Up from 2 days of Outside Lines, 1 day
Bathroom in 2012
Huron, Pa (Aug 7) – Proving that nothing is immune to the
downtrodden US economy, Camp Huron Lake is reporting massive inflation in the
camp equivalent of Oreos, Archie Comics, and other camp staples. Oreos and other cookies and crackers have
spiked in bartering price over the past three weeks to record highs. Camps up
and down the east coast have all been reporting widespread inflation and it
only expected to get worse as the second half of the summer begins.
Because of scarcity of tasty snacks smuggled into boys’ bunks
and dwindling supply and freshness, last year’s dustpan duty is no longer the
trade for three Triscuits. This year
campers are shelling out two days of Dustpan duty and trading their day off for
Bunk Sweep.
Wall Street analysts are puzzled by the dizzying heights
reached in the value of sugary snacks.
US Fed Economist William Reardon explains, “I’ve never seen anything
like this before. The only thing I can
honestly equate this to is when San Quinten Penitentiary barter system went
haywire in the spring of 2007. It
started as two cigarettes for a blow job and as stagflation reared its ugly
head, only weeks later the same two cigarettes were worth a blow job and a rim
job. Eventually demand weakened and the
price settled on a bj, a hand job, and a razor-edged toothbrush.”
Senior Boy camper Jon “Leiby” Leibowitz who has been
supplying most of boys’ side with Hydrox cookies, a kosher equivalent of Oreos,
for the past five summers, has been enjoying a fantastic chore-free
summer. “This has been the best summer
since 2010 when I cornered the market on powdered Gatorade. I haven’t had to lift a broom or clean a sink
all year. Kids know that Leiby has the
best stuff. I have Chip Clips on all my
packages to ensure quality and freshness all summer long.”
Archie Comics, entertaining campers for over 70 years, have
become as valuable as two kilos of cocaine this summer. Although these “comics” have never made a
child or young adult laugh, they nonetheless are a late night staple for campers
and counselors on OD. 19 year-old
counselor Aaron Schwartz of Bunk 17 recently traded a Sports Illustrated and an
OD sandwich (baloney on white bread) for a copy of Archie’s Digest from
2010. “I was hoping not to give up my
sandwich but I’d rather be hungry than bored.
The gang at Ridgedale High is really entertaining in a non-funny
way. Love that Moose!” said Schwartz,
dressed in his best Abercrombie sweatshirt hoping one of the female counselors
would stop by.
As the summer nears its conclusion, economist Reardon
believes that suppliers such as Leiby will be giving away their stashes right
after the Color War peak where campers demand extra energy for all day sporting
events. “I think last year two days before
we went home I traded a snack size Milky Way for an Under Armor
sweatshirt. Not the best deal for me
but, hey, these kids will be home soon and realize that this crap costs about
$1.25,” an honest Leiby explained.
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