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ARRESTED. JOEY BUTTAFUOCO, 39, celebrity cad; for soliciting sex from an undercover cop; in Los Angeles. Buttafuoco could face six months in jail-plus more time in New York, where he is on probation for the statutory rape of gun-slinging teen Amy Fisher. Said tenaciously patient wife Mary Jo: "My husband is a very friendly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Jun. 5, 1995 | 6/5/1995 | See Source »

...Prince Charles and the Princess of Wales have used the press to court public sympathy and approval. In the meantime, Squidgygate and Camillagate have become part of trendy patois; front-page dramas have been cranked up over crank phone calls; and James Hewitt's confessional has redefined the word cad. Last week the battle reached what may be the climactic point. The Sunday Times printed excerpts from Jonathan Dimbleby's approved biography of the prince, to be published Nov. 3. The author, a distinguished broadcaster and journalist, produced the documentary on Charles shown last summer in which the prince admitted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Charles: The Prince of Wails | 10/31/1994 | See Source »

...386SI. A software driver determines which devices have bean idle of a lecture always looms over your notebook computing life. One solution: Get a notebook that uses nickel hydride (NH) batteries, which on the average have 50% longer life than the more common and lest expensive nickel cadmider (Cad...

Author: By Haibin Hu, | Title: P.C. CORNER | 3/2/1993 | See Source »

...Times of London, also made an unusual, almost romantic appeal for some sympathy for the beleaguered couple. Writing in the Independent, a dead-serious newspaper that makes a point of ignoring the royals when at all possible, he noted, "The Prince of Wales is not a tiresome cad, the Princess of Wales is not a crazy witch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Princess Diana and Prince Charles: Separate Lives | 11/30/1992 | See Source »

...different about them? "Everything," says company spokesperson Svetlana Zavgorodnaya, with characteristically Russian fervor. "New emotions, new aesthetics, a new understanding of life!" Be that as it may, the young singers carry on the company's tradition of close ensemble performance. Vladimir Redkin as Onegin was an appropriately dashing cad. And in Nina Rautio, the Bolshoi presented a Tatiana who could be touchingly lyrical and also break a glass in the uppermost gallery. She carried her scenes triumphantly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can The Bolshoi Adapt to the Times? | 7/8/1991 | See Source »

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