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Page "World War I casualties" ¶ 30
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Civilian and deaths
Civilian deaths in the Ottoman Empire are also listed in this source.
" The U. S. War Department in 1924 estimated 13, 716 killed and died US War Dept 1924 Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 92, 000.
The 1922 War Office report listed 56, 639 Army war dead Civilian deaths were due to the Halifax Explosion
Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 500, 000.
Civilian dead include 1, 509 merchant sailors and 3, 357 killed in air attacks and long range artillery bombardments The French government did not provide an estimate of civilian deaths in the war zone, however tertiary sources have estimated civilian war dead at 40, 000.
Other estimates of Italian casualties were: by UK War Office in 1922, Dead 460, 000 and by the US War Dept in 1924 650, 000 killed and died Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 1, 021, 000.
Civilian deaths due to military action were about 3, 400 including 2, 293 by attacks on shipping, 958 during air raids and 142 by sea bombardment.
Another estimate of Portuguese casualties by the US War Dept in 1924 was 7, 222 killed and died Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 220, 000, 82, 000 caused by food shortages and 138, 000 by the Spanish Flu
Romania: Included in total are 177, 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds The statistic of 250, 000 military dead is " The figure reported by the Rumanian Government in reply to a questionnaire from the International Labour Office Other estimates of Romanian casualties are as follows: By UK War Office in 1922: 335, 706 Killed and missing By US War Dept in 1924: 335, 706 killed and died Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 430, 000, caused by military action, food shortages, epidemics and the Spanish Flu A Russian journalist in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century estimated 120, 000 Romanian civilian deaths due to military activity, 10, 000 in Austro-Hungarian prisons and 200, 000 caused by famine and disease
Civilian deaths in the 1914 borders exceeded the prewar level by 1, 500, 000 due to famine and disease and military operations. Civilian deaths in the post war borders, not including Poland, exceeded the prewar level by 1, 070, 000 ( 730, 000 famine and disease and 340, 000 military operations ).
By US War Dept in 1924: 45, 000 killed and died Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 450, 000, due to military activity, food shortages, epidemics and the Spanish Flu A Russian journalist in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century estimated 120, 000 Serbian civilian deaths due to military activity and 30, 000 in Austro-Hungarian prisons.
Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 292, 000.
The US War Dept in 1924 also listed 87, 500 killed and died Civilian deaths exceeded the prewar level by 100, 000. due to food shortages.
720 German civilians were killed by allied air raids Civilian deaths caused by the Blockade of GermanyGerman official statistics estimated 763, 000 civilian malnutrition and disease deaths were caused by the blockade of Germany.
Civilian deaths totaled 15. 9 million which included 1. 5 million from military actions ; 7. 1 million victims of Nazi genocide and reprisals ; 1. 8 million deported to Germany for forced labor ; and 5. 5 million famine and disease deaths.
Civilian casualties include deaths caused by strategic bombing, Holocaust victims, Japanese war crimes, population transfers in the Soviet Union, other War Crimes and deaths due to war related famine and disease.

Civilian and level
Lake Conasauga located near the summit of Grassy Mountain was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1940 and is the highest lake in Georgia at above sea level.
As part of the " New Deal ", the Works Progress Administration and Civilian Conservation Corps greatly reduced the level of the river to prevent flooding ( a move which would later become a problem for city leaders stuck with a nearly empty river ) and built one of the first experiments with public housing in the country.

Civilian and by
* 1933 – U. S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs two executive orders: 6101 to establish the Civilian Conservation Corps, and 6102 " forbidding the Hoarding of Gold Coin, Gold Bullion, and Gold Certificates " by U. S. citizens.
* Life in the Civilian Conservation Corps Primary Source Adventure, a lesson plan hosted by CCC in Texas
The various efforts made by ONUC to retrain the ANC from August 1960 to their effective end in June 1963 are described in Arthur House's book The UN in the Congo: The Civilian Operations, pages 145-155.
As part of its military ties with El Salvador, the ROC sold T-65 Assault Rifles to El Salvador during the 1970s and 1980s, which are used by the National Civilian Police, and trained Salvadorian military officers during the civil war.
The CJ (" Civilian Jeep ") series began in 1945 with the CJ-2A followed by the CJ-3B in 1953.
* 1965 – Civilian Prime Minister of South Vietnam Phan Huy Quat resigned after being unable to work with a junta led by Nguyen Cao Ky.
Civilian rule resumed from 1972 to 1977 under Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, until he was deposed by General Zia-ul-Haq, who became the country's third military president.
Civilian ownership of submachine guns is regulated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives under the provisions of the National Firearms Act of 1934 as amended by Title II of the Gun Control Act of 1968.

