Krakauer's 1996 account of McCandless' life and death inspired both the 2007 award-winning film by Sean Penn and the album by ...
The end of a successful hunt from back in the day, with the Magic Bus in the background. (Tyler Freel /) This story originally featured on Outdoor Life. Earlier this month, the Alaska National Guard ...
On a chilly October morning at a storage facility in central Fairbanks, Museum of the North curator Angela Linn pulled a giant tarp off of Bus 142 — a rust-covered green-and-white city bus from the ...
A $500,000 federal grant announced last month will help the University of Alaska Museum of the North preserve an old public transit bus. Why such a significant amount of money on an 80-year-old, ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — A bus that people ...
A recent opinion essay offered wide-ranging criticism of the University of Alaska Museum of the North for creating an exhibit for Bus 142 — made famous by Christopher McCandless and John Krakauer’s ...
In April 1992, Chris McCandless, a self-proclaimed adventurer embarked on a dangerous odyssey into the wilds of Alaska. Sadly, five months on, the 24-year-old was discovered dead, his body in a ...
In 2006, a film crew was in Astoria to film “Into the Wild,” directed by Sean Penn, the haunting story of hitchhiker/wanderer Christopher McCandless (aka Alexander Supertramp), who made his way into ...
Long before Christopher McCandless became a symbol, a warning and a lingering question, he was simply a 24-year-old with a journal, a camera and a hard, lonely idea about freedom. In the summer of ...
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