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                    <text>Org.
U.S. Postage
Paid
Orono, Maine
Permit No. 15

N o n -p ro fit

SUSAN H. SI EVENS

3312 x c:::.:s

ALBUfiL'Er.jUE, iil!

87110

W abanaki
A lliance

July 1979

Sockabasin-Dana case

Supreme Court ruling
seen as Indian victory

KER-SPLOOSH! Willy Lola, Ron Patrick Soekabasin, and John King, cool off with a
gleeful plunge into Big Lake, at Indian Township. Willy is 10, Ron 6, and John, 11 years old.

Island man dead of knife wound
INDIAN ISLAND — A Penobscot In
State Legislature, at the tribe's request,
dian, Adrian Loring, 29, was discovered
authorizing removal o f unattached nondead from knife wounds here, on July 1
4.
Indians from the reservation.
Arrested in connection with the slaying ’
He was born Nov. 2, 1949, in Bangor, son
was William A. Holmes, who had reportedly
o f George and Julia (Neptune) Loring. He
been living with an Indian Island woman the
had worked in construction. He is survived
by his father o f LaGrange; his wife, Yvonne
past several months. Holmes, 22, was in
(Francis) Loring o f Old Town; a daughter,
jail pending arraignment, at press time,
authorities said. Further details were not
Christi Loring, Brewer; two sisters, Donna
available, but sources said the incident
Loring o f Old Town and Beth Sockbeson of
was the first murder to occur in 89 years,
Bangor. Funeral services were held at the
at the reservation.
Indian Island Baptist Church. Burial will be
A law was recently enacted by the Maine
in the tribal cemetery.

ORONO — A 29-page opinion that favors
federal jurisdiction on Maine Indian reser
vations caught persons close to the case by
surprise.
This month’ precedent-setting ruling was
s
handed down by the state supreme court
several months earlier than anticipated. The
support for federal jurisdiction in what
amounts to a test case for Maine reserva
tions left Penobscot and Passamaquoddy
leaders jubilant.
Penobscot Tribal Administrator Andrew
Akin commented, “I'm very pleased. The
decision not only aided Allen (Soekabasin),
but we expect it to help us greatly in the land
claims case.”
A non-Indian source who is an expert on
this case said tile riding is, quite a setback
for the state.” He agreed that the decision
would help Indians seek return o f aboriginal
tribal land. “The ultimate issue has not
been decided, but the state has a pretty
steep hill to climb,” he said.
David Rosen, an assistant attorney gen
eral for the state, said at press time, "W e
only received a copy o f the decision late this
afternoon,” and he declined to comment.
The case stems from an appeal on behalf
o f two Passamaquoddy men, Allen J. Sockabasin and Albert C. Dana, convicted o f
arson last year in Washington County
superior court, in connection with an
attempt to burn the Indian Township
elementary school. Lawyers for the de
fen ders argued that the state does not have
jurisdiction over crimes committed on reser
vation lands — instead, they argued, major
crimes fall within the province o f the federal
government.
The supreme court justices appear to
agree. Their opinion declares that if the
alleged crime occurred in “ Indian country,”
then federal jurisdiction applies. The court
said that “all dependent Indian com

munities” that are identifiably separate in
cultural and economic ways from non-In
dians constitute “Indian country.”
Further, the court said the burden of
proof is on the state, to show that Indian
Township Passamaquoddies were not a tribe
in 1790 (date o f the federal Indian non
intercourse act that is a basis o f tribal land
claims), and therefore, were not a tribe April
16, 1977, date o f the attempted arson.
To contend the Passamaquoddies were
not a tribe will be difficult if not impossible,
as the federal government has recently given
Penobscots and Passamaquoddies official
recognition. “The state has the burden of
proof. It’ irrational to claim that they were
s
not a tribe in 1790,” commented a source
ciose lo the case.
The text o f the opinion says, in part:
"We have arrived at an understanding of
(Continued on page 9
)

Tribes slate pageants
INDIAN ISLAND — The Penobscot res
ervation plans to hold its annual Indian
pageant July 22. The program, which begins
at 1:00, will include dancers from the Island
and Pleasant Point and native crafts. Food
and beverages will be available. The pageant
is open to the public. Proceeds will go to St.
Ann’ Mission.
s
Indian Island is also planning an Indian
field day on July 21. All Maine Indian
people are invited to attend. The Most Rev.
Edward C. O ’
Leary, Bishop o f the Roman
Catholic Diocese o f Portland, is expected to
visit Indian Island, on that day.
Pleasant Point’ 14th annual pageant will
s
be held on August 12. The affair will mark
the 100th anniversary o f St. Ann’ Mission
s
at Pleasant Point. Native dancing, crafts',
and food will be featured.

IM director impressed with Penobscot plant
S
INDIAN ISLAND — The head o f Indian
Health Service (IHS) showered praise on the
new Penobscot Health and Social Services
Department, and said he anticipated similar
Passamaquoddy developments.
Dr. Emery Johnson, director o f the
federal agency, told Penobscot and Passa
maquoddy tribal officials that Indian
Island’ new plant is “just a little short o f a
s
miracle.” Johnson visited the Penobscot
Nation this month, and Passamaquoddy
health directors were invited to attend a
luncheon and official meeting at the Indian
Island center.
“I think the message here is we need to
get across to Congress and the President the
good results that have come from the ex
penditure for these programs . . . the short
term and long term payoff,” Johnson said.
“This is something the outside community
should learn about,” he added.
“We’ not going to stop this health
re
planning process. This is just volume one.

We want to come back and sit down with
you. and say okay, what can we do now to
work with you,” Johnson said. He praised
Penobscot health and social services, stating
that, “There isn’ any question, you’ done
t
ve
it all.” Present at the meeting were
Penobscot Health and Social Services
Director, Dr. Eunice Baumann; Pleasant
Point Passamquoddy Health and Social
Services Director, Doris Kirby; and Indian
Township Health and Social Services Di
rector, Wayne Newell.
Johnson told officials, “You’
re going
through a process the outside community
hasn’ gone through, but will have to face.
t
That’ my prediction. By that time you’ be
s
ll
down the road doing something else. The
Indian communities have been ahead o f the
general community for at least the last
decade,” he said.
Enjoying a meal prepared by Happy
Hamilton, a Penobscot, Johnson joked that
the center was “about 200 years coming.”

Indian Island’ center is the first such
s
complex to be built under IHS auspices in
northeast. The nearest similar center is at a
Seneca reservation in New York.

Newell, commenting on Passamaquoddy
health services, said he hoped to see a
groundbreaking ceremony for a center at
Indian Township by August 1 “We’
.
ve
learned much from the experiences o f other

tribes,” he said, adding, "like the other
communities, we’ discovered that alcohol
ve
and drug abuse are the biggest problems.
We’ begun to look at the values and
ve
spiritual aspects of our community.”
Newell mentioned the “frustration” of
having to employ non-Indians in health and
social service positions. “ We’ committed
re
to having our own people do the job, but we
just don’ have the people to fill the slots,”
t
he said.
Discussing the tribe’ recently completed
s
Tribal Specific Health Plan, Newell said, “I
just totally misjudged how much work there
was in it.” Asked by Johnson what he would
do differently, Newell replied, “ We’ start
d
earlier.”
Kirby cited problems with the abuse of
prescription drugs, “instead of really
treating someone.”
Johnson toured Indian Island’ complex,
s
and called it “sophisticated.” He praised the
(Continued on page 9)

�Page 2

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

editorials
Age of irony
We live in an age of many ironies. We read about an international
peace effort between world powers; and next to that story, news of a
new weapon to blow us off the face of the earth.
We encountered another kind of irony recently, in a Passamaquoddy reservation home. The television was blaring out a
“Western,” and a cowboy was drawling from under his ten-gallon
hat: “I don’ know Joe, but it looks like Indians to me.”
t
Several Indian youngsters were watching the show, impassively.
What was the TV saying to them? At least unconsciously, the TV was
telling these kids that Indians are bad news. We heard that one
Indian girl told her mother she was glad she did not live on an Indian
reservation — an idea she acquired from TV.
Textbooks and storybooks still portray Indians with ridicule,
exaggeration, or a humor that is ill-disguised prejudice. In 1979, one
might expect to be rid of such stereotypes. We still hear stupid jokes
about Indian chiefs, war dances, and so forth. (We confess to
enjoying a few of the jokes that turn the tables on the white man.)
People can be too picky. Obviously, jokes of all kinds will persist,
as will some unpleasant stereotypes and other instances of bad taste
and prejudice. Not all prejudice is negative: Nobody minds if we are
prejudiced in favor of watermelon on a hot day. It’ the destructive
s
myths that we must relinquish. It’ like pulling out those vicious
s
weeds in the garden — they’ tenacious, abundant, and sometimes
re
grow back.
We all need to make the conscious effort to provide models and
examples of understanding and mutual respect. As reasonable
people, we owe it to our children to destroy stereotypes, before those
stereotypes — the drunken Indian, the lazy Indian, the enemy Indian
— destroy the children. One way to do this is to insist on responsible
presentation of Indians in books, magazines, newspapers, radio and
TV.
To ask for fairness and respect is not asking too much. Not to
demand fair treatment is to allow destructive myths to continue. A
group of Indian persons have been meeting regularly the past couple
of months to edit and revise a textbook for Maine public school
students. This group has addressed itself to a chapter dealing with
Indians.
Many errors of both fact and attitude turned up in the original
draft. The Indian advisory group has corrected these misunder
standings and misinterpretations to the best of its ability. What will
emerge is a brief history o f Maine Indians that is responsible, fair,
accurate and respectful. Finally, a chapter of Indian history and
culture is being prepared by Indians.
There is absolutely nothing ironic about that.

Five-year-old Gary Neptnne wasn’t too scared, as a patient in the dental chair at Indian
Island. Gary is the son of Gloria and Gary Neptnne, Sr., of Old Town.

Healthy community
A story this month reports on a visit to Indian Island by the head
of Indian Health Service, a national agency that is funding health
centers at three reservations in Maine.
The director, Dr. Emery Johnson, is an affable, unpretentious
young man, who seems dedicated to his work. He praised the
Penobscots’ Indian Island complex, and offered encouragement to
the two planned Passamaquoddy health and social services centers,
yet to be built. While this sort of thing might sound all in a day’
s
work to outside persons, such is not the case.
The Indian Island health center is a breakthrough. At last,
Penobscots have direct medical and other services in their own
community. A dentist, a physician's assistant, a lab technician, a
nutritionist — the list goes on. There is a child care center, and space
for senior citizens and their luncheon meetings. Aside from all the
practical advantages, the Penobscot center is of appealing
architectural design, and creates a warm, friendly gathering place for
members and friends of the tribe.
Soon, possibly within a matter of a year or so, Passamaquoddies at
Pleasant Point and at Indian Township will share similar benefits.
Importantly, Indians in Maine are handling their own contracting
for goods and services, apart from the funding agency, Indian Health
Service.
Dr. Johnson said he had been advised that allowing Indians to take
charge of funding and planning was like throwing money away.
Fortunately, Johnson had more confidence than that. His confidence
was well placed.
The glow of Johnson’ praise is welcome, but Indians must
s
remember that goods and services alone do not make a healthy
community. Also essential is a fabric of community values. Wayne
Newell, director of health and social services at Indian Township,
pointed this out at a meeting with Johnson. Alcoholism and drug
abuse are still widespread, he emphasized, and community values
must resist these self-destructive patterns. Nurturing values must
replace the unhealthy habits, which include things like so-called junk
food, smoking and lack o f adequate exercises.
Doris Kirby, director of health and social services at Pleasant
Point, remarked that many persons are too dependent on
prescription drugs.
This brings us to a point worth considering. Health starts with the
individual, and his or her habits. Needless to say, a group of healthy
individuals is a healthy community.