Civilian and caused
Civilian SUVs and full-sized vans are notorious for rolling over because they usually have a higher center of gravity, caused by a higher ground clearance.

Civilian and food
The Civilian Conservation Corps were organized roughly along army corps area boundaries since most of the logistical administration and support ( food, housing, uniforms, transportation ) for this 1930s Great Depression-era emergency work program was provided by the U. S. Army.
Civilian peace time rationing of food may also occur, especially after natural disasters, during contingencies, or after failed governmental economic policies regarding production or distribution, the latter happening especially in highly centralized planned economies.
but Roosevelt handled this protest much more carefully than Hoover had: His administration set up an encampment for the protesters ( albeit too far from the Capitol to make their protest effective ), prohibited loitering in the District of Columbia ( forcing the marchers to stay outside the city ), sent Eleanor Roosevelt to deliver food and medicine to the marchers and hear their grievances, and encouraged the ex-servicemen to seek work with the Civilian Conservation Corps ( which many did ).

Civilian and shortages
The south had its paper shortages, and because Confederate prisons limited the amount of correspondence mail from Confederate prisons is much rarer than mail from Union prisons .< ref name =" American Civil War: Andersonville Prison "> </ span ></ font ></ ref >< ref name =" Civilian Flag-of-Truce Covers "> </ span ></ font ></ ref >< ref name =" Prisoner of war mail exchange "> </ span ></ font ></ ref >

Civilian and Spanish
The records centers which comprise the National Personnel Records Center are the Military Personnel Records Center, located on Archives Drive in Spanish Lake, Missouri, and the Civilian Personnel Records Center located between two facilities: one on Winnebago Street in downtown St. Louis, Missouri and the other on Boulder Boulevard in Valmeyer, Illinois.

deaths and exceeded
Russian deaths during a similar period exceeded 2 million.
Estimates of Indonesian deaths in fighting range from 45, 000 to 100, 000 and civilian casualties exceeded 25, 000 and may have been as high as 100, 000.
In the 1980s and 1990s Russia underwent a unique demographic transition ; observers call it a " demographic catastrophe ": the number of deaths exceeded the number of births, life expectancy fell sharply ( especially for males ) and the number of suicides increased.
From 1992 through 2011, the number of deaths exceeded the number of births.
A study by the Center for Immigration Research at the University of Houston found that, " In the late 1980s, the number of foreign transient deaths usually exceeded 300, and peaked in 1988 at 355.
The deaths themselves were the result of the units involved treating it as " military operation " which " was not corrected in accordance with the actual situation " ( the number of protesters present far exceeded what was expected ).
The smaller but increasingly popular resort area of Khao Lak some 80 km north of Phuket was hit far worse with 3, 950 confirmed deaths, however, the death toll in Khao Lak may have exceeded 4, 500.
Jacobs in the Jewish Encyclopedia presents some evidence that Jewish increase in this period may have exceeded that of the general population, but remarks also that such figures of increase are often very deceptive, as they may indicate not the natural increase by surplus of births over deaths, but accession by immigration.
Yes they were denied for the same reasons yet they pointed out that births in the town of Quinale far exceeded the number of deaths but the people migrate to other places because of lack of supervision and opportunities.
It was judged to be misleading on the grounds that none of the factors identified by the advertisers necessarily involved a vehicle exceeding the speed limit and that the claim would be understood by readers to mean that vehicles that exceeded the speed limit had caused a quarter of all deaths on London's roads and not that speed was merely a contributory factor in a quarter of fatal accidents.

1.974 seconds.