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Spiffy's had enough
Spiffy's letter from home is filled with the accomplishments of the other male family members and neighbors. It shames his status as a camp counselor and adds to his continual aggravations. Among those is Pruett comically singing Camp Divine's "Good Morning to You". As a favor to Camp Divine, Wivenhoe has the counselors do their laundry. Spiffy daydreams of being an important Washington employee. He ponders the standing offer in his mother's letter of joining his uncle's insurance company. In the midst of aggravations and mounting camp calamities, he abruptly quits. Doc diagnoses it as "campers fatigue", cracking under the strain of fresh air. The men try to talk him out of it and Spiffy gives them 20 seconds for one more chance. A newscast sets up the two-parter: "Will Senior Counselor George Spiffy find happiness in the world of big business, or will he return to the peace and quite of Camp Runamuck?"
- JordanThomasHall
- May 30, 2019
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