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By 1919, an " influx " of labor had migrated to Berlin turning it into one of the most fertile grounds for the modern arts and sciences in history.
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By filling the character pointer memory with values from zero to 1919 this essentially turned the text mode display into a very high resolution graphics mode, with the " font memory ", acting as the high resolution Raster graphics video memory.
Later we have Till the Clouds Roll By ( Victor Fleming, 1919 ), where anamorphosis is used to depict the nightmare effects of indigestion in a comic manner.
By the end of the war such films formed an appreciable but minor part of production: e. g. The Gun Woman ( F. Borzage, 1918 ) and Jubilo ( Clarence Badger, 1919 ).
By the end of 1919 he'd become famous, after his first one-man exhibition at Der Sturm gallery, June 1919, and the publication that August of the poem An Anna Blume ( usually translated as ' To Anna Flower ', or ' To Eve Blossom '), a dadaist non-sensical love poem.
By his own admission in his 1919 Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy, he " attempted to discover some flaw in Cantor's proof that there is no greatest cardinal ".
By 1919, the year he founded the British Psychoanalytical Society, Jones could report proudly to Freud that psychoanalysis in Britain “ stands in the forefront of medical, literary and psychological interest ” ( letter 27 January 1919 ( Paskauskas 1993 )).
By the time that Zhou returned to China in the spring of 1919, he had become deeply disenchanted with Japanese culture, rejecting the idea that the Japanese political model was relevant to China and disdaining the values of elitism and militarism that he observed.
By the time Norris held a mock funeral parade to " bury John Barleycorn " in 1919, the Acre had become a part of Fort Worth history.
By the revision of 1922 universal suffrage was explicitly adopted in the constitution, after it had already been introduced by law in 1919.
By 1919 Earhart prepared to enter Smith College but changed her mind and enrolled at Columbia University signing up for a course in medical studies among other programs.
By 1918 the residents of Pike Road acquired funds to establish the Pike Road Consolidated School, which opened in 1919.
By 1919, it became the consensus of many locals that they needed to form a county of their own and Garfield County was established.
By and influx
By this time the influx of Islamic silver from the East had been absent for more than a century, and the flow of English silver had come to an end in the mid-11th century.
By the start of the American Civil War, Falls Church had seen an influx of Northerners seeking land and better weather.
By 1980, West Texas had experienced a dramatic oil boom with greatly increased drilling activity and an influx of new people in blue-collar jobs.
By the beginning of World War I in 1914, with its additional irrigation water and influx of people, Riverton prospered as an agricultural community.
By 1976, after the town's residents had endured a spike in crime, overstressed public infrastructure, and an influx of people unfamiliar with Alaska customs, 56 percent said the pipeline had changed Fairbanks for the worse.
By 1874, with the village of Mae Rong Son having become a huge community with a constant influx of migrants and so it was agreed that it should change its status to that of a fully fledged mueang.
By partially blocking the potassium channels, the cell remains depolarized, increasing the time the cell spends in the calcium release stage of cell, which results in signaling leading to calcium influx.
By the time the New York City Subway was extended to the area in 1904, a large influx of European immigrants had given the neighborhood an urban character, with tenements replacing houses as the dominant form of dwelling ( Jackson, 1995 ).
By 1967, the influx of military personnel had driven the town population up to 2, 500, aided by the fact that some air force personnel assigned to the base chose to return to the area permanently following retirement.
By the 1978 elections, there was a sense among many citizens that the influx of petrodollars after 1973 had not been properly managed.
By the end of the 1980s, they had also created the mature-audience Vertigo imprint, under initial editor Karen Berger, and began an influx of British talent such as Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman.
By the end of the 18th century, particularly with the influx of Irish immigrants to Glasgow during the nascent stages of the Industrial Revolution, there emerged an increasing demand for a Roman Catholic church in the city.
By the 19th century, due to its active trade with Ladakh, and an influx of foreign merchants, it became " the largest and most populous of all the States of Káshghar ."( Kashgar ).
By the end of the Chilkoot Trail's heyday, there were five distinct tramway operations on different parts of the trail competing for the influx of gear and money in the region.
By the end of the 1920s, with the influx of population to the district, the prevailing optimistic mood led to progress and growth at Hillston.
By binding to the NMDA receptor with a higher affinity than Mg < sup > 2 +</ sup > ions, memantine is able to inhibit the prolonged influx of Ca < sup > 2 +</ sup > ions, particularly from extrasynaptic receptors, which forms the basis of neuronal excitotoxicity.
By the mid-20th century, Little Village saw a marked increase in Polish immigrants, escaping the ravages of war-torn Europe, and in the 1970's a large influx of Mexicans moved to the neighborhood.
By the morning of 3 February, the Australians around Eri were struggling to cope with increasing air and naval attacks, wounded Australians, the influx of Dutch personnel, diminishing supplies and widespread fatigue.
By the 1780s, with the influx of Loyalist refugees from the American Revolutionary War, the disparate geographic regions that comprised Nova Scotia were again split into separate colonies.
By the middle of the 16th century, France's demographic growth, its increased demand for consumer goods, and its rapid influx of gold and silver from Africa and the Americas led to inflation ( grain became five times as expensive from 1520 to 1600 ), and wage stagnation.
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