TAG AN DATEY_ By LICHTY F I-1 'rC7-6 03OT M EN 0P~t Tk-eiR rFIFTEN) SS ~sA0Nt Xwxt~v THE STROP OF. S16tiMt roa f' Io 1: Qr P E 6 A r = 7-ez . L-E Mouc~. R' '' -iTI:E - - 1~u " .:-~ UP TAER .-rMIS 2 °- er g' __. / III .__. 1 w:. / d ". [, " ti l _.-. + ..... \ ... , ;,: (141 ..arf/ I LICA VO1, ARRESTED OT Tq[0 01G BY TQEOPLC Suspect in Buckley Death Found After Search of More Than Year. INDICTED LAST JANUARY Argot Makes the Language Grow; Movies Assist Spread of Slang 1 , , sn _ .. .. _.. _ ._, 1, I Today's Radio Programs (Eaztern Standard Time) DOBBS - MALLORY STETSON - KNOX tacketeer Known as Prominent Leer of Down-River Rum Runners, DETROIT, Oct. 3.--(P)-Peter Li- avoli, 28, sought for more than a ear as a suspect in the slaying of erald E.: Buckley, radio political r mentator, was arrested in To- do Friday night and officials were reparing today to reopen the city's lost sensational murder case in any years. Licavoli was indicted last Jan. 27 r the Buckley murder along with ed Pizzino, Angelo Livecchi, Joe ommarito and three others whose ames were not divulged. Bomma- .to, Pizzino and Livecchi were ac-I itted after a long trial last spring. Authorities here were informed Licavoli's arrest late Friday night nd a member of the police homi- de squad, was dispatched to Tole- )with a copy of the indictment. A few weeks after the indictmentI as returnied last winter°, Licavoli' as reported driving about Detroit 1a heavily armored car. Then he opped from sight and noting as heard of him until a policema~n 1 l 1 l i By George A. Stauter "Those guys have rods-we're on the spot," boomed the character on the screen. "I'd give fifty grand to be out of here," replied another. And the audience, perfectly fa- miliar wi,th English as it is spoken, listens without a murmur to a jar-, gon that would have been unintelli- gible a short two years ago. The development of gangster talk through the gunman film is one ex- ample of the way the language grows-not the only way, but one of the ways. All trades, all cliques, all guilds and professions have slang. The human being seems strange- ly desirous of building up a tongue that is known only to his cult. The gunman slang is one of the very few that is becoming known to the public at large. Hardly an American todayrto so behind the times, as not to recog- nize "on the spot" as a term for being placed in a situation subject- i CUT IN APMMEN ing one to violent execution accord- ing to gangster law. d l "Taking him for a ride" is al- most an every-day phrase. Few do not know that a "grand" is $1,000, a "rod" is a gun, a "stretch" or "rap' is a prison sentence, a "stool" is an informer, and a "moll" is a gangsters girl. The strange, yet vivid and power- ful, phrases and words are only an infinitely small proportion of the class slang that decorates all busi- ness and professions. Newspaper Language. The newspaperman, nowever, rec- ognizes his own slang, and knows that the person mnentioned as "the one in the slot in the lobster shift" is sitting in the main position on wide, circular copy desk from 3 a.m. to 11 a.m. Thus a "flash" is a warning by wire of a big news event just "breaking" or coming in; a "fudge" is not candy to a newspaperman but a last-minute insertion of an important late story on the front page; a "bulldog" isn't a canine, but just an early edition; if "your weather ear is pied" you seek no medical relief but straighten the typographical errata in the small box at the top of the front page that carries the weather report. The "masthead" has nothing to do with shipping. columns, being the data concerning the paper that al- ways sits at the top of the first editorial page column. A "legman" almost explains himself as a report- er who does the heavy walking on a newsbeatsand who telephones his stories to rewrite. Then there are "by-lines" and "pi-lines" and "dead lines" and "date lines' to jumble the argot. Other walks of life have their own code, too. "I was stealing a job from a ba- nana,' says the taxi driver, "but the eel showed up so I cruised and got a long haul. He was 'a flat and rolled back empty." .It becomes intelligible if you know from a taxi-man that a "fare" is a pick-up in taxi slang. A "job" is a fare picked up while cruising. To "steal" is to cut ahead of your turn in the line-up. A "banana" is cant for a Yellow Cab. The "eel" is slang, for the roving taxi inspector. A "long haul" is one that takes the driver from the center of the city to places where fares are infrequent. A "flat" is not a flat tire but a fare who does not tip the driver. And so it is with all crafts. News- papermen are perhaps the only per- sons knowing more than one craft slang. Sunday night will be a gala one, with the Columbia Symphony or- chestra playing the last two move- ments of Mendelssohn's first piano concerto at 10 o'clock over WXYZ and KMOX, and the Max Steindel String Ensemble at 11:30 o'clock from the above stations. Another program reviewing the songs of