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numbers and grew
It grew bitterly cold toward the end of November, contributing to the miseries of countless numbers of people.
As numbers of gens de couleur grew, the French rulers enacted discriminatory laws.
As countries came under Nazi rule or became Nazi allies ( Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania, Croatia, Slovakia and Slovenia were Nazi allies ) the numbers of those wanting to flee grew more.
However, their numbers grew as the Vichy regime resorted to more strident policies in order to fulfill the enormous demands of the Nazis and the eventual decline of Nazi Germany became more obvious.
Under his rule the Ahmadi Community was severely persecuted by various Islamist movements, who grew in numbers and influence.
The union grew slowly until the economic depression of the 1870s, when large numbers of workers joined the organisation.
Macquarie grew during the seventies and eighties with rapid expansion in courses offered, student numbers and development of the site.
His work grew rapidly both in numbers and in geographical spread.
The Party's ranks grew in numbers with the Party modifying its organization to include more trade unions and factories.
Others argue that the species had not been common in the Pre-Columbian period, but their numbers grew when devastation of the American Indian population by European diseases led to reduced competition for food.
After 1974, the Red Brigades expanded into Rome, Genoa, and Venice, their numbers grew drastically and began to diversify in its criminal ventures.
From 1979 onwards, punk-influenced skinheads with shorter hair, higher boots and less emphasis on traditional styles grew in numbers and grabbed media attention, mostly due to football hooliganism.
As their space logistical abilities improved through the 1960s they continued to study the problem, but in each case the problem of increasing ICBM numbers meant the numbers of interceptors needed grew to overwhelm any possible launch capability.
Life expectancy grew from 49 years in 1926 to 60 years in 1961 and the total numbers grew rapidly.
As internet connections grew, so did the numbers of users and multi-user games.
At first, many were put on ships, but as numbers grew, the British decided they did not want them kept locally.
The Russian minority grew significantly in numbers during the postwar era.
At that time the " mainline " Protestant denominations weakened sharply in both membership and influence while the most conservative religious denominations ( such as the Southern Baptists and Missouri Synod Lutherans ) grew rapidly in numbers, spread across the United States, had grave internal theological battles and schisms, and became politically powerful.
The numbers of Tito's Yugoslav partisans were roughly similar to those of the Polish and Soviet partisans in the first years of the war ( 1941 – 1942 ), but grew rapidly in the latter years, outnumbering the Polish and Soviet partisans by 2: 1 or more ( estimates give Yugoslavian forces about 800, 000 in 1945, to Polish and Soviet forces of 400, 000 in 1944 ).
Thus, it is not surprising that people left Alsace, not only for Paris – where the Alsatian community grew in numbers, with famous members such as Baron Haussmann – but also for more distant places like Russia and the Austrian Empire, to take advantage of the new opportunities offered there: Austria had conquered lands in Eastern Europe from the Ottoman Empire and offered generous terms to colonists as a way of consolidating its hold on the new territories.
Other paying pupils (" Commoners extra Collegium "), either guests of one of the Masters in his private house or living in lodgings in town, grew in numbers till the late 18th century, when they were all required to live in " Old Commoners " and town boarding was banned.
Life expectancy was much higher in the U. S. ( because of better food, less disease, lighter work loads, and better medical care ) so the numbers grew rapidly by excesses of births over deaths, reaching 4 million by the 1860 Census.
Pequot numbers grew appreciably — the Mashantucket Pequot especially — during the 1970s and 1980s when tribal chairman Richard A. Hayward persuaded Pequot to return to their tribal homeland.

numbers and peak
Verant from 1999 to 2001 and SOE from 2001 to 14 January 2004 issued formal statements giving some indications of the number of EQ subscriptions and peak numbers of players online at any given moment.
No precise numbers exist, but it is estimated that at the Order's peak there were between 15, 000 and 20, 000 Templars, of whom about a tenth were actual knights.
Oort noted that there was a peak in numbers of nearly isotropic comets with aphelia — their farthest distance from the Sun — of roughly 20, 000 AU, which suggested a reservoir at that distance with a spherical, isotropic distribution.
Political analyst and former guerrilla León Valencia has estimated that FARC's numbers have been reduced to around 11, 000 from their 18, 000 peak but cautions against considering the group a defeated force.
While there are other industrial-strength transaction processing systems, notably IBM's own CICS and IMS, TPF's raison d ' être is extreme volume, large numbers of concurrent users and very fast response times, for example VISA credit card transaction processing during the peak holiday shopping season.
The band was at the peak of its commercial success, with both albums making the top 5 in the UK ( numbers 3 and 5 respectively ), but MacGowan was increasingly unreliable.
It is always helpful to have a statement of the likely peak numbers of users that might be expected to use the system at peak times.
With enrollment in the armies growing as the war progressed and numbers of resistance falling after Operation Tempest, the size of Polish armed contribution can be estimated, at its peak, as one million men.
The attendance of some conventions numbers into the hundreds of thousands, with the largest-ever gathering held in New York in 1958 at Yankee Stadium and Polo Grounds with a peak attendance exceeding 250, 000.
His numbers peaked in February 2000 with 62 % approval and 20 % disapproval, coinciding with the peak of the dot-com boom in California.
Middle Scots inscription " Godis Providens Is My Inheritans " over the main entrance door leading to the tower in Ballygally Castle. Scots, mainly Gaelic-speaking, had been settling in Ulster since the 15th century, but large numbers of Scots-speaking Lowlanders, some 200, 000, arrived during the 17th century following the 1610 Plantation, with the peak reached during the 1690s.
The peak of the Jūrmala area's development was the opening of the Riga-Tukums railway in 1877 ( which still passes through Jūrmala ) that gave a great boost to the numbers of visitors, and thus a boost to the development of the town as a resort.
After 1973, the peak year for passengers on the Talyllyn with 186, 000 passenger journeys made, numbers were to decline consistently until the 1990s.
They competed for jobs and limited housing, and the city's rapid changes and rise in social tensions contributed to the growth in numbers of the Ku Klux Klan, which reached its peak in 1925.
to arrive early in March with peak numbers in early April.
The Lesser Flamingo may be the most numerous species of flamingo, with a population that ( at its peak ) probably numbers up to two million individual birds.
Thereafter the numbers rise gradually year by year, reaching a peak of sixty-nine in 1903.
Each day, the sharks begin arriving at the aggregation area at 09: 00, reaching a peak in numbers during the hottest part of the day in the afternoon, and dispersing by 19: 00.
In Hawaii, box jellyfish numbers peak approximately 7 to 10 days after a full moon, when they come near the shore to spawn.
In the past, there have been additional line numbers in use for trains operated on part of a line, or during peak hours only.
At its peak and through a successful captive breeding program, more than 100 calves were produced at Golden Gate Park, helping preserve the iconic bison population numbers in North America, which has been critical to the culture and livelihood of Native Americans.
During the remainder of the eighteenth century Swiss numbers varied according to need, reaching a peak of 20, 000 during the Austrian War of Succession and falling to 12, 300 after 1763.
Tourist visitor numbers peak just before the school summer months.
Spring break party goers responded by moving to the more permissive community of Daytona Beach area ( over 200, 000 students traveled there each spring at its peak ), but after Daytona's local government undertook similar measures, the crowds of the mid-1990s and early 2000s had fallen to a point where " a few students still come, but officials don't even estimate their numbers ".

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