UXO stands for unexploded ordnance.
When I was stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina from late August, 1994 - November, 1996 I accidently found an unexploded artillery shell when I was digging a hasty fighting position.
( A hasty fighting position is not the same as a foxhole. ) I actuallly hit the damn thing with my E - tool. { entrenching tool; the Army's fancy name for a shovel }. And when I turned around the other four Soldiers had run off behind the trees and had left me for possible death.
So be careful when you are exploring old Military sites.
Why is it that all of these wall murals are so LAME ? ! ? ! ? !
All of these wall murals in all of these government run institutions look like they were painted by some Junior High School kid who did not any sort of proper and formal training in the arts at all.
There are no lines, no depth, no scale, no imagination and above all no classic beauty.
These pathetic paintings and the horrid bathrooms are just two of a long string of terrible injustices of which were inflicted upon these poor people.
Those mettalic (( maybe iron ? )) arches give this hallway a cold and naked feeling of lost hope. Almost looks like the inside of a naval ship. I would not feel comfortable in this hallway.
I am very surprised. If this room is a room for the wealthy patients then why does it look so plain and ordinary ? That chair does not not look too much different in design and function from many of the other chairs in the other government run institutions that I have seen on this website. Even that wooden table just looks very plain too. There is nothing really special about those two windows either. In fact those two windows look very boring in design.
The way it looks to me is that the wealthy patients just got plain old fashioned:
RIPPED OFF, GYPPED, THEY GOT TOOK,
THEY GOT HOOD - WINKED,
TAKEN FOR A RIDE,
THE OLD BAIT and SWITCH,
TAKE THE MONEY and RUN,
FLY BY NIGHT DIRT - BAG's.
UXO stands for unexploded ordnance.
When I was stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina from late August, 1994 - November, 1996 I accidently found an unexploded artillery shell when I was digging a hasty fighting position.
( A hasty fighting position is not the same as a foxhole. ) I actuallly hit the damn thing with my E - tool. { entrenching tool; the Army's fancy name for a shovel }. And when I turned around the other four Soldiers had run off behind the trees and had left me for possible death.
So be careful when you are exploring old Military sites.
Signed: An American Soldier stationed in Germany.