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Forecasters Tracking Strong Hurricane

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From Associated Press

Hurricane Isabel retained its 160-mph winds and its mystery Friday, as forecasters said it was still too early to tell if and where the potentially devastating storm will strike the United States.

Isabel was rated a Category 5 storm, the strongest. A hurricane hits the top of the scale when its winds reach 156 mph. It was about 350 miles northeast of the northern Leeward Islands in the northeastern Caribbean Sea and was moving west at 9 mph.

The long-range forecast placed it roughly 375 miles east of Cape Canaveral early Wednesday, if it makes a predicted turn to the northwest. But that forecast has a possible error of up to 432 miles, and meteorologists said they would know more about the potential direction of the storm late this weekend.

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“It is still too early to even speculate which parts, if any, of [the] eastern coast of the United States may get affected by Isabel,” hurricane forecaster Jack Beven said.

The approaching hurricane prompted somewhat higher-than-usual sales for items such as plywood, generators, gas cans and chain saws at Home Depot stores in Florida, company spokesman Don Harrison said. Sales of hurricane supplies at the chain’s other East Coast stores were normal, he said.

The last Atlantic hurricane to develop into a Category 5 storm was Mitch in 1998, which moved into the Caribbean Sea and eventually killed about 11,000 people and left thousands more missing in Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala. The last two Category 5 hurricanes to strike the U.S. coast were Andrew in 1992 and Camille in 1969.

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