�MORE LETTERS ON PAGE FOUR

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Page 3

letters
F orgotten Indians

Bangor
To the editor:
This is a letter for the Indians that
everyone seems to, or would like to forget
about, including sometimes their relatives. I
don't have any statistics on how many o f our
brothers and sisters are in various institu
tions in the nation or even in Maine, but I
know the number is growing.

many have people willing to recognize them
and aid them? Even if it’ just writing a
s
letter to let them know they aren’ forgotten,
t
it would mean a great deal. There is no
cultural setting in any institution in the state
to let the Indian learn his culture, or study
his religion, or to help him (or her) take
pride in their race or to retain the pride they
have. The institutions are structured to strip
everyone of their pride, not just Indians
alone.
We are and always have been a proud
race. It is the Indian way to help its brothers
and sisters less fortunate than themselves. I
am asking that you contact any brother or
sister that you know of, that is in any type of
institution, and, if at all possible, to help in
any way. Please do.
The Indian is kin to the Indian, regardless
o f tribal affiliation, we must stand together!
There are many things, too numerous to
mention, that could be done to help, and
I’ sure that you good people reading this
m
will do what you can.
I do not know if you can or will publish
this letter, but I am in hope that you will. If
you need to edit it, do so. Also, if you could
get it published in other Indian papers,
please do so. If not my letter, then an
editorial or anything would do, just some
thing to remind the people that they have
brothers and sisters that need them and any
type o f support they can give.
Tom Thurlow

I am speaking from experience, as I am
now completing my second term of confine
ment at Maine State Prison. I am at the
pre-release center at Bangor. I am Passamaquoddy. I lived on Pleasant Point Reserva
tion many years ago with my mother, Gloria
Moore. I am 30 years old and in the process
o f my second divorce. I have been confined
for eight and one half months and have
three and one half months left till I am dis
charged. The only relative that has been to
visit me in this period is my cousin from
Pleasant Point, Raymond Moore. He took
time out of a very busy schedule, to see me
and see if I needed anything and to tell me
that I could go to his home for furloughs.
This was important to me and I would like
to take this opportunity to thank him very
much. I consider myself fortunate to know
and have as a relative, someone so generous
and unselfish. Don't you agree?
But what o f my countless brothers and
sisters that are confined in this state alone?
How many o f them aren’ so fortunate, how
t

Prison story re v ie w e d
Thomaston
To the editor:
I don't know if any other inmates have
expressed their thanks for your recent
interview with us. If not, I'd like to say
thank you, for myself as well as sending the
other inmates’gratitude. I thought you did a
good story, considering what you had to
work with.
I was disappointed with your evaluation
of the situation down here. Although my
opinions may be a little biased, I’d like to
bring out a few points you may have missed
or misinterperted.
First o f all Mr. Tompkins is not a
spokesman o f the Indian population down
here. I really resented that, especially since I
can speak very well for myself. Don’ get me
t
wrong as I think Mr. Tompkins is a very
good person. But nobody can speak for
another Indian except themselves.
Another point I think you missed, is the
discrimination and violation o f civil rights
inflicted on the average Indian inmate. That
is the greatest problem an Indian faces in
here. But like most things, everybody talks
about unity and helping their Indian

brother, but when it comes to action,
nobody really wants to do anything.
I’m really not bitter about it as it’ a harsh
s
reality o f life. I just feel sad that the average
Indian has allowed themselves to be brain
washed into thinking like a white man.
These are just my personal thoughts, and I
could never speak o f what's on another
Indian’ mind. One thing I can say, is the
s
average Indian doesn't use the gift of
inductive thinking. I think money and tech
nological advancement is more important to
them instead of their own humanity.. I hope
I’m wrong but like everything else, time will
tell.
I’ drawn up a 1983 civil rights com
ve
plaint against the prison. I couldn’ get any
t
legal help or afford a lawyer so I’ doing my
m
own legal work. I can do legal research, and
have a working knowledge o f the law.
Hopefully I’ win my case, that way these
ll
Indians in here will have a way to fight back.
As soon as I enter it in Federal Court, I
expect retaliation from the prison. How
severe it will be I don’ know. I really don’
t
t
care, as I’ convinced I’ in the right.
m
m
Whatever happens happens.
Brian J. Attean

UP AND OVER — These cartwheelers were spotted in the hall of the Indian Island
community building recently. They are Greta Neptune, left, of Indian Island, and Star
LaCoute, of Indian Township.

Positive influence

The real news

Mt. Pleasant, Michigan
To the editor:
As a recipient o f the “Alliance” for
approximately the past year, I wish to thank
you for your fine, informative publication.
I’ not sure how my name was added to the
m
list o f subscribers, but suspect my aunt, Jean
Watson, o f Milford, MI. (daughter o f Joseph
E. and Jane M. Ranco and granddaughter
o f Peter and Mary Jane Francis Ranco) has
seen to it that I keep informed. I greatly
appreciate the individual and collective
efforts which bring me the real news.
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Enclosed is a small contribution which I
To the editor:
hope will assist in maintaining those efforts.
Just received June issue o f Wabanaki I would also like to encourage at least the
Alliance. I believe every issue gets better. consideration o f a donation on the part of
Especially interested in the article page 4 all readers.
_ __
Jim Houston
“Stalking the Fiddlehead!’ I wonder if you
would send me the address o f Rev. Donald
Daigle. I would like to write him.
Togus
It would be difficult to say which part o f To the editor:
your paper I enjoy the most I read each issue
We have been informed by the Depart
from cover to cover. Especially interested in ment o f Indian Affairs that you publish such
each month’ flashback photo, but to be a journal. We would appreciate any infor
s
brief and to the point Wabanaki Alliance is mation you might send us.
Stu Groten
a great paper.
Veterans Administration
Augustus Webb

Published monthly by the Division of Indian Services [DIS] at the Indian Resource Center,
95 Main St., Orono, Me. 04473.

To the editor:
I look forward so much to the newspaper.
June’ issue was filled with so much good
s
stuff. Your article on the Thomaston in
mates was forthright and honest. I feel that
Wabanaki Alliance has been such a positive
influence binding people together and also a
spring board for social action.
Pat Tompkins

Steven Cartwright, Editor
William O ’
Neal, Ass’L Editor

Notes improvement

Wabanaki Alliance

Vol. 3, No. 7

DIS Board of Directors
Jean Chavaree [chairman]
John Bailey, Public Safety Coordinator
Albert Dana, Tribal Councilor
Timothy Love, Representative to State Legislature
Jeannette Neptune, Community Development Director
Teresa Sappier, Central Maine Indian Assoc.
Susan Desiderio, Assn, of Aroostook Indians
Maynard Polchies, President, Aroostook Indians
Melvin L. Vicaire, Central Maine Indian Assn.
Reuben C. Cleaves, Representative to State Legislature

July 1979

Indian Island
Pleasant Point
Indian Township
Indian Island
Indian Township
Orono
Houlton
Houlton
Mattawamkeag
Pleasant Point

DIS is an agency of Diocesan Human Relations Services, Inc. of Maine. Subscriptions to
this newspaper are available by writing to Wabanaki Alliance, 95 Main St., Orono, Me.
04473. Diocesan Human Relations Services and DIS are a non-profit corporation. Contri
butions are deductible for income tax purposes.

VA inquiry

�Page 4

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

letters
Indians spring back
To the editor:
Would you please let me know how much
it is to jstart a paper. I got my Indian paper
from my uncie but I want to start paying for
my newsletter that is coming to me now.
This note I wrote is something that just
came to my head. I’ not the best speller,
m
but I hope you like it. I have been married to
a white man for 14 years and it’ ending. I
s
don’ want you to use my real name but my
t
Indian name. I also want my sister to have a
newspaper too, so if you could let me know
the price I sure would appreciate hearing
from you.
There isn't enough room for an Indian,
why because I’m an Indian and living in a
white man’ world for (21) twenty-one years
s
before you know it you’ pushed aside.
re
Why? Because an Indian thinks one way
and a white man thinks another.
But we Indians always spring back no
matter how hard we are pushed. Why?
Because we are proud to be Indian.
Morning Star
(Penobscot)

Praise for Emma Francis
Bangor
To the editor:
I would like to let all o f the readers o f the
Wabanaki Alliance know what a fine job ,
Emma Francis has done in developing the
gymnastic program for the girls on the
Island. She has worked very hard on this for
the past two years. Emma went to many
board and council meetings to obtain
funding for the program, and then personal
ly saw to it that the girls were transported to
Bangor and back.
I am confident that the girls from the
Island and their parents join me, Vickie
Daigle, and the school in saying “Thank
you, Emma, for the great job you have
done!”
At this time I would also like to mention
how well the five girls and one boy did in
their gymnastic training. I am very proud of
them all: Tami, Sherri and Kim Mitchell,
Lee Ann Decora, John and Christa King.
Vickie Daigle
Rudy Ramirez

Indian query
Greensburg, Indiana
To the editor:
Picked up the Wabanaki Alliance paper
to read it and under the heading Letters to
the Editor: I read Creek Indian Query?
Now what in the hell is that?
I never wrote anything to your paper like
that.
Creek’ up your way? I’ not Creek. I’
s
m
m
Chippewa. I’ never changed.
ve
Some one made a mistake somewhere,
check it out ok?
Stewart Rodda

Le tte r o f tha nks
Gardiner
To the editor:
This is an open letter to all o f those
associated with the Maine Indian com
munity.
On behalf o f the sponsors and staff of the
Maine Studies Curriculum Project, I wish to
express my deep appreciation for the
generous contribution o f time and thought
given to the review and writing o f the Maine
Dirigo textbook and educational program
being produced by the Project.
The many hours o f travel, discussion,
writing, and review which were given so
freely by so many will make this book of
special value to Indians and non-Indians
alike. The chapters on the history of Maine
and the Wabanakis will fill a much
neglected area o f Maine history and correct
inaccuracies and misconceptions.
I wish to give a very special thank you to
the writing committee, to those who
attended the meetings and reviewed the
manuscripts, and to the American Friends
Service Committee for supporting and
assisting in coordinating the effort with my
office. It was a pleasure meeting all of you
and working with you.
Dean B. Bennett
Director
Maine Studies Curriculum Project

A donation
Oneida, Tenn.
To the editor:
Heard about your fine publication, the
“Wabanaki Alliance” newspaper. I’ very
d
much appreciate being put on your mailing
list. Will send donations from time to time.
Also, heard that you would like articles, etc.
to publish — have enclosed a copy o f our
“United Lenape Bands” Aims and Goals —
this, is what we try to follow as closely as
possible, in our U.L.B. I wrote these Aims
and Goals, and you have my permission to
copy any part or all o f it. If you would like
more articles on our U.L.B. — our work,
etc. I’ be more than happy to send
ll
material. Also, I have much raw material for
Indian arts and crafts work, such as buck
skins, buffalo horns, white tail and mule
deer antlers (in sets&gt; bobcat and wolf hides
(all tanned) etc. If your members are
interested in securing some o f these items, I
could send you a price list. Will close for
now, so please put us on your mailing list
and send any information you may have,
that you think will be o f importance to us —
have enclosed SI.00 — to start with.
Chief Sam Gray W olf— U.L.B.
Rt. #2 Box 286
Oneida, Tennessee 37841
P.S. — your may print my name and
address, as I’ answer any and all letters
ll
from our Indian peoples.

