|| HURRICANE DENNIS ||

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Hurricane Dennis Insured Damage Expected (Hurricane Dennis) To Be $900 Million (NBC 6 Miami)


Hurricane Dennis Insured Damage Expected To Be $900 Million (NBC 6 Miami)
MIAMI -- Insurers are expected to pay $900 million to cover damage caused by Hurricane Dennis in the U.S., much less than any of the four storms that pummeled the Southeast last year, a risk analysis company said Tuesday.

Hurricane Dennis insured damage expected to be $900 million (Gainesville Sun)
nsurers are expected to pay $900 million to cover damage caused by Hurricane Dennis in the U.S., much less than any of the four storms that pummeled the Southeast last year, a risk analysis company said Tuesday.

Newlyweds learn to weather storms early (Sun-Sentinel)
NICEVILLE -- It's been a stormy relationship so far for newlyweds Christopher Murphy and his bride, Barry. The Atlanta couple, both 27, drove through rains generated by Tropical Storm Cindy so they could get married in Niceville, Barry's hometown, a day before Hurricane Dennis hit the Panhandle.

Florida newlyweds have a stormy relationship (USA Today)
It's been a stormy relationship so far for newlyweds Christopher and Barry Murphy. The Atlanta couple, both 27, drove through rains generated by Tropical Storm Cindy so they could get married in Niceville, Barry's hometown, just a day before Hurricane Dennis hit the Florida Panhandle.

Thunder Horse platform unlikely to start production in 2005 (New Orleans Times-Picayune)
NEW ORLEANS (AP) BP PLC's Thunder Horse platform in the Gulf of Mexico is unlikely to start petroleum production as scheduled this year after damaged by Hurricane Dennis, the company says.

Pensacola Beach, closed by Hurricane Dennis, reopens (Tampa Bay's 10)
PENSACOLA BEACH, Florida (AP) -- Pensacola Beach is opening to the public in the morning for the first time since Hurricane Dennis struck two weeks ago.

(AFX UK Focus) 2005-07-26 16:25 GMT: Hurricane Dennis to cost insurers $900M, ISO says (Interactive Investor)
SAN FRANCISCO (AFX) -- Hurricane Dennis will cause insured losses of $900 million, making it a much less-damaging storm than the four hurricanes that battered the southwest of the U.S. in 2004, the Insurance Services Office said on Tuesday.

Damaged Vehicles Already Back on the Road Thanks to Quick Action by Progressive Claims Service; Progressive's Claims (The Auto Channel)
PENSACOLA, Fla.--July 25, 2005--A little more than two weeks after the first hurricane of the 2005 season struck the Florida Panhandle, the state's fourth largest auto insurer reports that it has settled 80 percent of its auto claims resulting from Hurricane Dennis.

FROM CUBA Rotting produce sold in the wake of hurricane Dennis (CubaNet)
CIENFUEGOS, Cuba - July 20 (Vicente P rez Varela, Cubanac n Press / www.cubanet.org) - A day after hurricane Dennis swept through here, government stores offered for sale produce that consumers complained was in a state of decomposition.

Expenses of Evacuation Could Be Deterrent Next Time (Newhouse News Service)
MOBILE, Ala. -- When Hurricane Dennis was barreling toward the Gulf Coast with frightening intensity, Jimmy Law faced a difficult decision: the cheeseburger or the chicken sandwich.

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