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WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1940. Three Flingers’ High Grade Work Make Tribe Rising Power in American League 4+ Win, Lose or Drawfl:e"er Milnar, By FRANCIS E. STAN. Let’s Not Have a Second Fight Gabe Menendez was talking about Phil Purr and Steve Mamakos be- fore they went into the ring the other night. “The best thing that could happen,” said the matchmaker, “would be for thgse guys to put up a whale of a scrap. Then we can rematch ‘'em and put boxing back on its feet.” We trust Mr. Menendez has dismissed the thought now. it was a whale of a scrap depends on how you looked at it. The underdog, Furr, won. and we suppose it could be called a smashing victory. A seventh-round knockout over the fellow who was supposed to be the best local ringman in town. Miller. There were certain theatrics to the battle. from Mamakos' nose and mouth, Whether Blood literally He must have swallowed half of it but there was enough to go around. We saw them take the gloves off his hands at the end. The bandages underneath were crimson from the claret which ran down his helplessly dangling arms and seeped under the A fellow who even fooled an authority like Heinie | | gushed | wrist laces of the gloves. The Greek boy from Southwest ropped on his pants and full on b and into the ropes. close to winning a round. even a fight He never landed a solid blow himself and never came | We don't think it was a whale of a fight. There was something gruesomely dramatic about the way | the American League leaders to im- | was knocked silly six times. He was nis face and once was driven 10 feet Or | Mamakos took his beating but that was all. | Mamakos Isn’t Built to Be It 1s entirely possible that Mr. Menendez and his associates might | the pacemaking Boston Red Sox and make some money with a return bc back to see that same sort of a spectacle. t succumb to a b things. It wou have to bet his share of the purse on his tripe has been used to swell gates in But we doubt if the District B other fight. Not unless Mamakos obviously inferior opposition. And w! try again, anyway? Steve came out of the amateur & howling success because he was t fellow can get along by outroughing Mamakos isn't built to be a fighter in the first place. & weight lifter, with his short, bound arms and shoulders, can't hit it. He didn't always win, but lots of a Boxer There are people who would go There may be others who would | ip designed to dismiss the first fight as one of those to be profound. Mamakos simply could be quoted as saving he had an off night, Manager Matt Twomey could offer bov next time, etc. More elementary the past, oxing Commissicn would permit an- first proved himself against some hileson this subject, why should Steve ranks here. As an amateur he was ough and willing. In that league a the striplings he faces. He looks hke‘ well-proportioned physique and muscle- He nev As a pro he got by for a c er learned to box and, of course, he ouple of vears, too. Steve could take times he did because he discouraged the other fellows who had been exploding punches on his chin. The Case of Tough Joe Grim The case of Mamakos is remini an Ttalian who fought out of Philadel they knew he couldn't unless the opposition was They went to see whether he'd ever get knocked out. boys . .. fights to see him win pretty bad. Joe fought most of the big in their fists. He fought Philadelp! was knocked out. Then he fought down six times in six rounds. At t in the ring and velled: “Bring on Jim Jeffries.” He was tough, Grim was, ashore from the U. hody knocked Joe out. but S. S. Florida and knocked Joe out. scent of a plugeer named Joe Grim, phia. People didn't patronize Grim's the men who carried dynamite a Jack O'Brien a series and never Bob Fitzsimmons, who knocked him he finish Grim turned a handspring ' one night one Sailor Burke came And then every- The concrete in his jaw finally crumbled and stublebums who couldn't have carried Fitzsimmons' water bucket were murdering Grim. Down around the Southwest sector they still are trying to figure what | happened to the neighborhood hero—the fellow who early in his career | was ranked fifth among the world welterweights. harder