by- gone days will come over the air at 9 o'clock over KMOX and WXYZ. Fray and Braggioti, the famed piano duo, will introduce a new series of variations on the theme of "Swanee River" from 7:15 o'clock to 7:30 o'clock over the same sta- Stions that the old song review comes over from 10:30 to 11 o'clock, using the same outlet, the Gauchos will present an outstanding pro- gram of Cuban and Spanish dance music. Beginning at 7:30 o'clock, intro- ducing a new program to the air, The Three Bakers, WJR will carry the following programs for the WJZ chain of the National Broadcasting company: Enna Jettick Melodies at 8 o'clock, the Bayigk Stag party at 9:15 o'clock, Kellogg Slumber Music at 9:45 o'clock, dance music at 10:30 o'clock, the South Sea Islanders at 11: 45 o'clock, and Henry Theis andx his orchestra at midnight. Eddie Cantor is the big gun on the WEAF branch of the NBC; com- ing through WWJ at 8 o'clock. Oth- er programs worthy of mention a-e Moonshine and Honeysuckle, a sketch at 7 o'clock. Thru the Opera Glass, a program of opera music, will begin at 9:15 o'clock, to be fol- lowed by Ted Weem's orchestra at' 10:15 o'clock. Sunday at Seth Park- er's one of the most heart-appealing programs on the air today lasts from 10:45 to 11:15 o'clock, when Ralph Kirbery, baritone, Joseph Stopak, violinist, and Robert Braine, accompanist, come to the micro- phone. Jesse Crawford plays exclu- sively for WEAF at 11:30 o'clock, followed by Larry Funk and his or- chestra from the same station who closes the WEAF broadcast for Sun- day at 1 o'clock. Find Detroit Student Dead of Shot in Car DETROIT, Oct. 3-(AP)--Sidney Katz, 19-year-old high school stu7 dent, was found dead of a bullet wound Friday night in his broth- er's car parked on Nineteen Mile road in Oakland county. Although the pistol from which the bullet was fired was found on. the seat beside him and a note indicating he had taken his own life was discovered in his pocket, officials were investigating some circumstances which aroused belief he might have been slain. Chief among those circumstances Coroner Lee Voorhees of Oakland county said, was the fact that the rear seat of the car was bloodstain- ed, although the body was in the front seat and the wound had bled but little. Eighty-one per cent of the stu- dents at the University of Kentucky are employed. and many others irc in a Detroit po- )od on a cor- ;iess district. tod as saying to be a mem- i. gang which erwonld there 1 years has here asan a down-river His recotd one of them onviction, for Reminders of World War Must Be Destroyed for Peace, Asserts Mussolini. ROMVE, Oct. 3-(?) -Limitation of armaments and settlement of war debts and reparations were advocated by the grand council of Fascism today as the most effec- tive remedies for the world-wide economic situation. Premier Mussolini, chairman of the council, in meeting Friday night and early today, reaffirmed his long-standing conviction that reiminders of the World war must be wiped out in order to restore genuine peace and prosperty. Foreign minister Dino Grandi's proposal for an immediate truce on arms to last until the disarma- ment conference in February, sub- mitted to the council of the League of Nations, was said to have "sur- mounted prejudice and placed the international arms probSem on a realistic and concrete basis." Fascism's example in acting quickly to meet the emergency within its own borders, it was said, should be made known to the world as a helpful and effective influence. Use Only the D orn }'lethod of Blocking H'ats' THEY USE THIS BECAUSE ,THEY HAVE FOUND IT TO BE THE PREFERABLE METH- OD. WE HAVE CONFIDENCE IN THE SELECTION OF A BLOCKING PROCESS CHOSEN BY ALL OF THE LEADING HAT MANUFACTURERS. EVEN AS THEY HAVE FOUND IT TO BE SATISFAC- TORY SO HAVE THE'°MANY slaying of Buckley in the of La Salle hotel early the .ng of July 23, 1930, came at id of the campaign which re- in the recall of the then r Charles Bowles. prosecution's theory in the which resulted in acquittal of o, Livecchi and Bommarito hat Buckley was shot by an world clique which had op- the recall movement. ino and Liveechi later were cted of another slaying and. erving life sentences in Mar- prison. ,-#u I CUSTOMERS OF i GREENE'S HERE'S A I pe 0 00 If you want your clothes laun- AFTER A TREATMENT WITH THIS MODERN EQUIPMENT YOUR HAT IS RETURNED LIKE NEW. dered in an expert manner by all Tennis Racket means send it to the TROJAN. Years of experience have netted us a reputation for guaranteed qgal- ity, service, and satisfaction. Just dial 9495 and ask our man to stop; or you can save money by Greene's are the only.users 0 0 0 of the Dorn method in Ann Arbor - 0 00 4 SALE Cash Cardsfor5 0 0 O 25% Reduction using our 15 % carry system. discount cash and "No matter the color of the article, Greene is the best for cleaning and Ares ing. CHOICE OF ANY RACKET IN STOCK r THE TROJAN LAUNDRY reene CLEANERS AND DYERS 516 East Liberty GEORGE J. MOE 10vCl__mr t C'wag10 uAn--l