THE MICHIGAN DAILY yA anta Claus: Victim of odern, Liberal (EDITOR'S NOTE-A campus con- servative and his alter ego recently spent a day in the frozen wastes interviewing a well-known share- the-wealth proponent.) By MICHAEL HARRAH and ROBIN PAGE Special To The Daily NORTH POLE -- Indian Summer up here is pretty short (it came on a Tuesday from 2 to 2:15 this year) but we managed to en- joy its brief stay with one S. Claus, spreader of glad tidings and oth- er forms of good will toward the latter part of each year-or at least, each year up until now. S. Claus-Santa to those who know him-confided to us that he has run into some difficulties. When we pressed him for the de- tails, he reluctantly elaborated. "It's labor troubles," Santa said. (We were pleased when he asked us to call him Santa.) "Jurisdic- tional disputes." "How so," we inquired. "Well, the International Broth- erhpod of Elves and the Associated Toy-making Dwarfs have me all bottled up in a row over who will unionize my shop." * * * CAN'T YOU do anything to stop it?" we asked. "Appealed to that Bobby Ken- nedy fellow," he said. "Told me he'd take it up with his brother Jack. Jack decided I'd get no help from him." "Why not?" "Well, it seems I've got a mon- opoly up here. Fact Is, I've' got something here to prove it." He rummaged around in his old roll- top desk and came up with a very official-lookirig document which was titled. 'The People vs. Claus. Re: Conspiracy in Restraint of Trade. United States District Court.' "This is terrible," we said. "What will you do?" "Can't say," Santa puffed. "When I get this labor thing handled, they'll slap me with an injunction to stop making toys until my suit clears the court." "That takes a long time," we agreed. "Perhaps if you appealed to the United Nations . . ." * * * "NO GOOD," the old man in- terrupted. "Wrote 'em about it. They just told me to appear in person before the General As- sembly and they'd consider it." "Well, that seems reasonable enough," we said. LABOR PROBLEMS-Elves in Santa's workshop have learned the traditional labor complaints from reading American newspapers during milk break. Seizing upon these new ideas, they are threat- ening to unionize. "Oh, its reasonable all right," Santa said. "But I can't go." "Can't go? But why not?"' "Well, seems I've been grounded by the Civil Aeronautics Board for flying an unapproved aircraft. No provisions on the books for a sleigh, you see." "but how could you fly on Christmas eve then," we inquired. "Hard telling," he replied. "Last year I ducked two Nike missiles crossing the DEW line." "It's hard to believe that a won- derful person like you could have all this trouble," we consoled him. "But if you could get under way on Christmas eve, how would things-go?" "Not very well," he told us. "I've been running into local prob- lems." "Local problems, Santa? How so?" * * * "Well, I got four illegal parking tickets in Philadelphia, I ,got caught going the wrong way up a one-way street in South Bend, I've got a Judic case for not hav- ing a staff paid parking permit in Ann Arbor and the San Francisco police have offered a $1000 re- ward for my capture for flying too low over city streets." "My goodness." We registered surprise. "Well, why didn't you tell those people who you were?" "I did, but they all said they were Napoleon Bonaparte. Hauled me before a JP in Colorado for drunk driving. In Denver I had to pay license fees for the reindeer." "This is ridiculous," we inter- rupted. "We'll certainly take it up with our congressman." Santa said he would appreciate that. Then he asked us about President Kennedy. "Pretty good man," we said. "CAN'T UNDERSTAND him," Santa went on. "Sent a bunch of men up here. They stuck up signs all over. Depressed Area. What's that?" "It seems that the area is eco- nomically hard-pressed," we ex- plained. "Hard-pressed," Santa grum- bled. "Why I pay better wages than the Black Forest-three cod- fish a week, with Easter off too." "How's the toy business in gen- eral, Santa?" "Terrible," he said. "Sales dropping off, we sup- pose?" "Hardly that," he replied, "but commercial toymakers are under- cutting us." "How's that?" we asked. "They've stuck a high tariff on imported toys and left me to compete with that Japanese stuff, and you know what that's worth." We changed the subject. "Tell us about your new sleigh, Santa. How do you like it?" "Can't get used to it," he com- plained. "This one's an automatic and I've been used to a stick." We were bewildered. "What do you mean, Santa?" "Well, on the old sleigh, when- ever one of the reindeer was lag- ging I reached out with my stick and popped him one. Now I've got this automatic reindeer stinger. All I have to do is press the proper button." * * * "SOUNDS pretty easy," we said. "Not so easy," the old man con- tradicted. "The other day Mrs. C. was helping hitch up the reindeer for a trial run. I saw Blitzen ly- ing down, so I pressed the button. Mrs. C. shot six feet in the air. Wrong button." "Tell us about the image of Santa Claus," we said. "We un- derstand you took a poll on the subject." "Yes, I did. "Results were some- what inconclusive." "How could they be inconclusive, Santa?" "Well, here. I'll read 'em off: 19 per cent were pledged to the Eas- ter Bunny, 21 per cent said they didn't go to the movies, 16 per cent said they never voted Repub- lican and never would, 2 per cent took the fifth amendment, 10 per cent said they were already on relief and 13 per cent asked what comic strip I was in. Perhaps the question was phrased poorly." We consoled him. "Those poll- sters probably didn't ask any chil- dren. No wonder their respondents were so uninformed." "I've had some gripes about your fine children too," he grum- bled. "Got a job as a Santa at Macy's last year. Had to quit though. Insurance company can- celled my policy." * * * "CANCELLED IT? But why?" "They said-high risk job." "What could be risky about some little children?" Society "Private industry never cot compete with government. Y folks have got Santa Claus on year 'round basis. Kind of talk the novelty out of it when I g around." It took our breath away, t finally we said, "We didn't res ize what you were up again Santa." 1ut his eyes were twinkling a: he said, "I've not struck out, la dies. Old Santa still stands I something that your welfare sta never will. Santa Claus is the spi it of cheerful giving and cheerf receiving. Welfarism is only chee ful receiving.' "WE GUESS that's what mal Christmas better," we agreed. isn't much fun giving somethi to someone else unless you wa to." SUCH IS MODERN LIFE-With the wave of congressional investigations, black lists and left-over McCarthyism, even Santa's bag is under suspicion from the guard at the UGLI. "That's what I said. But they cancelled after the fourth claim on my beard." "Your beard?" "Yes. Once I had 17 lollipops stuck in it in the space of an hour. And it wouldn't be so bad except that the little brats kept pulling them back out." "Oh Santa, you're far too gloomy about people. Don't yo uthink they honor you as the spirit of Christ- mas?" The old man puffed on his pipe a bit, and then he said, "Not any more. I've been replaced." "Oh, Santa, nothing could re- place you. Why, you're the image of the spirit of giving." * * * SANTA laughed and laughed. "My children," he said. "You've got an outfit that's got it all over me when it comes to giving. "Why there's social security; un- employment compensation, aid to dependent children, social welfare, severance pay, time-and-a-half, overtime, expense accounts, soil bank, conservation rebates, price supports, vacation pay, graduated income tax, featherbedding-say, you can't beat that. "And unless you think they de serve it," Santa added. "I don' bring gifts to the children wh haven't earned them." The old man smiled to himsel and we couldn't rebut that, s we watched the setting sun ( was about that time of year u there) and when he had droppe off to sleep we hurried over t our little airplane-which had big red parking ticket danglin from the door handle. You just can't say that ol Santa hasn't learned a thing c two from all his troubles. 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