only take cleaner punches from blinking, too. They recalled that down. And that he got up and won The other night they saw Furr round with a blow that landed on tt air and swing a ballet punch that knocked Steve down. They had seen Steve hitters than Furr. Without even once as a pro was he knocked the fight. punch their boy half silly in the first he ear. They saw Furr leap into the At least half of the knockdowns were by punches that were not on the chin. This would seem to indicate that Steve has taken all of the hard wallops he can stand and that from now on he won't be so hard to whip. Somebody who thinks a lot of the boy might take him aside and tell him to stick to die- camng Bloodworth Pla In the long run he would be more useful. yer Wlth Many | Flaws, Makes Up for Them By Knocking in By BURTON HAWKINS, If you're in a mood for meditation pause to ponder the case of the Nats’ Jimmy Bloodworth, the chesty, strutting second baseman who is pro- | viding the village with fodder for baseball chatter. His weird recerd has the populace muttering in its iced tea Mr. Bloodworth, who never has guffered for lack of complete confi- dence in his ability and who chews probably the most mountainous wad of tobacco in the industry, isn't a polished performer, but he's accept- able enough to have plaved every inning of every game this season. It's no disgrace to Jimmy to label him the worst second baseman in the Jeague, not when such smooth articles as Ray Mack, Benny McCoy. Bobby Doerr, Eric McNair, Don Heffnet and Charley Gehringer are around He won't lay a glove on balls some of the others will field cleanly and no rhapsodies are being written on hiz nimble labor &5 a double play procucer There are many items concerning Bloodworth's play where there room for improvement He is as slow as a crippled cow and his batting average is an amenic .262, but still there is something intriguing about him that has kept Buddy Myer deco- rating the dugout. Jimmy Dangerous in Clutch. Ordinarily a player owning the numerous liabilities of Bloodworth would be branded a failure and shipped to Sqyedunk or points south, but Jimmy possesses an asset which has kept him on the job. He has a | happy habit of delivering at the plate when the chips are down. Jimmy, who has been swinging gixth or seventh in the Washington | batting order, represents a threat despite his lowly average. He is lead- ing the club in swatting home runs and he is second only to Gerald ‘Walker, who has been among the league leaders all season, in the vital matter of driving mates across the plate. ‘Walker, a colorful, reckless player with a heart the size of a water- melon, personally has presented the Nats a half dozen victories with his timely batting, amassing 37 runs| batted in, yet Bloodworth, insignifi- | cant average and all, has thumped | in some 32 runs. It's a tribute to his tenacity that Jimmy has been that successful. By all other standards he ranks as just another ball player, but in the de- livery department he has located a notable niche. He is likelv to go hit- | less for three games and then break out with a cluster of extra-base blows Joe Gordon, | is | Tallies in the fourth, salving the sting of his previous failures. His Confidence an Asset. ‘There is nothing timid in Jimmy's behavior. He has more than a sneaking suspicion he’s good, but that touch of ego hasn’t harmed | him. It's refreshing in a sense be- cause he isn't as likely to become as surly and downcast as most players in a slump. If Jimmy hits less than .280 this season but continues to wallop run- ners home at his present pace the Nats may discover he was a handy guy to have around despite his numerous flaws. Walter Masterson, withheld from action in vesterday’s double-header at Griffith Stadium due to a heavy | cold, was to face Cleveland in the | third tiff of the four-game series today, with Joe Dobson nominated to | toil for the Indians. Washington won the first game, | 7-2, with some concentrated hitting | and the steady pitching of Ken Chase, but couldn’t catch the In- | dians in the nightcap and lost 3-2. Nats Swat Six Straight Hits. Trailing 0-1 entering their half | of the fourth inning. the Nats linked | six successive hits to produce