PAGE FO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1931 PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1937 2=mmd Mt. Lucania,Hitherto HighestUnclimnbed Peak On Continent, Is Conquered A tLast -1 EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a first-hand account of1the ascent of Mt. Lucania, highest peak heretofore un- climbed in North America, written for the Associated Press by Bradford Wash- burn. Jr.. of the Harvard Institute of Geographical Exploration. By BRADFORD WASHBURN, JR. VALDEZ, Alaska, July 24.-A)- The special flag of the National Ge-. ographic Society flies today from the 17,150-foot peak of Mount Lucania amid the drifting snow and the ice of what was the highest unclimbed peak in North America. Robert Bates of Philadelphia and I reached the summit of the lofty mountain July ninth: Twelve days later we reached Burwash landing at the northern end of Kluane Lake after the first crossing on foot from Alaska to Canada over the great northern peaks of the St. Elias range. Reach Mount Steele After climbing Mount Lucania we also ascended Mount Steele, which rises to an altitude of 16,600 feet on the eastern flank of the same pass of which Mount Lucania is the eastern rampart. The climb up Steele marked the second ascent of Canada's high- est peak, first climbed in 1935 by the Wood Yukon Expedition of the American Geographical Society. Our expedition was sponsored by the Har- vard Institute of Geographical Ex- ploration and the New England Mu- seum of Natural History. Our ascent began June 18 when Pilot Robert Reeve flew Bates and myself to the Walsh Glacier from Valdez. Our plane was equipped with skiis surfaced with stainless steel, which enabled us to take off from the mudflats of Valdez and land on the snow-covered glacier. The surface ice proved so broken up by unexpected early thaws that Reeve was barely able to get back to Valdez after three unsuccessful attempts to take off. This made it impossible for Russell Dow of Woodsville, N. H., and Nor- man Bright of Sunnyvale, Calif., to join us at the glacier. Bates and I, unable to fly back with Reeve as the added weight would have prevented his taking off, there thus marooned on the glacier. Our only practical way to return to civilization was to go into Canada over the peak on Mount Steele. Start Out On Foot We were certain that once on top we could get down into the Yukon territory safely by using the same route climbed by the Wood expedi- tion. So after two days of prepara- tion, we sledged a 300-pound load of supplies by hand to an advanced cache at an altitude of 9,000 feet, five miles farther up the valley, and six miles from the main mountain pass. It snowed almost continuously, the fresh snow blotting out our trail and making it necessary to keep our camps very close together so that we could move supplies in short relays. Both of us fell into hidden snow- covered cracks constantly, and drag- ging each other out on the rope be- came almost a routine. We marked the trail ahead with willow twigs planted 60 feet apart in the snow. On July first we established a camp, stocked with food for 30 days, at the 10,000 foot high base of the great buttress which rises from the head of Walsh Glacier to the lofty pass be- tween Lucania and Steele. Fresh snow which fell on the steep slopes forced us to establish intermediate camps dug into the crest of the ridge at 12,000 and 13,800 feet before we would finally pack our equipment into the upper pass. Temperatures Drop Rapidly Temperatures now dropped rapidly, and during the week at the pass camp hovered between zero and 15 below every night. Climbing conditions be- Summer Trips Are Very Well Attended (Continued from Page 1) state in the Union. A special feature of the collection of buildings trans- ferred bodily to this 200-acre village, is the Thomas A. Edison group, con- sisting of the original Menlo Park laboratory, the inventor's library, and his first Menlo Park factory. A typ- ical Michigan town of 80 years ago surrounds a village green. Two remaining excursions are the trip to Put-in-Bay, Lake Erie, August 4, and a final tour through the Ann Arbor News building, where the party will observe a modern newspaper plant in operation. There is no charge for the last tour, he said. ARMY USES DUMMY FORTRESS Hills near Peiping, China, are dot- ted withdummy Tibetan fortresses ,rected by the Emperor Chien Lung to train his army for a successful conquest of Tibet at the time of the American revolution. FOR RENT Beautifully furnished, 5 rooms in duplex. Southeast section. Faculty owner on leave of ab- scence. Available for one year starting Sept. 1st. $85 includ- ing heat and water. came so wretched after a 20-inch fall of snow July third, that we were forced to abandon a good deal of our food, one sleeping bag, an air mat- tress,, and to cut the bottom out of our tent to seduce weight A sudden break in the weather July 8 gave us a chance for a swift removal to a location 4,000 feet from the peak. The following morning dawned ab- solutely cloudless and we decided to make a desperate effort to reach the top of Lucania before the weather changed. Our food was getting low and we wished an ample margin for our attack on Mount Steele. After a bitterly cold night we left camp at eight a.m. and started up the great northern ice wall of the mountain. The weather was flawless and the views over Alaska and Canada superb beyond words, but climbing was ter- rifically arduous. Hidden Crevasses Add Danger Constantly roped together to avoid the danger of hidden crevasses, we managed to reach a 16,000 foot notch between the second and third of Lucania's four peaks. We had a bite to eat. Another peak 500 feet high lay between us and the summit cone which rose just to the left at the head of an appalling cliff of rock and ice. I shall never forget the view from the pass. It