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Storm’s lashing turns inland

Rivers up; 8.2 million lose power in 17 states

Posted: October 31, 2012 at 5:27 a.m.

Brian Hajeski of Brick, N.J., looks at the debris of a home that washed up Tuesday on the Mantoloking Bridge in Mantoloking on New Jersey’s northern coastline.

Flooded highways, downed power lines and rising rivers greeted people Tuesday morning from Tennessee to Maine, with a blizzard warning and as much as 3 feet of snow expected to fall in West Virginia after the remnants of Hurricane Sandy rumbled through and a cold front from the north continued to push east.

After Sandy, darkness and damp in New York

The day after hurricane-turned-superstorm Sandy moves ashore, what is left behind is damage on a large scale. Among the hardest-hit areas: New York City and the New Jersey coast, site of wind, rain and fire.
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Front Section, Pages 1 on 10/31/2012

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