five | runs. | out and Bloodworth, Jimmy Pofahl, | | Chase, George Case and Buddy‘ Lewis followed with singles. Johnny Welaj, who stole 1hree‘ bases in the first game, proyided | | the fielding feature of the setond | | when he streaked back to the flag- | pole in center field for a one-handed stab of Mack's lengthy wallop lead- ing off in the fourth inning. By that time, though, the Indians had nicked Joe Haynes for three runs, all unearned due to errors by Case and Bloodworth, and Al Smith clung to the advantage. Smith, who yielded the Nats’ | first run in the eighth on Walker’s double and a brace of infield outs, was reached for another run in the | ninth on Case’s single, Shortstop t Lou Boudreaw's wild throw and Lewis’ single and retired with two out in favor of the famed Bobby Feller. Bob pitched only to Welaj, who forced Lewis at second to end | the game. | Kentucky Honors Haskell Paul Haskell, former Eastern High athlete and a consistent point- winner for Kentucky's track forces, has been elected alternate captain of the 1941 squad. He is a middle- distance runner. Smith Hold Fine Pace Kuhel Raps 2 Homers As White Sox Turn Breaks on Yanks By JUDSON BAILEY, Associated Press Sports Writer. | As long as every one is certain | | tife New York Yankees are going | | straight to their fifth consecutive | American League pennant, it may | seem time wasted to consider Cleve- land’s improved Indians. But a team with all the sterling qualmr: of the Tribe deserves to get a word in edgewise. | Cleveland was the only gne of prove its position yesterday, splitting a double-header with Washington, 2-7 and 3-2. This mediocre feat | brought them within half a game of perhaps served as a hint of a rising power in the junior circuit. The tipoff on the Tribe's position lies in the record of their pitchers. | Lefty Al Smith, rescued from the minors this spring, got credit for the victory in the nightcap to bring | his chart to five victories and no defeats. Al Milnar, another left- hander, has won 7 and lost 1. Bob Feller, the nonpareil, has won 8 and lost 2. Match Red Sox in Slugging. Not even the Cincinnati Reds, supposedly with the best balanced | pitching staff in the majors, can offer three such topnotch marks And pitching may mean the dif- ference between Cleveland and Bos- ton. The Red Sox are renowned sluggers. But the Indians are match- ing them. The combination of Lou Boudreau and Ray Mack is nothing short of miraculous, and Rollie Hemsley has settled down to be one of the best catchers in baseball. The Red Sox were stopped, 5-3, as the St. Louis Browns ended a 7- game losing streak. Jimmie Foxx, who had | made only a single the day before, | went hitless, although Boston got 10 off Elden Auker, three more than the Browns. The Yankees' parade was de- toured by the lefthanded slants of | Chicago’s Ed Smith and a 12-hit| onslaught topped by Joe Kuhel's | 10th and 11th homers of the season. | The score was 7-3. | ‘The third-place Detroit Tigers also | were stopped, 8-6, at Philadelphia after getting four runs in the first| frame. The A's hopped on Tommy | Bridges and three successors for clusters of runs, among them homers by Bob Johnson and Wally Moses. Dodgers Gain on Reds. | The Cincinnati Reds skidded to a 5-4 defeat at the hands of the New York Giants and lost a game of their lead over the Brooklyn Dodgers. It was the fifth consecutive triumph for Carl Hubbell. The Giants gave their “meal ticket” a 3-run start in the first inning and he| managed to keep in front, although giving 11 hits. The Dodgers trounced the St. Louis Cardinals, 10-1, in a night game, scoring five runs in the first, | when Pete Coscarart hit a home run | | with two on. Vito Tamulis went the route expertly, although Joe Medwick hit “five for five,” including three doubles. The Pittsburgh Pirates roused out of their lethargy under the lights to crush the Boston Bees, 14-2, be- | hind the five-hit hurling of Joe| Bowman. | The Chicago Cubs amassed 15 hits in thumping the Phillies, 12-6. They took a 6-0 lead and after| this Was squandered by Vance Page and Ken Raffensberger, managed to bunch three more runs in both the seventh and eighth 1nnmgs Monlrea| Bolstered ‘ By Dodgers, Seems "Ready fo Climb | By the