NAGS HEAD, N.C. — The eye wall of Hurricane Irene, now a Category 1 storm, came ashore just east of Cape Lookout in North Carolina on Saturday morning, the first stop in the mainland United States for a storm that is expected to scrape up the East Coast and bring flooding rains to a dozen states. 3dm lP2
Howling winds and sheets of rains accompanied the storm overnight, signaling the approach of its core. Part of the pier at Atlantic Beach, N.C., collapsed before dawn on Saturday, according to television reports, and a hurricane-force wind gust was reported at Hatteras on the Outer Banks. 1"k"<{%
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Radar images showed that the ragged eye of the storm appeared to reach land during the 7 a.m. hour. It is expected to force a storm surge into the bays and sounds here, inundating low-lying areas. An hour after dawn, the wide beach here in Nags Head had become a wide pool of water as waves began to erode the dunes of the Outer Banks.
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Irene’s landfall marked the first time since 2008 that a hurricane made landfall in the continental United States. 9AQMB1D*v4
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The storm is forecast to continue churning north-northeast toward New York, where mandatory evacuations were issued on Friday in parts of the city. /7Z5_q_
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On Saturday morning, the National Hurricane Center in Miami downgraded the storm from a Category 2 to a Category 1, indicating that further weakening had occurred overnight. The storm’s maximum sustained winds are 90 miles per hour, with higher gusts, the hurricane center said, but forecasters reminded residents that it remained a very powerful storm. !qe,&