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SUNDAY IN THE PARK

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Since Kirkpatrick’s review of Giroux’s “A Deed of Death” in large measure emphasizes the latter’s “inadequacies,” it seems in order to question the reviewer’s opening sentence/paragraph:

When did streetcars “rattle through Westlake Park”?

In the 1920s and much later, streetcars ran past the swank shops on Seventh Street--the park’s southern boundary. And perhaps past the then quality apartments and hotels on Sixth Street, along the northern edge of the park. I can’t pinpoint them at the moment.

But to my knowledge, in modern times the only street through the park was and is trackless Wilshire Boulevard; the famed motorized thoroughfare extended east through the park many years after the nearby 1922 William Desmond Taylor murder on Alvarado, the park’s eastern boundary.

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How young is the captious Mr. Kirkpatrick--or when did he arrive from elsewhere? I was attending junior high school a little more than a mile south east of Westlake Park in 1922. Even those “nearby orange groves” he included in the opening sentence were something you saw only on a Sunday drive in the country.

JOHN CORNELL

SAN MARINO

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