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Science Podcast - The modern hunter-gatherer gut, fast mountain weathering, and a rundown of stories from our daily news site (17 Jan 2014)

Hunter-gatherer gut microbes, fast moving mountains, and a daily news roundup.




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Podcast: A burning body experiment, prehistoric hunting dogs, and seeding life on other planets

News stories on our earliest hunting companions, should we seed exoplanets with life, and finding space storm hot spots with David Grimm.  From the magazine Two years ago, 43 students disappeared from a teacher’s college in Guerrero, Mexico. Months of protests and investigation have not yielded a believable account of what happened to them. The government of Mexico claims that the students were killed by cartel members and burned on an outdoor pyre in a dump outside Cucola. Lizzie Wade has been following this story with a focus on the science of fire investigation. She talks about an investigator in Australia that has burned pig carcasses in an effort to understand these events in Mexico.   [Image: Edgard Garrido/REUTERS/Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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What hunter-gatherer gut microbiomes have that we don’t, and breaking the emoji code

Sarah Crespi talks to Sam Smits about how our microbial passengers differ from one culture to the next—are we losing diversity and the ability to fight chronic disease? For our books segment, Jen Golbeck talks with Vyvyan Evans about his book The Emoji Code: The Linguistics Behind Smiley Faces and Scaredy Cats. Listen to previous podcasts. [Image: Woodlouse/Flickr; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Clues that the medieval plague swept into sub-Saharan Africa and evidence humans hunted and butchered giant ground sloths 12,000 years ago

New archaeological evidence suggests the same black plague that decimated Europe also took its toll on sub-Saharan Africa. Host Sarah Crespi talks with Contributing Correspondent Lizzie Wade about diverse medieval sub-Saharan cities that shrank or even disappeared around the same time the plague was stalking Europe. In a second archaeological story, Meagan Cantwell talks with Gustavo Politis, professor of archaeology at the National University of Central Buenos Aires and the National University of La Plata, about new radiocarbon dates for giant ground sloth remains found in the Argentine archaeological site Campo Laborde. The team’s new dates suggest humans hunted and butchered ground sloths in the late Pleistocene, about 12,500 years ago. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Download the transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Ife-Sungbo Archaeological Project; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Where our microbiome came from, and how our farming and hunting ancestors transformed the world

Micro-organisms live inside everything from the human gut to coral—but where do they come from? Host Meagan Cantwell talks to Staff Writer Elizabeth Pennisi about the first comprehensive survey of microbes in Hawaii’s Waimea Valley, which revealed that plants and animals get their unique microbiomes from organisms below them in the food chain or the wider environment. Going global, Meagan then speaks with Erle Ellis, professor of geography and environmental science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, about a project that aggregated the expertise of more than 250 archaeologists to map human land use over the past 10,000 years. This detailed map will help fine-tune climate models. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Ads on this show: Science Sessions Podcast; Kroger Download a transcript (PDF)  Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Chris Couderc/Flickr; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Hunting for new epilepsy drugs, and capturing lightning from space

About one-third of people with epilepsy are treatment resistant. Up until now, epilepsy treatments have focused on taming seizures rather than the source of the disease and for good reason—so many roads lead to epilepsy: traumatic brain injury, extreme fever and infection, and genetic disorders, to name a few. Staff Writer Jennifer Couzin-Frankel talks with host Sarah Crespi about researchers that are turning back the pages on epilepsy, trying to get to the beginning of the story where new treatments might work. And Sarah also talks with Torsten Neurbert at the Technical University of Denmark’s National Space Institute in Kongens Lyngby about capturing high-altitude “transient luminous events” from the International Space Station (ISS). These lightning-induced bursts of light, color, and occasionally gamma rays were first reported in the 1990s but had only been recorded from the ground or aircraft. With new measurements from the ISS come new insights into the anatomy of lightning. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Ads on this week’s show: Bayer; Lightstream; KiwiCo Download a transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Gemini Observatory; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Contesting Leviathan: activists, hunters, and state power in the Makah whaling conflict / Les Beldo

Dewey Library - SH383.2.B45 2019




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Why liberalism failed / Patrick J. Deneen ; foreword by James Davison Hunter and John M. Owen IV.

Dewey Library - JC574.D473 2018




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Government agencies should keep off "gold hunt": Pawar

The search started after a seer said he was told in his dreams that the buried gold was in Unnao.




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Treasure hunt to find 1,000 tonnes of hidden gold enters fourth day

12 member ASI team is carrying out excavation amidst tight security.




