Display in the Oval Office
The painting came into the possession of Steven Spielberg, who donated it to the permanent art collection of the White House in 1994. It was displayed in the Oval Office during the administrations of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama, sometimes to the left of the President's desk, above a cabinet or table on which was displayed Frederic Remington's sculpture The Bronco Buster. It was later moved by Obama to a position next to the fireplace, above a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. In January 2017, shortly after the inauguration of Donald Trump, the painting was still in the Oval Office. It was reportedly removed later in 2017, in favor of a portrait of Andrew Jackson. .
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Engines on display
McGill University, Montreal (cutaway) New England Air Museum, Connecticut (cutaway) Ontario Science Centre, Toronto, Ontario (cutaway)
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Excavation and display
The villa is located in West Wood, just west of the village of Sparsholt, Hampshire. Trial excavations were conducted in 1890 and 1895 which revealed part of the plan of the villa. Excavations, which were led by David E. Johnston, were conducted from 1965-72. Nothing is visible on the ground today. On display in Winchester City Museum is a near-intact 4th-century geometric mosaic taken from the aisled building. Also on display in the museum is a fresco containing a female portrait within a tondo, which may show the mistress of the house. Another fresco is a painted version of a guilloch - a type of pattern common in mosaics but extremely rare in Roman frescos. At Butser Ancient Farm near Petersfield is a reconstruction of the aisled villa building. The building was constructed by volunteers and includes a functioning hypocaust system.
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Later history and display
It is currently owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art via the Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon B. Polsky Fund, 2003. As of 2019, it is not currently on view. It has been displayed six times since its acquisition from Terence McInerney Fine Arts Ltd in 2003. It was also loaned as part of an exhibit, "Vishnu: India's Blue-Skinned Savior" that appeared at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville, Tennessee and The Brooklyn Museum in Brooklyn, New York
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LN-3 units on display
GermanyThe Wehr Technische Studiensammlung (WTS) at Koblenz.Exhibit of the LN3-2A system (without Alert Align Unit) in a vitrine. The platform gimbals can be rotated by the visitor with a remote control box. NetherlandsThe HVV (Historische Vliegtuigen Volkel / Historical Fighters Volkel) group at Volkel Air Force Base (NL) has adopted the collection of Navigation Systems of the former DELM / Rhenen museum.Display of a complete system, running as new. On request explication and demonstration of the system is given. The LN-3 system was on display at RNlAF Air Force Day's, June 2019 Friday 14th & Saturday 15th at Volkel, Hangar 1.
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List of dinosaur species on display
This list of dinosaur species on display lists which venue (museum or public or private location) exhibits (or has exhibited) which dinosaur species. Exhibits include skeletons (partial and complete, mounted and unmounted, originals and casts) and reconstructions
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Change only one display orientation from terminal
You will need to use xrandr for that.Where $orientation is left, right, inverted, or normal.You can select the display you want to rotate with the --display option
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No display on boot up on my PC?
Can you describe the problem in more detail? What do you mean by "laggy looking"? And when the computer would not boot, how far in the boot process did it get? My bet is that you have both onboard video and a video card. When you get no display, the display has simply switched to the other video output. What is happening is that the BIOS sees the onboard video as primary but then once you install the drivers, Windows sees the HD4670 as primary. So the display blanks. If you move the monitor to the other card, I bet you will see the output. The simplest solution is to disable the onboard video in the BIOS. Make sure the monitor is connected to the HD4670. And make sure you connected power to the video card!
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Construction and display
The recipient of the title is given a medal called the Medal of the Hero of Belarus (Belarusian: , Russian: ). The star and suspension are made of gold, and thus it is nicknamed "Gold Star", as was its predecessor, the Hero of the Soviet Union. The star has a total diameter of 33 millimeters, and is attached to a rectangular suspension device (boot tree). In the center of the rectangle is a ribbon of two sections of red and one section of green. The red and green bars on the ribbon evoke the design and colors of the national flag. The amount of gold is set at 585-1 Test, with the total weight of the medal being 19 grams. The present design was enacted into law by Presidential Decree Number 516 on September 6, 1999. The design of the medal is modeled after one used for the Hero of the Soviet Union. Unlike the Hero of the Soviet Union, Hero of Socialist Labor and the Hero of the Russian Federation titles, there is no engraving on the reverse of the star. The ribbon also copies the Soviet Hero medal's ribbon, since a flag design was also used to make the ribbon of that medal. The medal is always worn in full on the left side of the breast above all other medals and orders. Chapter 4, Article 69 of Law N 288- states that any awards and titles presented by the Soviet Union and the Byelorussian SSR must be placed after awards from the Republic of Belarus. 1996 medalWhen the title was created, a suggested medal was drafted and designed by the government. The major difference between this medal and the current medal is the design of the suspension and the star medallion at the bottom: the top suspension is longer than the bottom, and the bottom star is outlined differently and is adorned with rubies. The suspension was made from gold-plated silver, while the suspension of the current medal is made from gold, as the medal. The design of the star evokes the Marshal's Star, which Soviet Marshals wore around their necks. This medal was adopted by Presidential Decree Number 26 on May 15, 1996.