Frazz by Jef Mallett for June 04, 2024

  1. Bluedog
    Bilan  about 1 month ago

    What are the chances of them actually reading once they’re out there?

     •  Reply
  2. Picture 001
    rshive  about 1 month ago

    My school (in the woods of central PA) didn’t have A/C. Maybe it does by now.

     •  Reply
  3. B3b2b771 4dd5 4067 bfef 5ade241cb8c2
    cdward  about 1 month ago

    “Can we have class outside?” was one of our go-to questions the last month of school.

     •  Reply
  4. Img 20230511 134023590 portrait 5
    markkahler52  about 1 month ago

    May we leave through that door now that school is out for the summer?

     •  Reply
  5. Profile pic
    The Orange Mailman  about 1 month ago

    It was the third of June another sleepy dusty Delta day.

     •  Reply
  6. Avatar
    steveh64  about 1 month ago

    I remember reading, in a local paper in the late 1980s, of the dilemma of a school in the North Carolina county in which I live. It had at the time no air conditioning, so on hot days the only relief would normally be to open the windows. But they couldn’t do that because the school was located next to a turkey farm, and the smell would be intolerable. I can’t imagine trying to learn in such an environment.

     •  Reply
  7. Gocomic avatar
    sandpiper  about 1 month ago

    Depends on the thinking of the county supervisors where I taught. In a board meeting, one of them ranted against the need to have a gym. His theme was ‘we need more plumbers, electricians, etc’ And he also added that he couldn’t really see the need for more than 8 grades. As proof he said, I quit after the 8th grade, and I did alright in life. One of his contemporaries replied, _OK then, what did you do with the rest of the money your folks left you?’ The crowd laugh shook the building. Target’s face turned turkey red.

    Kinda reminds me of a recently convicted felon I call Buttercup for his lovely topknot. It usually but not always appears freshly tinted to catch the sun which also appears to have fried his brain.

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    Cozmik Cowboy  about 1 month ago

    At the first college I attended, it was not uncommon for a professor to pop into the dining hall at lunch and announce that the afternoon’s class would meet at the front table at Poffenberger’s Tavern.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    allangary  about 1 month ago

    I wonder if the request to go outdoors was prompted because lunch involved beans or a similar item?

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    Is like a melody Premium Member about 1 month ago

    Good morning y’all. I remember classes going outside when it was hot. There was one spot where we could always find 4-leaved clovers. Good times!

     •  Reply
  11. Missing large
    prrdh  about 1 month ago

    Schools with windows that open? What a concept.

     •  Reply
  12. E83843d4 c14a 4c7d 834d e523e220a2cf
    Solarbear Premium Member about 1 month ago

    One of my elementary schools, and my first middle school, had huge windows that opened wide; unfortunately the school I attended the year school lasted until mid-June (due to a teachers’ strike) was a newer school, and though the glass windows covered most of the wall, only one small (think one foot high) part opened. It was unbearably hot. The school is now air conditioned, though I’m not sure when that happened. My second middle school was build in the 70s; it was a big cube with virtually no windows at all, just a few one-foot square ones that didn’t open, to make it “energy efficient.” They kept it cold all the time, presumably to keep us from falling asleep.

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    eced52  about 1 month ago

    Why didn’t you just ask him if you all could go outside to read to begin with?

     •  Reply
  14. Cat pic
    DKHenderson  about 1 month ago

    I like how Mr. Burke teaches!

     •  Reply
  15. Plsa button
    Richard S Russell Premium Member about 1 month ago

    Back when 80-90% of the country was agrarian and all the farmers needed the kids at home to help out during the growing season, summer vacation made sense. But that was no longer true for the latter half of the 20th Century and has never been true during the 21st, when virtually all agriculture is handled by adults, machinery, and automated irrigation. And air conditioning (one of Time magazine’s “Greatest Inventions of the 20th Century”) has been around since Willis Carrier invented it in 1902. Meanwhile, the amount of stuff available to be learned about the world has exploded by orders of magnitude. So why do schools still have summer vacation?

     •  Reply
  16. Images
    MT Wallet   about 1 month ago

    I never went to a public school that didn’t have windows that would open, but I also never went to one that had air conditioning.

    Now they don’t have windows that open.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frazz