NEW YORK, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Frustration grew for superstorm  Sandy's victims in the U.S. Northeast on Friday, many of whom  were left with no power, no gasoline and little information  about when their shattered lives might return to normal.                  While Manhattan prepared to host the annual New York City  Marathon on Sunday, acute gasoline shortages in the city's  storm-battered outer boroughs and New Jersey led to long lines  and short tempers.                  Tankers finally began entering New York Harbor on Thursday,  and a tanker carrying 2 million barrels of gasoline arrived at 2  a.m. (0600 GMT) on Friday, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said.      (SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVE UPDATES)              Sandy, which brought a record storm surge to coastal areas,  killed at least 102 people after slamming into the U.S.  Northeast on Monday. Forty-one died in New York City, about half  of them in Staten Island, which was overrun by a wall of water.                       Starting before dawn on Friday, long lines of cars snaked  around gasoline stations around the area in scenes reminiscent  of the energy shortage of the 1970s.                  "The police are stopping people who are trying to cut in the  line," said Steven Golub, 53, an attorney who waited in line for  hours at a Manhattan gas station. "There's no gas anywhere else.  There was a guy with diplomatic plates who tried to cut in the  line and one of the cab drivers complained so the police  actually stopped him."                  Police were in place at many spots to keep the peace between  furious, frustrated drivers. In one instance, a man who  attempted to cut in line was charged with threatening another  driver with a gun on Thursday in the borough of Queens.                  "When people cut the line, people are about to stone them,"  said Chris Allegretta, who had stood in line for 90 minutes with  a gas can at a filling station in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey.                  Less than 40 percent of all gas stations in New York City,  Long Island and New Jersey operated on Thursday   because of a combination of power outages and constricted  supplies after the storm devastated the energy industry's  ability to move fuel into and around the New York City region.                  U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano and  Federal Emergency Management Agency Deputy Administrator Richard  Serino planned to visit Staten Island on Friday amid angry  claims by some survivors that the borough had been ignored.                                    'THEY FORGOT ABOUT US'                  President Barack Obama, locked in a tight race with  Republican challenger Mitt Romney, has so far received praise  for his handling of storm relief. But scenes of angry storm  victims could affect the U.S. political campaign with Election  Day four days away.                  "They forgot about us," said Theresa Connor, 42, describing  her Staten Island neighborhood as having been "annihilated."  "And Bloomberg said New York is fine. The marathon is on," she  said, referring to Mayor Michael Bloomberg.                  Rising seawater flooded lower Manhattan, much of which still  lacked power and subway service on Friday, while midtown and  uptown Manhattan were close to normal.                  Fury has been escalating throughout New York at Bloomberg's  decision to proceed with the marathon on Sunday, vowing the  event - which attracts more than 40,000 runners - would not  divert any resources storm victims.                  "I just walked past four huge generators. Those could be put  to use for people who need them," said Marjorie Dial, a tourist  from Oregon who was shocked to see the generators in Central  Park, where the marathon finishes. "What they've discovered on  Staten Island should have been the tipping point - the bodies."                  New York City Councilman James Oddo said on his Twitter  account: "If they take one first responder from Staten Island to  cover this marathon, I will scream."                  More than 3.7 million homes and businesses along the U.S.   East Coast remained without power on Friday.                  While power was expected to be returned throughout Manhattan  by Saturday, it could be another week or more in suburbs and  more distant towns along the coast.                  Cuomo directed the New York National Guard to deploy an  additional 600 troops to help restore the grid in Westchester  and Rockland counties, suburbs north of New York City.                  Forecasts for colder temperatures only added to the tension,  since many in New Jersey and elsewhere have been using  fuel-powered generators to run lights and heaters while waiting  for utilities to repair downed power lines.                  Disaster modeling company Eqecat estimated Sandy caused up  to $20 billion in insured losses and $50 billion in economic  losses, double its previous forecast. New York  Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli estimated economic losses of $15  billion to $18 billion in New York state alone.                  At the high end of the range, Sandy would rank as the fourth  costliest U.S. catastrophe, according to the Insurance  Information Institute, behind Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the  Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and Hurricane Andrew in 1992.                  Sandy started as a late-season hurricane in the Caribbean,  where it killed 69 people, before smashing ashore in the United  States with 80-mile-per-hour (130-kph) winds. It stretched from  the Carolinas to Connecticut and was the largest storm by area  to hit the United States in decades.
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