the northeast, eventually land will get in the way. and that land is south carolina and north carolina. right there, very close. even if it doesn t make official landfall, where the center of the eye hits land, the eye wall will hit land. and the eyewall could have 100 miles per hour winds. and after midnight, finally about 8:00 or almost this time on friday, 48 hours from now, the storm goes by cape hatteras and out to sea. and no more effect. it should not, does not look like it can turn back toward the northeast part of the united states. here s what the radar should look like for the rest of the day. we re going to stop it here, right about 5:00 tomorrow morning. very close to savannah and charleston. charleston forecasting somewhere in the ballpark of a 10.5-foot surge. not total surge, total level. and hugo was 12.5. that tells you only a couple feet below where hugo took the water into charleston. hurricane warnings up into wilmington. that s going to continue for the rest of th