Associated Press. | The Montreal Royals, studded | with farmer major league players | | sent down by the Brooklyn Dodgers, really have been playing big league | | ball the last few days, In fact, they couldn’t have done better if Larry | McPhail himself had been watching them. McPhail, president of the Dodg-| ers, has gone to great pains to im- | prove the Royals, and it's beginning Ben to look at though his efforts wer bearing fruit. The Royals have been bogged | Jake Early drilled a double | dOWn in the second division since | Fgrqer. ! May 8, and although they're still | ries. 1; to right after Zeke Bonura grounded | below the 500 mark, at the rate|OR they've been '.rnvehng lately, it won't be long until they're knock- ing at the door of the first division | Keahey, Ex-G. W. | Player,' Signs With Giants NEW YORK, June 5—Duce Kea- hey, 215-pound tackle. has sent in his signed contract to the New York Football Giants. Last fall Keahey was voted the | most valuable player on the George b ‘Washington University eleven. Lesnevich-Conn Fight Data By the Associated Press. DETROIT. June 5_—Statlatigs on the two pricipals in tonight's 15-round light-heavyweight champlonship ~fent at Olympia Stadium: Billy Conn. Gus Lesnevich, 4 | pitcher—] UPSETTER SIGNS UP! THEY SHO 1S MAKIN' TENNIS BALLSAYENDER THE POWERFUL VIRGINIAN pPUTS EVERY OUNCE OF HIS 6-FT.4-IN FRAME BEHIND HIS TERRIFIC SERVE,.,.. B GARNETT.... THE BIG BADMAN OF D.C. COURT CIRCLES... HAS RXTURNED AFTER A 2 YEAR LAYOFF B TAKE PART (N THE CITY OF WASHINGTON TOURNEY STARTING SATURDAY AT EDGEMOOR...... HIS ENTRY PUTS COLOR IN THE MATCHES.., AND FEAR (N ToP FLIGHT FAVORITES.. —By JIM BERRYMAN ———— THE 225 - POUNDER DOESN'T OBJECT T A STRENUOUS TYPE OF TENNIS.... WIMMIN AN’ CNILDREN B(G BILL'S LAST SERIOUS AET e APPEARANCE, W 1937, ELIMINATED 3 OF THIS SAME EVENTS HIGHEST- SEEDED PLAYERS.... —c Paychek and Allen Lacking in Punch, 'May Go Limit ‘ Fight Is Johnny’s First Since Kayo by Louis Two Months Ago ne Associated Press CH’ICAGO June 5 —Heavyweight Johnny Paychek of Des Moines has heen kayoed only once in his career, but he got more headlines out of that one incident than out of all his other fights combined Tonight Pavchek makes his first nnz appearance on the comeback | trail—his first effort to redeem him- tel( since Champion Joe Louis flat- !tened him in the second round two months %go. His opponent, Chicago Negro, % — Altus Allen, young Conn, Coin Main Goal, Turning To Heavy Ranks After Bout With Lesnevich By the Associated Press. | DETROIT, June 5—It's no secret | that heavyweights pay the biggest income taxes among the boxers. That's the principal reason Billy Conn, a 22-year-old Pittsburgh Irish- man whn prefers donnrs w a mle Official Scores FIRST GAME. CLEVELAND, Boudreau. ss Weatherly, cf. Bell. rf. Trosky. 1b. Heath. 1 Peters 1b. Mack, 2b." - iciomiom B scussomaRI=D Naymick p. fHemsley Zuber. p. Totals Batted for Humphries in sixth. Batted for Naymick in eighth. WASHINGTON. AB.R. H gase. 11 Welni: et Walker.if, - Bonura. 1b. Early c Bloodworth, | Potah [ oty o Totals Cleveland Washington Runs _batted iz 000 511 00x—7 | in—Pytlak. Bloodworth, Chase (2), Case. Wela). Walker. Heath. ura Twoobase hits—Eariy, Weatherls: | —Bloodworth. ' Stolen bases | Lewis. Sacrifice—Harder. Pofahl to Bloodworth 1t _on_ bases—Cleveland. 12 Wathinton 1o R Sase on eik—Off Chase. 5: off Humphries. 2 Struck out—By Humph- Harder. 9 in 34 innings: off Humph- ries. 2 in 1% innings: off Naymick, 3 in (nnmn off Zuber. i in 1 inning. Wild Bit ches—Harder, Chlu Naymick. Losing arder. SECOND GAME, CLEVELAND. AB. Boudreau, ss. Campbell, cf. BRIl == 2 ETFN TS Sormassom otsmmonmmol commsiSwm0 SRDRNDHDDRD oosmmsoso=M Totals WASHINGTON. o £ Bhvodworth, 26 Pofahl. ss. Ferrell, c. Haynes. p. *Gelbert Monteagudo, p. _ tEvans > | sososmormng © cosesssomcamy B cosommesrarug ¥ | omcomwnosswsy Totals = *Batted for Haynes in seventh. tBatted for Monteagudo in ninth, Cleveland 120 000 000—3 Washington 000 000 011—2 o Rung batted in—Trosky. Smith, Boud- s. Two-base hits— Walker. ' Double _play—Lewis to Left on bases— 0. Pirst ba: off ' Haynes, y_Haynes, Hits-—Off Haynes. & in 7 innings: off Mobteagudo. 1 in"® innings; off Bmith 11 in &% mnings: o Feller. 