Here in central North Carolina (the Chapel Hill - Durham
area) where most of the impetus for this inaugural issue of American Diplomacy
originated, Hurricane Fran passed through September 5 and 6, leaving a path of destruction and
property loss not previously equaled for this area in the twentieth century. Virtually
everyone here waited out the night with a high degree of anxiety, once it became
apparent that this was a major storm and that it was not, as so often has been the case
over the years, going to pass us by. By morning, we here in the Tar Heel state looked
out upon an astonishing amount of damage to our own homes, inflicted mainly by the
hundreds of mature trees that the hurricane winds felled. Electricity was out everywhere,
for days in many cases, with power lines down and streets blocked by debris and tree
trunks. Potable water was in short supply. It was a mess, from which the area is gradually emerging. Fortunately, personal injuries and the loss of lives were
held to a minimum.
THE MOST STRIKING EFFECT of this unsurpassed natural disaster was to make us all recognize
that we were, after all, fortunate to come through with nothing more than damage
to some of our possessions. Howling winds and crashing timbers concentrate the mind wonderfully on the things that are truly important, things such as life and limb
above all, and then the conveniences of life.
Oh yes; another consequence of Fran was a delay in going on line with American Diplomacy.
We trust that such a delay will not be repeated in future editions of the journal.
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