was still, almost cloud- less, and every peak of the St. Elias range was in sight, a vast ice pano- rama which cannot be surpassed in grandeur anywhere on earth, except possibly by the Himalayas of India. At 2:30 we put on our ice creepers and tackled the ridge. It was ex- ceedingly steep, one side dropping off 10,000 feet, and was of hard ice crusted with a veneer of wind-packed snow. We made its summit at 3:15, and across a small saddle-like pass saw the final summit cone of Lucania. Victory Lies Ahead We could see two excellent routes to the summit and for the first time felt certain victory lay ahead. In a steep pitch of ice-encrusted powder snow we reached the lower end of the summit ridge and tackled the last 300 feet. At 4:15 the last hump seemed to lie but a few yards ahead but to our dismay another peak rose to the west of us. But this time there was no mistake and climbing a hundred paces through frost feathers and loose snow at 4:30 we clambered out onto the final peak, a beautiful little ridge of snow-covered ice, sharp as a knife and only a dozen feet in length. We fairly cheered with joy. The view from the summit of Lu- cania is superb beyond description. To the east lay Canada beneath a tossing sea of magnificent thunder storms. To the west, south and north stretched a jagged endless mass of Exceptionality Has Two Sides, Keeler Asserts Exceptionality in children has two sides, with those children above the normal being on one side and those below the normal on the other side, Prof. L. W. Keeler of the education school told a group yesterday in the auditorium of University High School. Speaking on "Procedure Used In Instructing Exceptional Children," Professor Keeler said that exceptional children can not be taught as nor- mal children. "And," he continued," these children have just as much right for education as normal chil- dren." "There are several types of excep- tional children," Professor Keeler as- serted. "There are those that have need of special education because of physical defects and nervous dis- turbances, there are those that don't have the normal intelligence and there are those on the other end- the very gifted persons that have higher than normal intelligence." brilliant snowclad peaks. It was late in the day and though there was scarcely a breath of wind the air was exceedingly cold. We made a complete panorama of pic- tures to help fill in blank spots on the map, and then descended hastily toward our base camp 4,000 feet be- low, reaching it after another long struggle in the bottomless powder snow. Find Woods' Trail Markers Moving back to our pass camp, we next packed two forty-pound loads of food, and gasoline for fuel, to the 15,000-foot altitude on Mount Steele. The following morning, at 10 below, we struggled slowly up the last slopes of Mount Steele. Below the summit the cloudless weather held, an even clearer day than on Mount Lucania. At 1:45 p.m. we reached the summit of Steele where to our amazement Bates located a large bundle of trail markers jammed in the snow on the very peak by the Wood expedition nearly two years ago. We now had three days of perfect weather, and if we camped where we were we risked being marooned by an oncoming storm. With clouds brew- ing in the west, we broke our packs, reducing their weight a third, and plunged over the edge in as breath- taking descent as one could imagine. Snow conditions were abominable, but after discarding even more of our equipment we made camp safely be- side Wolf Creek Glacier. The follow ing day we reached Donjey River, 20 miles farther down the valley, with our food rations reduced to less than half a pound each. These rations consisted of dried beef, powdered gravy, powdered soup, powdered milk, two slices of bacon, one half pilot cracker and vitamin tablets, all packed in tiny paraffined bags. Finally on July 17 after a 40-mile detour to ford the river, we unexpect- edly met a ten-horse pack train bound for a nearby hunters' lodge and laden with delicious food. We re- traced our steps withnthem a few miles at their invitation and gorged with them in their spacious tent for two solid days of sunshine, peace and luxury before riding into Burwash Landing on Lake Kluane. Montague Goes Before Judoe For Hearing LOS ANGELES, July 26.- (A) - Smiling and affable, John Montague, golf's recently unmasked "Mystery Man," came into court today on charges of participating in a New York robbery and greeted three east- ern officers, "Well, boys, glad to see you." Municipal Judge Wilbur Curtis postponed Montague's arraignment until Aug. 9 pending Gov. Frank M. Merriam's action on New York's ex- tradition request. Montague is charged with having been one of four men who robbed a Jay, N.Y., roadhouse of $750 in 1930. His true name is La Verne Moore, eastern authorities said. In Sacramento, the governor's of- fice received 66 appeals to refuse ex- tradition. Most of them were from screen actors and scene artists with whom the defendant has become fast friends during seven years in Holly- wood. Indications that the extradition hearing will be held in Los Angeles were seen when the governor, who is here, telephoned his assistant secre- tary in Sacramento to bring the file on the Montague case to his Los An- geles office tomorrow. U "I i' Q IY in U 1 S C You can no longer afford to send your laun- dry home. Our ROUGH DRY (semi-finish) bundle for students is far more economical than any other laundry service. This gives you finished laundry on Shirts, Handker- chiefs, and Socks. Underwear and pajamas are washed, dried. and ready for wear. U Price per Pound 000@.loc r-^ (Minimum Bundle - 50c) ShirtsExtra Full Dress Shirts not included in this Service Sox, Extra, pair 0..3c Handkerchiefs, Extra . Ic E. TYPEWRITERS FOUNTAIN PENS Student Supplies 0. D. 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