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Tropical Storm Arthur threatens Fourth of July in Carolinas

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    This Tuesday, July 1, 2014, satellite image released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), shows the center of Tropical Storm Arthur off the east coast of Florida. With the July Fourth weekend on the horizon, the Atlantic hurricane season's first named storm plodded off Florida's coast early Wednesday, though Tropical Storm Arthur wasn't yet spooking too many in the storm's potential path. (AP Photo/NOAA)

CHARLESTON, S.C. >> Along much of the East Coast, hotel owners, tourism officials and would-be vacationers kept a watchful eye on forecasts Wednesday as Tropical Storm Arthur churned off Florida, threatening Fourth of July plans for thousands of people.

A tropical storm warning was issued for parts of North Carolina as the first named storm of the season was expected to strengthen to a hurricane and skim the Outer Banks, a string of narrow barrier islands prone to flooding but popular for beachgoers, as a Category 1 hurricane Friday.

Wednesday’s warning stretched across the entire North Carolina coast, from Little River Inlet near South Carolina north to the Virginia border.

A tropical storm watch for Florida’s east coast was canceled.

The worst of the storm should occur at Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, about dawn Friday, with 3 to 5 inches of rain and sustained winds up to 85 mph, said Tony Saavedra, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service. The storm should move through quickly and be off the coast of New England later in the day, perhaps making landfall in Canada’s maritime provinces as a tropical storm, he said.

The motel Shutters on the Banks in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, was completely booked for the holiday weekend, general manager John Zeller said Tuesday, but he was considering waiving cancellation fees if the storm continued to track toward the area.

"We have received some cancellations but not too many," he said. "Basically we are telling people to kind of wait and see what happens. … I think everybody is kind of watching the weather."

Late Wednesday morning, Arthur was about 105 miles east-northeast of Cape Canaveral and about 260 miles south-southeast of Charleston, South Carolina. It was moving north about 7 mph with maximum sustained winds of 60 mph.

About an hour north of Cape Canaveral, the Hilton Daytona Beach Oceanfront Resort’s holiday reservations were unaffected by the storm, general manager Tom Manno said.

"In fact we’re sold out right through Sunday," he said. "So we haven’t experienced any cancellations at all."

But some precautions were taken at the hotel.

"We’ve gone through all the emergency procedures, the staff is confident, and everything is in place," Manno said. "Right now the weather is good, the winds are pretty calm, and we’re hoping it will remain that way."

On Florida’s Gulf Coast, the National Weather Service says dry air rotating around Arthur reduced rain chances in the Tampa Bay area. But as the storm moves north, the rain chances will return — just in time for the holiday weekend.

On Hilton Head Island, on South Carolina’s southern tip, there was little concern about Arthur — the storm was forecast to pass the island on Thursday well out at sea.

"It’s a very busy week on Hilton Head Island. … It will be a sold-out weekend," said Charlie Clark, a spokeswoman for the Hilton Head Island Chamber of Commerce. "We’re expecting a strong weekend and we’re not getting calls from visitors asking what’s up with this storm."

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Associated Press writer Kyle Hightower in Orlando, Florida, contributed to this report.

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