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St. Louis Magazine - April, 2008
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In This Issue

Features

Flashback - 1964 Because We Know How to Get the Blood Pumping We Love Baseball The Provocateur Because We Can Claim These Guys as Our Own The Numbers Game Because Marcus Townsend Won't Let Inner-City Baseball Die Foul Ball Because Without Us, They'd Probably Still Be Playing Barehanded Because We've Got the Best Blog Our Hallowed Ground The Wal-Mart Effect Neighborhood As Universe The Next Neighborhoods? Greener Acres Road to Recovered Gravity & Grace

Departments

Reflections in Flint Mamas, Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Horsemen Symptom Addict A Kick in the Head A Major League Decision Simon Says Rock Flex Time Upwardly Mobile How Suite It Is The King of String The Fast and the Fearful Q&A: Simon Doonan A Family Affair Things We Love Manhattan Mysteries The Splendid Mr. Douthit The House That Art Built Little Bosnia The Naked Goose Kitchen Q&A - Brendan Noonan Liquid Assets - Gin Goes Back to the Future Frugal Foodie - Zaytoon First Look - Skybox Review - F15teen A Conversation with Zach Smith
2008.07.01 - Awesome Amphibians
Frogs, toads, snakes, lizards, newts, salamanders and caecilians, oh my!...
2008.07.01 - Dan Flavin: Constructed Light
Late minimalist sculptor built his works from mass-produced light fixtures,...
2008.07.01 - Dinosaurs Alive!
Large-format movie about the giant reptiles that once ruled the earth.SAINT...
2008.07.01 - Flight City: St. Louis Takes to the Air
History of the aerospace industry in St. Louis documented by photos, oral...
2008.07.01 - From Kettle to Keg
A historical look at how St. Louis became a brewery town, from John Coons'...

The King of String

The King of String
Photograph by Frank Di Piazza

Yo-yo master Kevin Eulalia is in it to spin it this month

By Maud Kelly

Wanna know how to do a laceration? (It’s not what you think.) Snap your yo-yo super­fast, whip the string around the thing while it’s in the air, catch the string with your other hand and land the yo-yo on it. Got it? No? Don’t feel bad—it’s a tough move. Kevin Eulalia, 14, “the laceration master of all time,” according to friends Aron Bendet and Jacob Monash, has practiced it for years.

They, and Eulalia, bind, grind and, yes, lacerate on the main stage at the City Museum for four hours every Saturday. They are Team MoYo, and with the state yo-yo championship coming up on April 26, the pressure is on.

MoYo founder Christopher Myers organized this year’s competition. Yo-yoers from as far away as New York will come to compete, and Eulalia is the team’s big hope. At last year’s tournament, he ranked number one in Missouri. His closest competitor is Ian Cole, a 16-year-old from St. Charles who placed number one in a separate, off-string division, but whose point spread put him a hair behind Eulalia in the overall contest.

Eulalia—who practices well over an hour a day, burns through three strings a day and bears a scar on his left cheek from his early yo-yo days—is not afraid. He wraps the yo-yo around his back, flicks it away from himself, runs it up his arm and says with a shrug, “I’ve got some tricks up my sleeve, some moves I haven’t done at the club yet.”