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The stars aligned: Cassius Clay (not yet Muhammad Ali) and the Beatles (in Miami Beach in 1964) would soon ride a tsunami of fame. Harry Benson The Beatles were furious. They were standing in the ...
In the '60s and '70s, photographer Terry O'Neill was on the front line of fame, photographing music giants like the Beatles ... he was Cassius Clay, an Olympic champion boxer full of pride ...
Likewise, Tom Wolfe, in his seminal 1963 Esquire article, palled around with Cassius Clay, not Muhammad Ali ... and was secretly replaced by the other Beatles, a conspiracy hinted at in ...
Likewise, Tom Wolfe, in his seminal 1963 Esquire article, palled around with Cassius Clay, not Muhammad Ali ... and was secretly replaced by the other Beatles, a conspiracy hinted at in ...
Watching world-class Irish Olympians competing over two weeks in Paris during the summer, I cast my mind back to the games ...
World heavyweight champion Mohammed Ali, formerly Cassius Clay, is interviewed by a reporter in front of the United Nations with his brother, Rudolph Valentino Clay, Black Muslim leader Malcolm X ...
Cassius Clay was a towering young braggart, but as much as he used his mouth, the real music was in his hands. In January of 1964 he hadn’t done much worth talking about yet in professional ...
A Crack in the Chin of Cassius Clay: In the sport of MMA, the durable boxer Collard had only once before been finished with strikes. Max Holloway outdueled him over a decade ago at UFC Fight Night 49.
I remember when Ali, then Cassius Clay, won the heavyweight boxing gold medal at the 1960 Olympics, but he grabbed my attention more after he changed his name and became a contender for the ...
During those years he served as President of the Union and went to New York for convention and even shook hands with Cassius Clay. He and Gladys were members of the American Legion Montgomery ...