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- TREAD302
- !U04,33@ THE SINKING OF AN UNSINKABLE SHIP
-
- It was pitch black on that April night
- in 1912 and there had been iceberg warn-
- ings off the southern coast of Newfound-
- land. But the White Star Liner Titanic
- continued full speed ahead on her maiden
- voyage from Southampton to New York.
- The "fastest ship afloat," as she had
- been called by the newspapers, was trying
- to break a speed record for the trans-
- atlantic crossing.
- STOP
- Yet despite rumors of icebergs that
- circulated through the salons and dining
- rooms that evening, none of the 2,200
- passengers and crew seemed the least bit
- concerned. After all, they reassured one
- another, what could possibly happen.
- The Titanic was unsinkable, wasn't she?
- Well, the Titanic did make the headlines
- the next day as a recordbreaker. But in-
- stead of going down in history as the
- fastest crossing, it will be remembered
- STOP
- as one of the greatest sea disasters of
- all time. The "unsinkable" luxury liner
- had sliced her bow on an iceberg and sunk
- in a matter of hours, taking 1,517 sur-
- prised and unbelieving people to the bot-
- tom with her. It turned out that there
- were only enough lifeboats for a fraction
- of the people on board. The assurance of
- her builders that she was unsinkable and
- the ambition of her captain that she win
- a record turned out to be no match for
- STOP
- the dangers of the open sea.
- Still, it might be said that some good
- did come out of this tragic event. In the
- wake of the Titanic disaster came a wave
- of maritime reforms designed to ensure
- safer passage on the high seas. Perhaps
- the lives lost that night were not lost
- in vain, and those who went down with the
- Titanic helped to prevent countless others
- in the years since from meeting a similar
- fate.
- END
- EOF
- RET