The steepest mountain
To become a man you have to climb
the steepest mountain, the mountain of
manhood, for it will not be easy; it takes
great will, strength and courage to fight the
pain which awaits you climbing the roughest
trail.
To survive you must go on and on, learn
great wisdom as others encourage you not to
stop, for it is very dangeftms.
Once you have stopped, too weak to go
on, you will have no place to go, you can’ go
t
forward or back, therefore you must step
aside, clearing the path so that others can go
on fighting for their survival.
Staying there and wasting your life away,
not knowing what to do, but hanging your

ISLAND BEAUTY — Angela Lamberth, 7, stopped by on a visit with her grandfather,
Joseph Biscula, at Indian Island. Angela is from an even larger island ... in the Philippines,
where her father, David, is stationed with the Navy. Her mother, Mary, is thinking of buying
a house on Indian Island. Angela said she wants to move to the Island. The Philippines have
too many snails, beetles, lizards, bamboo vipers, and boa constrictors, she said. She said
she’ most looking forward to making her first snowball.
s

head low for no one to see.
For those who fought hard to reach the
top a great change comes over you as you
enter the square o f the four directions. You
have a chance to see life around you, to fast
and pray, thanking the Lord for having you
as a chosen one, to live a good life from there
on.
There you will be granted the powers of
love, courage, faith, wisdom to know the
strength to fight the evil and to have great
respect for everything and everyone around
you; to enjoy freedom like the great buffalo
of the endless plains.
Matthew Dana
Indian Township

A refugee Cherokee
Santa Barbara, Ca.
To the editor:
The Reorganization Act o f 1934 provided
for, freedom o f choice, each tribe could
reject it in a referendum held by secret
ballot. Tribes that accepted the 1934 Act
could organize under it for a local tribal
government. Under the Johnson O ’
Mally
Act that was also passed the same time that
the Reorganization Act of 1934. The tribes
came out from under federal jurisdiction
and could decide on allowing other political
subdivisions o f the states and private
agencies in to help the Indians build up
their economic enterprises, through this
flexible system o f contracts and o f being
given grants to help the Indian develop their
economic system. But they were given free
choice to decide on the non-federal help
under the Johnson O ’
Mally Act o f 1934 and
the Act o f 1934 called the Reorganization
Act o f 1934.
Under the Reorganization Act the tribes
who voted to come under this Act were also
allowed to organize under their local self
tribal government, but they were to call their
Indian owned and operated corporations
Federal Charted for Economic Enterprise
and an Indian Commissioner was appointed
his duties were to encourage Tribe self
government and tribal owned and operated
and worked cooperative enterprises, under
the Reorganization Act o f 1934, now it
seems to me the Indian people should get
their act together and first find out which
tribes voted to come under the Reorganiza
tion Act o f 1934 and which voted to come
under the Johnson O ’
Mally Act o f 1934.
We call ourselves Refugee Indians be
cause we or our representatives have never
given up our original title and ownership to
our land. We exist as a distinct national
community and we will never relinquish our
sovereignty to our ancestors’ claim o f land

sovereignty unless the United States Gov
ernment makes war upon our Bear Nation,
and they have to find us first since we are
Indian Refugees and spread across Ameri
ca, we consider all o f America our sovereign
right and home lands. We cannot be
dissolved as a free united Indian nation
because o f the expulsion from our lands, we
are refugees o f this land and we are still a
nation until we ourselves decide to relinguish title, which we will never do since
the blood and guts and flesh and bones of
our ancestors are mixed in this land and it
speaks to us and is alive to us and tells us we
still have sovereignty to this land and that
our rag-tailed disposessed people are still a
sovereign nation, needless to say we can’ get
t
federal jurisdiction on us because the
United States hasn’ had a Indian War with
t
us and beat us.
But we claim our right under the 1924 Act
that states every Indian born in lands
belonging to the U.S. is a citizen, so we
claim all the United States Constitutional
rights every other citizen has, we feel this is
about what white America does they claim
all their rights as an American here and still
cling to their white European roots and take
care o f the people overseas while the Native
Peoples o f this land get no human rights or
legal rights, so we feel we can help change
all this by our own special political
sovereignty, since we claim our Indian
Sovereignty we come directly under the
United States Constitution, which we re
spect in the fact that it is the only law o f this
country and the officials who are elected are
required to serve it, therefore we deal only
with the Constitution and Constitutional
Law for it is the true government, the men
come and go and only are servants to serve
it.
Pauline Grehalva
Refugee Cherokee

Diocesan camp offers scholarships
PORTLAND — A number o f half-scholarships are available this summer for Camp
Pesquasawasis at Poland Spring, operated
by Diocesan Human Relations Services, Inc.
Four two-week sessions are scheduled at
the camp, starting July 1 The co-ed camp
.

for ages six to 13 offers Red Cross
swimming, boating, sports, art, radio,
photography and worship services, with the
Rev. Frank Morin, chaplain.
For further information contact John DiBiase, director, 87 High Street, Portland.

�Tribe to enforce
logging policy
By Steve Cartwright
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — The practice of
clearclutting areas of the 17,000 wooded
acres of the Passamaquoddy reservation
here became strictly illegal July 1, and other
new regulations protecting the tribe and
Indian woodsmen are equally stringent.
Bruce Francis, head o f the tribe’ recently
s
established Forestry Department, said he
has sought laws with “teeth” in them, plus
the authority to police all tribally held land.
Francis, the first Passamaquoddy Indian to
graduate from the University o f Maine at
Orono’ forestry school, has extended his
s
authority to stopping speeding vehicles
along Route 1 in the Township.
,
Among the tighter rules adopted by the
Joint Passamaquoddy Tribal Council is that,
“all timber harvesting on Indian Township
shall require a permit issued through the

Decal affixed to Indian forestry depart
ment’s pickup truck.
Passamaquoddy Indian Forestry Depart
ment.” Such a permit must describe the
area to be cut, a list of wood by species and
units, plus stumpage rate.
Only one permit may be held by a
contractor at any given time, the regulations
stipulate, only one crew is allowed per
logging contractor (not more than five
persons), and the majority o f crew members
must be enrolled in the Passamaquoddy
tribe. The new forestry department, “will be
responsible for seeing that all permit
requirements have been met.”
It’ a whole new ball game for Indian
s
Township, which shares its forest resources
with Pleasant Point Passamaquoddy reser
vation. Francis and other tribal officials
acknowledge that effective forest manage
ment has been a long time coming, and that
unregulated cutting has in the past led to
the devastation o f some o f the Indians’
prime woodlands.
Enforcement sounds easy on paper, but
Francis at press time had just one trained
forester working in his fledgling depart
ment, plus several assistants learning skills
on the job. One of those assistants, Joe
Socobasin, a Passamaquoddy, knows the
problems in a personal way.
"It’ their land. Why should anyone tell
s
them what to do with it,” Socobasin asked
rhetorically. He said his father is a
woodcutter at the Township, and father and
son don’ see eye to eye on forestry
t
management. Seasoned contractors, assign
ed lots for their own use by the tribe, may
not react favorable to sudden restrictions
and requirements that cramp their style.
Currently, there are four crews working
the Indian Township woods, and one of
them reportedly does not meet the require
ments of a majority of Indians involved. New
regulations had not been enforced at the
time this article was written.

The four pages o f regulations state that
only one skidder per crew will be permitted
any logging operation, and skidders “must
be owned or leased with an option to buy, by
a tribal member.” Also “each contractor is
responsible for the work of employees,
associates or helpers and for their compli
ance with the terms o f the permit and the
guidelines listed.”
Explicit procedures for cutting are set
forth: Trees eligible to be cut will be marked
at chest level, and at the stump, by forestry
Indian foresters, Russell Roy, left, Paula Bryant and Joe Socobasin stand beside skidder
department staff. In other words, all trees
and only those trees marked exclusively by that belongs to Joe’s father.
the forestry department may be harvested.
Logging being a year-round business at
Indian Township, the regulations require
snow be cleared from around trees before
they are felled. Trees must be limbed and
topped before being yarded.
The new rules demand that contractors
construct their own truck roads, installing
necessary bridges and culverts, and pay for
same. Plans for new roads must be okayed
by the forestry department. Any damage to
the roads attributable to logging operations
is the responsibility of the contractor.
Contractors must inform the department
who its purchasing agents are, and those
agents must supply forestry officials with a
copy o f scale slips. Stumpage values shall be
reported to the Department of Indian
Affairs. Copies o f stumpage checks must be
given to the forestry department for review.
Regulations declare that, “ Payments for
stumpage will be for the best products that
can be made.”
Orders regarding buildings and fire
prevention are straight and to the point.
Buildings shall not be constructed without
the department’ permission, and that
s
applies to trailers as well. Buildings or
trailers must be removed when a job is
completed. Fires can only be built on snow.
In case of forest fire, loggers and other
woods workers must drop what they’
re
doing and join firefighting efforts. Unless
otherwise covered, such persons will be paid
going rates for their assistance.
A woods road at Indian Township — 17,000 acres of timber land.

George Stanley of Pleasant Point enjoys log
ging; “You can bunt anytime you want to.”
Violations will apparently be dealt with
evenly and quickly. "Should it be found that
any contractor is in violation o f any o f the
aforementioned policies and procedures, the
Indian Township Forestry Department is
duly authorized by the Joint Passama
quoddy Tribal Council to 1 Halt the logging
)
operation o f the contractor in question until
the violation has been remedied; 2) Direct
the contractor to perform whatever tasks are
necessary to bring the operation within the
requirements.”

Hauling a heavy load along Route 1, Indian Township.

�Page 6

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Township spared
budworm spray
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — The Passamaquoddy reservation here was all set to be
sprayed in the spruce budworm control pro
gram. but last minute changes in plans
prevented the poison from being applied to
10,000 wooded acres.
Tribal forestry department head, Bruce
Francis, said he had at first requested state
authorities to spray against the pest, but
later objected because of the kind o f spray.
“I'd given them the okay to go ahead,
with the idea that they’ spray Sevin. Then I
d
heard it was going to be Dylox,” Francis

said. He said tribal Gov. Harold Lewey
formally requested the state not spray any
areas of Indian Township.
Several Indians reportedly expressed
concern about spraying Indian Township,
where drinking water comes from lakes and
streams. Their concern may have influenced
Francis and Lewey to change their minds.
Tribal forester Russell Roy said there was
“too much standing water” in the woods to
safely spray Dylox.
The organic Sevin is seen as a safer
insecticide than the chemical Dylox. Dylox
is more toxic.

SPIT AND POLISH — Maxwell Stanley keeps the two fire engines at Pleasant Point ready
for action.

Boxers battle first round
at Indian Island
INDIAN ISLAND — The first Indian
invitational boxing tournament at the
Penobscot Nation drew a crowd o f more
than 100 paying spectators, and participants
from as far away as Boston. Maine Indians
fought well, and some scored high, in the
recent event.
The first bout went to an Indian
Township boy, Don Newell, with a TKO
over Jeff Brouser o f Lewiston. Newell weighs
120, his opponent 119 pounds.

of the recent first Indian Island invitational boxing meet were from left,
Chris Francis, Miles Francis, Kirk Francis and Danny Mitchell. The boys were sponsored by
the Penobscot tribal recreation department

Dana-Burf wed in outdoor rites
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — Dozens of
guests joined in celebrating the traditionalstyle wedding o f Samuel Dana, a Passamaquoddy, and Joann Burt, a Micmac, at Long
Lake Campground, June 9.
The bride is the daughter o f M. Patricia
Burt o f Portland. She is a graduate of
Deering High School, Portland, and Whea
ton College in Norton, Mass., where she
earned a degree in economics.
The groom is the son o f Albert and

Kirk Francis, 76 pounds, was the victor in
the fourth bout, against Tony LeBretton, 67.
Both are Indian Islanders. In the fifth
round, Brian Davidson, 80 pounds, lost to
Dennis Pickman o f Bangor, who held a ten
pound edge over his opponent.
Danny Mitchell o f Indian Island fought

Obituaries

Philomene Dana, o f Peter Dana Point. A
graduate of Higgins Classical Institute, he
plans to study business administration at
University o f Maine. The couple is living at
the campground, and will move into a new
home on the Dana Point road, when
completed.
Passamaquoddy tribal Gov. Harold Lew
ey presented the newlyweds with the gift of
an Indian basket.

