Word: cols
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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December 4, at Dartmouth; 6, at Providence College; 11, Boston College; 15, Boston University; 18, Northeastern; 22, at Minnesota; 23, Minnesota at Hibbing, Minn.; 26 and 28, Colorado at Colorado Springs, Col.; 29-30, at Denver...
Fourteen senior members of the Harvard Army ROTC unit received Distinguished Military Student decorations yesterday in a ceremony at Andover Field. President Pusey made the awards. At right, Pusey is shown with Lt. Col. Trever N. Dupuy, professor of Military Science and Tactics, Cadet Joshna Levin '54, and Capt. Roy G. Simpkins...
...School 2:00 p.m. Sat., Oct. 17 Tufts 2:00 p.m. Wed., Oct. 21 M.I.T. at Tech Field 3:00 p.m. Fri., Oct. 23 Dartmouth 2:00 p.m. Wed., Oct. 28 Exeter at Exeter 3:00 p.m. Sat., Oct. 31 Andover 2:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 4 Nichols Junior Col. 2:00 p.m. Fri., Nov. 13 Brown at Providence Fri., Nov. 20 Yale at New Haven...
Camp V was at 22,600 ft. at the head of the Western Cwm. Here the South Col rose 3,000 ft. sheer. Ice boots were changed for high-altitude footwear soled with microcellular rubber (to keep out - 50° cold). Goggles protected the men from snow blindness; padded smocks enclosed their bodies. One by one, Hunt and Hillary, Bourdillon and Evans, Noyce, Wilson and Tenzing, put on their oxygen masks and learned to sleep in them...
Climb to the Col. Thus, fully accoutred, they struck at the face of Lhotse. Heavy icing is dangerous on a slope of 30°; Lhotse, in many places, is close to vertical. Wilfred Noyce, a Charterhouse schoolmaster, took two days to hack an ice staircase diagonally up to the -col. Camp VI and Camp VII were established on the face; finally, Noyce and a Sherpa gang reached the col and stood in a clear sky on the threshold of Everest. Here they made Camp VIII...