Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Dead Kennedys — No, not the band.

 

 This guy to the left is J.D. Tippet, a Dallas police officer, shot and killed by Lee Harvey Oswald. Most folks don't know about him or how it happened. More on that in the column below.

Seems quite coincidental and serendipitous that a Kennedy article would materialize the same week another major development in the Kennedy assassination saga makes the news (odds?). Sirhan Sirhan, the Palestinian militant who executed Robert F. Kennedy for his spearheaded role to provide 50 fighter jets to Israel, has won the recommendation for parole on his 16th attempt. Incredibly, the Kennedy family's opinions are mixed. We'll see how that goes.

Published November 8, 1988 in the Gainesville Times, Prof. Alex Taylor's Crime Stories visits the enigma of President John F. Kennedy's killing. More to follow...


I suppose you're all wondering what the Professor believes... a bottom line, conspiracies, official reports, and personal involvement considered (don't ask, TLDR and loosely connected) —
"What does he think?"

Details and motives vary, but Ret. Det. Sgt. Alex Taylor would sum it up simply as "It was the mob."
No surprise; I'll leave it there.



Tuesday, August 17, 2021

No Less, No More

Prof. Alex Taylor's column dives in to the legend of Boot Hill and the many incarnations thereof. Originally appearing November 1, 1988 in the Gainesville Georgia Times, he examines some of the famous epitaphs associated with the Wild West, and some insight into other Boot Hills — mafia included.








Indeed, the Lester Moore grave is a contrivance. As well are the puns upon his epitaph. In fairness, it does begin with HERE LIES.

It was reportedly a favorite mention of ZZ Top's deceased bassist, Dusty Hill, who wanted something similar for his own but couldn't come with a favorite. Let's see...

Here Rests    (had to use a musical pun)
Dusty Hill
Four Strings
A Bearded Thrill
He's been up, and now he's down
Oh Lord, take him downtown


I'm sure his were better...






 

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Oh My Goodness, He Said BLUENOSE

Alex Taylor Tuesday brings a one Anthony Comstock to light. You probably haven't heard of this gent or the delightful derision bearing his name.

Published in Gainesville Georgia's Times, October 25, 1988, Taylor's "Nude Painting.." feels harmless until you dive a little deeper into the deathly fallout of priggish policies.

More to follow...

Nude storefront mannequins rings a bell...
I'm looking at you, Christopher's on the Square!


 

Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Choice Words

This week, Prof. Alex Taylor covers the meaning and origin of a few select words from the world of crime. To comment, time apparently never favors certain parts of language, as you shall soon see.

This column was originally published, October 18, 1988 in Gainesville Georgia's Times, usually found on the left of the first page of its NE Georgia section.

For those of you just joining this regular feed, Prof. Taylor retired from the Tampa Police Department in the late 1970s as a Detective Sgt and former head of TPD's Criminal Intelligence Unit. While at TPD, he received his masters from the University of Tampa and was sourced as one of Brenau University's professors of Sociology, Criminology and Deviant Behavior, where he later became Dean of that department. He was a regular lecturer for several local colleges and universities, and attended Atlanta's John Marshall School of Law. There's quite a lot more to his CV, and maybe I'll get to that when the proper context arises. 

"We'll see..."

(don't forget to check below the column for additional info!)

Now, I need to remind everyone that my father's columns were drafted in the pre-net era, given to anecdotal folly and limited or lax formal reference due to the arcane nature of slang. In other words (pardon the poor pun), paper encyclopedias and books from "authorities" were never 100% accurate or foolproof. I know, neither is the internet, but with enough credible sources, a little verification, and a dash of common sense, we'll arrive at a reasonable conclusion that is likely true. Diving in for the facts...

"Copper" seems to arrive from a different place if you are to believe etymology.com's reference. No badges or their ranking metals mentioned. Wikipedia may have copped theirs from here or vis versa. If you run a Google search for cop copper brass and gold badges, you'll locate several references to the metal of one's badge. I have to wonder where "top brass" came from if the actual top brass used gold badges. A military-ism, perhaps. Opinions vary.

Take any 1930s gangster movie or film noir and "G-Man" is a ubiquitous affair. Of course, as the WWII-era poster depicts, G-Man later became synonymous with virtually any government employee. Wikipedia cites several references, careful to employ the passive, safe-harbor term "may". Fair enough. 

This brings us to "hoodlum", which appears to be spot-on if you trust Wikipedia and the Online Etymology Dictionary. For those with curious minds, "hoodwink" appeared a few hundred years before hoodlum, although it was possible to be hoodwinked by hoodlums in the late 1800s. Today, you might be hoodwinked by hoodlums wearing hoodies.
Bad hoodoo!

All right, enough of that.

"Hijack" is more of an enigma to verify. There are several references that state something similar to "probably" from the Prohibition Era, so I'll have to give this one a pass as credible.

And now, "lynching". It was 1988 when my father wrote this, so (and due to obvious father-son bias) there's somewhat of a cultural context pass for the omission of lynching's racial context. The Etymology Dictionary's entry does a fair job of that, so I'll let them do the heavy work. Otherwise, the word origin is correctly attributed.

Lastly, "Red Light Districts", according to Wikipedia, passes as credible, although one of its contributors appears to favor the possibility of a western-European origin. It's Wikipedia, therefore I'm surprised Facebook doesn't place misinformation disclaimers anytime someone cites it. Too inconvenient, methinks.

Coming next Taylor Tuesday: Some Nude History

 

T. Nelson Taylor | Official Site | DusT | Bolita