0 inning._Winning _pitcher—8mith. t » 3 - 9 by Monieagudo, 1. {1y and appears destined to grow into la full-fledged heavyweight. | feared the fight might wind up as mpires—Messrs. Time— lfi'fi“fi” gltcher—sa turned pro several months after winning the light- heavy championship in the inter- national Golden Gloves matches in 1939. The battle is set for 10 rounds in the Coliseum. Paychek, like Allen, got his ama- teur training in Golden Gloves com- petition, in which he won the heavy- weight title. The fight figures to go the distance, since neither fighter is known as a hard hitter, although both have shown flashes of sharp boxing ability. Paychek should have about a four- pound advantage on Allen. The battle, last indoor show of Conn, who climbed to the cham- the season, is expected to draw close pionship only 11 months ago, meets to $7, 000 a man he has alreadv conquered— Gus Lesnevich of Cliffside Park. N.J. They fight over the 15-round route at Olympia indoor stadium and Co-promoters Mike Jacobs and John Nelson talk of a turnout of 10,000 customers and gate receipts of around $35,000. The threat of con- tinued hot weather caused the pro- moters to revise downward their original estimate of a $50,000 gate. Growing Heavier Steadily. The charm of coin is not Conn’s only reason for quitting as the 15th light-heavyweight champion in his- ! tory. In recent months the 6 foot 1 inch battler has filled out physical- Tonight will make his third detense of the 175-pound championship tonight his last. Hereafter, Conn says, he will campaign among the big boys for better or for worse. League Leaders Br the Associated Press. AMERICAN LEAGUE Ba: thg—Pinney, Runs—Case. Wash Phi ldv‘lnf‘ A, R\lr‘\! b"n»uPd 73 50 wil- Moses. Boston. 44 hington. and Trosky Chicago. Bosion. (" Doubles—Greenberg Mack and Boudreau Cleveland, Triples—Kreevich. — Chicago: _ Moses, Philadeiphia. and_Finney, Boston, 8. Home runs—Foxx. Boston, and Trosky, Cleveland, 13 Stolen bases—Case. Washington. 14: Waiker, Washington. 7 Pitching—Smith. Cleveland. 5—0; Milnar, Cleveland. 7—1. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Danning. Lombardi. Cincinnati. Runs—Frey, uis, 30 62 Cramer, 14; Detroit. 5 13 The ballyhoo for tonight's fight has been concerned not with the engagement at hand but with the possibility of a bout between either | Conn or Lesnevich and Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis in Detroit in September. In fact the publicity about Conn growing up became so heavy that' John J. Hettche, chairman of the Michigan Boxing = Commission, ins— Cincinnat Mize. St. Rups batted in_Danning. New York, AR: Leiber, ChicAzo, 34 nd F. McCor- Dobiee R MeCormick and_Werber. Cincinnatl. and Medwick, St. Louis. Triples—Ross. Boston, #: Vaughan. Pittsburgh, f‘nm|ll| Brooklyn, and Gleeson. Chicago. ey wtki\ Louis, 14: Dan- s 9 York. TODAY BASEBALL 2%, Washington vs. Cleveland AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK | Tqmonowrclevelandfi}fi_&m. Cmcn;ml!l an overweight match and insisted upon each battler postine a $2.500 weight guarantee bond. They weigh in at 1 pm. (E. S. T), and train- ers of champion and challenger say their men will scale under the 175- pound limit. Following Lead of Others. Conn will not be the first light- heavyweight to quit his title for competition among the heavy-| weights, but precedent is against his chances for success. Georges Carpentier, Jack Delaney and Tommy Loughran are among | the men who found the heavy-| weight division no soft touch after | mopping up in their own class.. Conn, who won the title from Melio Bettina last July 13, came with a rush in the closine rounds | to beat Lesnevich in New York last | November 17. At that time Les- | nevich had not fought for nearly six months, and his followers blamed | s R | his defeat on lack of endurance and sense of pace. Both Conn and Lesnevich hnve fought but once this year. Gus mad his Detroit debut on January 1 by winning a hair-line decision from Dave Clark, Detroit Negro. Conn won an overweight match from Henry Cooper at New York on January 10. The fighters will enter the ring at 9:30 pm, (E. 8. T). CHELSER CIGARETTES 5 24 BETTER CIGARETTES ’5¢ CHELSER Net Excitement Due as Garnett Enters Lists Sensation