As I said above, make your own call regarding whether to open lee windows during the cyclone, but make the decision on the basis of some hard information. Here are two sources I quickly dug up, I've also got an article written after studies involving a large wind tunnel along with on the ground investigation after hurricane Andrew in Florida, buried in my hard drive somewhere, I'll dig a bit deeper, however the thrust of it was that whilst opening leeward windows did reduce internal pressure by a miniscule amount, it was unnecessary and given the sometimes unpredictable, turbulent airflow actually increased the chances of breakage and of having a windward opening - something everyone agrees is undesireable.
http://www.onestorm.org/prepare/storms-explained/hurricanes/CycloneMyths.aspx, http://www.snopes.com/science/hurricane.asp,
Maj I'm not sure quite how to take your comment about university bred experts, but I find it surprising that pilots who generally have a good understanding of scientific principles and accept wind tunnel data wrt aircraft, will dismiss the same source of data in regard to the behaviour of a structure.
Agree wholeheartedly re tiled roofs, had quite a bit to do with them after Larry - tiles peeled off wholesale and ended up showering down on the neighbours which didn't go down very well!
Edit: A slightly more authorative source, see p2 http://www.jcu.edu.au/cts/idc/groups/public/documents/newsletter/jcuprd_045829.pdf