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ADVANCE FOR USE SUNDAY, FEB. 23, 2014 AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this March 17, 1966 file photo, heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali arrives at a Veterans Administration office in Louisville, Ky. to appeal his 1A draft classification. Behind him wearing a hat is his attorney, Edward Jocko of New York. "I ain't got no quarrel with those Viet Cong," he said, setting off on a path that cost him more than three years of his career and nearly put him in prison. Ali became a symbolic, if unlikely, figure of the anti-war movement, though his mind was always more on resuming his career than furthering the cause. (AP Photo/GS)

ADVANCE FOR USE SUNDAY, FEB. 23, 2014 AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this March 17, 1966 file photo, heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali arrives at a Veterans Administration office in Louisville, Ky. to appeal his 1A draft classification. Behind him wearing a hat is his attorney, Edward Jocko of New York. "I ain't got no quarrel with those Viet Cong," he said, setting off on a path that cost him more than three years of his career and nearly put him in prison. Ali became a symbolic, if unlikely, figure of the anti-war movement, though his mind was always more on resuming his career than furthering the cause. (AP Photo/GS)

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