130 Comments Posted by Scott

wrote:
one of the walls of the rooms had deep finger nail maks and finger nails left at the end. some of the things seen were to much believe as fake
wrote:
collection cases from 1999 probably wouldn't have any educational value. also, hospitals, companies, and governmental agencies are required to retain records for certain periods, varying depending on the type of document. documents are destroyed to protect the company, hospital, agency, not the patient. the "destroy date" is the date that the files must be kept for, not the date they must be destroyed.
wrote:
i was just in this place just last night wit a group of my buddies and to be honest its exactly wat the description says, and auditorium...and thats it, nothing special about...sry believers.
wrote:
Unbelievable. This whole series is great, but This is my fav.
wrote:
They are sumac trees. There is no mistaking it.

Shytown got his bubble bursted I figure. A locust tree is a hardwood with much smaller and rounded leaves. Nasty thorns on them also.
wrote:
You paint and scrub to hide my pen

But the outhouse poet has struck again

Ole Bird ;)
wrote:
Berthing areas on Navy ships were painted institutional green as late as the early 1980's.

I don't know about now. I still felt like killing a few shipmates. I might have actually offed one or more of them if not for the green. :D
wrote:
actually i think the things hanging down are calcium depsits
wrote:
well we tried to figure what it ays and we got something close to your translation
wrote:
i was wondering what the rest of that sign said when i was there, thanks for the info
wrote:
You would think someone would take some time and keep a building like this from such a state...
In my town, they demolished a historic prison (The Ohio Penitentary in Columbus, OH) to build a arena. The wouldn't even preserve the original building. Really sad, considering the beauty of that building.
wrote:
Awesome Shot! probably my Fav in the series.
wrote:
Abram Hewitt is gone but not forgotten.

Abram Stevens Hewitt was an American iron manufacturer, philanthropist, and politician. In 1886 Hewitt was elected as mayor of New York City, defeating Theodore Roosevelt. He served as mayor until 1888 and helped topple the Tweed Ring and reform Tammany Hall. He was elected as a Democrat from New York City to the U.S. House of Representatives (1874-86). He created a plan for building an underground mass transit system, which was not used for another decade.


http://www.hgtv.com/hg...3217_1389718,00.html

http://www.mercercount...istory.ind_giant.htm

http://videoindex.pbs....d=3292&chap_id=2

http://www.picturehist...nd/p/16123/mcms.html
wrote:
When you see this picture & read the caption, you can't help but want to cry for all the people who were sent here. Brave but unknowing.......
wrote:
Geez...nobody was getting out of this place