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Page "United Nations Population Fund" ¶ 65
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More and than
More potent a charm to bring back that time of life than this record of a few pictures and a few remembered facts would be a catalogue of the minutiae which are of the very stuff of the mind, intrinsic, because they were known in the beginning not by the eye alone but by the hand that held them.
More temperately than in the study of Grey and despite his Liberal bias, Trevelyan vividly sketches the England of pre-French Revolution days, portrays the stresses and strains of the revolutionary period in rich colors, and brings developments leading to the Reform Bill into sharp and clear focus.
More than twenty-four hundred years old, bruised, battered, worn and partially destroyed, combining to an astounding degree solidity and grace, it still stands, incomparable testimony to man's aspiration.
More important is the simple human point that all men suffer, and that it is a kind of anthropological-religious pride on the part of the Jew to believe that his suffering is more poignant than mine or anyone else's.
More industrial acreage lies vacant in St. Clair county than in any other jurisdiction in the St. Louis area.
More often than not, as the Old Grad wanders along the old paths, his memory of happy days when he strolled one of the paths with a coed beside him becomes an ache and a pain.
More importantly, several of the more advanced of the less developed countries have found through experience that they must plan their own complex investment programs for at least 5 years forward and tentatively for considerably more than that if they are to be sure that the various interdependent activities involved are all to take place in the proper sequence.
More than that, Sam Rayburn is the very living symbol of an iron-clad integrity so powerful in his nature and so constantly demonstrated that he can count some of his best friends in the opposition.
More than 25 carefully selected cities were visited, including New York, Brooklyn, Long Island City, Newark, Elizabeth, Stamford, Waterbury, New Haven, Bridgeport, Boston, Cambridge, Worcester, and Waltham.
More than 2000 copies have been sent out to prospective clients.
More than 36 other big Navy ships are no less than a day's sailing time away.
More than one president has found that a long-range plan helps him to attract major gifts.
More often than not I have found easy excuse to leave my own work and stand at a respectable distance where I could watch this man transform raw nature into a composed, not imitative, painting.
More campers than campsites
More than 50% of all lumber is unitized ; ;
More than once I was confronted by professional gamblers, `` bookies '', loan `` sharks '', gangsters, `` thugs '' and `` finger men '' -- people of a class I did not even know existed -- to repay my husband's staggering losses, `` or else '' I shuddered to think that someone so dear to me could even associate with such a sinister milieu.
More than anything, it is the therapist's intuitive sensing of these latent meanings in the stereotype which helps these meanings to become revealed, something like a spread-out deck of cards, on sporadic occasions over the passage of the patient's and his months of work together.
More time was spent in trying to marry these incompatibles than over any subject discussed at Yalta.
More than that, Allied air had complete superiority in the Eighth Army's sector.
More often than not he would bow to the inevitable.
More than half of the sorghum and barley seeds we produce and most of the byproducts of the milling of cereals and the crushing of oilseeds are fed to livestock.
More than 200 million tons of seeds and seed products are fed to livestock annually in the United States.
More than 11 thousand business establishments in the United States were based on cereals and oilseeds in 1954.
More than creatures of metropolitan forces, the churches have taken the lead in counteracting the interdependence of metropolitan life, crystallizing and perpetuating the stratification of peoples, giving form to the struggle for social homogeneity in a world of heterogeneous peoples.

More and quarter
More than a quarter of the town's land is covered by the Lynn Woods Reservation, which takes up much of the land in the northwestern part of the city.
More than a quarter billion Slinkys have been manufactured in the toy's history.
More settlers came to the area and another store was built a quarter mile south of the first store by Hawkin's brother, Perry.
More precisely, in the absence of fluxes, compactification on a Calabi Yau 3-fold ( real dimension 6 ) leaves one quarter of the original supersymmetry unbroken if the holonomy is the full SU ( 3 ).
More than one quarter of Kahoolawe has been eroded down to saprolitic hardpan soil.
More recently, historian Andrew Prescott has dated the text to the second quarter of the fifteenth century.
More than a quarter ( 26. 1 %) of the city's population was born outside of Canada.
More than a quarter of a billion dollars worth of advertising was donated during the first three years of the National Defense Savings Program.
More specifically, it is part of the quarter known as Mlyniska.
More than 8, 000 of the type were produced in 11 different marks plus various purpose-built variants, accounting for approximately a quarter of wartime British tank production.
More than a quarter of a million people were arrested during the 1934 1935 period and the Gulag system was vastly expanded under his stewardship, forced labor becoming a major factor in the Soviet economy.
More than a quarter of the union government's tax revenues is shared with the state governments.
More than the old drystone walls that quarter the fells, the packhorse bridges or the whitewashed farmsteads, the little grey Herdwick sheep typify the Lakeland.
More than a quarter of the passengers died in the crash, and several others quickly succumbed to cold and injury.
More than a quarter of Collegiate teachers hold a Ph. D ..
More than a quarter of a century later, from 1822 on, specially constructed cells for " state prisoners " in the northern wing of the former fortress were filled with Italian patriots known as Carbonari, who had fought for the unification, freedom and independence of their country.
More than a quarter of the student body is reported to be international in origin.
More than a quarter century later, she helped write its creed that set up a code of conduct for black women.
More than half of the delegates had trained as lawyers ( several had even been judges ), although only about a quarter had practiced law as their principal means of business.
More specifically, in the 1750s, mostly fine cotton and silk was exported from India to markets in Europe, Asia, and Africa ; by the second quarter of the 19th century, raw materials, which chiefly consisted of raw cotton, opium, and indigo, accounted for most of India's exports.
More than one quarter of the population of Cyprus was expelled from the occupied northern part of the island where Greek Cypriots constituted 80 % of the population.
* More weight is carried on medial part of hoof, so it is more likely to cause bruising, quarter cracks, and corns.
More than half of surgical fires happen inside a patient's airway or on the patient's upper body ; around 10 percent of surgical fires actually happen within the body cavity ; and a quarter of surgical fires happen on other parts of the body.
More than a quarter of Greenland's population lives in Nuuk, with the majority of the important institutions in the country located in the city, and the need to change planes at Kangerlussuaq is costly and time-consuming for passengers.

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