I’ve often thought that a good summer job for Frazz would be as a camp councelor. That way he could still be involved with kids until school restarted in the fall. The strip wouldn’t have to rely on him running into everyone he knows from school through the summer, which is kind of ridiculous. Also a great way for J. Mallett to introduce new characters.
For me the summers were predictable: part time job to add to family income. [Enjoyment depended on which job.] Then the Dept of Ed mandated classes that had little or no application in the classroom but were required to maintain the certificate. [They were part of the Standards of Learning or SOLs, an ironic match to an old military acronym for when an op went south. It was an abbreviation for S—- Out of Luck.]
Erse IS better over 1 year ago
There’s different in detail and then there’s different in scope.
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 1 year ago
It may be the first time you’ve said it within this guy’s hearing, which isn’t quite the same thing as never having said it at all.
Sanspareil over 1 year ago
The principle here is that the Principal doesn’t seem altogether here!
markkahler52 over 1 year ago
Deja Vu all over again !
Rhetorical_Question over 1 year ago
Kroykali over 1 year ago
I’ve often thought that a good summer job for Frazz would be as a camp councelor. That way he could still be involved with kids until school restarted in the fall. The strip wouldn’t have to rely on him running into everyone he knows from school through the summer, which is kind of ridiculous. Also a great way for J. Mallett to introduce new characters.
goboboyd over 1 year ago
It seems that more people have complained that seasons aren’t falling on predictable calendar dates. (The Universe laughs at our plans.)
mrwiskers over 1 year ago
I learned that one of the most popular reasons folks travel is for the taste of different foods.
Caldonia over 1 year ago
Because if you don’t say it to Frazz—if you say it to anybody else—it doesn’t count.
sandpiper over 1 year ago
For me the summers were predictable: part time job to add to family income. [Enjoyment depended on which job.] Then the Dept of Ed mandated classes that had little or no application in the classroom but were required to maintain the certificate. [They were part of the Standards of Learning or SOLs, an ironic match to an old military acronym for when an op went south. It was an abbreviation for S—- Out of Luck.]