Indian panel revises
history book
ORONO — A chapter o f Maine’ history
s
dealing with Indian people has been ex
tensively revised by a group o f concerned
Indians, meeting here regularly the past few
months.
The chapter delves into the history and
culture o f Indians in Maine, but was con
sidered innaccurate and misleading, prior to
the revisions by the ad-hoc committee. The
chapter will appear in Dingo, a school text
book that has been assembled and edited by
Dean B. Bennett o f Maine Studies Curricu
lum Project, Gardiner. Bennett said the

Bout two involved small fry: 60-pound
Miles Francis squared off against Chris
Francis, but the result was a no-contest
decision, between the two Indian Islanders.
In the third confrontation, local favorite
Sterling Lolar, 164 pounds, knocked out
Brian Polchies, 167, o f Boston. Lively
announcing was provided by Deraid Soloman o f Indian Island, a Maliseet who has
been away from the Island 25 years.

Frankie Cleaves o f Pleasant Point, in round
six. Mitchell, 112 pounds, beat Cleaves, 122
pounds. Joey Gamache, 98, from Lewiston,
boxed Steve Marshall, 105, from West
Quincy, Mass., in the seventh bout, but this
reporter lost track o f the score.
The eighth round found Mike Kyajonan,
132 pounds, a victor over Mike Stevens, 137,
o f Brockton, Mass. Mark “dance master”
Adams, a 150-pound Bangor boy, clobbered
Chris Morley, 141, from Boston, in the ninth
bout. Adams was judged best boxer o f the
evening.
Gary Giles, 152 pounds, from York, beat
Stewart Simon, 154, South Boston, in the
tenth match at the ring.
The “heavies” got their turn in the
eleventh and twelth bouts. By far the biggest
cheer o f the tournament went to a loser,
Dale Newell o f Indian Township, 220
pounds. Dale put up an impressive fight
against his 180-pound opponent, Chris
Clukey.
Finally, Howard Hunter, 208, o f Bangor,
outboxed Richard Poulette, 203, Dorches
ter, Mass.
The Indian Island exhibition was produ
c e d - by Jerry Thompson, a promoter from
Boston.

book, funded by the state Department o f
Education and Cultural Services, will prob
ably be published this fall.

MARY MAE LARRABEE
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — Mary Mae
Larrabee, 44, died unexpectedly June 15,
1979, at Peter Dana Point. She was born
May 30, 1935, at Peter Dana, daughter of
Lola and Rose Ann (Sopiel) Sockabasin. She
was a librarian and an teacher at the school
at Peter Dana Point. She is survived by her
husband, Wayne of Peter Dana; one step
son. Wayne Jr. o f Kittery; one daughter.
Lucinda Hood of Peter Dana; one step
daughter, Susanne of Kittery; four brothers.
David, Clayton, Rapheal and Patrick, all of
Peter Dana; three sisters, Florence Patoine
o f Brookton; Diane Campbell and Annabelle Stevens, both of Peter Dana; two
granddaughters, Tammy Mae .and Angela
Mary of Peter Dana.
A Mass o f Christian burial was celebrated
at St. Ann’ Church, Peter Dana, with the
s
Rev. Joseph Laughlin officiating; burial in
the tribal cemetery.

ROBERT A. TOMAH
The book will not only attempt to portray t
HOULTON — Robert A. Tomah, 38,
Indians fairly, but also deal with Francodied July 14,1979, at a Caribou hospital. He
Americans in Maine, and other aspects of
was born in Kingsclear, N.B., March 6,
state history.
1941, son o f Leo and Mary Ellen (Paul)
Serving on the volunteer committee were Tomah. He was a member o f St. Mary’
s
Andrea Nicholas o f Tobique reserve, in Church. He is survived by his father of
Canada; Brenda Polchies o f Houlton; and Houlton; two sons, Eric o f Big Cove, N.B.;
Carol Dana, Vivian Massey, Debra Mitchell,
Christopher o f Houlton; three daughters,
and Ann Pardilla, all o f Indian Island.
Robin and Mary Ann o f Big Cove, N.B.,

Alice o f Houlton; two brothers, Aubrey and
James o f Houlton; two sisters, Mrs. Eleanor
Perley of Houlton, Mrs. Deborah Haley of
Presque Isle. Mass was celebrated at St.
Mary’s Church, with the Rev. John E. Bellefontaine officiating. Interment will be in St.
Mary’ Cemetery, Houlton.
s

CM IA holds annual meeting
ORONO — Central Maine Indian Asso
ciation’ annual meeting is set at 7 p.m.,
s
Thursday, July 12, according to CMIA
director, Tom Vicaire.
Four positions will be filled in annual
elections, including the organization's vice
presidency, Vicaire said. “Everyone is
encouraged to attend,” he said. The meeting
will be held at Indian Resource Center, 95
Main St., Orono.

Kingsclear celebrates
KINGSCLEAR, New Brunswick — The
Maliseet reserve at Kingsclear will be
holding its annual Feast Day in honor of
Saint Anne on July 28. The celebration will
extend to the next day and wall include
races, fireworks, and other outdoor activities
as well as Indian dancing, picnics, and
religious ceremonies.
Everyone is invited.

�Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Page 7

200,000 oysters

for aquaculture
PLEASANT POINT — A total of 200.000
seed oysters were flown to Maine from
California recently, to be used in the
Passamaquoddy tribal acquaculture busi
ness.
Started last year, the business may be able
to market some 2.000 oysters this summer to
restaurants and other retailers. Project
director Norman Laberge said it takes three
to four years for the seed oysters to reach
saleable maturity. Last year the tribe
ordered 40.000 seed oysters.
Working in acquaculture this summer are
Passam aquoddies. Lenny Sapiel. Ann
Moore and Martin Francis. Jr.

Training funds available

Micmac lad finds Boston
has friendly Indian center
BOSTON — Francis Clair walked into
the Boston Indian Council building with a
grin. “ Francis! How are you doing,” was the
response.
Francis, an 18-year-old Micmac from Big
Cove reserve in New Brunswick, isn’ sur
t
prised when people know and greet him in
Boston. He recently hitch-hiked to Boston
Indian Council, from Canada, because he
felt like it. “I decided to come down here to
see what s happening.” Francis said.
Francis has a sunny outlook on life that
hides a difficult upbringing involving fights
with his father, and a foster home in
rredericton. N.B. He has completed ninth

grade, and is now pursuing more education
through special programs for dropouts.
Raised by grandparents. Francis left the
reserve at age 1 . He traveled to Maine to
5
pick potatoes, and has been raking blue
berries since age eight. His Fredericton
foster parents' house is the place he calls
home. At one time, he said. “ I went to my
father’ place (to live), but we started
s
drinking, fighting.”
Francis is unsure o f his future. He might
attend a trade school. He doesn’ think he
t
will ever forget Micmac and the “ mother
language.” He said, "there is something to
learn in cities,” and, “ I met all kinds o f Big
Covers around here.”

PRESQUE ISLE — Training funds are
available to eligible employers who are
selected to participate in the on-the-job
training program (OJT), of Aroostook
County Action Program (ACAP).
The OJT program, which is funded under
the Comprehensive Employment ana Train
ing Act (CETA). matches CETA eligible job
ready individuals with jobs and reimburses
the employer for 50 per cent o f the entry
level wage paid during the employee’
s
training period. This financial incentive
provides an opportunity to employers to
increase the number of their staff or to
replace an employee who has left the job.
Eligible OJT training sites will include
businesses of any size which provide year
round full-time employment. The length of
training will vary according to the job
description and skills required. ACAP Em
ployment and Training will provide em
ployability assessment to match the charac
teristics and skills of the trainee with the
employer's needs. OJT participants work
the employers full time work week and are
paid the em ployer’ usual entry wage rate
s
for the occupation. ACAP Employment and
Training will reimburse the employer, on a
monthly basis, for 50 per cent of entry level
wages for up to 26 weeks.
Any employer in Aroostook who would
like more information on the OJT program
is invited to call ACAP OJT coordinator,
Terry Condon at 764-3721. Condon will be
available to visit a place of business to
explain the OJT program.

Eskimo takes Church job
The Rev. Raymond Baine, 53, has become
district superintendent o f the United Meth
odist Church in Santa Ana, Calif.
This is the first such appointment outside
the Oklahoma Indian Missionary Confer
ence. O f native Alaskan descent, Baine will
lead 50 congregations and 27,432 persons.

TUREEN'S AIDE — Connie McCloud, a
native of Aruba in the Carribean, is em
ployed as an aide to Native American Rights
Fund lawyer Thomas N. Tureen, who is in
charge of Maine Indian land claims.
McCloud works at Tureen’s Portland
offices. A newcomer to Maine, she says she
is very fond of the state, but has been too
busy to do much sightseeing.

m d io n s w in re p re s e n ta tio n
The U.S. Justice Department has ob
tained a consent decree requiring Thurston
County, Neb., to create seven districts of
equal population to help restore Indian
membership on the board of supervisors.
In 1971 the county changed the method of
electing supervisors from seven single-mem
ber districts to at-large balloting. A suit
challenging that action was filed last year.
Indians make up 28 percent of Thurston
County’ population but compose 77 and 81
s
percent o f the population in two of the old
seven districts.

Indian children
a conference topic
FLAGSTAFF. Ariz. — - The Arizona CEC
Federation will host a topical conference on
the Exceptional Indian Child and Indian
Education.
The conference will be held in Flagstaff.
Oct. 12-13. 1979. Federation President
Elaine Peterson issues an invitation to all
individuals concerned with the education of
American Indian children and vouth.
Interested individuals may contact the
chairperson. Robert Horn. Round Rock
Trading Post. Chinle. Ariz. 86503.

Ways sought to Improve Indian housing
WASHINGTON — A plan to test wavs of
improving the design, quality and pro
duction of housing for American Indians is
being reworked to ensure it reflects the views
of Indians themselves, according to Depart
ment of Housing and Urban Development
Secretary Patricia Harris.
Indian opinion will be solicited to improve
the proposal or to devise an alternate
method.

Effectiveness of the effort will denend
largely upon the active cooperation of the
Indian community. Harris said. "W e expect
to use this additional time to solicit specific
comments and suggestions. The initiative
lies with the Indian people themselves."
In the meantime. HUD says it is prepared
to approve construction management pro
posals initiated by individual Indian housing
authorities.
*

BIA opens northwestern agency
WASHINGTON — A Bureau of Indian
Affairs agency has been established at
Hoquiam, Washington, to serve nine Indian
tribes located on the Olympic Peninsula,
assistant secretary for Indian Affairs,
Forrest J. Gerard announced.
Gerard said the new agency wall more
effectively meet the increasing tribal re
quests for services to Olympic Peninsula
reservations and will improve Bureau
performance in meeting responsibilities

under the provisions of the Indian Self-De
termination and Education Assistance Act.
In the past the Western Washington
Agency, located in Everett, Washington, has
served 21 tribes in its geographic juris
diction. Under the change announced today
the Western Washington Agency will be
renamed the Puget Sound Agency and will
continue to serve 12 tribes in the Puget
Sound Area. The agency in Hoquiam will be
called the Olympic Peninsula Agency.

