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Snow pounds parts of East Coast, spares several big cities

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Snow and sleet pounded a large swath of the East Coast on Saturday, coating roads with ice and causing hundreds of crashes. Thousands of people lost power and forecasters warned of blizzard-like conditions from Virginia to parts of the Northeast.

Police investigated several fatal crashes as potentially storm-related, but some of the South's biggest cities - Atlanta, Charlotte and Raleigh - appeared to avoid the worst of the storm. Authorities praised residents for learning the lessons of past storms that resulted in icy gridlock, where thousands of people were stranded along the interstates. But officials warned that bitter cold would keep roads treacherous well after the snow and sleet stopped.

"If I tell you anything it would be stay home," Gov. Roy Cooper said. "Do not go out and drive on the roads unless you absolutely have to."

North Carolina cities Burlington, Greensboro and Roxboro received 8 inches or more of snow, and several inches fell in southeast Virginia, where a blizzard warning was issued for the cities along the coast.

North Carolina reported more than 250 crashes, while Virginia had more than 100. Hundreds of crashes were reported in Tennessee starting Friday. Hundreds of flights were canceled, from Atlanta to airports farther north.

At least one fatality - a man whose pickup truck went off a snow-slickened Kentucky road Thursday - has been blamed on the weather. Motorist deaths in North Carolina and Maryland as the storm blew in were investigated to see if they were caused by the weather.

Power outages had grown to about 25,000 in North Carolina alone, according to a news release from the governor. Nearly half were in the Charlotte area and adjacent Union County, according to Duke Power.

In Cornelius, north of Charlotte, Matt Thomas said he used a ruler to measure nearly 6 inches of snow and sleet that had piled up on the back of his pickup truck. He planned to spend the weekend enjoying the snow and watching television. A plow passed through his neighborhood, but the road still looked slippery.

"The sleet started first, so there's definitely a layer of ice under the snow," he said by phone. "I'm staying home."

The unpredictable storm left some areas with much different outcomes than neighboring counties. Unofficial totals from the National Weather Service showed that much of Raleigh and Charlotte had 2 inches or less of precipitation - much of it sleet - while areas to the north of both cities got several inches of snow.

In Atlanta and parts of Georgia, people who were expecting a couple of inches of snow instead woke up to a thin coat of ice. Still, it didn't stop children from sliding down slick grassy hills in what is a once- or twice-a-year icy occurrence.

Some took to social media to complain that they didn't have anything to sled in, prompting an apologetic Tweet from one well-known Raleigh weatherman.

"To all my detractors, more than 24 hours ago I began talking about how this snow event could go up in smoke. I try to be honest-all I can do," WRAL-TV chief meteorologist Greg Fishel said early Saturday.

A blizzard warning for southeast Virginia accompanied forecasts of high winds and up to 9 inches of snow there. The National Weather Service had already measured nearly 6 inches of snow at its post in Wakefield on Saturday.

Even with snow coating Virginia Beach roads, diners and staff made it to the popular breakfast spot Citrus.

"When there's bad weather, people come out," manager Tara Junke said. "I've worked in restaurants for 20 years in Hampton Roads and we've never shut down for snow."

Chris Turner, 58, a health care analyst sitting at the counter with a mug of tea, said he drove 7 miles to his usual breakfast spot, aided by four-wheel drive.

"It's fun to enjoy mother nature in all her glory," he said. "I'd rather be out. I can't stay at home."

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Finley reported from Virginia Beach, Virginia.

A boy sleds down a hill after ice and snow fell in North Georgia, Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017, in Kennesaw, Ga. One to 3 inches of snow fell across northern Georgia before tapering off Saturday morning. Though rain and freezing rain fell at times in Atlanta, its workers, schools and companies dismissed early Friday, avoiding the epic snowstorm traffic jam of January 2014 that stranded motorists in cars on interstates. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) The Associated Press
A truck navigates a snowy section of Niles Avenue in St. Joseph, Mich., after a winter weather system dumped several inches of snow in the area, Friday, Jan. 6, 2017. Michigan transportation officials are urging caution amid wintry weather that's affecting travel across portions of the state. (Don Campbell/The Herald-Palladium via AP) The Associated Press
A pedestrian makes his way across an icy Willamette Street in Eugene, Ore., on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2017, after a snow storm dumped several inches of snow on the area. A series of winter storms were moving east and threatening turbulent weather across much of the Southeast. (Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard via AP) The Associated Press
Randall County Emergency responders work an accident at Interstate 27 and Highway 2219, after a driver slide off the service road, in Amarillo, Texas, Friday, Jan. 6, 2017. One person was transported to nearby a nearby hospital. (Michael Schumacher/The Amarillo Globe News via AP) The Associated Press
A man is bundled as he stands in the snow Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017, in Newark, N.J. (AP Photo/Mel Evans) The Associated Press
People bundle against the cold and snow as they walk downtown Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017, in Newark, N.J. (AP Photo/Mel Evans) The Associated Press
Clayton Bivins, 11, goes off a ramp while sledding in the Historic Boulevard District after a wintry mix came through Athens, Ga., Saturday, January 07, 2017. (John Roark/Athens Banner-Herald via AP) The Associated Press
People walk in the snow Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017, in Newark, N.J. (AP Photo/Mel Evans) The Associated Press
Emma Dawson walks with her 7-month-old golden retriever, Indy, on the North Campus of the University of Georgia after a wintry mix came through Athens, Ga., Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017. (John Roark/Athens Banner-Herald via AP) The Associated Press
Crew Ellis, 7, foreground, pulls Ben Lawrence, 7, in the Historic Boulevard District after a wintry mix came through Athens, Ga., Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017. (John Roark/Athens Banner-Herald via AP) The Associated Press
A car navigates on a icy road Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017 in Charlotte, N.C. A winter storm blanketed parts of North Carolina and Virginia with snow Saturday as its slow march across the Southeast grounded flights and left roads icy and impassible. (John D. Simmons/The Charlotte Observer via AP) The Associated Press
A snow plow clears the road during a snowstorm on Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017 in Charlotte, N.C. A winter storm blanketed parts of North Carolina and Virginia with snow Saturday as its slow march across the Southeast grounded flights and left roads icy and impassible. (John D. Simmons/The Charlotte Observer via AP) The Associated Press
Snow covers the hair of Taylor Fields as she waits for the bus on Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017 in Charlotte, N.C. A winter storm blanketed parts of North Carolina and Virginia with snow Saturday as its slow march across the Southeast grounded flights and left roads icy and impassible. (John D. Simmons/The Charlotte Observer via AP) The Associated Press
A workman uses a leaf blower to move the the light snow in front of business offices along Fire Road in EHT during the mid-morning hours of the snowstorm. Saturday, Jan. 7 2017. (Ben Fogletto/The Press of Atlantic City via AP) The Associated Press
Daniel Mitchell operates a snowblower along the sidewalk on Norfolk Ave. next to Randolph College on Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017 in Lynchburg, Va. (Jay Westcott /News & Daily Advance via AP) The Associated Press
A light dusting of snow covers the ground in Auburn, Ga.,on Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017. Parts of the Southeast got a dose of winter weather. Snow, sleet and freezing rain pelted a wide swath of the South overnight, turning roads icy and impassable in spots amid reports of car crashes as many braced for up to a foot of snow in parts of the Carolinas and Virginia. (AP Photo/Lisa Marie Pane) The Associated Press
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