|  | Unknown 4/97 Seward 
            Hiker Bear Mauling
 HIKERS 
            FIND MAN'S REMAINS
 By Jon 
            Little, ADN 09/26/97
 
 When two hikers stumbled on shredded 
            blue jeans and a couple of sodden daypacks atop an out-of-the-way 
            peak, they sensed something was wrong.  But there was no blood, 
            no body.
 
 If they ever saw the tiny white shards scattered 
            nearby, it didn't click in their minds that these splintered bones 
            were all that remained of what Alaska State Troopers are guessing 
            was a 39-year-old man, a wanderer from out of state who scribbled 
            reflections and weather reports in a small notebook he packed on his 
            journey.
 
 Little is known about the man, who apparently kept 
            largely to himself.  Troopers have found no friends or 
            family.  They do know he was an immigrant from Vietnam whose 
            last known address was a rescue mission in North Little Rock, 
            Ark.
 
 If it weren't for a passport and driver's license, they 
            wouldn't have that much.  Alaska's abundant and efficient 
            predators devoured his remains before the hikers discovered his 
            belongings Sept. 16.
 
 Most of the clean, white bone fragments 
            troopers found were about the size of a quarter.  The biggest 
            was 6 inches long, and it was splintered, said trooper Sgt. Brandon 
            Anderson.  ''The trouble is, they had all passed largely 
            through a bear,'' he said.  ''Several animals had been working 
            on what was left because (the bones) were scattered 
            wide.''
 
 Nobody reported the man missing, and nobody at the 
            Arkansas shelter remembered him, Anderson said.  Until troopers 
            find his family, they won't release his name.
 
 Troopers first 
            have to confirm that the bones are human, which Anderson said is 
            almost certain.  The state crime lab in Anchorage easily can 
            handle that.  But connecting the bones to this particular man 
            is a lot trickier.  They hope to do so with the help of the 
            upper half of a denture found among the pants, shirt, leather jacket 
            and wallet strewn about on the unnamed 2,000-foot peak five miles 
            south of Seward.
 
 If they can match those false teeth with 
            dental records, it would be the closest troopers could come to 
            certainty.
 
 They do have a good lead on relatives, 
            however.
 
 Troopers have asked the U.S. Immigration and 
            Naturalization Service to search for names of people the man listed 
            as his next of kin in 1986 when he took his oath as a U.S. citizen 
            in Houston, Texas.
 
 The man appears to have traveled alone 
            from the Lower 48 to Seward.  His journal lists St. Paul and 
            Seattle on April 7, Vancouver on April 9, Prince George, Canada, on 
            April 11 and Tok on April 13.
 
 He jotted down temperature and 
            weather conditions.  His last entry, on April 17, says, ''20' 
            clr,'' ''3/12 Noon,'' and ''Indian cottage, 6:23 p.m.''  Beyond 
            the observations, his notes in the 4-by-7-inch weekly planner 
            indicate a man struggling to understand himself.Every other page has 
            preprinted inspirational quotations from famous people.  
            Sometimes he wrote little responses.  In the week of April 7, a 
            quote attributed to Eleanor Roosevelt says, ''You must do the thing 
            you think you cannot do.''
 
 Under it, he has written in 
            capital letters, ''TRY HARD TO COMPLETE.''  On another page a 
            cursive hand reflects a belief that God still loves the sinners he 
            casts into hell.  It concludes, ''So you have to love yourself 
            more than others.  Therefore, you shall know how to love 
            someone.''  Sometime after April 17, the man took a couple of 
            daypacks up a steep trailless ridge through spruce, devil's club and 
            alder thickets before emerging above treeline into the alpine tundra 
            and scree.  If it was in April, he would have hiked through 
            snow.  He probably wore blue jeans, a white T-shirt and a 
            leather jacket.  Troopers have not found his shoes.  Once 
            atop the peak, he would have had a commanding view of Resurrection 
            Bay and some beautiful waterfalls along the Tonsina and Spruce creek 
            drainages on either side of him, said Jennifer Roy, one of two 
            hikers who stumbled on his remains.
 
 Her companion, Phil 
            Weeks, was first to reach the top and saw soaking wet daypacks and 
            clothing strewn around. He also picked up a bundle of plastic wrap 
            that protected a passport and immigration papers.
 
 A pair of 
            blue jeans near the packs was shredded, troopers said. The right leg 
            was torn at the knee and the left leg was ripped from the thigh 
            down.  His T-shirt was torn and had what looks like teeth marks 
            on its back.
 
 The clothing is stained, but the state crime lab 
            in Anchorage has yet to determine whether those stains are blood, 
            Anderson said. If it is blood, its amount and location may offer a 
            clue. If the man died before the bears got to him, he wouldn't have 
            bled much, Anderson said.
 
 Troopers helicoptered to the site 
            and recovered bone fragments scattered in the steep scree slope 
            about 75 yards below the day packs. Foul play isn't suspected, 
            Anderson said.
 
 Whatever the cause of death, the area's wild 
            animals would have wasted little time moving in, said Gino Del 
            Frate, a state wildlife biologist.  ''The area's loaded with 
            bears," he said.  "It's got wolves, it's got wolverines, it's 
            got everything else."
 
 In the spring, brown and black bears 
            wake up from hibernation, hungry, and one of the first things they 
            look for is carcasses of animals that died during the winter, he 
            said.
 
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