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Glowing for Gold : News of treasure hunt in Unnao village goes around the globe

Daundiya Kheda pradhan''s husband is fielding calls from across the globe about the treasure hunt.




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Brutality in Purulia: Forest officials hunt for villagers who chopped off claws, tail of leopard



  • DO NOT USE West Bengal
  • India

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073 JSJ React with Pete Hunt and Jordan Walke

Panel Pete Hunt (twitter github blog) Jordan Walke (twitter github) Joe Eames (twitter github blog) AJ O’Neal (twitter github blog) Jamison Dance (twitter github blog) Merrick Christensen (twitter github) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Ramp Up) Discussion 01:34 - Pete Hunt Introduction Instagram Facebook 02:45 - Jordan Walke Introduction 04:15 - React React - GitHub 06:38 - 60 Frames Per Second 09:34 - Data Binding 12:31 - Performance 17:39 - Diffing Algorithm 19:36 - DOM Manipulation 23:06 - Supporting node.js 24:03 - rendr 26:02 - JSX 30:31 - requestAnimationFrame 34:15 - React and Applications 38:12 - React Users Khan Academy 39:53 - Making it work Picks Ben Mabey: Clojure Plain & Simple (Jamison) JSConf 2013 Videos (Jamison) Kittens (Jamison) PBS Idea Channel (AJ) Free Trial SSL (AJ) OSX Wifi Volume Remote Control (AJ) js-git (Merrick) vim-airline (Merrick) MLS LIVE (Joe) Seraphina by Rachel Hartman (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Hire Chuck (Chuck) GoToMeeting (Chuck) ScreenFlow (Chuck) syriandeveloper (Pete) jsFiddle (Pete) Hotel Tonight (Pete) Green Flash Brewery Beer: Palate Wrecker (Jordan) All Things Vim (Jordan) Next Week Grunt.js with Ben Alman Transcript JAMISON:  Joe is Merrick’s personal assistant. CHUCK:  [Laughter] MERRICK:  No, we’re just in this little room and he had, he was like, “Yeah” JOE:  Want me to freshen up your coffee, sir? [Chuckles] JAMISON:  Feed me some tacos, Joe. [Laughter] [Hosting and bandwidth provided by the Blue Box Group. Check them out at BlueBox.net.]  [This episode is sponsored by Component One, makers of Wijmo. If you need stunning UI elements or awesome graphs and charts, then go to Wijmo.com and check them out.]  [This podcast is sponsored by JetBrains, makers of WebStorm. Whether you’re working with Node.js or building the front end of your web application, WebStorm is the tool for you. It has great code quality and code exploration tools and works with HTML5, Node, TypeScript, CoffeeScript, Harmony, LESS, Sass, Jade, JSLint, JSHint, and the Google Closure Compiler. Check it out atJjetBrains.com/WebStorm.] CHUCK:  Hey everybody and welcome to episode 73 of the JavaScript Jabber Show. This week on our panel, we have Joe Eames. JOE:  Hey there. CHUCK:  AJ O’Neal. AJ:  Live again from Provo. CHUCK:  Jamison Dance. JAMISON:  Hey friends. CHUCK:  Merrick Christensen. MERRICK:  Hey guys. CHUCK:  I’m Charles Max Wood from DevChat.TV and we have two special guests this week. Pete Hunt. PETE:  Hey guys. CHUCK:  And Jordan Walke. JORDAN:  Hi. CHUCK:  Since you guys haven’t been on the show before, do you want to introduce yourselves? We’ll have Pete go first. PETE:  Sure. So my name’s Pete. I work on general React stuff these days. But my day job is building the Instagram web experience. If you go to Instagram.com, we have a bunch of frontend stuff you can play with and a bunch of backend infrastructure that supports all that. That’s what I mostly work on. We’re big users of React at Instagram so I ended up contributing a lot to the React core as well. JAMISON:  So did you come from Instagram or from Facebook and then to work on Instagram? PETE:  Well it was actually a pretty good story just in terms of the integration of the two companies. I was originally at Facebook for a couple of years and we acquired Instagram and they came in and they wanted to build a web presence. Facebook’s core competency is definitely web technologies and Instagram hasn’t historically focused on that. So we were able to take the Facebook web expertise and get Instagram up and running really quickly. I came from the Facebook side but the team is still very much a separate team, their own building, that kind of thing. So that’s my background. CHUCK:  Awesome. JAMISON:  Sweet. CHUCK:  And Jordan?




