There is an optometrist at USAFA. They take care of all your medical and dental needs. In fact, you would need special permission to go to a civilian doctor.Quick question: when I am needing to update my glasses lens to reflect my new eye prescription in the future, is there a place on campus to do so? Or do I need to take care of it while I'm home on breaks?
Quick question: when I am needing to update my glasses lens to reflect my new eye prescription in the future, is there a place on campus to do so? Or do I need to take care of it while I'm home on breaks?
"They" being USAFAThere is an optometrist at USAFA. They take care of all your medical and dental needs. In fact, you would need special permission to go to a civilian doctor.
Look forward to BCGs - no matter how they update the military issue frames, they are still...BCGs. Doesn't matter the service.
USAFA will issue you glasses--both BCGs and a more ordinary looking pair.
Eh, I'm going to have to disagree with you there. They really are not that bad, especially in comparison to the old ones. I wear mine on a daily basis as do many other cadets and military members, and I have never once been asked why I do so nor have I been avoided by the opposite gender. But then again, those are pretty low standards. Ha!Ugliness/beauty is, in this case, not only in the eye of the beholder, but the wearer.
I just picked up my 6 free pairs of black plastic framed reading glasses that military retirees rate, and shared a good laugh with the young Navy corpsman at the USNA Med Clinic Optometry office about their almost-delightful ugliness. They are my house glasses, the spare in my computer bag, the spare in the car. Price is right, and by gosh, I wear my BCGs with perverse pride.