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Word: unsoeld (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Into Tibet. Days before, a sudden gust of gale-force wind at the 25,000-ft. level had blown away their tents and spare oxygen bottles, knocked two members of their support party 100 ft. down Everest's flank. Hornbein and Unsoeld were dangerously low on supplies. The climbers had to pick their way around huge outcroppings of rock. Now and then, searching for a foothold, they disregarded passport restrictions and stepped across the Nepalese border into Communist Tibet. No one expected them to go all the way-just to climb as far as they could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mountain Climbing: Point of No Return | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

...base camp. Expedition Leader Norman Dyhrenfurth waited for a walkie-talkie message from the climbers. Just below 28,000 ft., the West Ridge team faced its toughest obstacle: the "Yellow Band"-a 100-ft.-high cliff that resembles a shingled roof. Only pitons and rappel ropes kept Hornbein and Unsoeld inching upward. At last they radioed back that they had crossed the Yellow Band safely. But now they were past the "point of no return." Their supply of pitons was gone. They had to reach the summit and head down the easier South...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mountain Climbing: Point of No Return | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

What of Bishop and Jerstad? Where were they? Nobody knew. Jerstad's walkie-talkie battery had run out of juice. At 6:33 the base camp got another message -a whoop of triumph. The West Ridge team had done it! Hornbein and Unsoeld were on the summit and starting down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mountain Climbing: Point of No Return | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

...Shelter. Then fate played a capricious hand. The South Col team had also reached the summit-at 3:30 p.m.-looked around for the West Ridgers, given up, and headed back to wait at the South Summit, 328 ft. below. Unaware of all this, Hornbein and Unsoeld wasted valuable time at the summit searching for Bishop and Jerstad. Not until 9 p.m. did the rendezvous take place. By now it was so dark that the four climbers could not find Camp 6 on the South Col route. Huddled against each other they spent the night at 28,000 ft.-without...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mountain Climbing: Point of No Return | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

...open, but under their own power, and with an unprecedented record of mountaineering firsts. Dyhrenfurth & Co. had achieved every goal. All told, five Americans had reached Mount Everest's lofty summit. For the first time, Everest's "impassable" West Ridge had been conquered. When Hornbein and Unsoeld finished their return trip down the South Col, they completed the first transverse crossing in the history of Himalayan climbing. Only Sally Dyhrenfurth took it all calmly. "What," she asked her husband, "are you going to do for an encore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mountain Climbing: Point of No Return | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

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