| Travel snarls as Nor'easter hits US East Cost(AP)
 Updated: 2006-02-12 15:22
 
 A developing nor'easter headed up the East Coast on Saturday with a threat of 
more than a foot of snow, canceling flights and putting road crews on overtime 
but cheering up skiers in a region spared harsh weather for most of this season. 
 Blizzard warnings were posted from the New York City area into eastern 
New England, and a winter storm warning was issued for most of New Jersey where 
up to 16 inches of snow was possible, the National Weather Service said. Heavy 
snow warnings were in effect from eastern Kentucky to New England.
 
 
 
 Hundreds 
of homes across New Jersey were without power late Saturday as the first couple 
inches of snow fell.
 |  A man identified as 
 Sylvester Stallone, left, prepares to film a scene for the movie 'Rocky 
 Balboa,' during a snow storm, on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of 
 Art, Saturday, Feb. 11, 2006. [AP]
 |  More than 100 flights were canceled at New Jersey's Newark Liberty 
International Airport, one of the New York area's major airports. There were 
scattered cancellations at New York's LaGuardia and John F. Kennedy 
International airports. 
 Delta said it canceled its Sunday arrivals and departures at several other 
airports in the storm's path, including those in Philadelphia; Boston; 
Baltimore; Newark; Providence, R.I.; Washington, D.C.; and Hartford, Conn. 
 Four inches of snow had accumulated in parts of Fairfax, Va. late Saturday, 
and crews worked to clear the runways at Washington Dulles International Airport 
in suburban Virginia. 
 Snow began falling Saturday afternoon in eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey, 
slowing traffic and putting road crews into action. 
 The New Jersey Department of Transportation had 600 trucks ready to plow snow 
and spread salt, plus 1,100 contractor trucks, the department said. The 
department also had its regular maintenance staff of 735 employees, plus more 
than 400 other state employees, available to operate plows. 
 The Port Authority had more than 160 pieces of heavy snow equipment at the 
New York region's three major airports. 
 In Connecticut, forecasters predicted up to 12 inches of snow, with the 
highest totals along the shoreline. Snow was expected to start Saturday evening 
and become heavy after midnight before tapering off Sunday afternoon. 
 Gov. M. Jodi Rell urged residents to stay off the roads if possible. 
 "Take it easy out there and just use common sense," she said. "We want 
everyone to get through this weekend storm safe and sound." 
 In Maryland, transportation officials expected the storm's timing to make 
road crews' jobs relatively easy. 
 The heaviest snowfall was expected between 9 p.m. Saturday and 3 a.m. Sunday, 
the lightest traffic hours of the week, said State Highway Administration worker 
David Buck. 
 About 2,100 road workers were on the job and more than 1,900 salt trucks and 
plows were out clearing roads around the Maryland — nearly a full deployment, 
highway administration spokeswoman Lora Rakowski said. 
 Despite the likelihood that drivers would have to dig their cars out Sunday 
morning, the storm was great news for northern New Jersey's Hidden Valley Resort 
and its 12 ski slopes, said Roni Mattiello, director of snow sports. 
 "It means great, fresh powder to ski in tomorrow," Mattiello said. "It will 
help us open terrain on the mountain that hasn't been opened yet because of the 
mild winter." 
 And at Jiminy Peak ski resort in western Massachusetts, Betsy Strickler said 
she sees the storm as free advertising after an unseasonably warm January 
dragged down business. 
 "The best PR is when people look up in the sky ... see the snow start to 
fall," said Strickler, the resort's head of marketing. 
 Not all sports fans were elated, however. New York's Aqueduct race track 
canceled Sunday's horse racing schedule. 
 
 
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