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085 JSJ Huxley with Pete Hunt

The panelists discuss Huxley with Pete Hunt




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201 JSJ Security with Troy Hunt

02:32 - Troy Hunt Introduction

04:12 - Why should people care about security?

06:19 - When People/Businesses Get Hacked

09:47 - “Hacking”

11:42 - Inventive “Hacks”

13:24 - Motivation for Hacking/Can hacking be valuable?

17:08 - Consequences and Retribution

19:10 - How to Build Secure Applications

20:47 - Weighing in UX

22:50 - Common Misconceptions

  • Password Storage
  • Encoding
  • Cookies

31:27 - Passwords (Cont’d)

33:16 - Justifying the Importance of Security

35:24 - Client-side Security

44:10 - Resources

45:27 - Routing

47:21 - Timeouts

51:36 - Cached Data

Picks

awesome-react (Aimee)
Edsger W. Dijkstra Quotes (Jamison)
Sam Newman: Telstra, Human Error and Blame Culture (Jamison)
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace (Jamison)
T.I.M.E Stories (Joe)
We Are Anonymous: Inside the Hacker World of LulzSec, Anonymous, and the Global Cyber Insurgency Paperback by Parmy Olson (Troy)
The Have I been pwned Project (Troy)




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MJS 064: Troy Hunt

Panel: Charles Max Wood

Guest: Troy Hunt

This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Troy Hunt who is from Australia. In this episode, Troy and Charles talk about web security and how Troy got into the field. Troy writes a blog, creates courses for Pluralsight, and he is a Microsoft Regional Director and an MVP who travels the world speaking at events and training technology professionals.

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

  • Web security
  • This show is not about code or technology, but about the person.
  • How did you get into programming, Troy?
    • 1995 Troy started at the university.
  • Book: HTML for Dummies
  • How did you get into web development and JavaScript in general?
  • What have you done with JavaScript that you are particularly proud of?
    • At the time, I was proud of my work with the Pizza Hut application.
    • Fast-forward – I still use JavaScript but also framework.
  • How did you get into security?
  • What are you working on now?
  • E-mails and Passwords breached
    • Have a program that tells you to do something different instead.
    • Try to find a balance.
    • Do most people think about web security? Probably not.
    • Bring awareness about this.
    • Make systems usable
    • Give people enough advice.
  • Service
  • Troy’s Real-Life Stories
  • How do you stay current with all of this web security information?
    • Having a healthy following in Twitter.
    • Stay on top of the mentions.
    • Interesting spread of people within this field.

Links:

Sponsors:

Picks

Charles

Troy




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JSJ 342: Aurelia in Action with Sean Hunter

Panel:

  • AJ O’Neal
  • Joe Eames
  • Jesse Sanders

Special Guest: Sean Hunter

In this episode, the panel talks with Sean Hunter who is a software developer, speaker, rock climber, and author of “Aurelia in Action” published by Manning Publications! Today, the panelists and Sean talk about Aurelia and other frameworks. Check it out!

Show Topics:

0:00 – Advertisement: KENDO UI

0:38 – Joe: Hello! Our panelists are AJ, Jesse, myself, and our special guest is Sean Hunter (from Australia)! What have you been doing with your life and what is your favorite movie?

1:45 – Guest talks about Vegemite!

2:20 – Guest: I was in the UK and started using Aurelia, which I will talk about today. I have done some talks throughout UK about Aurelia. Also, the past year moved back to Australia had a baby son and it’s been a busy year. Writing a book and being a new parent has been hard.

3:22 – Panel: Tell us the history of Aurelia, please?

3:31 – Panel: Is it like jQuery, React, Vue or what?

3:44 – Guest: Elevator pitch – Aurelia is a single-page app framework! It’s most similar to Vue out of those frameworks; also, similarities to Ember.js.

4:30 – Guest goes into detail about Aurelia.

6:15 – Panel: It sounds like convention over configuration.

6:42 – Guest: Yes that is correct.

7:21 – Panel: Sounds like there is a build-step to it.

7:39 – Guest: There is a build-step you are correct. You will use Webpack in the background.

9:57 – The guest talks about data binding among other things.

10:30 – Guest: You will have your app component and other levels, too.

10:37 – Panel: I am new to Aurelia and so I’m fresh to this. Why Aurelia over the other frameworks? Is there a CLI to help?

11:29 – Guest: Let me start with WHY Aurelia and not the other frameworks. The style that you are using when building the applications is important for your needs. In terms of bundling there is a CUI and that is a way that I prefer to start my projects. Do you want to use CSS or Webpack or...? It’s almost a wizard process! You guys have any questions about the CLI?

