Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 20, 1957, Image 13

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    Did Somebody Forget
To Check Casanova
Bowl Game Records?
San Francisco University
of Oregon has no mere chance
to beat Ohio State in the Rose
Bowl than the proverbial snow
ball in the hot place if you can
believe the pigskin pundits.
The Vebfoots, with a spotty
Over-all record of seven wins
tnd three losses, are supposed to
be the biggest push-over in Rose
Bowl history. Already the gam
blers have made the Buckeyes
19-point favorites.
"Ohio State will win and by
big score," ays Alex Karras,
the All-American lineman from
Iowa.
"West Coast football players
Ju:t aren't as rugged as they
re in the Eig Ten," says Eddie
Sobczak, current San Jose State
baseball coach and former great
Michigan State end.
Casanova Record Impressive
However,, there is the possi
bility that somebody forgot to
look at the Casanova record
and check up on Rose Bowl
upsets.
Len Casanova has made ap
pearances in three bowl games
two as an assistant coach under
Buck Shaw and one as head
coach.
In 1949 he took a Santa Clara
Bronco grid club to the Orange
Bowl against a supposedly-invincible
Kentucky team. The
Broncos were one touchdown
underdogs. Final score: Sania
Clara 21, Kentucky 13.
In 1937 ando1933 he was an
assistant coach on Bronco clubs
that defeated Louisiana State
21-13 and 6-0 in the Sugar bowl.
"You must not overlook the
fact that Oregon has a real solid
ball club," says Coach Tommy
Prothro of Oregon State. "The
Ducks make very few errors.
They won't beat themselves. The
other team will have to beat
them."
Makes Most ot Talent
Casanova is rated as one of
the finest teachers with the tal
ent available in the country. A
few years ago he developed one
of. the top aerial games in the
country when he had the brilli
ant George Shaw as quarterback.
But when he ran out of top
rank passers, he switched to a
running game and the last two
ars his clubs have been the
v
No. 1 rushing teams on the West
Const.
3 In line with Prothro's state
Fans Snap Up
Tickets to Bowl
Pasadena, Calif. OP) Ohio
State may be favored by 20
points over Oregon for the Rose
Bowl game on New Year's Day,
but the fans don't seem to care.
They still want to see the game.
Rose Bowl officials disclosed
Thursday that 3,500 tickets of
fered in a public sale, conducted
by mail for the first time this
year, were snapped up like free
dollar bills.
Remaining ticket requests
were being sent back.
The two schools and the Tour
nament of Roses association
share the balance oi the 100,000
seats in the famous stadium.
U.P. HONORS AARON
Milwaukee (IP Milwaukee
Braves outfielder Hank Aaron
has been named Wisconsin's
"Athlete of the Year" by United
Press radio and newspaper
sports editors. He outpolled
teammates Lew Burdette, War
ren Spahn and Red Schoen
dienst. Club Arranges for
Calls fo Santa Claus
Through arrangements made
by Medf ord Kiwanis club, young
sters of the community may talk
to Santa Claus on the telephone
again this year.
Children wishing Santa to call
htme may drop a letter or post
card to Santa Telephone, Med
ford. Ore. A coupon, which may
be filled out and mailed, has ap
peared in the Mail Tribune but
the request can be made without
the coupon.
The letter or postcard should
) include the name (printed by a
parent), age and telephone num
ber of the child and should desig
nate whether the youngster is a
boy or girl. Children with broth
ers and sisters wishing also to
talk to Santa should include their
names and ages.
Because of his heavy business
t this season, Santa requires
Ifcat calls involving toll charges
1e made collect.
luamsier Locals
Ordered Expelled
Washington OP) The AFL
ZlO ordered its state and city
bodies today to expel Teamster
union locals from membership
at once.
The merged labor federation
also advised its more than 650
state and local groups to oust
locals of the Bakery Workers
and Laundry Workers unless
they conform to AFL-CIO
standards.
All three unions were ex
pelled recently from the AFL
CIO for failing to remove offi
cials charged with corruption.
ment that the Ducks don't beat
themselves, the official Pacific
Coast conference statistics show
that Oregon lost the ball on
fumbles only six times this year,
compared with 13 times for their
opponents.
The Webfoots may get whipped
by the Buckeyes, but don't look
for one of those 49-0 debacles.
