cyclone     
                    Tracy in 1974      
                       
                            
                       
                       
                       It did not seem possible     
                    that there could be so much destruction in so short a time.     
                    One minute the 45 000 people of Darwin, in the far north of Australia, were asleep in     
                    their beds or returning home late from Christmas Eve parties.     
                    The next, they were creeping out of their ruined homes like     
                    mice from their holes. Mile after mile of the city was destroyed.     
                         
                      As one man said, with tears     
                    in his eyes: "I've been in Darwin for forty years. I've seen     
                    it grow and now I've seen it go."      
                      Life in Darwin had always     
                    been free and easy. During the dry season, from May to October,     
                    the weather was the best in Australia. It never rained there     
                    and tourists arrived in large numbers from the south to escape     
                    the winter cold.      
                      But it was not always pleasant     
                    weather.The     
                    people of Darwin were well aware of the threat of  in their part of the world.     
                     At the first sign of a high     
                    wind the radio put out a warning. But,     
                    because few of the storms ever did hit the towns on the coast,     
                    people had come to discount the warnings.      
                      However, on 24 December     
                    1974, the local television and radio stations warned of a     
                    cyclone, which the weather men had named Tracy, moving rapidly     
                    nearer Darwin.      
                      But it was Christmas Eve.     
                    The people of Darwin did not want to think about cyclones     
                    when they were only a few hours away from Christmas Day, with     
                    various preparations still to make. There were presents to     
                    get ready for the children and food to prepare for the family     
                    meal the next day.      
                      The frequent warnings on     
                    the radio did not go unnoticed. There were a few nervous people     
                    considering anxiously whether to drive off in their cars to     
                    escape the danger. But, as usual, everyone hoped that the     
                    storm would blow away.      
                  
                          
                    At two minutes before midnight, the radio gave out a short     
                    message. There seemed little doubt that Cyclone Tracy was     
                    moving towards Darwin.      
                      The first report of the     
                    cyclone's position was given at 9.40 p.m. Tracy was then seventy-three     
                    kilometers away, traveling east-south-east at six kilometers     
                    an hour. An hour later, it was sixty-four kilometers away,     
                    still moving at the same speed. 
                      In spite of the continued 
                  cyclone warnings, the people of Darwin went to bed well before 
                  midnight that night. They were     
                    tired from all the last-minute shopping and the excitement     
                    of Christmas.      
                      There were some, however,     
                    who stayed up much later, at Christmas Eve parties. Returning     
                    in the early hours of Christmas morning, they suddenly understood     
                    for the first time that the cyclone was going to hit Darwin.     
                    There was a very strong wind and the rain was coming down     
                    so hard, it hurt to be out in the open.      
                      Those who had gone to bed     
                    gave up trying to sleep. The noise from the wind seemed to     
                    fill every room. Lights were on all over the city. Families     
                    turned on their radios to hear the latest news about the advancing     
                    cyclone. Many of them moved into their bathrooms because they     
                    were told that was the safest place.      
                      Although Darwin lies in     
                    the recognized cyclone "belt", the houses in the city were     
                    not built to stand up against such fierce winds. Many of them     
                    in the city were made of wood, with iron sheets for roofs.     
                    Other towns in Australia, within the same cyclone belt, had     
                    prepared a new building act.      
                      But Darwin did not follow     
                    their example. So the houses were very weak. Most of them     
                    were raised up on "legs" to provide extra coolness in the     
                    hot weather. The iron roofs were just nailed down instead     
                    of being firmly fixed with what Australian builders call "cyclone     
                    bolts."      
                      In spite of the increasing     
                    danger from Cyclone Tracy, now only thirty kilometers away,     
                    the local people were actually making jokes about it. They     
                    even made up songs about the cyclone that never reached Darwin.     
                         