14:43 – Panel: Thanks! I was wondering what is actually occurring there?

15:25 – Guest: Good question. Basically it’s that Aurelia has some built-in conventions. Looking at the convention tells Aurelia to pick the Vue model by name. If I need to tell the framework more information then...

17:46 – Panel: I think that for people who are familiar with one or more framework then where on that spectrum would Aurelia fall?

18:20 – Guest: It’s not that opinionated as Ember.js.

19:09 – Panel: Talking about being opinionated – what are some good examples of the choices that you have and how that leads you down a certain path? Any more examples that you can give us? 

19:38 – Guest: The main conventions are what I’ve talked about already. I can’t think of more conventions off the top of my head. There are more examples in my book.

20:02 – Panel: Your book?

20:10 – Guest: Yep.

20:13 – Panel.

20:20 – Guest. 

21:58 – Panel: Why would I NOT pick Aurelia?

22:19 – Guest: If you are from a React world and you like having things contained in a single-file then Aurelia would fight you. If you want a big company backing then Aurelia isn’t for you.

The guest goes into more reasons why or why not one would or wouldn’t want to use Aurelia.

24:24 – Panel: I think the best sell point is the downplay!

24:34 – Guest: Good point. What does the roadmap look like for Aurelia’s team?

25:00 – Guest: Typically, what happens in the Aurelia framework is that data binding (or router) gets pushed by the core team. They are the ones that produce the roadmap and look forward to the framework. The core team is working on the NEXT version of the framework, which is lighter, easier to use, and additional features. It’s proposed to be out for release next year.

26:36 – Advertisement – Sentry.io

27:34 – Panel: I am going to take down the CLI down and see what it does. I am looking at it and seeing how to teach someone to use it. I am using AU, new command, and it says no Aurelia found. I am stuck.

28:06 – Guest: What you would do is specify the project name that you are trying to create and that should create it for you. 

28:40 – Panel.

28:45 – Panel.

28:50 – Panel: Stand up on your desk and say: does anyone know anything about computers?!

29:05 – Panelists go back-and-forth.

29:13 – Panel: What frameworks have you used in the past?

29:17 – Guest: I was using single-paged apps back in 2010.

31:10 – Panel: Tell us about the performance of Aurelia?

31:17 – Guest: I was looking at the benchmarks all the time. Last time I looked the performance was comparable. Performances can me measured in a number of different of ways.

The guest talks about a dashboard screen that 20 charts or something like that. He didn’t notice any delays getting to the client.

33:29 – Panel: I heard you say the word “observables.”

33:39 – Guest answers the question.

35:30 – Guest: I am not a Redux expert, so I really can’t say. It has similar actions like Redux but the differences I really can’t say.

36:11 – Panel: We really want experts in everything! (Laughs.)

36:25 – Panelist talks about a colleagues’ talk at a conference. He says that he things are doing too much with SPAs. They have their place but we are trying to bundle 8-9 different applications but instead look at them as...

What are your thoughts of having multiple SPAs?

37:17 – Guest.

39:08 – Guest: I wonder what your opinions are? What about the splitting approach?

39:22 – Panel: I haven’t looked at it, yet. I am curious, though. I have been developing in GO lately.

40:20 – Guest: I think people can go too far and making it too complex. You don’t want to make the code that complex.

40:45 – Panel: Yeah when the code is “clean” but difficult to discover that’s not good.

41:15 – Guest: I agree when you start repeating yourself then it makes it more difficult.

41:35 – Panel: Chris and I are anti-framework. We prefer to start from a fresh palette and see if a framework can fit into that fresh palette. When you start with a certain framework you are starting with certain configurations set-in-place. 

42:48 – Joe: I like my frameworks and I think you are crazy!

43:05 – Panel.

43:11 – Joe: I have a love affair with all frameworks.

43:19 – Panel: I think I am somewhere in the middle.

43:49 – Panel: I don’t think frameworks are all bad but I want to say that it’s smart to not make it too complex upfront. Learn and grow.

44:28 – Guest: I think a good example of that is jQuery, right?

45:10 – Panelist talks about C++, jQuery, among other things.

45:34 – Guest: Frameworks kind of push the limits.

46:08 – Panelist talks about JavaScript, frameworks, and others.

47:04 – Panel: It seems simple to setup routes – anything to help with the lazy way to setup?

47:35 – Guest answers question.

48:37 – Panel: How do we manage complexity and how does messaging work between components?