Crater Frosh
Nip Ashland
Central Point Denny Ed
wards' three points in the second
overtime last night gave the
Crater high freshmen a 31 to 28
basketball decision over Ashland
at Ashland.
Score was tied at 26-each after
the four regular quarters and 28
all after one extra session. Ed
wards put in a free shot, then a
field goal in the sudden death
overtime. Under the rules first
club to tally two points in a sud
den death period i3 winner.
Three Foul Out
In addition to his vital points
Edwards headed his club with
16 of its 44 rebounds. Crater
dominated the backboarding in
which Ashland got 23 retrieves.
The Comets were handicapped
when they lost Loyal Higin
botham, a top scorer for the
quint, on fouls in the second
quarter and then lost Bryson
LaCasse and Dave Foote on in
fractions later on.
First quarter count was knot
ted at 7 apiece. Crater led at the
half and the game was tied
again 20-30 at the third period
rest.
Coach Don Miller of the
Comet frosh said he is looking
for Dec. 27 and 28 preliminary
game action for his club.
LINE-UPS:
31 Crater Ashland 28
F 9 Foote Blake
F 8 Edwards Crapser 8
C 2 LaCasse Varis 7
G 4 Romine Hamis 11
G 6 Higinbotham Cameron 2
Substitutions For Crater. White 2,
Martin, Alien; for Ashland, Hedges,
Doster.
Is That So?
No animal in America has
been as maligned as the wolf.
Our very language bristles with
misconceptions: "Keep he wolf
from the door," "Lone Wolf,"
"the wolf calls," "cry wolf,"
"wolf in sheep's clothing" and
the term 'wolf" applied to a pred
atory male in human society who
is supposed to prey upon unat
tended females.
Besides this, the wolf sup
posedly is a savage heartless
killer; he falls upon and kills hu
mans at the least provocation;
that he only drinks the blood of
his victims.
Bosh! The wolf is none of
these horrid things: there is yet
to be found an authenticated in
stance in North America of a
wolf making an unprovoked at
tack on a human.
Part of the bad reputation is
our inherited folklore tradition
from the Old World, perpetuated
by such stories as Little Red Rid
ing Hood and more recently
Walt Disney's The Three Little
Pigs.
To be sure, it is not difficult
to understand why people should
fear the wolf: the wolf is not a
beast to be underestimated. He is
highly intelligent comparing fa
vorably with the elephant, horse
or gorilla. And besides, our gray
wolf is a mighty big fellow
weighing up to 175 pounds, and
standing three feet at the shoul
der.
From the Old World, there are
stories of -wolves running in
packs, fiercely cannibal but yet
capable of elaborate co-operation
laying siege to villages and some
times menacing cities. Now it
may be possible that these wolves
many on the plains of Russia
have lost some of their fear and
respect for man by interbreeding
with domestic dogs.
From Coast To Coast
At one time before civilized
man brought in his stock and
drove him off the wolf was
common throughout Europe and
England. In America, he ranged
over the entire country, from
coast to coast, from Mexico to
the Arctic. Today, because there
is a price on his head, he survives
only in wilderness areas and is
well on his way toward extinc
tion. And yet, the wolf is perhaps
the most "model" family as hu
mans look upon the word model
in America. Usually the male
will stay with one mate for life.
He helps her dig the under
ground den, or widen an aban
doned burrow of another ani
mal. He roams abroad great dis
tances to bring his mate and
her young meat. He stands
watch. . .and when an enemy
appears attracts attention to him
self to draw it off. He helps train
the young to hunt. . .and once
they are weaned, the family
hunts together.
As for drinking the blood of
its victims, that is nonsense. . .as
Poison Oak?
Try a Bottle of ZEMACOL
You must be satisfied or your money
cheerfully refunded. Get a bottle to
day at WESTERN THRIFT.
PORTS
Dons Clash
In Kentucky
Tournament
By UNITED PRESS
The University of San Fran
cisco a 50-49 upset victim at the
hands of Stanford which wasn't
figured to go very far thi3 sea
son, tries to get back on the
rails tonight at the Blue Grass
tournament in Louisville, Ky.
Coach Phil Woolpert's Dons
will open against Seattle in a
tourney that embraces the host
ing Cardinals, and Army.