                      Little did they know that     
                    when Tracy arrived, not even the houses built with bricks     
                    would remain standing.      
                      For the boat out at sea     
                    the bad dream began at about midnight. Bob Hedditch had taken     
                    his fishing boat, the seventy-three foot Anson, out to sea     
                    at about 7.30 p.m. on Christmas Eve. There were two other     
                    men on board.      
                      "By 2 a.m., we had no steering,     
                    no lights, and only the main engine to keep us moving into     
                    the eye of cyclone," said Bob. The "eye" is the calm center     
                    of a cyclone, inside a ring of storm.      
                      It had taken just four     
                    hours for Cyclone Tray to turn Darwin into a huge pile of     
                    rubbish. There was not a single roof left on any of the buildings     
                    and the people of Darwin were standing outside their ruined     
                    homes like lost children.      
                      John Auld lived with his     
                    wife Helen and their 22-month-old-son Glenn, in Darwin, but     
                    until Cyclone Tracy arrived they did not know their neighbors     
                    very well. There was the Firth family across the road and     
                    the Dabovitch couple next door. The cyclone was to bring them     
                    all together.      
                      John Auld was working on     
                    night duty at Darwin airport. He was very busy because they     
                    were waiting for a British Airways plane on a flight to Sydney,     
                    stopping off at Darwin.      
                      Helen Auld, frightened     
                    by the screaming wind, tried to telephone her husband but     
                    all the lines were down. So she took the baby, who was asleep,     
                    into the bathroom and sat on the floor.      
                      Before Cyclone Tracy reached     
                    Darwin, its "eye" was very large. But now suddenly it began     
                    to get smaller and smaller. This caused the speed of the winds     
                    to increase even further around the eye.      
                      Within minutes people were     
                    running screaming into the dark streets. Houses     
                    were torn from the ground and thrown several yards in all     
                    directions.      
                      Tall office buildings and     
                    hotels fell to the ground. Cars parked in the street were     
                    blown over and over until every bit of metal was bent or scratched.     
                    At Darwin's railway station, trains were thrown into the air     
                    as if they were toys. The rails were torn up from the ground     
                    and bent into different shapes. All the time the cyclone was     
                    screaming and moaning and roaring.      
                      At the airport, John Auld     
                    watched in horror as fifty planes were destroyed. Some of     
                    them were blown for hundreds of yards. John looked at his     
                    watch. It was 4 a.m. He was desperately worried about Helen     
                    and the baby. When he felt that there was nothing more he     
                    could do at the airport, he ran to his car. Luckily it was     
                    under cover and was not damaged.      
                      He drove the six kilometers     
                    to his home as fast as he could but it was an almost impossible     
                    journey. All the roads were covered in overturned cars, doors,     
                    roofs, glass and furniture.      
                      When he reached the street     
                    where he lived, his house had disappeared and there was no     
                    sign of his family.      
                      But Peter Firth from across     
                    the road had rescued Helen and the baby. Helen had stayed     
                    in the bathroom holding her child closely to her. When the     
                    roof flew off, she thought she was going to die and prayed     
                    that her husband John would come back from the airport.      
                      As     
                    the full anger of Cyclone Tracy began to die down, Peter Firth     
                    struggled out of his ruined house and forced open the front     
                    door of the Auld's home. He found Helen and Glenn in a     
                    corner of the bathroom, the only room in the house, which     
                    was not destroyed. He led them to the safety of the storm     
                    cellar under his house. The Dabovitches joined them later.     
                    They had spent three hours hiding under the concrete steps     
                    in the front of their house, after their home had flown away     
                    into the night.      
                      John Auld searched everywhere     
                    for his family, until he found them in the Firths’ cellar.     
                    Many of the people of Darwin escaped by hiding in cellars     
                    that night.      
                      One family stayed alive     
                    by lying under a bed all night as the cyclone tore down their     
                    house piece by piece.      
                      One man spent the whole     
                    night supporting the bathroom ceiling with his shoulders to     
                    protect his family.      
                      Another family with two     
                    children hid in a neighbor's shed which somehow managed to     
                    stay on the ground.      
                      The     
                    mother, Mrs. Vivianne Buffery, described the scene at the     
                    height of the storm.      
                      "Everything was flying     
                    through the air," she said, "Washing machines, fridges, television     
                    sets, ladders, fences."      
                      When Cyclone Tracy finally     
                    left Darwin, there was a strange silence throughout the city.     
                    Everyone waited, expecting the storm to turn round and come     
                    back again to make sure that all the buildings were knocked     
                    to the ground.       
                       But when the people at     
                    last appeared from their hiding places at dawn, they could     
                    see that the cyclone had done a very thorough job! Nothing     
                    was left standing for as far as the eye could see. Quite simply,     
                    the cyclone had picked up the city of Darw - in, shaken it,     
                    and then dropped it to the ground like an unwanted toy.      
                         
                       It took a long time to     
                    discover how many people had died in the cyclone. But after     
                    two weeks, the final figure was only forty-eight, including     
                    thirteen children under the age of twelve. More than sixty     
                    were injured, many of them seriously.       
                       The     
                    city was so badly hit that it was decided to bring in     
                    to knock down whatever was left standing. The only thing     
                    to do was start from the beginning and rebuild the whole city.                         
                      Thousands of families     
                    were flown out over the next few days to live in other parts     
                    of Australia until they could return to Darwin. But many people     
                    decided to stay behind to help in the long task of rebuilding     
                    their city.      
                      (1 635 words)      
                       
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