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As Hurricane Sandy nears, 450,000 on East Coast told to evacuate

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Not even Halloween was safe.

“To have to cancel is a little bit heartbreaking,” Nicole Purmal said Sunday as workers dismantled rides and game stalls at Luna Park, where the “Night of Horrors” was called off. “You just don’t want to take the risk,” said Purmal, marketing manager at Coney Island, 15 miles from Midtown Manhattan.

City workers patrolled the wind-whipped Coney Island boardwalk and shouted at gawkers to go home. But wave watchers appeared mesmerized as they awaited a storm whose size, trajectory and timing have created a meteorological wonder.

Others listened to the mounting warnings.

“I just want to get out of here,” said Bill Kilcup as he stopped for coffee on the Jersey shore before getting back into the slow stream of cars heading away from Atlantic City. “Right now we just want to get as far west as we can.”

New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg ordered about 375,000 residents of low-lying coastal areas to evacuate. About 50,000 in Delaware and 30,000 in Atlantic City also were told to evacuate, The Associated Press reported. Some coastal towns in Maryland also were to be evacuated.

The New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq will close Monday and perhaps Tuesday. All Broadway and off-Broadway shows were canceled Sunday evening and Monday.

In New Jersey, Republican Gov. Chris Christie ordered Atlantic City’s casinos closed and barrier islands evacuated from Cape May in the south to Sandy Hook in the north, and he urged residents in low-lying areas to heed warnings from emergency officials.

“How about if we go by this rule? Anything that looks stupid, is stupid,” Christie told a news conference.

The nightmare prospect for the barrier islands is a storm surge so high that ocean waves meet the bay on the inland side, swamping the islands.

Emergency shelters began filling up Sunday as waves pounded the piers and beaches on the New Jersey coast and in some cases caused early flooding. About 300 people took refuge in Pleasantville High School, where the Red Cross set up cots in a gym.

“We woke up flooded — up to my waist,” said Mary Hakes of Absecon, a coastal town. “We left everything we own back there.”

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