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Racioppo's house is one of six that sit just 20 feet from the beach. But he considers himself lucky. His was spared major damage when the house in front of his "took the brunt of the hit." "Our home is pretty much back to normal, but several of my close neighbors are still rebuilding," he said. And that's the story the exhibition tells, too, of those still struggling for some normalcy. "A lot of people haven't even started to rebuild. The point is it's an ongoing thing a year later," Corcoran said. Visitors will see how the storm dramatically altered parts of the landscape while leaving places just a few miles away unscathed. That was the case in Ocean Grove, N.J. The storm wiped out its famous pier but spared other parts of the charming Victorian town. Bob Bowne, a carpenter and lifetime resident, captured the pier as a turbulent surge lashed against it. He perched himself high on a third-floor balcony of a grand home as the town evacuated. He says he's glad he stayed because that image "preserved the memory of the pier
-- not the destruction -- but shows the ferociousness of the storm." The exhibition runs through March 2.
[Associated
Press;
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