48:54 – Guest: The simple scenario is that you can follow a simple pattern, which is (came out of Ember community) and that is...Data Down & Actions Up!

50:45 – Guest mentions that Aurelia website!

51:00 – Panel: That sounds great! Sounds like the pattern can be plugged in easily into Aurelia.

51:17 – Picks!

51:20 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job!

END – Advertisement: CacheFly!

Links:

Sponsors:

Picks:

Joe

AJ

Jesse Sanders

Sean




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Bad Gene Hunting—Sudden Unexplained Death and Familial Long QT Syndrome

This essay describes a physician’s experience of the sudden, unexplained death of her brother and her family’s discovery of the genetic cause.




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Treasure hunt

Do not race after riches, do not risk your life for success, or you will let slip the heaven within you.




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Hunter wine - a history / Julie McIntyre ; John Germov

Hayden Library - TP559.A8 M35 2018




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Handbook of global contemporary Christianity : movements, institutions, and allegiance / edited by Stephen Hunt




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Jesus Caesar : a Roman reading of the Johannine trial narrative / Laura J. Hunt

Hunt, Laura J., author




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Contemporary Christianity and LGBT sexualities / edited by Stephen Hunt




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The talent equation [electronic resource] : big data lessons for navigating the skills gap and building a competitive workforce / Matt Ferguson, Lorin Hitt, Prasanna Tambe, with Ryan Hunt and Jennifer Sullivan Grasz

Ferguson, Matt




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Review: Al Pacino and Nazis, in Amazon's 'Hunters'

In Hunters, the primary focus of that attempted fusion is Jonah Heidelbaum, the 19-year-old Brooklynite, petty drug dealer and comics-shop employee played by Lerman




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Huntsman to acquire CVC from Emerald




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Avian reservoirs [electronic resource] : virus hunters & birdwatchers in Chinese sentinels posts / Frédéric Keck.

Durham : Duke University Press, 2020.




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No hiring freeze: Companies hunting top talent despite salary, job cuts

More than 200 director-level and above posts were available over the past week, according to Xpheno, a staffing firm that compiles data from job portals, LinkedIn and company sites.




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Polarization and public health [electronic resource] : partisan differences in social distancing during the coronavirus pandemic / Hunt Allcott, Levi Boxell, Jacob C. Conway, Matthew Gentzkow, Michael Thaler, David Y. Yang

Cambridge, Mass. : National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020




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Transcendent teacher learner relationships: the way of the shamanic teacher / Hunter O'Hara

Online Resource




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Iceland didn’t hunt any whales in 2019—and public appetite for whale meat is fading

Since the International Whaling Commission placed an international moratorium on whaling in 1986, few countries have engaged in the practice. Iceland was one of them, however, and it has hunted whales sporadically since then and has been roundly criticized by many neighboring countries for doing so. There are indications now that a generational shift in consuming whale meat for food is taking place in the country---with younger citizens avoiding whale meat altogether and thus reducing the economic demand for the product.




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Eight held for hunting nilgai in Chhota Udepur

Eight held for hunting nilgai in Chhota Udepur




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Delhi: Liquor hunt shifts online, site crashes

Delhi: Liquor hunt shifts online, site crashes




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Routledge handbook of agricultural biodiversity / edited by Danny Hunter, Luigi Guarino, Charles Spillane and Peter C. McKeown




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Midwestern strange: hunting monsters, Martians, and the weird in flyover country / B.J. Hollars

Hayden Library - TL789.4.H649 2019




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Yet to receive proposal from LIC for IPO, says Irdai Chairman S C Khuntia

Khuntia also asked insurance companies to "weed out" loss-making products and concentrate only on the better paying ones




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William Hunter




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The marriage record of Brittle, John and Huntley, Annie




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The marriage record of Hunter, J. H. and Cook, Lou




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The marriage record of Keen, James E. and Hunter, Martha J




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The marriage record of Hunter, Samuel and Wills, Amelia




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The marriage record of Hunter, Raymond, and Paine, Mary




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The marriage record of Brewer, James and Hunter, Mary Anna




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The marriage record of Sikes, Joseph W. and Hunter, Malinda




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The marriage record of Branch, S. L. and Hunter, Mamie




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The Rat Hunt Isn't Over Yet




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The Hunter hunted, caught by an alligator in the Everglades, Florida




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The Huntington, St. Petersburg, Fla




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Hotel Huntington, St. Petersburg, Fla




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Wild ducks on a Florida river where hunting is good