Examples of Red Summer in the following topics:
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- Numerous examples of postwar racial friction sparked by Nativism
and the Great Migration reached a peak in the 1919 Red Summer.
- At the
height of the tensions came the Red Summer of 1919, when whites carried out
open acts of violence against blacks, who were forced to fight back.
- The
Red Summer is a term for the race riots that occurred in more than three dozen
cities in the United States during the summer and early autumn of 1919.
- Department of Labor, drafted a study of the violence-filled summer to
be used by the U.S.
- In September 1919, in response to
the Red Summer, the African Blood Brotherhood, a radical black liberation
organization, formed in northern cities to serve as an "armed
resistance" movement.
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- Current evidence suggests that species classified as chromalveolates are derived from a common ancestor that engulfed a photosynthetic red algal cell, which itself had already evolved chloroplasts from an endosymbiotic relationship with a photosynthetic prokaryote.
- However, some chromalveolates appear to have lost red alga-derived plastid organelles or lack plastid genes altogether.
- For approximately 20 species of marine dinoflagellates, population explosions (called blooms) during the summer months can tint the ocean with a muddy red color.
- This phenomenon is called a red tide and results from the abundant red pigments present in dinoflagellate plastids.
- Red tides can be massively detrimental to commercial fisheries; humans who consume these protists may become poisoned.
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- The effect of red light is reversible by immediately shining far-red light on the sample, which converts the chromoprotein to the inactive Pr form.
- Unfiltered, full sunlight contains much more red light than far-red light.
- Any plant in the shade of another plant will be exposed to red-depleted, far-red-enriched light because the other plant has absorbed most of the other red light.
- Since Pfr reverts to Pr during darkness, there will be no Pfr remaining at sunrise if the night is long (winter) and some Pfr remaining if the night is short (summer).
- Short-day (long-night) plants use this information to flower in the late summer and early fall when nights exceed a critical length (often eight or fewer hours).
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- Red herring (Ignoratio Elenchi): intentionally or unintentionally misleading or distracting from the actual issue.
- Argument: More cows die in the summer.
- More ice cream is consumed in summer months.
- Therefore, the consumption of ice cream in the summer is killing cows.
- The deaths and consumption could be unrelated, or something else could be causing both, such as summer heat.
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- For example, in mapping average summer temperature across the United States, symbols may represent the following values, from smallest to largest symbol size:
- For example, in the same map of average summer temperature across the US, you might have symbols representing 68F, 93F, 104F, etc.
- For example, an election map depicts shaded states of blue or red based on the percentage of votes cast for a politician or party.
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- Temperatures ranging between -30°C - 30°C (-22°F - 86°F) drop below freezing on an annual basis, resulting in defined growing seasons during the spring, summer, and early fall.
- The leaf litter also protects soil from erosion, insulates the ground, and provides habitats for invertebrates (such as the pill bug or roly-poly, Armadillidium vulgare) and their predators, such as the red-backed salamander (Plethodon cinereus).
- The leaf litter is home to invertebrates (such as the pill bug or roly-poly, Armadillidium vulgare) and their predators, including the red-backed salamander (Plethodon cinereus).
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- However, seasons (fall, spring, summer,
and winter) are not capitalized.
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- When the draft began in the summer of 1863, they launched a major riot in New York City that was suppressed by the military, as well as much smaller protests in other cities.
- Areas covered by the Emancipation Proclamation are shown in red.
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- For example, an electrical element on a stove glows from red to orange, while the higher-temperature steel in a blast furnace glows from yellow to white.
- Similarly, black asphalt in a parking lot will be hotter than the adjacent gray sidewalk on a summer day, because black absorbs better than gray.
- Thus, on a clear summer night the asphalt will be colder than the gray sidewalk because black radiates energy more rapidly than gray.
- It is apparent that the shift toward the ultraviolet with temperature makes the visible appearance shift from red to white to blue as temperature increases.
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- Kōrin's masterpiece "Red and White Plum Trees" (紅 Kōhakubai-zu, c. 1714–15) is now at the MOA Museum of Art in Atami, Shizuoka.
- Sakai published a series of 100 woodcut prints based on paintings by Kōrin, and his painting "Summer and Autumn Grasses" (夏 Natsu akikusa-zu) is painted on the back of Kōrin's "Wind and Thunder Gods screen" is now at the Tokyo National Museum.
- Kōrin's "Red and White Plum Trees" (1714/15) established the direction of Ripa for the remainder of its history.