http://www.hubce.edu.cn/AdvE/kwnr/2-1.jpgLesson1 Face to Face with Hurricane" /> 1 John Koshak, Jr., knew that Hurricane
Camille would be bad. Radio and television warnings had sounded
throughout that Sunday, last August 17, as Camille lashed
northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico. It was certain
to
pummel Gulfport, Miss., where the Koshers
lived. Along the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama,
nearly 150,000 people fled inland to safer 8round. But, like
thousands of others in the coastal communities, john was reluctant
to abandon his home unless the family -- his wife, Janis, and their
seven children, abed 3 to 11 -- was clearly endangered.
2 Trying to reason out the best course of action, he talked with
his father and mother, who had moved into the ten-room house with
the Koshaks a month earlier from California. He also consulted
Charles Hill, a long time friend, who had driven from Las Vegas for
a visit.
3 John, 37 -- whose business was right there in his home ( he
designed and developed educational toys and supplies, and all of
Magna Products' correspondence, engineering
drawings and art work were there on the first floor) -- was
familiar with the power of a hurricane. Four years earlier,
Hurricane Betsy had demolished undefined his former home a few
miles west of Gulfport (Koshak had moved his family to a
motel
for the night). But that house had stood only a few feet above sea
level. "We' re elevated 2a feet," he told his father, "and we' re a
good 250 yards from the sea. The place has been here since 1915,
and no hurricane has ever bothered it. We' II probably be as safe
here as anyplace else."
4 The elder Koshak, a gruff, warmhearted expert machinist of 67,
agreed. "We can batten
down and ride it out," he said. "If we see
signs of danger, we can get out before dark."
5 The men methodically prepared for the
hurricane. Since water mains might be damaged, they filled bathtubs
and pails. A power failure was likely, so they checked out
batteries for the portable radio and flashlights, and fuel for the
lantern. John's father moved a small generator into the downstairs
hallway, wired several light bulbs to it and prepared a connection
to the refrigerator.
6 Rain fell steadily that afternoon; gray clouds
scudded
in from the Gulf on the rising wind. The family had an early
supper. A neighbor, whose husband was in Vietnam, asked if she and
her two children could sit out the storm with the Koshaks. Another
neighbor came by on his way in-land — would the Koshaks mind taking
care of his dog?
7 It grew dark before seven o' clock. Wind and rain now whipped
the house. John sent his oldest son and daughter upstairs to bring
down mattresses and pillows for the younger children. He wanted to
keep the group together on one floor. "Stay away from the windows,"
he warned, concerned about glass flying from storm-shattered
panes.
As the wind mounted to a roar, the house began leaking- the rain
seemingly driven right through the walls. With mops, towels, pots
and buckets the Koshaks began a struggle against the rapidly
spreading water. At 8:30, power failed, and Pop Koshak turned on
the generator.
8 The roar of the hurricane now was overwhelming. The house
shook, and the ceiling in the living room was falling piece by
piece. The French doors in an upstairs room blew in with an
explosive sound, and the group heard gun- like reports as other
upstairs windows disintegrated. Water rose above
their ankles.
9 Then the front door started to break away from its frame. John
and Charlie put their shoulders against it, but a blast of water
hit the house, flinging open the door and shoving them down the
hall. The generator was doused, and the lights went out. Charlie
licked his lips and shouted to John. "I think we' re in real
trouble. That water tasted salty." The sea had reached the house,
and the water was rising by the minute!
10 "Everybody out the back door to the oars!" John yelled. "We'
II pass the children along between us. Count them! Nine!"
11 The children went from adult to adult like buckets in a
fire
brigade. But the cars wouldn't start; the
electrical systems had been killed by water. The wind was too
Strong and the water too deep to flee on foot. "Back to the house!"
john yelled. "Count the children! Count nine!"
12 As they scrambled back, john ordered,
"Every-body on the stairs!" Frightened, breathless and wet, the
group settled on the stairs, which were protected by two
interiorwalls. The children put
the oat, Spooky, and a box with her four kittens on the landing.
She peered nervously at her litter.
The neighbor's dog curled up and went to sleep.
13 The wind sounded like the roar of a train passing a few yards
away. The house shuddered and shifted on its foundations. Water
inched its way up the steps as first- floor outside walls
collapsed. No one spoke. Everyone knew there was no escape; they
would live or die in the house.
14 Charlie Hill had more or less taken responsibility for the
neighbor and her two children. The mother was on the verge of
panic. She clutched his arm and kept repeating, "I can't swim, I
can't swim."
15 "You won't have to," he told her, with outward calm. "It's
bound to end soon."
16 Grandmother Koshak reached an arm around her husband's
shoulder and put her mouth close to his ear. "Pop," she said, "I
love you." He turned his head and answered, "I love you" -- and his
voice lacked its usual gruffness.
17 John watched the water lap at the steps, and felt a crushing
guilt. He had underestimated the
ferocity of Camille. He had
assumed that what had never happened could not happen. He held his
head between his hands, and silently prayed: "Get us through this
mess, will You?"
18 A moment later, the hurricane, in one mighty swipe, lifted the
entire roof off the house and skimmed it 40 feet through the air.
The bottom steps of the staircase broke apart. One wall began
crumbling on the marooned group.
19 Dr. Robert H. Simpson, director of the National Hurricane
Center in Miami, Fla., graded Hurricane Camille as "the greatest
recorded storm ever to hit a populated area in the Western
Hemisphere." in its concentrated breadth of some 70 miles it shot
out winds of nearly 200 m.p.h. and raised tides as high as 30 feet.
Along the Gulf Coast it devastated everything in its swath: 19,467
homes and 709 small businesses were demolished or severely damaged.
it seized a 600, 000-gallon Gulfport oil tank and dumped it 3 ~
miles away. It tore three large cargo ships from their
mooringsand beached them.
