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badge and is
The club is one of the five teams that has earned the right to keep the European Cup and to wear a multiple-winner badge ; they won consecutively in 1971 – 1973.
It is the 1924 tour that is credited as being the first in which the team were referred to as " the Lions ", the irony being that it was on this tour that the single lion-rampant crest was replaced with the forerunner of the four-quartered badge with the symbols of the four represented unions, that is still worn today.
The club has had two other nicknames, The Robins, adopted in 1931, and The Valiants, chosen in a fan competition in the 1960s which also led to the adoption of the sword badge which is still in use.
" The swords and stars refer to the former general's career, as does the crest, which is the badge of the 101st Airborne ( which he served as a brigade commander in the mid-1970s ).
Yet in nations or regions where traditional folk music is a badge of cultural or national identity, the loss of traditional music can be slowed ; this is held to be true, for instance in the case of Bangladesh, Hungary, India, Ireland, Scotland, Latvia, Turkey, Portugal, Brittany, and Galicia, Greece and Crete all of which retain their traditional music to some degree, in some such areas the decline of traditional music and loss of traditions has been reversed.
The shield of the Royal Arms of New South Wales crowned with the St Edward's Crown is employed as the badge of the governor, appearing on the viceroy's flag and on other objects associated with the person or the office.
The rod of Asclepius was adopted by most Western doctors as a badge of their profession, but in several medical organizations of the United States, the caduceus took its place since the eighteenth century, although this use is declining.
The Liverpool badge is based on the city's liver bird, which in the past had been placed inside a shield.
The butterfly Mon ( badge ) | mon of the Taira is called Ageha-cho ( 揚羽蝶 ) in Japanese
The badge of the Presidential Medal of Freedom is in the form of a golden star with white enamel, with a red enamel pentagon behind it ; the central disc bears thirteen gold stars on a blue enamel background ( taken from the Great Seal of the United States ) within a golden ring.
In addition, the medal is accompanied by a service ribbon for wear on military service uniform, a miniature medal pendant for wear on mess dress or civilian formal wear, and a lapel badge for wear on civilian clothes ( all shown in the accompanying photograph of the full presentation set ).
In a letter dated February 23, 2011 to the Speaker of the U. S. House of Representatives, the Attorney General of the United States stated " while sexual orientation carries no visible badge, a growing scientific consensus accepts that sexual orientation is a characteristic that is immutable ".
The current flag of South Australia was adopted on 13 January 1904, and is a British blue ensign defaced with the state badge.
The badge is described as a Piping Shrike with wings outstretched on a yellow disc.
The state badge is believed to have been designed by Robert Craig of Adelaide's School of Design.
During the Second Boer War, a Boer force attempting to sneak up on the Royal Canadian Dragoons was defeated after their movements startled the nearby springbok, thus alerting the Canadian sentries, which is why the Dragoons have the springbok as their cap badge and as their mascot.
The British Army's salute is given with the right hand palm facing forwards with the fingers almost touching the beret badge.
There is also a convention badge, displaying each attendee's name, membership number and ( if desired ) fannish nickname.
The customary practice is for all attendees at the same convention — occasionally excepting Guests of Honor — to wear badges of the same design, but each Worldcon's badge design is unique to that convention.
* Curse of 39, a belief in some parts of Afghanistan that the number 39 ( thrice thirteen ) is cursed or a badge of shame.

