Examples of Detroit in the following topics:
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- Before the 1980s, Detroit was a center of industrial production and a hot spot of American culture.
- Today, Detroit is associated with a high concentration of poverty, unemployment, and noticeable racial isolation.
- The city of Detroit, and the U.S. automobile industry, are regarded as the prototypical examples of deindustrialization's negative effects, but Detroit is not an isolated example.
- Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, St.
- This map depicts the economic ramifications of deindustrialization in the Detroit area.
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- Detroit was once known for automobile manufacturing and was associated with comfortable, middle-class living.
- After automobile manufacturing was largely moved overseas, Detroit has come to be known for urban decay and an abandoned city center.
- The city of Detroit represents the deindustrialization crisis in the American context.
- Detroit was once a center of production associated with a high-quality, middle-class standard of living.
- Today, Detroit is associated with a high concentration of poverty, unemployment, noticeable racial isolation, and a deserted urban center.
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- Detroit is not a utopia.
- I list the challenges inherent in revitalizing Detroit to demonstrate that I see the city's flaws, and I know what it means to say, I love Detroit and truly believe it is worth saving.
- Detroit is far from ideal, but it is full of potential.
- That said, Detroit is so much more than a "case study."
- If we give up on Detroit, America will lose a flawed, but beautiful, piece of its identity.
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- On July 12, 1812, General William Hull led an invading American force of about 1,000 untrained, poorly-equipped militia across the Detroit River and occupied the Canadian town of Sandwich, now a neighborhood of Windsor, Ontario.
- Hull's army was too weak in artillery, however, and by August, Hull and his troops retreated to Detroit.
- He moved rapidly to Amherstburg with reinforcements, and, along with Shawnee leader Tecumseh, immediately attacked Detroit.
- Hull and his troops surrendered Detroit without a fight on August 16.
- The surrender not only cost the United States the village of Detroit, but also control over most of the Michigan territory.
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- "Detroit and Sarnia: Two Foes on the Brink of Destruction."
- "Detroit and Sarnia: Two Foes on the Brink of Destruction."
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- "Detroit and Sarnia: Two foes on the brink of destruction."
- "Detroit and Sarnia: Two foes on the brink of destruction."
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- Here is an example that you might use when doing a presentation on football: "Anyone who makes a bad call against the Detroit Lions risks ticking off their last remaining fan."
- Here, for example, is a joke one might use for a presentation on football: Anyone who makes a bad call against the Detroit Lions risks ticking off their last remaining fan!
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- Following Roosevelt's speech, Detroit, Michigan adopted the phrase as a nickname, memorializing the city's rapid industrial wartime conversion towards production of vital armaments .
- An inspector in the Chrysler Corporation in Detroit, making the weapons Europe needed to defend itself against Germany.
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- Scenes can be used to describe geographic subsets of a subculture, such as the Detroit drum and bass scene or the London goth scene.
- The term can be used to describe geographic subsets of a subculture, like the Detroit drum and bass scene or the London goth scene.
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- On July 12, 1812, General William Hull led an invading American force of about 1,000 untrained, poorly-equipped militia across the Detroit River and occupied the Canadian town of Sandwich, now a neighborhood of Windsor, Ontario.
- By August, Hull and his troops, numbering 2,500 with the addition of 500 Canadians, retreated to Detroit, where they surrendered to a force of British regulars, Canadian militia, and Native Americans led by British Major General Isaac Brock and Shawnee leader Tecumseh.
- The surrender not only cost the United States the village of Detroit, but control over most of the Michigan territory.