Telephone poles and 20-inch-thick pines cracked like guns as the
winds snapped them.
20 To the west of Gulfport, the town of Pass Christian was
virtually wiped out. Several vacationers at the luxurious Richelieu
Apartments there held a hurricane party to watch the storm from
their spectacular vantage
point. Richelieu Apartments were smashed
apart as if by a gigantic fist, and 26 people perished.
21 Seconds after the roof blew off the Koshak house, john yelled,
"Up the stairs -- into our bedroom! Count the kids." The children
huddled in the slashing rain within the circle of adults.
Grandmother Koshak implored, "Children, let's sing!"
The children were too frightened to respond. She carried on alone
for a few bars; then her voice trailed away.
22 Debris flew as the living-room fireplace and its chimney
collapsed. With two walls in their bedroom sanctuary beginning to
disintegrate, John ordered, "Into the television room!" This was
the room farthest from the direction of the storm.
23 For an instant, John put his arm around his wife. Janis
understood. Shivering from the wind and rain and fear, clutching
two children to her, she thought, Dear Lord, give me the strength
to endure what I have to. She felt anger against the hurricane. We
won't let it win.
24 Pop Koshak raged silently, frustrated at not being able to do
anything to fight Camille. Without reason, he dragged a
cedar
chest and a double mattress from a bed-room
into the TV room. At that moment, the wind tore out one wall and
extinguished the lantern. A second wall moved,
wavered, Charlie Hill tried to
support it, but it toppled on him, injuring his
back. The house, shuddering and rocking, had moved 25 feet from its
foundations. The world seemed to be breaking apart.
25 "Let's get that mattress up!" John shouted to his father.
"Make it a lean-toagainst the wind. Get the
kids under it. We can prop it up with our heads and
shoulders!"
26 The larger children sprawledon the floor, with the
smaller ones in a layer on top of them, and the adults bent over
all nine. The floor tilted. The box containing the litter of
kittens slid off a shelf and vanished in the wind. Spooky flew off
the top of a sliding bookcase and also disappeared. The dog cowered
with eyes closed. A third wall gave way. Water lapped across the
slanting floor. John grabbed a door which was still
hinged
to one closet wall. "If the floor goes," he yelled at his father,
"let's get the kids on this."
27 In that moment, the wind slightly diminished, and the water
stopped rising. Then the water began receding. The main thrust of
Camille had passed. The Koshaks and their friends had
survived.
28 With the dawn, Gulfport people started coming back to their
homes. They saw human bodies -- more than 130 men, women and
children died along the Mississippi coast- and parts of the beach
and highway were strewn
withdead dogs, cats, cattle. Strips of
clothing festoonedthe standing trees, and
blown down power lines coiledlike black
spaghettiover the roads.
29 None of the returnees moved quickly or spoke loudly; they
stood shocked, trying to absorb the shattering scenes before their
eyes. "What do we dot" they asked. "Where do we go?"
30 By this time, organizations within the area and, in effect,
the entire population of the United States had come to the aid of
the devastated coast. Before dawn, the Mississippi
National
Guardand civil-defense units were moving
in to handle traffic, guard property, set up communications
centers, help clear the debris and take the homeless by truck and
bus to refugee centers. By 10 a.m., the Salvation Army's canteen
trucks and Red Cross volunteers and staffers were going wherever
possible to distribute hot drinks, food, clothing and
bedding.
31 From hundreds of towns and cities across the country came
several million dollars in donations; household and medical
supplies streamed in by plane, train, truck and car. The federal
government shipped 4,400,000 pounds of food, moved in mobile homes,
set up portable classrooms, opened offices to provide low-interest,
long-term business loans.
32 Camille, meanwhile, had raked its way northward across
Mississippi, dropping more than 28 inches of rain into West
Virginia and southern Virginia, causing rampagingfloods, huge mountain
slides and 111 additional deaths before breaking up over the
Atlantic Ocean.
33 Like many other Gulfport families, the Koshaks quickly began
reorganizing their lives, John divided his family in the homes of
two friends. The neighbor with her two children went to a refugee
center. Charlie Hill found a room for rent. By Tuesday, Charlie's
back had improved, and he pitched in with
Seabeesin
the worst volunteer work of all--searching for bodies. Three days
after the storm, he decided not to return to Las Vegas, but to
"remain in Gulfport and help rebuild the community."
34 Near the end of the first week, a friend offered the Koshaks
his apartment, and the family was reunited. The children appeared
to suffer no psychological damage from their experience; they were
still awed by the incomprehensiblepower of the
hurricane, but enjoyed describing what they had seen and heard on
that frightful night, Janis had just one delayed reaction. A few
nights after the hurricane, she awoke suddenly at 2 a.m. She
quietly got up and went outside. Looking up at the sky and, without
knowing she was going to do it, she began to cry softly.
35 Meanwhile, John, Pop and Charlie were picking through the
wreckageof the home. It could
have been depressing, but it wasn't: each salvaged item represented
a little victory over the wrathof the storm. The dog and
cat suddenly appeared at the scene, alive and hungry.
36 But the bluesdid occasionally
afflict
all the adults. Once, in a low mood, John said to his parents, "I
wanted you here so that we would all be together, so you could
enjoy the children, and look what happened."
37 His father, who had made up his mind to start a
welding
shop when living was normal again, said, "Let's not cry about
what's gone. We' II just start all over."
38 "You're great," John said. "And this town has a lot of great
people in it. It' s going to be better here than it ever was
before."
39 Later, Grandmother Koshak reflected : "We lost practically
all our possessions, but the family came through it. When I think
of that, I realize we lost nothing
important."
(from Rhetoric and Literature by P. Joseph
Canavan)
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