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According to a June 15 statement by guard RalphLambert, who said he witnessed the incidentsupervisor Dino Bavaro told Skillman he could nothave a sweater yet. When Skillman complained thathe was cold, Henaghan, who was wearing a newsweater, asked the guard if he was "some kind offucking idiot...

Author: By Joe Mathews, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Supervisor Had Confrontations With Four Guards | 10/14/1992 | See Source »

Dean Martin did what he wanted -- drink, screw around, play golf, make a bundle -- with little effort and on his own terms. The son of Italian immigrants, Dino Crocetti learned fast the American genius for appropriation. He swiped somebody else's voice, altered his name twice and his nose once, sold 105% of himself to early investors. He took plenty from everyone and didn't give back much but a kind of low-level radiance. He was a gambler, yes, but even more a dealer; it was the trade he plied as a youth in Ohio gambling joints and later...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dealer With A Hot Hand | 8/24/1992 | See Source »

...Martin's is an exemplary American story: how to succeed without really caring. And America loved the ease with which he held an audience, even if he held it in contempt. But is this an exemplary life? Is Dino worthy of Nick Tosches' big, reckless new book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dealer With A Hot Hand | 8/24/1992 | See Source »

...with slight effect, like the gentle baritone rumbling of a distressed stomach. His TV show was flash encircling stupor: the Golddigger chorines did their cooch; the cue-card girl had the script written on her bare midriff. And in the middle, so laid-back as to be supine, was Dino -- on the cutting edge of lumpen-American mediocrity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dealer With A Hot Hand | 8/24/1992 | See Source »

This is just what Tosches, author of a fine biography of Jerry Lee Lewis, sees as crucial in Martin's life: that he was the signal showman of an America that was "fulfilling its destiny as the chrome-crowned glory of post- literate, polyvinyl civilization." Dino was what we wanted and deserved. With the cool of a crooner and the leer of a rocker, he straddled two pop eras. He took the styles others created and filtered them, through the screen door of his nonchalance, for a Middle America avid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dealer With A Hot Hand | 8/24/1992 | See Source »

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