WITH DISPATCH — Frances Cleaves, a dispatcher at Pleasant Point’ new municipal
s
building, is one of several persons who provide full-time dispatching for the Passamaquoddy
police and fire departments.

�Page 8

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Health services take shape
on Maine reservations
By Bill O’
Neal
Five years ago the Maine reservations
counted themselves lucky to have even one
tribal nurse to care for their health needs.
Today, with federal recognition and the
influx o f dollars and counsel from Indian
Health Service (IHS), health care on the
reservations will soon rival or surpass most
Maine towns.
Indian Island already has a fully func
tioning health center, complete with exam
ining rooms, a dental office, laboratory,
counseling rooms and office space. Pleasant
Point is scheduled to begin building a
similar facility this month and will have it
completed in Nov., according to tribal lieu
tenant governor Giv Dore. It is estimated
that Indian Township’ center will be com
s
pleted sometime next year.
Services will range from examinations at
reservation health centers by physicians’
assistants to mental health and counseling
by trained staff. A key feature o f the new
health programs will be a referral system
through which patients coming into the
clinic will be referred to area doctors or
other health-related people, holding con
tracts to provide services with the tribe.
Each center wiH have physicians, dentists
and registered nurses on full or part-time
bases.
According to Eunice Baumanndirector of
the Penobscot health center on Indian
Island, patients entering the center are ex
amined by a physician’ assistant. They are
s
then referred, according to their ailments, to
one of more than 40 area doctors, con
tracted to work with the tribe. Any expenses
not covered by conventional medical insur
ance are picked up by IHS.

Eunice Baumann, director of Indian Island
health center.
Planned, or already operational, are
pharmacies and basic laboratory facilities to
do blood and urine analyses and to carry out
specific diagnostic screening as for diabetes,
otitis media (a respiratory ailment), and
other diseases found to exist in the Indian
community. Wayne Newell, director of
health and social services at Indian Town
ship, predicted that the Passamaquoddies
would emphasize screening and crisis-inter
vention “for a couple o f years, because the
problems have been ignored for so long.”
According to Baumann, studies in Maine
have shown that “medical problems of
Indians in Maine are not variant from other
lower socio-economic groups.”
Routine services offered at the centers will
be supplemented by visits from area
specialists who will hold clinics in their
fields.
Health education will also receive em
phasis for the first time on the reservation,
according to Pleasant Point health and
social services director, Doris Kirby. Coun

seling ranging from nutrition to applying for
social security benefits will be offered at the
centers. In addition, Indian Island is dis
tributing a regular health newsletter.
Each reservation will have community
health representatives (CHR) to act as
liaison between the health centers and tribal
members. They will be charged with going
into the homes and monitoring the health
needs in the community. According to
Newell, at Indian Township the CHR’ will
s
be required to speak Passamaquoddy.

Wayne A. Newell, director of Indian Town
ship health services.

partment o f Indian Affairs next fiscal year, Our tribal nurse goes to conferences on
the tribes have been left $200,000 short in native healing. It’ not that well-defined a
s
their budgets. At a recent meeting o f health field yet. Nobody’ going to prescribe
s
officials at Indian Island, Dr. Emery anything without m ore information, but it
Johnson, director o f IHS, stated that is something we plan to get into.”
previous court cases have shown that the
As Wayne Newell put it, “The good Lord
presence o f federal dollars may not be used doesn’ charge you for prescriptions (with
t
as a reason for withdrawing state funds,
native medicine); He just tells you where to
find it.”
Newell said it was too early to comment
on what action will be taken concerning the
state’ withdrawal, but said, “My personal
s
belief is to fight for those resources. At the
time the IHS contracts were planned, it was
with the assurance that the state would
continue services.” He termed the state’
s
INDIAN ISLAND — Teresa Sappier, a
action “a breach o f promise, not just to
lab technician at Penobscot Health and
Indians, but to the federal government.”
Social Services Department, plans to enroll
A primary concern on the reservations is
at Gallup Indian Medical Center, in Gallup,
increasing the number o f Indian personnel
New Mexico, starting next month.
working in the health centers. According to
The two-year program leads to a degree as
Newell this problem is being attacked by
a physician’ assistant, and is funded
s
encouraging reservation youths, going into
through the U.S. Indian Health Service.
higher education, to consider health fields
Sappier, a Penobscot, graduated from
and by “getting (reservation) people in now,
University of Maine at Orono with a degree
with an eye to later training.”
in microbiology. She has worked at the
Community response to the newly in
university’ Cutler medical center, and at
s
augurated programs has been slower than
Seaton Hospital, Waterville.
expected. At Indian Island, where most of
Sappier said she may return to Maine to
the services are established, Baumann at work after graduation. She is currently a
tributed the sluggishness to a lack o f under
member o f the Wabanaki Alliance board of
standing and confidence in the physician’ directors.
s
assistants or nurse practitioners. “I feel
people are put off by the term nurse prac
titioner,” she said. “It’ not the same thing
s
Health m eetin g
as a practical nurse,” she emphasized.
“They get two years specialized training.”
slated in Spokane
She also pointed out that the staff has a
physician backup with whom to confer.
“They are well enough trained to recognize
SPOKANE, Wash. — This city is the
their own limitations,” she said.
scheduled site o f a third annual Indian/
Despite the m odem facilities and syste
Alaska native health conference, July 22-26.
matic approach to medicine adopted by the Among featured speakers will be Emery
tribal planners, some money has been set Johnson, director of the federal Indian
aside to study Indian medicine. According Health Service (IHS), Howard E. Tommie o f
National Indian Health Board (NIHB), and
to Baumann, “There has been an en
couragement on the part of IH S all over John Echohawk, director of Native Ameri
the country to get back to native healing. can Rights Fund (NARF).

Terry Sappier to
enter IHS school

The one major health problem not
currently included in tribal health planning
is alcoholism. At present, Wabanaki Corp.,
a central organization serving all Maine
Indians, is the primary Indian agency
addressing the problem. Some tribal health
officials, however, expressed dissatisfaction
with the effectiveness o f the agency, which
has been plagued with personnel and
political problems, and suggested that at
some point alcoholism programs would be
managed at the reservation level. Indian
Health Service has been reluctant to fund an
alcoholism program on the reservation as
long as Wabanaki Corporation is operating.
The possibility exists that IHS will fund the
agency after a five year trial period,
however. Wabanaki Corp. is currently
funded by National Institute o f Alcoholism
and Alcohol Abuse (NIAAA).
Exactly who will be served by the
reservation health centers has not been
decided. Baumann said efforts are under
way to expand the Penobscot service
area, which currently includes only Indian
Island, Penobscot County, and half of
Aroostook County. She said IHS has been
asked to increase the area to any distance
“within easy driving" of the reservation,
which, she said, would permit most
Penobscots in the state to use the
facilities.
Newell indicated that Indian Township
will be responsible for Indian Township and
Aroostook County. He intends to send a
team to Fort Fairfield to establish an out
reach program. “Distance is a great
problem,” he said. Some sort o f arrange
ment may be worked out with the Associa
tion o f Aroostook Indians (AAI) located in
Houlton, he added. Outreach workers will
be used by the other reservations to a lesser
degree.
People eligible for Passamaquoddy health
center services include all Passamaquoddies
in the service area and some, but not all,
non-Passamaquoddy dependents. Newell
said an exchange o f services with the Pen
obscots is being discussed, but has not been
resolved.
Although the prognosis is good for Maine
Indian health programs, several concerns
still remain. With the state o f Maine
Doris Kirby, health and social services director at Pleasant Point Passamaquoddy reserva
tion, shares a smile with young friend, Carol Ann Taylor, seven.
planning to discontinue funds to the De

�Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Page 9

Health leader vows to
fight for state services
INDIAN ISLAND — Maine Gov.
Joseph E. Brennan seems to have un
knowingly antagonized a federal agency
in his zero-budget proposal for the De
partment o f Indian Affairs, and as a
result his plans may backfire.
The head of Indian Health Service
(IHS) said in a visit last month to Indian
Island that Maine has a “responsibility”
to continue funding health related
programs for Maine-based Indians.
Dr. Emery Johnson, IHS director, told
Wabanaki Alliance his agency is willing
to assist federally recognized Penobscot
and Passamaqouddy Indians in attempts
to have the second year budget for Indian
Affairs reinstated.
Johnson, U.S. Bureau o f Indian
Affairs official Harry Rainbolt, and
tribal leaders met in Bangor recently to
plan strategy. The state budget cut could

mean the loss o f $200,000 in contract
services, one official declared.
Brennan has budgeted $721,584 for
the first year o f the biennium, the same
funding level as last year. He has hinted
he may restore certain funds in the
second year, according to one tribal
representative.
James Meredith, an IHS official, said
the meeting in Bangor was “to provide
the tribes with what impact a reduction
o f services will have on the total
program.” Asked about legal action on
behalf of the tribes, Meredith com
mented, “This has been done in other
states and usually the tribes have won.
The American Indians as citizens are
entitled to their fair share."
Johnson said his agency has con
fronted state governments over similar
budget cutbacks in the past: “We
haven’ lost any o f them yet. I don’ see
t
t
any reason why this should be the first.”

Dr. Emery Johnson, head of Indian Health Service, meets with lab technician Teresa
Sappier, during tour of Indian Island health building.

Physician's helper joins health center

A group of officials meet on luncheon line; Penobscot tribal Gov. Wally Pehrson greets Jim
Meredith of IHS; also present, from left, Paul Buckwalter of Indian Island health services,
IHS Director Emery Johnson, [foreground]; tribal planners Timothy Love and Andrew
A k in s.

IHS impressed
(Continued from page 1
)
concept o f IHS contract projects, where
local officials design, develop and manage
health and social services. “We were told by
many people that we were just wasting our
money letting Indian communities design
their own health delivery systems.”
Accompanying Johnson on his visit were

Sonja (Soctomah) Dorn, a native of
Pleasant Point, has been hired by the tribal
health department headed by Passama
quoddy, Wayne Newell. Dom, 34, graduated
May 27 from St. Joseph’ School o f Diploma
s
Nursing in Bangor. A graduate of Shead
Memorial High School in Eastport, she
underwent LPN training in Fond-du-lac,
Wisconsin.
Her husband, Allen Dorn Sr., a Wiscon
sin native, graduated May 19, from Wash
ington County Vocational Technical In
stitute, with a degree in diesel mechanics.
The Dorns have three children, Tina, 14;
Allen Jr., 10, and Andrea, eight.