badge and black
) hung on a hook on the wall, and underneath it I could see his tie, knotted, ready to be slipped over his head, a black badge of frayed respectability that ought never to have left his neck.
Although he still wore a standard British officer's cap on arrival in the desert, he briefly wore an Australian broad-brimmed hat before switching to wearing the black beret ( with the badge of the Royal Tank Regiment next to the British General Officer's badge ) for which he became notable.
In the British Army the wyvern has been used to represent Wessex: The 43rd ( Wessex ) Infantry Division adopted a formation sign consisting of a gold wyvern on a black background, and both the Wessex Brigade and Wessex Regiments used a cap badge featuring the heraldic beast.
After the battle, legend states that John's personal crest ( a pair of black wings ) and motto Ich dien (" I Serve ") were adopted in slightly modified form by Edward, the Black Prince, and since then they have been part of the badge of the Prince of Wales.
For ceremonial occasions both boys and girls may wear the a white or black blazer ( depending on the school, with its badge and also the blazer may be of a school color ; e. g. :- maroon ) with the school's tie.
The UVF's nickname is " Blacknecks ", derived from their uniform of black polo neck jumper, black trousers, black leather jacket, black forage cap, along with the UVF badge and belt.
Their badge included a ship, the upper part of the City of Sunderland coat of arms, a black cat, and a football in front of Sunderland's red and white stripes.
The Football Club's badge became black, and the monogram substituted by Clube de Regatas ' lone star.
Football's badge had the clubs initials too, B. F. C. written in black colour in a white space.
The club's home strip is a white shirt, with two horizontal stripes at chest level, the upper one red and the lower one black, and with a badge in the centre of the chest.
The badge, which was designed by Walter Ostrich in the early days of São Paulo, consists of a shield with a black rectangle in the upper section bearing the initials SPFC in white.
Wear and preening expose many of the bright brown and black markings, including most of the black throat and chest patch, called the " bib " or " badge ".
A picture of the badge from the 19th century ( gold griffin on black background )
Gray's Inn does not possess a coat of arms as such, but instead uses a badge, often displayed on a shield, blazoned either " Azure an Indian Griffin proper segreant " or, more currently, " Sable a griffin segreant or ", i. e., a gold griffin on a black background.
Ever since their rebranding to the Earthquakes in 2000, the team badge has featured an inverted triangular shield containing a soccer ball invoking the rising sun used in the logo for the City of San Jose, a stylized ' Earthquakes ' wordmark, and a color palette of blue, black, white and silver.
All officers wear dark green uniform with black ties and a badge ( appear on the right ).
Defining features of the GT include red piping in the bumpers, black overhead cloth, a rev counter and a red " GT " badge in the grille.
Their current home strip is red and white ; with the town badge on the right of the shirt to commemorate the clubs return home, and their away kit is amber and black.
In Australia, a white Sam Browne belt and strap is worn by the Victoria Police Mounted Unit, the New South Wales Police Force VIP Cyclists, Protocol Inspector and Protocol Sergeant ( during ceremonies only ), NSW Police Academy Senior Protocol Officer ( Senior Sergeant ) and Parade Sergeant wear a black coloured leather basketweave Sam Browne belt and strap with silver coloured fittings as a badge of office.
Introduced in September 1972 the first 200 big valve cars were badged and painted to honour the just won Team Lotus's F1 World Championship title with John Player Special as sponsors, all with 5 speed gearbox, these were all black with gold pin stripe matching the livery of the GP cars – plus a numbered JPS dash board badge, becoming the first ever John Player Special commemorative motor vehicles.

badge and cloth
In 1697 an act was passed requiring those who begged to wear a " badge " of red or blue cloth on the right shoulder with an embroidered letter " P " and the initial of their parish.
The characters jiazi became a symbol of the coming change and later, when the followers of Zhang Jue went to battle they wore a yellow cloth bound about their heads as a badge.
They also began wearing their traditional badge of rank, a white patch of cloth with a gold button and a twist of white cord on each side of the coat collar.
The scroll on Earp's chest is a cloth pin-on badge
The Jewish badge was introduced in some places ; it could be a coloured piece of cloth in the shape of a circle, strip, or the tablets of the law ( in England ), and was sewn onto the clothes.
The yellow badge ( or yellow patch ), also referred to as a Jewish badge, was a cloth patch that Jews were ordered to sew on their outer garments to mark them as Jews in public.
10th century Copts | Coptic cloth badge incorporating a cross, worn to identify Christians in 10th century Egypt.
The beret is often adorned with a cap badge, either in cloth or metal.
The scroll on Earp's chest is a cloth pin-on badge
Probably either the bishops introduced directly by a positive precept as a liturgical pontifical badge a humeral cloth resembling the ordinary omophor and called by that name, or the civil omophor was at first used by the bishops as a mere ornament without any special significance, but in the course of time gradually developed into a distinctively episcopal ornament, and finally assumed the character of an episcopal badge of office.
By the 19th century a badge was an almost invariable part of any uniform, including school uniforms, which in the UK usually still feature the school's badge in cloth on the breast pocket of the jacket or blazer.
There are exceptions such as the Welsh Guards, where all ranks wear a cloth cap badge.
Additional items that reflect a regiment's historical accomplishments, such as backing cloth and hackles, may be worn behind the cap badge.
The cadets wear a cloth ATC cap badge on their flight caps, while officers wear the same cap insignia as RNZAF officers.
The cap badge of the other ranks must also be backed by an oval patch of dull cherry-red coloured cloth measuring 44mm wide and 55mm high sewn directly to the beret.
Officers do not use the backing, but have a sewn-on cloth cap badge instead.
* A yellow badge, a cloth patch that Jews were ordered to wear on their clothes
Based on the 2007 Chrysler PT Cruiser Touring model, this version had Pacific Blue Pearl body, 4-wheel disc anti-lock brakes, bright front door sill scuff pads, front bright accent ring cupholders, silver shift knob, chrome lock knobs, chrome bodyside molding, " Street Cruiser " badge, Pacific Coast Highway Edition badge, rear body-color spoiler, bright exhaust tip, leather steering wheel with bright spokes, sport suspension, supplemental side air bags, 6-way power driver's seat, Sirius satellite radio, 17x6 inch aluminum platinum clad wheels with 205 / 50R17XL 93H BSW all-season performance tires, and cloth seats with blue insert.
An adult leader who has earned the Queen's Scout Award is entitled to wear a miniature replica of the cloth badge on their uniform.

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