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Page "Presidential Medal of Freedom" ¶ 7
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badge and Presidential
Medal and wikt: accoutrement | accoutrement s including undress ribbon, miniature, and lapel badge. Graphical representation of the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction.
The Collar of the Order was used de facto as the badge of office of the President of the Republic, since the original Presidential collar, that of the Order of the National Coat of Arms was taken from Estonia to the Kremlin after the Soviet occupation of the country in 1940, where it remains to this day.
The Presidential Service Badge ( or " PSB ") is a military badge of the uniformed services of the United States which is awarded to members of the U. S. military and personnel of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Commissioned Corps and the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps who serve as full-time military staff to the President of the United States.
A similar badge, the Vice Presidential Service Badge, exists for military personnel assigned to assist the Vice President of the United States.
The Vice Presidential Service Badge is a military badge of the uniformed services of the United States which is awarded to members who serve as full-time uniformed service aides to the Vice President.
The badge is very similar to the Presidential Service Badge, authorized for uniformed service personnel assigned to the staff of the President of the United States.
* Presidential Service Badge, a badge of the US military issued to those who serve the President
1926: Presidential badge struck-first president to wear it was Robert McConnell.
If the President agrees with the recommendation, he will issue a decree to award the person the title, which includes receiving a medal, miniature badge and certificate at a ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Kiev.

badge and Medal
General Marshall initiated this after Medal of Honor – recipient Major Charles W. Davis noted to him that: It would be wonderful, if someone could design a badge for every infantryman who faces the enemy, every day and every night, with so little recognition.
Gwent Police have issued a silver coloured " Gwent Police Staff Diamond Jubilee Badge 2012 " A small lapel badge awarded to all Police Constables and PCSOs who received the Jubilee Medal.
The original Navy Good Conduct Medal was also not worn on a uniform, but issued with discharge papers as a badge to present during reenlistment.
The main badge, called the Medal of Merit, consists of a gold roundel medallion, the obverse in enamel bearing at its centre the escutcheon of the arms of Prince Edward Island, all surrounded by a blue collar with the words MERIT • PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND.
For example, the book claims that Disney wore a Barry Goldwater badge when receiving the Medal of Freedom from President Lyndon Johnson just before the 1964 election and alleges that Disney refused to lower the American flag at Disneyland after the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
The identifying badge, the " Gold Star Medal ", was not created until 1 August 1939.
Its badge, the " Hammer and Sickle Medal ", was created on 22 May 1940.

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
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 form
But dully glinting on the dark form were the buttons and badge of a policeman.
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.
Henry was known for his anti-Jewish decrees, such as a decree compelling Jews to wear a special " badge of shame " in the form of the Two Tablets.
This badge with basic gold color is set in the form of the ITIL-logo.
The ancient Greeks regarded the beard as a badge or sign of virility ; in the Homeric epics it had almost sanctified significance, so that a common form of entreaty was to touch the beard of the person addressed.
In much of Europe, Jews were supposed to wear the Judenhut or a yellow badge in the form of a wheel or ring ( the " rota "), or, in England, a shape representing the Tablets of the Law.
After the German invasion of Poland in 1939 there were initially different local decrees forcing Jews to wear a distinct sign – in the General Government e. g. a white armband with a blue Star of David on it, in the Warthegau a yellow badge in the form of a Star of David on the left side of the breast and on the back.
The badge is in the form of a cross patonce ( having the arms growing broader and floriated toward the end ), the obverse of which bears the same field as the star ( that is, either Britannia or George V and Queen Mary ); the reverse bears George V's Royal and Imperial Cypher.
The club's main colours ( blue and white ) are evident throughout the badge both in the mantling and in the shield, in the form of stripes.
The concept of a clan badge or form of identification may have some validity, as it is commonly stated that the original markers were merely specific plants worn in bonnets or hung from a pole or spear.
The badge depicts St Andrew in the same form as the badge-appendant surrounded by the Order's motto.
The main badge consists of a gold medallion in the form of a stylized trillium, the official provincial flower.
Multiple factors, including how much one could said to be ‘ integrated ’ into the business, or whether one metaphorically wore thebadgeof the organisation, were looked at, with a focus, it was said on ‘ economic reality ’ and form over substance.
The main badge consists of a gold medallion in the form of a stylized flower of the Pacific Dogwood the official provincial flower with the obverse in white enamel with gold edging, and bearing at its centre the escutcheon of the arms of British Columbia, all surmounted by a St. Edward's Crown symbolizing the Canadian monarch's role as the fount of honour.
The most common form of badge was the " rota " ( Latin for " wheel "), which looked like a ring, of white or yellow.
During the 14th century specific colours, often with a device or badge sewn on, denoting a great person began to be used for both his soldiers and his civilian followers ( often the two overlapped considerably ), and the modern sense of the term began to form.
Since 1864, the Blue Ensign is defaced with a badge or emblem, to form the ensign of United Kingdom government departments or public bodies, for example :-
The opposite form, i. e. du with the last name ( Berliner Du ), but leaving away Herr or Frau, is frequently used among retail workers or enlisted men in the military wearing badges with just their title and last name ( e. g., Herr Schmidt, Frau Müller ), who will address each other in the colloquial way while, for convenience, sticking to the name form on the badge.
The president is elected biennually and wears a badge in the form of a spoked wheel, with the standing figure of Joseph Priestley depicted in enamel, mainly in red and blue, on a hexagonal medallion in the centre.
The badge of the Order, in the form of a sheepskin, was suspended from a jewelled collar of firesteels in the shape of the letter B, for Burgundy, linked by flints ; with the motto " Pretium Laborum Non Vile " (" No Mean Reward for Labours ") engraved on the front of the central link, and Philip's motto " Non Aliud " (" I will have no other ") on the back ( non-royal knights of the Golden Fleece were forbidden to belong to any other order of knighthood ).
Each inductee receives a badge in the form of a gold tie bar in the shape of a round-nosed shovel.
There is a sixth form house tie available, although girls may choose to wear a pin badge instead.
The reflection on his helmet seems to form the end of possible a Moorish prison window or ( in conjunction with his beard ), a Cross fleury, the badge of the Order of Aviz, of which he was master.

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