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Word: gospelers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...often multimillionaires who behave like kids with a mean streak of attention deficit disorder. Some are naughty and nuts, like Dennis Rodman, and are rewarded with fat contracts by sneaker companies. Even the best pros display their worth mostly by avoiding trouble. Ali was different; he found a gospel and lived by it, whatever the cost to his reputation or to the job that he so loved. When We Were Kings recalls a time, not so long ago, when an athlete could be a renegade hero, not of the self but of the soul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: LONG LIVE THE KING | 2/17/1997 | See Source »

...adapted to the modern era. Played by Skeet Ulrich, he has done time in the wilderness, suffers the stigmata and can cure the incurable by the laying on of hands. Otherwise, though, he's a cool dude. He likes girls, shows no particular interest in spreading any sort of gospel and turns a politely bemused face toward the hustlers and lowlifes who swarm around when word of his preternatural healing gifts starts to drift out of the rehab center where he has taken refuge. Among his would-be exploiters are a sometime revivalist (Christopher Walken), now reduced to selling used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weekend Entertainment Guide | 2/16/1997 | See Source »

Spencer Perkins and Chris Rice, co-authors of the book "More than Equals: Racial Healing For The Sake of the Gospel," delivered an address last night in Sever Hall stressing the importance of Christian values in achieving racial harmony...

Author: By Paul M. Golaszewski, | Title: Co-Authors Speak on Christianity | 2/15/1997 | See Source »

...adapted to the modern era. Played by Skeet Ulrich, he has done time in the wilderness, suffers the stigmata and can cure the incurable by the laying on of hands. Otherwise, though, he's a cool dude. He likes girls, shows no particular interest in spreading any sort of gospel and turns a politely bemused face toward the hustlers and lowlifes who swarm around when word of his preternatural healing gifts starts to drift out of the rehab center where he has taken refuge. Among his would-be exploiters are a sometime revivalist (Christopher Walken), now reduced to selling used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weekend Entertainment Guide | 2/14/1997 | See Source »

...often multimillionaires who behave like kids with a mean streak of attention deficit disorder. Some are naughty and nuts, like Dennis Rodman, and are rewarded with fat contracts by sneaker companies. Even the best pros display their worth mostly by avoiding trouble. Ali was different; he found a gospel and lived by it, whatever the cost to his reputation or to the job that he so loved. 'When We Were Kings' recalls a time, not so long ago, when an athlete could be a renegade hero, not of the self but of the soul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weekend Entertainment Guide | 2/7/1997 | See Source »

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