Saturday,  November 3, 2012 • Vol. 13--No. 109 • 31 of 42 •  Other Editions

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SD Red Cross volunteer helping with Sandy relief

• PIERRE, S.D. (AP) -- A longtime Red Cross volunteer from Onida who has helped victims of 9/11, Missouri River flooding last year and Hurricane Isaac in Louisiana this year is being mobilized to help in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy.
• Nancy McKenney was flying to White Plains, N.Y., on Friday to help with disaster relief. She could be there up to three weeks. McKenney has been with the Red Cross for two decades.
• Several Red Cross volunteers from North Dakota also have headed to the East Coast since Sandy made landfall in New Jersey on Monday with devastating effects.

Power sputters back after storm; weariness mounts
KAREN MATTHEWS,Associated Press

• NEW YORK (AP) -- More New Yorkers awoke Saturday morning to power being restored for the first time since Superstorm Sandy pummeled the region, and those whose lights were back on celebrated it, but patience was wearing thin among those in the region who had been without power for most of the week.
• From storm-scarred New Jersey to parts of Connecticut, a widespread lack of gasoline frustrated people who were just trying to get to work or pick up a load of groceries. Gas was to be rationed starting at noon Saturday in northern New Jersey, where drivers will be allowed to buy it only every other day, the governor declared.
• The ongoing recovery also forced the cancellation of Sunday's New York City Marathon. Mayor Michael Bloomberg reversed himself Friday and yielded to mounting criticism that this was no time to run the race, which starts on hard-hit Staten Island and wends through all five of the city's boroughs.
• Bloomberg, who as late as Friday afternoon insisted the world's largest marathon should go on as scheduled Sunday, changed course shortly afterward amid intensifying opposition from the city comptroller, the Manhattan borough president and sanitation workers unhappy they had volunteered to help storm victims but were assigned to the race instead. The mayor said he would not want "a cloud to hang over the race or its participants."
• Many runners understood the rationale behind the decision. The death toll in the city stood at 41 and thousands of people were shivering without electricity, making many New Yorkers recoil at the idea of police officers protecting a foot race and evicting storm victims from hotels to make way for runners.

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