TWO BIBLE CODES THAT SHOW VERY CLEAR SEARCH WORD RELEVANCE
TO THE ENCODED WORDS. BUT "WHAT" RELEVANCE ?
The Hurricane “Charley”
Legend :
« Hurricane »
« Charley »
« A great wind came » (yellow squares)
“16 dead”
Another cluster with the same terms and the same horizontal expression, which appears only once in the whole Bible, demonstrating one more time the redundancy of the bible codes phenomenon.
THE ACTUAL NEWS !
Charley Could Benefit Insurers
Analysts say next year's premium rises will more than offset hurricane claims.
Insurers worldwide yesterday began counting
the cost of the damage wreaked by Hurricane Charley, but shares in Lloyd's of
London companies were helped by hopes of higher premiums next year.
The initial estimate of the economic loss caused by the category 4 storm,
which came ashore with 145mph winds on Florida's Gulf Coast on Friday night,
is $20bn (£10.8bn).
Munich Re, the world's biggest reinsurer, said insured losses were likely to
be in the range of $7bn-$14bn, although some UK analysts thought the final
bill would be lower at $4bn-$10bn.
The storm killed 16 people and left thousands
homeless. Several hospitals were badly damaged and entire counties left
without power.
If the worst estimates prove accurate, Charley becomes the second most
expensive storm of all time, after Hurricane Andrew in 1992, and the fourth
most expensive insured event, after Andrew, the 9/11 terror attacks and the
Los Angeles earthquake of 1994.
After Andrew 12 years ago, many insurers pulled out of providing hurricane
cover to the affected areas and various quasi-governmental funds stepped in.
They will now limit exposure faced by the private insurance sector.
Munich Re said it expected claims of about £100m from Charley. A spokesman
said: "A first rough estimation for Munich Re is in the low three-digit
million euro range."
He added that it was too early to say whether the reinsurer would be forced to
revise its net profit target of €2bn (£1.3bn) for the full year.
Hannover Re said it expected claims of up to €100m while Allianz predicted a
maximum of €50m.
Shares in the big reinsurers tumbled as the markets opened yesterday but by
the close most had recovered to be flat on the day or slightly up.
In the UK, Lloyd's insurer Hiscox did not expect its bills from Charley to be
outside reserves put aside for such events. Robert Childs, underwriting
director at Hiscox, said Lloyd's insurers should take Charley in their stride:
"It is likely that if it [exposure] is within budget for us it is going to be
in budget for other people."
Hiscox shares climbed 2.75p to finish at 173p. Lloyd's insurer Wellington
closed down 0.5p at 80p while Atrium, which provides property insurance and
reinsurance in the US, was down 5p at 167.5p.
Analysts pointed out that the Lloyd's companies might benefit from higher than
expected premium rates next year.
"There is no doubt that Hurri cane Charley had a devastating impact on central
Florida, but its cost to the insurance industry will be less than some of the
more lurid headlines would suggest," said analysts at brokers Bridgewell in a
note.
"There will be a negative impact on the second-half earnings, but the effect
on the insurance industry for next year should be to hold rates at a higher
level than would otherwise prove to be the case."
Allstate Florida's second biggest home and car insurer said it expected its
full-year results to be hit by Charley losses. State Farm, Florida's biggest
home insurer, said it had received nearly 20,000 claims from householders.
Hurricane "Jeanne"
Legend :
"Death..." "...In the storm..." skip : + 185 268
"...Jeanne..."
"...6 dead..."
"...My wind in the land of the North" (yellow squares)
"word God"
Legend :
"In the storm..." skip : - 53515
"...Jeanne..."
"...6 dead..."
"...Indeed a wind" (yellow squares)
6 dead as Florida mops up after yet another hurricane
MIAMI (AFP) - Florida Monday began yet another mop-up job after the fourth hurricane to hit the state in six weeks left six dead, countless homes smashed and a million households without electricity.
The same storm that is feared to have killed about 2,000 people in northern Haiti a week earlier left six people dead in the southeastern US state, police and local reports said.
A man was found lying in water in a flooded house where he had been partying as the storm slammed ashore in the town of Micco in southeastern Florida.
In nearby Palm Bay, a man apparently drove his car into a canal Sunday morning, when the storm was still raging hours after making landfall during the night.
Two died when their vehicle plunged into a lake in Fort Lauderdale, and in Miami, a 70-year-old man was electrocuted by a downed power line, police said.
In Clay County, northern Florida, a 15-year-old was killed by a falling tree.
Jeanne was headed towards the state of Georgia early Monday bearing tropical-storm strength winds of 85 kilometre (50 mile) per hour winds and risks of tornadoes and floods.
The fourth hurricane in six weeks to hammer Florida, Jeanne smashed homes, tore off roofs, flooded streets and left one million people without electricity Sunday.
Jeanne barrelled into southeastern Florida at the same spot where Hurricane Frances made landfall three weeks earlier. Two other hurricanes have hit Florida since mid-August.
"This has been a historic six-week period," Florida Governor Jeb Bush said at a news conference.
"Never before, since 1880 has there been a state that has received four hurricanes at once, and back in 1880 in Texas there were probably 100,000 people that lived there," while Florida today is "a state of 17 million," said Bush.
When Jeanne crashed ashore, it was a powerful category three hurricane packing winds of 193 kilometres (120 miles) per hour, with higher gusts.
It then headed inland, turned north and was eventually downgraded to a tropical storm, but could still trigger floods and spawn tornadoes.
The governor - who is a brother of President George W. Bush - said he was confident that Florida would rebuild and recover.
"On long term basis this state will not only survive, it will rebound," he said.
In Fort Pierce, one of the towns worst hit by the storm, trees, lamp posts and traffic lights littered the streets. Numerous trailer homes were smashed to pieces, as Jeanne in some cases completed the destruction Frances had started three weeks ago.
At the city's marina, several boats were under water, some sunk by Frances, some by Jeanne.
Further north, in Vero Beach, it was the streets that were under water, and the facade of a 13-story condominium was completely ripped off.
Nearly every beachfront home along 48 kilometres (30 miles) of coast stretching north from Vero Beach suffered structural damage, a helicopter survey showed.
See also : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Jeanne
***NOTE*** THE DEAD NUMBERED HERE ARE JUST FLORIDA AND SO THE PERSON WHO DID THIS ENCODING
SHOULD LOOK FOR THE WORD FLORIDA AND THEY WILL PROBABLY FIND IT.
MORE PROOF WE DON'T KNOW THE WHOLE STORY IN EACH MATRIX.