Seattle and San Francisco are
only a few of the West Coast
teams which have hit the road
for a final shakedown before
plunging into January's activi
ties. Stanford is in the Rockies for
games at Utah tonight followed
by titlts with Denver and Colo
rado Saturday and Monday.
California battles Kansas State
tonight, Kansas Saturday and
then leaves with Seattle for the
Holiday Festival next weekend
in New York,
UCLA at Bradley
UCLA, which was scorched
by Wichita on Wednesday night
83-68 is at tough Bradley to
night. St. Mary's, which upset Evans
ville Monday to highlight a
tough road trip, dropped a 79
66 decision to Indiana Thursday
night and next meets Washing
ton of St. Louis on Saturday.
Oregon State visits Iowa
Saturday afternoon and Indiana
Monday night before going home
to host the Far West Classic Dec.
27-28. Oregon plays at Brigham
Young Saturday and Monday.
Washington and Washington
State also are on the road. The
Huskies play at Kansas tonight
and Kansas State Saturday
night. Washington State is at
Utah Saturday and Monday.
Southern California is at Ari
zona Saturday. The Trojans won
a 62-63 victory from Arizona
State (Tempe) Thursday night.
By EUGENE BURNS
Ranger-Naturalist
are such other myths that he
fills his belly with mud when
starving, or that he can sustain
life by sucking his forepaws.
Actually, he is a good hunter.
Usually he operates in small
family packs. (Those fierce hundred-wolf
packs are fiction.)
Such a pack will pursue deer,
mountain sheep, caribou and
moose, slaughtering the sick,
aged and calves which lag be
hind. In doing so, the weak and
diseased are ruthlessly weeded
out of the herd and the herd ben
efits. In settled districts, he may
prey on domestic stock but more
often he feeds on smaller game
such as rabbits and rodents.
Oftentimes, because his range is
extensive, he may have only one
single meal a week but that
one may be one-fifth of his own
weight.
(Copyright, 1957, by Eugene
Burns Released by McClure
Newspaper Syndicate)
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the deader who sends me the
best true-life nature adventure,
the best nature observation, or
the best question on nature and
wildlife, a complete 30-volume
set of this world-famous refer
ence vork in a handsome Seal
craft binding. Each week new
submissions will be considered.
Sorry, I simply can't answer
your many friendly letters.
Please address your letter to: Is
That So! co Medford Mail Trib
une, Box 575, Sausalito, Calif.
Drug Use in Narcotic
Cases Being Studied
Portland (IPl Law enforce'
ment officers met with District
Attorney Leo Smith to discuss
possible use of a drug called
nalline to detect narcotics users.
Smith said the drug was com
paratively new and was first
tested at Lexington, Ky., federal
hospital in 1952. He said it cau
ses withdrawal symptoms when
a minimum dose is injected into
a user.
Smith said he would investi
gate the possibility of handling
use of the drug under supervis
ion of county health authorities.
Under the proposed program,
a user would be placed on par
ole for two years after a "cure"
period. One condition of the
parole would be consent to be
ing given the nalline test when
ever authorities felt it neces
sary. a"7 Builders Supply
QUALITT
BLOCKS
Bricks. Flues,
Drain Tile
727
W. McAndrews
Ph. SP 2-4107
11 ' " 9s JK&&s
LEADING DON SCORERS, Fred LaCour (20) steals ball
from Trojan John Werhas. At left is Mike Farmer, star
University of San Francisco forward. Dons beat Trojans
70-56 at San Francisco Cow Palace. (International)
CRATER LAKE LEAGUE
Standings: W. L.
Timberribb Construction 45 li 22:,j
Your Office Boy 45 23
Mann's Department Store 36',i 31Va
Ellis Market 35 33
Medford Shrine Club 34 "4 33 '2
Modern Plumbing 31 37
Mechanics Laundry 30' i 37 'i
O K Market 29 2 38 'i
U. S. National Bank 29 2 38 i
Dan Patch Company 23 45
Results!
Modern Plumbing 4 (R. Arjpelgate
586) 2558; Patch Co. 0 (H. INewland
488) 2378.
O. K. Mkt. 3 (L. Nelson 618 2572;
Ellis Mkt. 1 (O. Nordstrom 516) 2330.
Timberrib 3 R. Knutson 585) 2525;
Office Bov 1 (W. Meyers 564) 2474.