Sockabasin-Dana case

IHS officials James Meredith, who heads a
department dealing with southern and
(Continued from page 1
)
eastern tribes; project officer William
Millar; and Keith Enders, an environmental
the meaning, and scope, o f all dependent reservations were not addressed in the court
engineer with Meredith’ department. Dr.
s
Indian communities, as a criterion o f the opinion.
George Lythcott, a federal health official
existence o f Indian country, which leads us
“The ultimate issue has not been decided,
originally scheduled to visit Indian Island
to conclude that the term embodies an ex
but the state has a pretty steep hill to climb
with Johnson, was unable to attend.
pansive federal concern with matters af
. . . I think the odds are overwhelmingly in
fecting Indians which was not fully recog
favor o f the Indians,” said a source who
nized by the Superior Court when it failed to asked to remain anonymous. “It’ a pretty
s
arrest the judgments o f conviction now big decision as far as the northeast is con
before us. We therefore sustain the appeals cerned. It pretty much reinforces Passama
from those judgments and remand to the quoddy versus Morton,” the source said,
Superior Court for further inquiry, in ac
referring to a landmark decision in the Pencordance with guidelines hereinafter pro
obscot-Passamaquoddy land claims case.
vided, into the question whether the status That decision established that the 1790
o f the Passamaquoddy Tribe and its lands Nonintercourse act, making Congress re
brings this arson case within the jurisdiction sponsible for approving treaties with In
of the federal government to the exclusion of dians, applied to Passamaquoddies.
the jurisdiction o f the State o f Maine. ”
Sockabasin told Wabanaki Alliance that,
The supreme court has mandated that the “It has been a long haul for me.” He said it
Sockabasin-Dana case be remanded to was difficult to put into words his feelings
Washington County superior court, for a after three years o f fighting through the
hearing with Judge David Roberts, who courts. He said he had turned overnight
originally presided over .the case in a jury from a loser into a winner.
“I sacrificed a lot. I sacrificed my family,
trial. Informed sources said they were
certain federal jurisdiction on Maine Indian my kids, to prove a point. I feel an Indian
person shouldn’ have to do this,” Socka
t
reservations will be upheld.
basin said.
No one was certain what would happen to
“ Some o f us will go to any extent to prove
the defendents, but it appears unlikely they what’ right. Personally, I gave up my
s
will face a jail sentence, if given a new trial freedom to prove that the Indian people are
in U.S. district court, Bangor. Procedures right. And basically, we control our own
Sonja S. Dorn
for dealing with federal jurisdiction cases on destiny,” he said.

Indian nurse accepts tribal job
INDIAN TOWNSHIP - The health and
social services department here has its first
registered nurse, and she is a Passama
quoddy Indian.

INDIAN TOWNSHIP — The new physi
Campbell is living in Calais. He enjoys
cian’ assistant at the tribal health center bow hunting.
s
here says he is, “excited about getting things
off the ground.”
Barry Campbell, 30, has been hired by
Passamaquoddy Health and Social Services
Department. Busy ordering new equipment
and orienting himself to his work and fellow
staff, Campbell said, “It's a new thing for
me, setting up a clinic.
“Basically, my job is primary care, which
basically involves family, health, medical
history, physical exams,” he said. Campbell
will assist Dr. Ronald Heatherington, who
has a contract with the tribe to visit the’
health center thrice weekly.
Campbell, although non-Indian, was born
on a Klamath Indian reservation in Oregon.
He spent one year as a laboratory technician
in Ketchikan, Alaska. He graduated from
Alderson-Broaddus College, West Virginia,
and Portland (Oregon) Community College.
He studied at West Virginia University
Barry Campbell
Medical Center.

�Page 10

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Youth show little interest in native medicine
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — Seventy-yearold Fred Tomah says he wouldn’ mind
t
showing young Passamaquoddy people the
art of Indian medicine; “but I don’ see
t
much interest,” he adds.
„
Did you know flagroot cures coughs,
colds, the flu and blood poisoning? Rockbreak, a moss, is good for kidney trouble.
Life of man is good for “almost everything,
if you know what it is, and where to find it.
Lady’ slippers can stop convulsions; and as
s
many people know, plantains cure cuts and
inflammation.
Fred said he took lady’ slipper one time,
s
and hospital officials were bewildered when
they could not draw blood. "They say
Indians used to-take it before going out to
do battle," he said.
Fred smokes cigarettes. He's tried to quit.
He’s a former river driver on the St. Croix.
Did you know that balsam fir pitch speeds
healing of wounds? A pine pitch “plaster,
well cooked, can mend a broken bone when
applied for a period of time. ’T’ had a
ve
broken rib I don't know how many times,
and a sore back." The pine pitch works.
Fred says.
Fred the medicine man boasted that
Sonja Dorn, Passamaquoddy nurse, asked
him about a sore throat. Use the roots of
golden thread, he advised. Milkweed is good
for warts. Everyone knows about arthritis,
but what to do? "Boil cedar boughs a
minute or two, then you let it steep. You
strain it. and tirink it three or four times a
day." You've got nothing to lose but your
arthritis. Fred says, adding, “I’
ve been
taking it right along.”
Fred says he is excited about an invitation
to display his knowledge at a Bar Harbor
fair this month (see story elsewhere in this
paper). Fred has four sons and four daught
ers by his first wife; four daughters and a
son by his second wife. He has 40 grand
children. His grandfather. Tomah Joseph
Tomah. worked for Franklin Delano Roose
velt at the president's Campabello Island
home. That’ where young Fred had his first
s
ice cream.

Indian Cookery
MOLASSES GLAZED BEANS
(Makes 8 servings)
2 cups dry great northern or pea (navy)
beans
5 cups water
IVi teaspoons salt
l i small onion, chopped
/
V cup brown sugar, packed
*
1teaspoon dry mustard
Vi cup molasses
2 tablespoons margarine or meat fat
drippings
Wash and drain beans.
Put beans and water in large pan and heat
to boiling. Boil 2 minutes. Remove from
heat. Cover and let stand 1hour.
Add salt. Cover and boil gently about IVi
hours until beans are tender.
Add rest of ingredients and more water if
needed for cooking. Stir gently to mix.
Cover and boil gently about 1 hour to
blend flavors. Uncover toward end of
cooking, if needed, to thicken liquid.

SUNFLOWER SEED CAKES
3 cups shelled sunflower seeds
6 tablespoons corn meal
2 teaspoons maple syrup
3 cups water
Vi cup oil
Simmer seeds in water in heavy saucepan,
covered, for 1 hour. Grind.
Mix syrup and corn meal into ground
seeds. 1 tablespoon at a time, making a soft
dough.
Shape dough into firm flat cakes 3" in
diameter.
Brown cakes in hot oil in heavy skillet on
both sides. Drain on brown paper and serve
hot.

Fred Tomah

P en obscot w o m a n
to attend scout m e et
INDIAN ISLAND — Vicki Almenas,
head of Penobscot Girl Scout chapter here,
plans to attend an American Indian' youth
seminar on scouting, at Pine Ridge, South
Dakota.
The conference at the Ogala Sioux reser
vation is scheduled July 30 to Aug. 2, and
will include workshops, a sun dance, inter
tribal powwow, arts and crafts fair, plus
leadership training. Chairman of the event
is Mark Ben, a Choctaw; vice chairman is
Tino Hernandez, Pima.

COME ON IN, THE WATER’ GREAT — Maria Sockabasin, three, who gives her name
S
as Pumpkin, js just waiting for a friend to come splash with her, at Peter Dana Point, Indian
Township.

HAM [Cured Pork] HASH
Makes 4 servings
3 tablespoons fat or oil
4 medium potatoes, finely chopped
2 medium carrots, finely chopped or
shredded
Vi small onion, finely chopped
About IVt cups finely chopped, cooked
cured pork salt, as desired.
Heat fat in large fry pan. Add potatoes,
and cook over low to medium heat until
browned on bottom.
Turn potatoes. Cover with carrots and
onion, then with pork.
Cook about 8 minutes longer until
potatoes are browned on bottom and are
tender.
Sprinkle with salt, if needed.

GOING, GOING . . - This home will be moved and saved, but others like it have been
demolished at Peter Dana Point, to make way for new housing on the Indian Township
Passamaquoddy reservation. The tribe received a $400,000 federal grant to raise 21 houses
cited as substandard. Those homes were built a number of years ago by the state, using
funds reserved for the tribe.

�Wabaaaki Alliance July 1979

Page 1
1

New firetruck delivered
at Township
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — A first fire
engine for the Passamaquoddy tribe here,
was delivered recently by members o f the
National Guard.
The 1957 Ward LaFrance pumper was a
bargain at $7,000, with only 22,000 miles on
the engine, according to George W.
Mitchell, tribal public safety director. The
pumper comes from Middleton, Mass.,
where it belonged to that town’ fire depart
s
ment.
:
Mitchell said the pumper weighs ten tons

empty, and that its 600 gallon booster tank
was installed in 1977. The engine can pump
750 gallons per minute, and is equipped
with a 1200 watt transformer for night light
ing, and so forth. The truck will be stored in
the municipal building.
Indian Township residents interested in
joining a volunteer fire crew should contact
Mitchell at his office in the municipal
building, Peter Dana Point.
Selection of a fire chief is pending,
Mitchell said.

Rights of ex-offenders explained
PORTLAND — Can an ex-offender vote?
Change his or her name? Hold public
office? Can an ex-offender be licensed as a
barber, accountant, registered nurse? How
can an ex-offender get help in seeking em
ployment?
No members o f society are more deprived
o f their ordinary legal rights than ex-of
fenders, people convicted o f crimes who
have served their sentences and are no
longer under the jurisdiction o f the state. In
some states ex-felons cannot vote. In many
states, ex-offenders are barred from em
ployment in a diverse number o f jobs, from
engineer to manicurist to real estate broker.
At least one state has a law that prohibits a
“habitual criminal” from marrying.
“The Rights o f Ex-Offenders,” one of a
series of handbooks published by American
Civil Liberties Union, examines the rights of

such people in the crucial areas o f public
and private employment, marriage, divorce
and personal finance, insurance, armed
services enlistment, and such government
benefit programs as welfare and medicare.
Author David Rudenstine, who for five
years directed an ACLU sentencing and
parole project, also includes listings o f state
and national organizations which give job
and legal assistance to ex-offenders. In
addition, he provides tables which list
licensing restrictions for occupations in all
fifty states. State-by-state breakdowns of
procedures for regaining the right to vote
are included.
The handbook, written in an easily under
stood question-and-answer format, is avail
able from the Maine Civil Liberties Union,
97A Exchange Street, Portland, Me. 04101.

SPECIAL DELIVERY — Passamaquoddy public safety director, George Warren Mitchell,
right, accepts delivery of tribal firetruck from Lt. Col. Frank J. Amoroso of Portland,
commander of 133rd Engineer batallion, Maine National Guard. [Photo by Richard
Tompkins]

Tribal censorship seen problem of press
Rudy Bantista, editor o f the Kiowa Indian
News, was elected President of the Southern
Plains Indian Media Association, a recently
formed organization o f 18 Indian news
papers and media offices in Oklahoma and
Kansas.
Bantista said that the association would
work to, “improve communications among
Indian people and between Indians and the
non-Indian public.
“We want to improve our standards, ex
change news and provide technical assist
ance to those who need it.” He said.

“ Probably the toughest goal to meet will be
freedom of the Indian press and media. It
seems that regardless of what tribe we
represent, there is some form of censorship
exercised by the tribal government.” Other
officers elected are: vice presidents, Mary
Ann Anquoe, editor of the Tulsa Indian
News, and Rusty Coffee, production coor
dinator for the Kickapoo Tribe; secretary,
Susan Arkeketa, media newsletter, Okla
homa Indian Affairs Commission; treasurer,
Quinton Roman Nose, communications
director, Cheyenne-Arapahoe Tribe.

FEARSOME W ARRIOR? — Not likely, with a name like Pumpkin. Behind the bonnet
and war club is Frances V irginia Newell, 2, from I n d ia n Township.

Training session held for elderly

PLEASANT POINT MEMORIES are evoked in this 1930’s photo of Grace Dana, at about
age 12. Grace, who continues to make her home at the Passamaquoddy reservation, was
photographed by a Calais photographer who made the picture into a postcard. Note
buckskin dress and sealskin stretched on rack in background. [Photo courtesy of Richard
Emmert of Eastport, son-in-law of Grace Dana.]

