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Word: alie (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Greatest is at its best when Ali has others, and himself, analysing and talking about Ali. Ali is clearly very conscious of his media image, of a loud-mouth braggart, sadist (particularly after the Floyd Patterson bouts), and racist white hater. Ali wants to present himself in another light, to offer the public the "real" Ali. He tells us of his early sex life, and his flubbing of a chance with a hooker when he was 16 because he didn't know what to do. He dwells on his shyness with women (a shyness which one suspects still exists). There...

Author: By Andy Quigley, | Title: Winner and Still Champ | 12/3/1975 | See Source »

...humorous aspects of The Greatest are only momentary interludes, interspersed with what for the most part is a non-joking Ali who is talking straight from his heart. He tells us what it was like growing up in a poor black family living in the slums of a big city, barely able to feed himself. He talks a lot about his respect for and devotion to his parents and family. His reminiscences of his childhood days in Sunday School and roaming the streets are emotional and effective...

Author: By Andy Quigley, | Title: Winner and Still Champ | 12/3/1975 | See Source »

...Ali talks affectionately not only about his own children, but also about the children of the men he defeated, and the anguish it brought him to see the pained expression on their faces at ringside as he was beating their fathers' faces in. "Children are a special love in the life of a heavyweight champion. They have a way of making him know what love is." Ali also allows his first wife to include her story as to why their marriage broke up. The Ali we get from her narrative is an often immature, single-minded, tyrannical husband...

Author: By Andy Quigley, | Title: Winner and Still Champ | 12/3/1975 | See Source »

...book also contains some tense, dramatic episodes, for instance, how Ali came to throw his gold medal into the Ohio River. He had been refused a hamburger in a whites only restaurant, shortly after his triumphant homecoming to Louisville, and then was attacked by a band of Naziinsignia-bearing motorcycle hoods who demanded that Ali give them the medal. Ali fought them off, but the whole experience finally sealed his disillusionment with white America...

Author: By Andy Quigley, | Title: Winner and Still Champ | 12/3/1975 | See Source »

...primary reason that The Greatest comes off so well is the style with which Ali tells his story. From his Class Day speech last year and his news conference a few weeks ago, Harvard students are familiar with the boyish, disarming nature of Ali, the kind of innocence cum street smartness that allowed him to utter the simple yet profound statement that "I got no quarrel with them Viet Cong." Ali is able to put this style into his writing as well...

Author: By Andy Quigley, | Title: Winner and Still Champ | 12/3/1975 | See Source »

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