U. S. Bank 2 (S. Doty 501) 2363;
Mann's Store 1'2 (E. Culbertson 517)
2346.
Shrine Club 2 (R. Rice 513) 2405;
Mechanics Lndry. 2 (R. Speer 533)
2353.
ELK'S LEAGUE
(END OF FIRST HALF)
Standings: w. L.
Lively Five 48'i 19 'i
PERs 36 32
Gypos - 35 2 32 'i
Cementers 35 33
Go-Boys 33 35
Medics 33 35
Miss-Fitts 32 36
Wallflowers 19 49
Results:
Lively Five 4 (Burroughs 560) 2526;
Go-Boys O (Morgan 576) 2342.
Cementers 3 (McCall 499) 2293;
Gvpos 1 (Chase 462) 2070.
"Medics 4 (Veal 486) 2036; Wallflow
ers 0 (Blavlock 4371 1910.
PERs 3 (Gardiner 539) 2355; Miss
Fitts 1 (Sloniger 485) 2334.
(Second half will start January 8.
1958)
EVERGREEN LEAGUE
Standings: W. L.
Seven Up Bottling Co 15 9
Medford Corporation 14 10
Big Y Market 14 10
Chuck's Pump Service 13 11
Medford Steel Co 13 11
Safewav Stores 13 11
Barco Supply Co 12 12
Medford Plaza Apts 12 12
Tru Mix Construction Co 11 13
Picard's Jewelers 11 13
Singler's Auto Supply 10 14
Medford Blowpipe Co 6 18
Results:
Medford Steel 3 (Gardner 513) 2,395;
Seven Up 1 (Pevton 517) 2.301.
Singler's 3 (Bohannon 505) 2,428;
Blowpipe 1 (Curley 552) 2.365.
Safeway 1 (Tyler 558) 2,206; Medco
3 (Haugen 579) 2,320.
Plaza 3 (Trout 492) 2,363; Barco 1
(Judv 486) 2.257.
Big Y 3 (McQuat 549) 2.414; Picard's
1 (G. Picard 514) 2.352.
Tru Mix 3 (Baize 509) 2,282; Chuck's
1 (Couch 469) 2,201.
CITY LEAGUE
Standings: W. L.
Norton Lumber Co 13 , 7
State Farm Insurance 13 7
Westside Merchants 13 7
Southern Oregon Moulding .. 10 10
Medford Barbers 10 10
Weter & Olson 10 10
Ross Lumber Co 10 10
Central Market 10 10
California Oregon Power Co. 9 11
Telephone Employees Assn... 8 12
First National Bank 7 13
Daugherty Lumber Co 7 13
Results:
TEAA 1 (Rickman 472) 2,220; Copco
3 (Rolls 500i 2,262.
Central Mkt. 4 (Schulz 566) 2,467;
S. O. Mldg. 0 (Knapp 494) 2.281.
Ross Lbr. 3 (Culv 501) 2,360; Bar
bers 1 (Speer 552) 2.349.
State Farm 1 (Fischer 547) 2,377;
Daugherty 3 (Ball 534) 2.404.
F N B 0 (Dimick 513) 2,284; West
side 4 (Blind 563) 2,358.
W & O 2 (Webster 511) 2.400; Nor
ton 2 (Olsen 584) 2.377.
EMPIRE LEAGUE
Standings: W. L.
Winnie's Style Salon 38 18
Nu Wav Cleans 36 20
Hillver Oil Co 33 23
Western Thrift Drug 32 24
The Village Dairv Smith 27 29
West Main Rent All 26 "2 29i2
Virginia's Big Y Beauty 26 30
Jewel House 22 'i 332
Skinner's Buick 22 34
Hoppe's Florist 17 39
Results:
Western Thrift J (Helen Paulson
143-413) 1218: Jewel House 3'2 (Pat
Braach 154-458) 1304.
Winnie's 4 (Jackie Wilson 172-447)
1302; Virginia's 0 (Bernice Hazlett 157
437) 1213.
Hillver Oil 3 (Lee Neely 159-431)
1241; Hoppe's 1 (Ruby Edmonds 145
401) 1108.
Nu-Wav 3 (Virginia Wilson 164-456)
1219; West Main 1 (Norma Larson 169
416) 1169.