PLEASANT POINT — A training pro
gram for “senior companions” took place
here June 4-15, at the Passamaquoddy
tribe s housing for elderly project. Three
Indian Township Passamaquoddy women
were among those volunteering to partici
pate in the program, which involves
spending time with, and assisting, older
residents. The three were, Mary Gabriel, 70;
Simon Gabriel, 75; and Irene Newell. A
variety o f topics concerning the elderly were
discussed at the Pleasant Point session.

which was attended by several experts on the
problems o f old age.

Two brothers graduate
SOUTH PORTLAND — Fred Snowman,
Jr., of South Portland, graduated recently
from the University o f Maine at Orono, with
a degree in business administration. His
younger brother, John Snowman, completed
high school this year. The Snowman
brothers are grandsons o f Mary Gabriel,
Passamaquoddy, of Indian Township.

�Page 12

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Of canoes, guides, and home brew
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — Jim (Jimdee)
Jim's mother, Margaret Socoby, died
Mitchell likes best to talk about his grand -several years ago. Jim was born at Peter
father. Indian guide Joe Mell. He said ask Dana Point; his father died when he was
anyone at Grand Lake Stream about Joe three weeks old and he was placed with his
grandparents, a common Indian custom.
Mell, and the name would be recognized.
Jim was right. His grandfather was known Young Jim attended the Catholic schools at
for his fishing lore, and for his custom Peter Dana Point, and Pleasant Point.
wooden canoes. “Everybody wanted a Joe Passamaquoddy was not taught in the
Mell canoe. They were light and narrow, 14 schools then, as it is today. On the contrary,
or 15 feet. He used to make the canoes that “They claimed if you could speak English,
won the races on the Fourth o f July,” you can get along better,” Jim said.
comments Mitchell, who turned 61, June 9.
Peter Dana Point was a different place in
Eight years after getting off the bottle those days. The road, for example, was
(with a special Alcoholics Anonymous medal unpaved. “We had those Model T Fords,
to prove it), Jim Mitchell is fit as a fiddle. He Buicks, Oaklands, you name it. Sometimes
has worked as a welder in a shipyard, and the ruts would be so deep the wheels would
done a variety o f other jobs. These things just spin . . . Wallace Lewey, John Stevens’
don’ matter to him. But his voice is full of grandfather, had a horse in a stable over
t
respect and affection when he speaks o f Joe there. They’ go up to pull the car out,” Jim
d
Mell.
recalled. Sammy Tomah also kept a horse,
“He was an Indian guide, and he was a that could be pressed into service as a
caretaker for Underwood, the typewriter “wrecker” for stranded vehicles.
man. He went to New York City with Under
wood and I don’ know if it was 5th Avenue,
t
“Where the school is was all orchard. We
or what, but he said, ‘Mr. Underwood, used to steal the apples. Well, not really
where do all these people come from, and steal them. O f course, we were welcome to
who feeds them?’ ” Underwood bought Mell them,” Jim remembered with a grin. He
a felt hat, suit and so forth, for the occasion. liked the pace o f life: “Nowadays people live
A small flat stone marks the grave o f Joe too fast. The old people were quiet and
Mell, at Peter Dana Point cemetery. He died sensible.”
July 23, 1929, at age 77. His wife, Julian,
But not dull. “My grandfather always had
lived from 1849-1930, and her grave is
beside his. Both grandparents were special something going — canoes, paddles, ax
handles, snowshoes,” Jim said, adding that
tO Jim. “I lived with my grandmother and
v
grandfather until I was 12.1 didn’ know till Joe Mell swapped items with a generous
t
they died that they weren’ my mother and non-Indian family across the lake. “We had
t
Indian dancing. I remember the Fourth of
father.”

July in town. They had hot dog stands,
canoe fights," he said. Jim explained that
canoe fights consisted of jousting with poles,
fitted with a leather or canvas ball on one
end; the object, to capsize your opponent.
Without hurting him. other than his pride.
"Just about everybody made their own
home brew. I remember they had a raid one
time, and oh my, there were hogsheads.”
Jim recollects “bees beer,” a drink made
with barley. “We’ race back to camp, to
d
see who would get to the jugs first.”
Jim grew up in the "Reed place,” a home
near the reservation where he was bom, and
where his grandparents were employed by a
wealthy family. The son o f “colored
servants” was his own age, and Jim said, “I
remember when they used to make ice
cream in the old-fashioned maker. Him and
I would fight over the dasher.”
Memories swirl and mix, mostly bringing
a smile to Jim’ face. “My grandfather used
s
to play quite a bit; he had a violin.” Later,
Jim would join a carnival, then work as a
logger with Russians and Polish people,
using bucksaws.
Unlike other Passamaquoddy tribesmen,
Jim still lives in an old house along the strip
(Route 1 Divorced in 1957 from Frances
).
Sockabasin, the little house is enough for
him. A sister, Mary Gabriel, lives nearby.
He has another sister, Doris Smiley; and a
daughter, Roberta Richter, o f Pleasant
Point. Gov. Harold Lewey o f Indian Town
ship is his nephew and Godchild.

Nutrition Notes
By Natalie S. Mitchell, LPN
Fiber is an important constituent o f good
eating habits. Within our alimentary canal
(digestive system), fiber aids in the quick
passage for normal elimination.
Our intestines consist o f the small
intestines and the large intestines, known to
many as, “the bowels”. Each has separate
functions. Much o f the digestion o f impor
tant nutrients takes place within the small
intestine. The remaining food mass then
passes through to the large intestine. Here
the digestive juices and water are reabsor
bed so that the contents take on a solid form
for elimination.
Fiber is a part o f a plant that is unaffected
by digestive secretions in the small intestine
and passes to the large intestine undigested.
Fiber acts as a sponge within our intestines.
Fiber has the ability to decrease the amount
o f water, cholesterol and bile salts (import
ant for the digestion o f fats) that is absorbed

from the intestine. Because o f the bulkproducing affect o f fiber in the diet, a
person’ appetite is satisfied sooner than
s
eating low-fiber foods that have the same
caloric value. Also, eating fibrous foods
takes longer to chew, which tends to
decrease food intake. Low-fiber foods, in
contrast to the high-fiber foods, exert extra
effort on the intestinal wall. Much o f the
water is removed from the food mass within.
The colon must work harder to move the
feces along and constipation becomes an
immediate problem. If this condition con
tinues, serious consequences may arise.
Such diseases that may be attributed to
low-fiber intake are diverticulitis, hemorr
hoids, varicose veins due to abdominal
straining. Other diseases that are now under
study, due to low-fiber intake, are diabetes,
cancer o f the bowel, and coronary heart
disease.
Sources o f fiber are fruits and vegetables,
however the best sources come from the

bread and cereal groups. Daily additions to
the diet include two heaping tablespoons of
miller’ bran in cereals or soups, choice of
s
fiber-rich breakfast cereals, increased con
sumption o f potatoes, and a reduction of
sugar and white flour. Other sources are
All-bran, whole wheat bread, and whole
grains such as brown rice. Individuals
following this diet at first may pass more
flatulence (gas) and feel some discomfort,
but these symptoms will pass. In a few weeks
the amount o f fiber can be increased and
continued as a normal dietary habit.

R.l. Indian meeting set
PROVIDENCE, R. I. — A meeting will
be held, prior to the National Urban Indian
Council Convention in Denver, July 23, 1979
at 12 noon in the Conference Room o f the
J.F. Kennedy Federal Building, office o f the
Federal Regional Council/Indian Task
Force.

Jim Mitchell

Bi-lingual head
resigns job
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — Robert Leavitt
wiil be leaving his job as director of
Wabnaki Bi-lingual Education, effective
July 27, to take an educational post
elsewhere.
Leavitt is a veteran o f seven years as an
educator at Passamaquoddy schools, both at
Indian Township and Pleasant Point. For
the past couple o f years he has directed the
Passamaquoddy language instruction pro
gram, founded eight years ago by Wayne
Newell, a Passamaquoddy.
The expiration o f an operating grant for
the program is the main reason for his
resignation, Leavitt said. (The end o f the
funding period will not jeopardize the
program, but may eliminate Leavitt’
s
position.
Leavitt has accepted a job as director o f
Tri-County Regional Special Education
Services, and will be based in Dover-Foxcroft. His job will encompass seven school
districts. Leavitt and Newell both hold
master’ degrees in education from Harvard
s
University.
Leavitt and his family will relocate from
Perry, to a home they have purchased in
Dover-Foxcroft.

Penobscot News
By M. T. Byers
Congratulations to S.C. Francis and his
wife, Alice, and also to Donald Nelson and
Jocelyn Nelson, for two fine babies bom one
month apart.
A son was born to Alice and S.C., April
16, and a little girl was bom to Donald and
Jocelyn.
The Recreation Department held prize
fights on the Island. We can be very proud
of all who participated — Sterling Lolar,
Daniel Mitchell, Kirk and Miles Francis
won trophies — it was very exciting and
there was a good turnout. All deserve hon
orable mention for entering the ring.
Rainy day pursuits
In the past, the little girls made paper
dolls from catalogs and the Indian girls of
other tribes used to make them with a
cardboard back and paste. The dolls were
attached to the cardboard with flour and
water. It was said in those days that the girl
with the most paper dolls was the most
popular little girl on the Island.
Mrs. Irene McDougall recently returned
from a University o f Maine trip to England.

The Senior Citizens club held a food sale,
and it was a great success. Thanks are owed
to Mrs. Celina Newell for her help. The club
is planning another sale in August. Prof.
William B. Newell is a patient at St. Joseph’
s
Hospital, Bangor, and would appreciate
cards or a visit.
Penobscot Indian, Barbara J. Francis, has
been accepted by the Institute o f American
Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She
will begin her studies there in August. She
will be working toward a degree as a
museum curator. She hopes to work in an
Indian museum somewhere. The planned
Penobscot museum at Indian Island?

Alcoholism group to meet
MILWAUKEE —
A second annual
North American Indian Alcoholics An
onymous conference is planned in this city,
Aug. 24-26, at Plankington House. A flyer FUN AND FROLIC are part of Central Maine Indian Association’s Orono-based summer
said rates and other information are avail recreation program. Playing tether ball are from left, Renee Knapp, Rebecca Sockbeson,
able by writing United Conference, 1554 and Tracy Farrenkopf. Steve Googoo, a Micmac, is in charge of the program, assisted by
West Bruce Street, Milwaukee, Wise. 53204. Lisa and David Pardilla, and Sue LeClair. Games, swimming and arts and crafts are
“Bring dancing outfits,” the flyer advises. offered.

�Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Poetry
Open Your Eyes
Oh beautiful blue sky with your pillow's of
soft white clouds, what do you see below and
beyond you, I pray thee, tell me.
If I could talk, I would tell you, but ask
the majestic eagle that flies in my skies. He
can tell you.
Majestic Eagle, I beg o f thee, tell me what
you see below and beyond you.
My Friend! I can see the wind going
through my plumage that the Great Spirit
gave to me. I can sense the peace below, as I
travel my silent, gliding flight.
Oh! tell me more, my magnificent friend,
tell me more, I beg o f thee.

LIGHTS, ACTION, CAMERA — David A. Francis and Adelaide Newell pose for Brother
Larry Smith’ videotape camera. Brother Smith [standing] is taping conversations with
s
Passamaquoddy elders about what life was like when they were children.

