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Articles written by Allen G. Breed


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  • Sandy leaves death, damp and darkness in wake

    ALLEN G. BREED, TOM HAYS,Associated Press

    NEW YORK (AP) — As superstorm Sandy marched slowly inland, millions along the East Coast awoke Tuesday without power or mass transit, with huge swaths of the nation's largest city unusually vacant and dark. New York was among the hardest hit, with its financial heart in Lower Manhattan shuttered for a second day and seawater cascading into the still-gaping construction pit at the World Trade Center. President Barack Obama declared a major disaster in the city and Long Island. AP Photo/Frank Franklin II New York Police o...

  • East Coast grinds to a halt as superstorm nears

    ALLEN G. BREED, JENNIFER PELTZ, Associated Press

    NEW YORK — Hurricane Sandy bore down on the Eastern Seaboard's largest cities Monday, forcing the shutdown of mass transit, schools and financial markets, sending coastal residents fleeing, and threatening a dangerous mix of high winds, soaking rain and a surging wall of water up to 11 feet tall. Sandy strengthened before dawn and stayed on a predicted path toward Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York — putting it on a collision course with two other weather systems that would create a superstorm with the potential...

  • Sandy gains power and aims for Northeast

    ALLEN G. BREED, JENNIFER PELTZ, Associated Press

    NEW YORK — A fast-strengthening Hurricane Sandy churned north Monday, raking ghost-town cities along the Northeast corridor with rain and wind gusts. Subways and schools were closed across the region of 50 million people, the floor of the New York Stock Exchange was deserted, and thousands fled inland to await the storm's fury. AP Photo/Mel Evans Rough surf of the Atlantic Ocean breaks over the beach and across Beach Ave., Monday morning, in Cape May, N.J., as high tide and Hurricane Sandy begin to arrive. Hurricane Sandy c...

  • Northeast buttons up against terrifying megastorm

    ALLEN G. BREED, WAYNE PARRY,Associated Press

    AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana Store manager L.P. Cyburt boards up the windows of the business as Hurricane Sandy approaches in Ocean City, Md., on Saturday. Hurricane Sandy upgraded again Saturday just hours after forecasters said it had weakened to a tropical storm was barreling north from the Caribbean and was expected to make landfall early Tuesday near the Delaware coast, then hit two winter weather systems as it moves inland, creating a hybrid monster storm. SHIP BOTTOM, N.J. (AP) — Tens of thousands of residents were ordere...

  • Newtown holds the first funerals for the victims

    ALLEN G. BREED, HELEN O'NEILL, Associated Press

    NEWTOWN, Conn. — A grief-stricken Newtown on Monday began burying the littlest victims of the school massacre, starting with two 6-year-old boys — one of them a big football fan, the other a mischievous, whip-smart youngster whose twin sister survived the rampage. Family, friends and townspeople streamed to two funeral homes to say goodbye to Jack Pinto, who loved the New York Giants and idolized their star wide receiver, and Noah Pozner, who liked to figure out how things worked mechanically. AP Photo/Mary Altaffer Bar...

  • Questions of 'Why' and 'How' fill pews in CT town

    ALLEN G. BREED, PAT EATON-ROBB,Associated Press

    NEWTOWN, Conn. — Six-year-old Jennifer Waters came to Mass on Sunday at Saint Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church with a lot of questions. "The little children, are they with the angels?" she asked her mother as she fiddled with a small plastic Sonic the Hedgehog figurine on a pew near the back of the church. "Are they going to live with the angels?" AP Photo/Julio Cortez A priest embraces a woman outside St. Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church between Masses, Sunday, in Newtown, Conn. On Friday, a gunman allegedly killed h...

  • Giant dome for Gulf oil leak is next best solution

    ALLEN G. BREED VICKI SMITH Associated Press Writers NEW ORLEANS

    The best short-term solution to bottling up a disastrous oil spill threatening sealife and livelihoods along the Gulf Coast should be headed out to sea today in the form of a specially built giant concrete-and-steel box designed to siphon the oil away. At about midday, a barge will haul the 100-ton contraption 50 miles offshore to a spot where a mile-deep gusher from a blown-out undersea well has been spewing at least 210,000 gallons of crude a day into the Gulf for two weeks. BP spokesman John Curry said it would be...

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