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Word: kayos (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Gory Camp. Humor is no detriment at all to the third and best play of the triad. An epicene author named Kayo Hathaway (William Young), sleek as a snake and wicked as a weasel, has made a million by turning out reams of gory camp about a Commie-hating little old lady in sneakers and her homicidal gorilla of a son. Granting an interview to a worshipful young fan (Matthew Cowles), Hathaway utters the pomposity: "You get what you give." And that becomes the text for a murder that is as amusing as it is satisfying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Laughing in the Dark | 3/28/1969 | See Source »

...last January, he fired his lawyer, Frances Kahn, because she was a "prosecution spy" and took over his own defense. The detective who arrested him he called a "sadist." Assistant District Attorney Frank Rogers became the "persecutor." Judge Gellinoff was an "animal." Once, while cross-examining a prosecution psychiatrist, Kayo posed an hour-long hypothetical question. "Now, Doctor," he finally concluded, "assuming everything I said to be true, do you have an opinion as to whether District Attorney Rogers is crazy?" Improper, ruled the court wearily. "Why, Judge?" asked Kayo. "Anybody who would try me on these preposterous charges must...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Criminal Justice: Talk Tactics | 4/21/1967 | See Source »

...Deterianation." Gellinoff was patient. But after almost two months of buffoonery, Gellinoff excused the jury from the courtroom. "Now shut up and listen to me," he told Kayo. "You are a faking, lying, scheming, conniving person. I have an open mind as to whether you are guilty, but I want you to know, and I put it in the record, that I think you are sneaky and tricky. I now, on your behalf, move for a mistrial in this case-and deny the motion." Fifteen days later-after a four-hour summation in which Kayo offered to pay jurors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Criminal Justice: Talk Tactics | 4/21/1967 | See Source »

Because of his two previous felony convictions, Hoodlum Konigsberg faced a maximum sentence of 174 years. But Kayo decided to keep on stalling. On the day of the sentencing, he launched into another four-hour speech-this time assaulting the English language along with other targets. "It is because of people like you, Mr. Court," he said to Gellinoff, "that justice has deterianated. It is bringing totarianism here. The court made 49 errors in law, and you foreclosed me in getting a fair trial. I will not kowtail to you or anyone else." Having thus blathered on, he next stood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Criminal Justice: Talk Tactics | 4/21/1967 | See Source »

...took two weeks before that hearing could be taken care of, then another month for a rescheduled sentencing date. But Kayo, apparently, was still talking. According to police and criminal grapevines, he is one of the most important sources of Mafia information now in captivity, and it was he who gave away the location of a gangland graveyard in New Jersey where FBI agents last month found the bodies of two gangland rub-out victims. Last week, Judge Gellinoff finally sentenced him, not to 174 years but to 30 to 44. He still faces trial on twelve counts of contempt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Criminal Justice: Talk Tactics | 4/21/1967 | See Source »

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