S, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY _-_9 9 H E M I HI A N D A L a * Rudolph Confesses Payola Participation By PATRICIA GOLDEN Children the world over were shocked to learn this week that Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer has been dropped from the St. Nicholas herd. Although newsmen were barred from the workshop and stables be- cause of the unwrapped Christmas presents stored there, one Daily reporter was able to interview Ru- 4 dolph before he left the North Pole by plane, bound for Washington, D.C., and a Federal grand jury. Rudolph achieved swift promi- nence several years ago when he led the St. Nicholas number one reindeer team to victory through fAstronomers Fail To Solve Star Mystery 4 The mystery of the Christmas star brings popular interest in astronomy to a peak in December, Prof. Hazel Losh of the astronomy department believes. And It's a mystery astronomers haven't solved yet. "The narrative about the star is too incomplete, the date of its ap- pearance too uncertain, and the early calendar too unreliable to lead us to any definite conclu- sions," she said. Finds Ancient Scroll Giving Great Liht a very dark night in the annual Dec. 24-25 midnight marathon. On that occasion he was pressed into service because of his bright red nose, which emits a faint glow. Announce Dismissal His dismissal was announced after a Senate investigation dis- closed the fact that Rudolph had been accepting payola. Subsequent probing revealed that the entire operation was fraudulent. Flanked by FBI guards at the Polar airfield, the former yuletide hero admitted the monstrous hoax. "The summer before the disc made the charts, I was approached by a New York distributor," Ru- dolph admitted. "He said he had a moving sound on wax and needed some atmosphere to push it. Explains Deal "The deal was that if I would wear some strawberry jam on my normally black nose throughout the holiday season and sit for publicity pictures, he would pay me a designated sum of money plus several cases of drops for tired eyes," Rudolph confessed. According to the prominent deer, all went well until the dis- tributor, who always referred to himself as Mr. X, decided to branch out Into novelties and toys. To stimulate public demand for Rudolph articles, he arranged a clincher for the Christmas Eve classic reindeer race. Lacks Glow Since the jam on Rudolph's nose did not produce enough glow to guide the team in total darkness (the original idea had been to stage an eclipse of the moon, but this was not feasible since the strawberry jam did not oblige), Mr. X devised a scheme to impair the vision of everyone but the Red-Nosed Reindeer. He hid the eyewash. The scheme went off perfectly, Rudolph said. Nicholas Claus, vet- eran driver of the swift Nicholas entry in the marathon, searched for his eyewash for several hours on the afternoon of Dec. 24. The reindeer in the regular team were helpless in the Arctic night as well. Mr. X's assistants had prudently removed the handy pocket-purse- saddle-sized squeeze bottles of eye- wash from the reindeer trappings. Meanwhile, the distributor him- self was administering the pre- cious fluid to Rudolph. A few minutes before the start- ing gun, driver Claus dashed blindly out of the house in the By MICHAEL SIBLEY Special to The Daily TOURS -Prof. Alan DeMause, historian emeritus of Institute Bibliophage and part-time archae- ologist by avocation, announced a significant "find" last night. "The scroll I have discovered will change the face of the entire Christmas carol myth," Prof. De- Mause revealed. He was referring to the yellowed manuscript in his left hand, con- spicuous in the absence of his third finger (lost while digging for the ruin last month). The manuscript is evidently a docu- ment copied by hand in a Dark Ages monastery. Prof. DeMause explained, "On this manuscript are borne the fruits of what may have been the only creative attempt during the entire 12th century. A monk, in his dissatisfaction with existing celebratory measures and theologi- cal dicta in general, apparently wrote Christmas carols of his own, signed with the pseudonym Robert Crowder." Professor Describes The carols, which Prof. De- Mause calls "wonderous to be- hold" though aged so greatly that some words are obscured, seem to cover the gamut of human ex- perience of the time. (Obscured words are translated with substi- tutes indicated by parentheses.) "Oh praise, All praises due; Oh praise, (praise), praise And more praises, too." Another expresses faith in the future: "Gloria, Gloria, All praises due; Oh praise, (praise), praise And in the future, praises (too)." Notes Subtlety "It is the subtlety of the metre (sic) and the consummate skill with which this Crowder utilizes symbolic content that makes the find significant," Prof. DeMause continued. "For instance, there is this five-lined quatrain:" "Oh Truth, truth Where art thou? (Oh) Truth your stamp is not imprinted And more praises, too." A wild argument rages today in the highest archaeological circles as to Prof. DeMause's trans- lation of the word "Oh" in the third line. Several authorities have suggested "God" might be a more appropriate word, in the light of the fact that the monk Crowder was obviously a man of no little intellectual scope. "This is all nonsense," Prof. DeMause's rebuttal (Paris Re- view) begins, "but whatever hap- pens, it will change the face of the Christmas carol myth." RED-FACED REINDEER ... stands revealed direction of the stable, where all reindeer except the prize eight of the number one team are shel- 11 i u r "It's Christmas Time at Collins" . CALLING ALL *J :"COLLIP J : MEN'S NI F_ WEDNESDAY, DEC. 9th . Men! . . Let our ci ladies help you make your select and shop! No charge for g MAIN FLOOR.9 SPORTSHC No guessing with this handy size ch4 HER SIZE CHART DRESS PAJAMAS COAT GOWNS SUIT i SLIPS BLOUSE PANTIES SKIRT HOSIERY SWEATER SLIPPERS SLACKS GLOVES ROBE JEWELRY FAVORITE COLORS .................. Shop Mon.. Dec. 7 and Fri.. Dec. 11 9:30 0