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Sandy leaves devastation in its wake as East Coast looks for relief

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Thousands more flights scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday were canceled, bringing the total to more than 18,000. That surpassed the 15,000 flights terminated by Hurricane Irene in August 2011. Some airlines had already begun to cancel Thursday flights.

Because the storm damaged or disrupted at least four busy airports — La Guardia International Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport, Teterboro Airport and John F. Kennedy International Airport — the ripple effect reached across the country. At Los Angeles International Airport, more than 100 incoming and departing flights were canceled.

Several New York hospitals had to evacuate patients after power supplies failed. Without functioning elevators, workers carried patients down the stairs, including babies from neonatal intensive care as nurses and others carefully balanced the infants’ IV lines.

Blizzard conditions — with winds that created four-foot piles of snow in some areas and closed numerous highways and roads — struck portions of West Virginia, Maryland, Tennessee and North Carolina.

In West Virginia, entire cities and even counties were cut off from the rest of the state. Yet shelters remained nearly empty, with most residents riding out Sandy at home.

“We have a different problem here in West Virginia, and that’s people and their pride,” said Debra Palmer, the state’s assistant regional emergency services director. “They’re self-sufficient. They tend to not take advantage of things that are right in front of them.”

Firefighters and police officers had gone door-to-door as the storm approached, urging people to take refuge in shelters where hot meals and blankets awaited. In two counties, their effort persuaded four people.

“There’s no way to describe to you how private and proud these people are,” Palmer said. “They don’t really want any help. And they’ve done very well that way for generations.”

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(Tanfani of the Tribune Washington Bureau reported from Beach Haven, N.J., Zucchino of the Los Angeles Times from Berkeley Heights, N.J., and Gold of the Times from Los Angeles.)

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(Staff writers Tina Susman, Brian Bennett, Cindy Carcamo, Kim Geiger, Kathleen Hennessey, Hugo Martin, Michael Memoli and Joseph Serna contributed to this report.)

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