NEW DELHI: It's a different kind of crisis of plenty for those with new Rs 2,000 notes-they have cash but are still finding it difficult to pay for essential items with shops running short on change.Many outstation students said they were being refused a meal or photocopies. Anirudh Verma, a student from Patna, had Rs 4,000 in the wallet but he was back at an ATM near Barakhambha on Sunday. "I want Rs 100 or Rs 500 notes. No roadside eatery is ready to sell food when I show them a 2,000-rupee note. I cannot afford to spend Rs 500 on one meal," Verma, who lives in Mukherjee Nagar , said.The situation has become worse as not many ATMs have small denominations. "I cannot buy vegetables and fruits worth Rs 500," said Swati Rawat, a student from Uttarakhand who lives in Amar Colony. Rawat had to settle for 500 grams of apples instead of 1kg as she could pay only Rs 50, not Rs 100.Sikha Sharma, a student of Kirori Mal College , tried her best to pay a photocopier with a Rs 2,000 note at Vijay Nagar. "I need to photocopy a chapter of 12 pages. But the shopkeeper said he didn't have change."Sukhdeo Pramanik, an outsider who works in a mobile phone store, dropped the idea of withdrawing money from an ATM at CP after getting to know that it had no small denomination.