of 3 Years Ago Back in Evening Star Tournament By BILL DISMER, Jr. Indications of another tennis sen- }sauon such as he caused in The Star’s tournament three years ago appeared today with the receipt of | the entry of Yelverton (Bill) Garnett in the City of Washington cham- pionships starting Saturday at Edge- moor Club, | Garnett, it will be remembered. is | the 6-footer plus with the terrific service who, on successive days, whipped three of the 1937 tourney's highest-seeded players to set the stage for a memorable final wiih Barney Welsh. But, following one other tourney in that season, Garnett dropped out of the local net picture entirely. study at the University of Virginia and travel having prevented him from being in Washington during the tennis seasons of ensuing years. Now Weighs 225 Pounds. Now. he’s back—some 40 pounds heavier at 225, looking an inch taller and a settled, married man working on a newspaper. Naturally. he's not playing as much tennis as he was in those carefree student days, but he’s been working out regularly at Chevy Chase Club and wasn't exactly lost in a doubles match with Don Budge, Dan Watson (the Chevy Chase pro) and Charley Sturtevant in an exhibition here a month or 50 ago. Because h¢ never has been ranked locally as a senior plaver, Garnett probably will be unseeded when the draw is made tomorrow night. which may result in a match between him and one of the favorites in the opening rounds. If he gets a good break in the draw. i. e. if he isn't called upon to meet an opponent of Welsh's caliber in the early go- ing, he mav repeat his feats of three vears back. At that time Walsh was the only one in the city who could beat him. for he demonstrated his class by licking Ralph McElvenny, Dooly Mitchell and Lt. John McCue—then three of the District's best—in as many days. Looking even stronger today. Garnett may have the stam- | ina to crash through as formidable a fleld again, even though he has been out of local competition for some time. Teams with Buddy Adair. Garnett also has entered the dou- bles competition with Buddy Adair, and because they have plaved to- gether frequently they cannot be dismissed lightly by any potential rivals. Little more than 24 hours remains for contestants to enter the tourna- ment, for the draw will be made at 6 o'clock tomorrow evening at Edge- moor. Entries, with singles fees of $2, should be made before that time either to Strand Johnsen, tournament referee, at Edgemoor or ‘Muior Statistics WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5. 1940. AMERICAN Results Yesterday, Washington, 7—2; Cleveland, 2—3 Chicago, 7: New York. 3. 5: Boston, 3 Bt. Louis, Philadelohia, R; Detroit. #. STANDING OF THE CLUBS 8 wiydEpsud | a3muIg lev. M Washington. - hicago at N_Y. t Louis at Boston Detroit at Phils, NATIONAL Results Yesterday. Cincinnati, 4 Philadelphia. 8 Pitteburgh, 14: Boston. 2 (night Brookiyn. 10: 8t. Louis. 2 (night) STANDING OF THE CLUBS St. Louis at Bost, New York. 5 Chicago. 12 u\n-_)‘ neuupuD purea wjudgpe; 13.620 315" 478 0 ¢ 31420 412111 = lals GAMES TOMORROW. ) Brooklvn at 8t Phila at Chicago Boston. at Pitts ot hetr not scheduled Housion Slab Rookie Beats 45-Year Mark With 12th in Row By the Associated P:ess DALLAS, June 5—Howard Pol- lett, sensational 18-year-old Hous- ton southpaw, won his 12th game of the season last night to break the all-time Texas League record for pitching victories without a defeat, The rookie tumbled Dallas. 4-0, on three hits in a seven-inning windup of a double-header. A Dallas hurled listed only as Huffman set the 1l-victory mark 45 years ago. The league record for consecutive GAMES TODAY N. Y. at Cinc. (night Phila at Chicago Others not scheduled | victories is 19, established by James Patrick (Snipe) Conley of Dallas in 1917. Houston farm is a St. Louis Cardinal to the writer. care of The sports department First-round singles matches will begin Saturdav afternoon. with all- day competition scheduled for Sun- day, when doubles will commence, ‘Women will not start play until a week from Monday. with juniors, boys and girls beginning on June 24, Star HAHN 14th & G Tth & K \ 3212 14th Open evenings “4483 Conn. 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