Word: boal
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...prophetic Baccalaureate speech in which President Lowell asked "Do we want it (America) to be merely big, prosperous, and comfortable or do we want to have it great in purpose and in moral stature?" Instead the recent years of the depression class of 1929 fit in aptly with Stewart Boal's brief biography: "Very pleasant, Episcopalian, progressive Republican life...
...pound class: Chang (Stoughton) defeated Lichauco (Holworthy), by a fall. Time--3 min., 1 sec. 130-pound class: Boal (Grays). No opponent. 137-pound class: Baker (Wigg. West) defeated Paschal (Lionel), by decision. 147-pound class: Cassidy (Matthews North) defeated Hirsch (Wigg. East), by a fall. Time--4 min., 42 sec. 157-pound class: Schierl (Straus South) defeated Smyth (Matthews North), by decision. 167-pound class: Brown (Lionel) defeated Ball (Straus North), by decision. 177-pound class: Easton (Straus South) defeated Simmons (Straus North), by a fall. Time--3 min., 2 sec. Unlimited class: Templeton (Straus North) defeated Koch (Lionel...
...confused with Mrs. Hunkle, an "old bag" who lives in Sam Boal's column in the New York Post (TIME...
...Hollywood last week, the Old Bag was indeed bringing in the mail. In a recent column, Boal had answered a question he had often been asked: Is Mrs. Hunkle real? Wrote he: "Sure she exists . . . she lives in perhaps 500,000 houses in London or Manchester or Leeds. . . . I didn't invent her. I merely tried to describe...
...weeks, when Mrs. Hunkle has cooed her fill at Hollywood (and Boal has recovered from a London auto accident), he will return with her to England, continue to report the British through the eyes of a charlady he "dreamed up one morning when I had a hangover and didn't want to write anything heavy...