Dairy Smith 3 (Ann Wilson 148-434)
1159; Skinner's 1 (Wanda Booth 146
415) 1132.
High game Jackie Wilson 172; High
series Pat Braach 458.
Split conversions Maxine Janzen
2- 7; Wanda Booth 4-5; Helen Frye
3- 9-10: Bea Mathews 5-5-10; Ann
Rodgers 2-8-7.
retif'iaHin WestTnrh
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE
Standings: W. L.
Courtesy Chevrolet 42 14
Andv's Jewelers 39 21
Communications Workers of
America '. 38 22
Timber Products 36 24
E. H. Mann Co 27 33
. ..TO ONE AND ALL
And Don't Forget!
John Deere
Day
January 7th
ubbard-Wray Co.
25 South Riverside
Friday, December 20, 1957
Sport
Parade
New York (in Fraley's Fol
lies and absolutely the final
football selections of the year
the bowl game "winners" which
will prove, if you bet on 'em,
that it is better to give than to
receive.
Without further ado, or even
any more nonsense, here they
are:
Rose Bowl Ohio State over
Oregon.
Sugar Bowl Texas over Mis
sissippi. Cotton Bowl Navy over
Rice.
Orange Bowl Oklahoma over
Duke.
Gator Bowl Texas Aggies
over Tennessee.
Game by game, it shapes up
this way:
Rose Bowl
Coach Woody Hayes of Ohio
State is acting like a man with
the seven year itch who bites
his fingernails. A man who calls
a shovel a gol-durned spade, he
talked himself into a mess on
the coast a couple of years back
and nobody has forgotten or
forgiven. Including Woody.
The insinuation was that
Western teams didn't make it
smell like a Rose Bowl and,
to prove it again, Woody is in
sisting that his muscular ' mar
vels kick the attar out of poor
little Oregon. Ohio State is a
17 point choice or maybe the
word "cherce" now is more ac
ceptable in the Los Angeles area
and it is doubtful if Hayes
will settle for less.
Oregon lost three games by
a total of only 13 points and a
good defense may hold down
the score for the first three
quarters. But watch those Buck
eyes run in the final heat after
crunching the resistance out of
Oregon for the first 45 minutes.
Sugar Bowl
This is a game which proves
that education really has sur
vived in college, even for foot
ball players. Texas got off slow
ly because it is loaded with
sophomores. The pore li'l fellers
had to learn and did. Their
late surge gave them all A's in
first aid. Ole Miss is faster than
a blue tick hound surprised by
a pair of coons. Seven former
backs make the line as mobile
as a Sherman tank and there
are three 10-second sprinters in
the backfield. But I got to go
for education in a pick 'em ball
game.
Cotton Bowl
This Navy team hits like a
bunch of grogged-up gobs in an
Arch St. saloon. Rice has a
diversified attack but the Mid
dies figure to handle it with a
"jitterbug" defense which is
really something to see.
There ought to be a law against
guys like that Reifsnyder. The
opposition could wind up in the
stands and somebody might get
hurt. Navy is only a two-point
favorite yet from here it looks
like money in the bank from
San Diego to Singapore.
Orange Bowl
Oklahoma loses a ball game,
after chalking up 47 in a row,
and right away they're a bunch
of stiffs. Notre Dame's line
played a whale of a game to
pull off that miracle and Duke
has a forward wall which won't
take sass from anybody.
But I'd sooner bet on the
Cove Valley Supply 26 34
Table Rock Lumber 24 't 35 ',4
Mid-Coast Painters 22 38
Hughs and Dodd 22 38
Ideal Cement 20 ',i 39,i
Results:
Hughs and Dodd 2 (John Kantor
500) 2677; Ideal 2 (Frank Matthews
421) 2673.
Cove Valley 1 (Ted Jantzer 561)
2271- C.W.A. 3 (Lyle Brown 480) 2301.
Mann Co. 1 (Jim Morgan 563) 2702;
Timber Products 3 (Willie Anderson
500) 2808.
Mid-Coast 2 (Charlie Redding 513)
2610; Andy's 2 (Ralph 470) 2576.
Medford
MEDFORD (OREGON)
By
OSCAR FRALEY
Sports Writer
United Press
Sooners than the Blue Devils,
being the angelic type, anyhow.
