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Manuel Bernardo, 30, of Bethesda, Md., was on his way to Barcelona, Spain. He bought a ticket to New York and was hoping to make it there in time to catch his flight to Madrid. "Until this morning, I was happy as pie, because I love snow," he said. In Falls Church, Va., a Washington suburb, Jeff Patmore, 43, was trying to get his Jeep out. The State Department employee's family was running low on supplies
-- particularly milk for his three young children. Patmore attempted a grocery run Saturday, but didn't make it far. "I thought my car could do anything, and I was wrong," he said. "My wonderful neighbors dug me out, and I limped back with my pride injured but everything else intact." Greg Ten Eyck, a spokesman for Safeway Inc., said road conditions are making it hard for many stores to restock following the "epic" crowds before last week's storm. A new wave of cold residents was checking into the Hilton in Silver Spring, including Bill and Ann Hilliard and their two elderly cats. Temperatures in their powerless home had dropped into the 40s and with another foot of snow forecast, they didn't want to stay home. Ann Hilliard recently had part of her leg amputated and their neighbors helped them out of the neighborhood. "There was no way to get her out otherwise," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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