Oklahoma could win it big. yet
I'm inclined to back off from
that 11-point spread.
Gator Bowl
"They look to be a couple of
touchdowns better than we are,"
moans Bear Bryant, whose Ag
gies are 6V point favorites.
Tennessee is light but has
good punting. However, Johnny
Crow figures to run it back far
enough and often enough to take
it all.
Brother, can you spare a dime?
HOCKEY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
By United Press
It didn't take Jack Mclntyre
long to prove he belongs with
the Detroit Red Wings.
Obtained earlier this week in
an eight-player trade' with the
Chicago Black Hawks, the vet
eran left wing from Brussels,
Ont., rapped in two goals to lead
the Red Wings to a 3-2 victory
over the Toronto Maple Leafs
Thursday night at Detroit.
The Boston Bruins took over
undisputed possession of third
place by deadlocking the New
York Rangers, 3-3, on a 30-foot
shot by defenseman Larry Hill
man in the third period.
Chicago (IP) Rogers Horns
by, seven times the National
League batting champion with
a lifetime batting average of
.358, has signed as chief hitting
instructor and coach with the
Chicago Cubs, Vice President
John Holland announced today.
Snider Undergoes
Knee Surgery
Santa Monica, Calif. OP)
The Los Angeles Dodgers had
good news today about outfield
er Duke Snider.
Snider underwent an opera
tion Thursday at St. John's hos
pital to remove a torn cartilage
from his left knee. Dr. Dan Le-
vinthal, who performed the op
eration, said Snider was in ex'
cellent condition and that the
knee should be as sound as ever
by next spring.
About 77 per cent of all fatal
motor vehicle accidents occur on
straight roads, most of them dry,
during daylight.
Your .
Key to
Gracious
Giving
how the gay golden spiral of the new
Hospitality Bottle matches your holiday mood
. . . adds gift appeal to the
lid flavor appeal of the
never-changing Old Frrz
Bourbon inside! Get it
. . . give it . . . get credit
for being the imaginative
man who knows good N
Bourbon! Same price as
regular fifth.
Regular bottle available in luxury gift wrap. im
Kentucky Straight Bourbon Bonded 100 Proof
STrrZEL-Wnx eb Distdxekt Louisville, Ky., Estab. 1841
MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTE
East Works
On Defense
Santa Clara. Calif. OP) Cen
ter Frank Kuchta of Notre Dame
and quarterback Dave Bourland
and guard Stan Slater of Army
were missing today when East
coach Rip Engle counted noses at
the team's training site.
Engle had the squad practic
ing defensive pass patterns dur
ing Thursday's second worfcout
for the annual Shrine East-WjttC
game.
Archer Seeking
13th Straight-
New York (IP) Welter
weight Jimmy Archer seeks hif
13th straight victory in his firtt
Madison Square Garden maiJ
event tonight against Gale Jttf
win.
Their 10-rounder will be tele
vised and broadcast nationally
by NBC at 10 p.m. EST. O
Each is sandy-haired and each
is 22; but ex-stevedore Archer
of New York is favored at 9-5
over Kerwin of Ottawa, Ont.,
now fighting out of Valley
Stream, N. Y.
Archer is favored because of
his aggressiveness and his win
ning momentum.
Doctor Loses Claim
To Fluoridation Harm
Olympia (IPi Dr. Frederick
B. Exner, Seattle, who tried to
claim a $1000 reward for prov
ing harmful effects through flu
oridation of drinking water, lost
his case Thursday in the stat
supreme court.
The court upheld dismissal
by Judge John L. Langer.bach
in Lewis county superior court
of a lawsuit brought by Exner
against the Chehalis fluorida
tion league and 13 Chehalis
couples.
The doctor said the league
in a handbill circulated in 1955
offered the reward to anyone
who could prove any harmful
effects of fluoridation in the ra
tio of 1,000,000-to-l. He offered
evidence purporting proof.
In upholding the judgment
the supreme court said in a
brief two-page opinion: "Our re
view of the record convinces u
that the evidence does not pre
ponderate in the favor of th
appellant."
Oil engineers of the U.S. 1ivJ
drilled to 20,521 feet, compared
with the height of Mr. Everfest
of 29,002 feet.
THE FINAL CHOICE OF MATURE TAS7
Eight $A55
Years
Old FIFTH
o