Brother Smith videotapes lore
PLEASANT POINT — A project here is
designed to record the thoughts and faces of
older Indian persons who are a link with the
Passamaquoddy past.
The attempt to preserve history and
culture on videotape casettes is being made
by Brother Larry Smith, a Jesuit with St.
Ann’s Mission at the reservation.
Recently, Brother Larry met with Passamaquoddies David A. Francis and Adelaide
Newell. Newell, 60, was to be interviewed by
Francis, 63, but what occurred in the
morning videotape session was an informal
chat.
Newell remembers well the “hard times"
when she was a girl, growing up on the
reservation. She recalls eating gulls, and
gulls’eggs. “The kids now, like Martina (her
daughter), she won’ eat a muskrat or a
t
rabbit or any kind o f wildlife.”
Francis remembered: “We were all poor,
but nobody starved or went hungry, because
we all shared.” Many people made their
living weaving baskets, selling them to
tourists who arrived by steamer from
Boston, docking at Eastport. Others lived on
welfare, “just like today,” Francis said. The
state Indian agent, Justin Cove, had “ a big
store, with everything.”
“We were happy though,” Newell chimed
in. Both David and Adelaide recall Sister
Beatrice Rafferty, after whom the present
modern elementary school is named. Sister
Beatrice was only four feet tall, but she was

not to be disobeyed. “I’ box your ears,” she
ll
would tell school children. They knew she
meant it.
“There was no vandalism. There was so
much discipline. If you did something wrong
at school you’ be punished at home,”
d
Francis said.
Religion was taken seriously by everyone,
Brother Larry was told. “Everyone had more
faith in those days ... Corpus Cristi was like
the Fourth o f July. The men would cut trees
ten feet tall and stick them in the ground all
around the reservation. They were white
birch,” Francis said.
“When the priest elevated the chalice,
they’ set off a stick of dynamite,” he
d
recalled.
Newell and Francis also discussed legends
and “little people,” an aspect o f old Passa
maquoddy religion dating from before the
“blackrobes” arrived. Many Passama
quoddy people apparently still believe in the
existence o f mystical little people. They
point to a rock with inscriptions, and a rock
with animal footprints, and evidence that a
chain was dragged across it. If you hear the
swamp woman, there may be an impending
death in your family.
Brother Larry plans to interview other
Passamaquoddy elders, to build a resource
library o f information. He is working in
conjunction with Project Indian Pride,
headed by Passamaquoddy, Joseph A.
Nicholas o f Pleasant Point.

Phone call idea makes life less lonely
BANGOR — The Junior League of
Bangor, in cooperation with the volunteer
office o f Eastern Maine Medical Center, is
in the process o f organizing Telecare.
This telephone reassurance program is
a volunteer service which makes daily phone
contact, every day o f the year, with persons
who live alone to check on their well-being.
If the participant does not call the center (or
answer the phone) at the appointed time, an
emergency plan goes into immediate action.
As pre-arranged, a neighbor, next-of-kin, or
possibly a policeman makes a house call. If
a medical crisis is discovered, the partici
pant’ doctor is called and his relatives
s
notified.
“Telecare aims to help satisfy the natural
desire of people to live independently by
eliminating some o f the dangers that living
alone entails. For such people, a telephone
call at an arranged hour once a day, every
day, may mean the difference between life
and death, or between complete recupera
tion and permanent disablement,” accord
ing to Telecare director Sarah Clark.
“ We anticipate initiating Telecare on
June 1 1979 and will operate as a pilot
,

program for four months. During the pilot
stage we plan to avail the service to EMMC
discharged patients only, chiefly because we
need a controlled situation and time-frame
in which we can smoothly establish and
develop this new service,” she said.

Dartmouth powwow held
HANOVER, N.H. — New England In
dians gathered here recently for a weekend
powwow and fair. Several Penobscot and
Passamaquoddy Indians from Maine at
tended the annual event at Dartmouth
College, a prestigious private college that
offers a native American program.

Symposium on jurisdiction
BELLINGHAM, Wash. — A three day
symposium on tribal sovereignty and juris
diction took place here last month, at
Western Washington University. On the
roster o f speakers were Vine Deloria, Jr.
noted Indian author, and Slade Gorton.

When I drift against the royal blue ceiling
that the Great Spirit gave to us, I can see the
Hand o f The Master Artist — .the greatest
artist the world has ever known. I can see
the countless numbers of greens, the trees
lifting lofty green boughs to the Great Spirit
in praise, or the green-carpeted floors of
.valleys and canyons stretching across the
land, as far as eye can see.
How beautiful it sounds! Please go on.
Each one o f these green floors is splashed
with the colors o f the rainbow; and you
know the Great Spirit made the rainbow.
Yes, ah yes, I know.
All this is broken only by a crystal, clear
stream flowing through lush valleys, never
ending, but joining hands with a brother
stream, and racing on toward the blue-green
Pacific Ocean, or the green Atlantic.
I have seen the sparkle o f the Great
Lakes, and the lofty grandeur o f the Rocky
Mountains, and the hazy beauty o f the
Appalachian peaks.
Oh if only I could be an eagle, then I too
could see all this.
My Friend. The Great Spirit gave you
eyes. Open them! You can see all this and
much more. D on’ you understand! I can
t
give you only the cover to this great book. I
could wish that I had your legs in place of
my wings. Then I could walk, rather than
fly. And this, Friend, would permit me to see
1 finest points o f all, that I have described.
the

Page 13

The Indian Epoch-Clock
Machine
In an obsecrated land we ventured, touched
by the pulse o f time
Unaware the hands were drawing, a circle
around my mind
Perfect as the wheel it is, digits brand my
head you see
The nerves o f night that often kill, the man
that you call me
With shaft and shadows frozen in square, an
illusion a maze and bright
And thru my soul a current flows,
magnifying, electrifying night
Now in my soul I feel your pain, a path a
thousand men have gone
w'ho felt the epitaph upon your face, the
scars old time has drawn
Too you, void o f empathy, non-Indian, take
a long look and see
3ut for the grace o f your so called God, it
could be you instead o f me
My clock a horse in synchronized pace, a
poet in awkward rhyme
Carrying the Universe within his chest,
going forward, disregarding time
Now here I am just a Machine, ticking away
and tocking
With a lifetime o f truth and lies, and yet, the
Epoch clock keeps on walking
Back and forth in his steel cacoon, like a
Pendulum swinging fro
Forever going nowhere it seems, but where
on Earth is there to go? Inside this
goddam machine...
Richard A. Tompkins
Indian Township

Ben’ Basket
s
“Where’ you get the pack basket?”
d
I ask, knowing. I can barely see it,
stashed among sporting gear
in the back o f the station wagon.
Not only that I have one myself,
rather you can tell from the woven
sheen of the ash,
the glow released in working the wood.
“Neptune.” The reply flat, nasal Ohio.
For as long as I dared,
I left mine unvarnished, displaying
to every visitor, friend or not,
a miracle o f light caught in the weave.

If you open your eyes, you could see the
By Robert Alan Bums
gentle breeze dancing through the verdant
Gardiner
valleys; scrutinize the birds you take for From Ben Neptune, Fiddlehead Poetry
granted, but never really see; observe their Books, No. 252, Fredericton, N.B., 1978.
intricate designs and colors: The Great
Spirit painted them.
Look at the stream I can see. Look well!
,You could see the trout jumping for flies, or
the muskrat swimming to get the grasses
along the stream’ bank for her young. You
s
could see these, whereas I can’ from up
t
here. Open your eyes!
Look around, look about, my Human
Friend, and you will see the Great Spirit’
s
marvelous pictures laid out for you to see.
Stop wishing to be something else! Be what
'the Great Spirit intended you to be.
Thank You! Thank you, for making me
see, my Majestic Eagle friend (as he faded
from sight in His endless flight).
I
Don Daigle
Indian Island

Life
One spring morning I was startled to see
the papery shell moving back and forth. I set
my laundry basket aside and watched the
long struggle o f a butterfly emerging from
the cocoon. At last it crawled out. Gradually
it folded out its moist wrings, fluttering them
for two hours as it rested on the twig. Shortly
before noon, the butterfly lifted from the
bush and flew away to explore the glories of
the spring season.
Pauline Mitchell
Indian Island

Father Cote leaves Island post
INDIAN ISLAND — After 18 months at
St. Ann’ Parish, the Rev. David P. Cote is
s
leaving Indian Island, to take a job as
program director at a school in Hinkley.
A replacement at the Indian Island
Catholic Church has not yet been selected,

according to officials at the Roman Catholic
Diocese in Portland.
Father Cote, a graduate o f Boston College
School o f Social Work, will be program
director at Hinkley Home-School-Farm, a
private residential care facility for emo
tionally disturbed children.

�Page 14

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Penobscot sisters
recall Fourth, old ways
INDIAN ISLAND — They are full of
spunk, and talent runs in the family. They
are the former Lewey sisters; proud to be
Penobscot Indian, still practicing the fine
art o f basketrv.
Eunice Lewey Attean Crowley, 59, bristles
at the idea that members of the tribe don’
t
weave baskets anymore. She does, and her
son, Gary, gathers the ash from the woods
— which then must be pounded by a
neighbor and split, using guages and
“crooked" knives handmade by Gary
Attean.
“I definitely don't like these stories about
nobody on the Island making baskets
anymore,” Eunice said.
“ I’ a full-blooded Indian. My father was
m
a Passamaquoddy. A Lewey. My mother as a
Nicola. I was born here on Indian Island
and went to school here,” states Eunice. She
doesn't mince words. “ A lot of girls got
married young to get away,” she recalls.
Francine Lewey Murphy sat in the
kitchen and sipped lemonade while her
sister, Eunice, wove a basket. “ I left here
when I was 17. There was nothing here,” she
said emphatically. “ Perhaps if I’d stayed
here, I’d be up there in the boneyard with
the rest of them.”
The sisters w-ere discussing the old days in
Eunice's kitchen, part of the old tribal
council house. The building has been
extensively modified and is unrecognizable
as anything but a home. Old beams are
visible in places.
Remembers Eunice: “My husband, Elmer
Attean, was an engineer on the railroad —
New York, New Haven and Hartford — we
purchased this place in 1953. It was all
rundown. There was no bathroom. No
nothing. So we renovated the house. I left
here in '58, and the house was vsndalized.
“This was the old council house. It was
vandalized by people right here on the
reservation. I returned in '66 and I repaired
it. I rented it, but they moved out in the
middle of winter, and it was vandalized
again.
“I came back in '72 and we did what we
could until we ran out of money,” Eunice
said. “ I cannot get any help repairing it
because I'm not sole owner.
"This was the old fort, right through here.
According to the traditionals, this was
supposed to be sacred ground. This building
is over 125 years old. The old Indians used it
for meetings,” she said, adding that the
tribal hall stood nearby, but was demolished
a few years ago.
Eunice said life wasn’ easy on the Island
t
when she was growing up. “ Most o f my life
was spent away because you had to, to

work." she said. Eunice recently worked as
assistant cook for Indian Island senior
citizens, but has lately been doing baskets
exclusively.
‘‘ started about five years old, making toy
I
baskets. We were taught to clean the sweetgrass. Then we graduated from toys to
bookmarks. It wasn’ until I was in my teens
t
I made the big baskets. When we made a
basket, if my mother wasn’ satisfied, it had
t
to be ripped out and done over, until she was
satisfied,” Eunice remembered. Later, she
learned the art of split ash basketry.
“I made baskets ail my life, even when I
was away from the reservation. At one time,
I had to make baskets for a living and I
didn’ like that much. I was up to 12 at
t
night.” As Eunice wove a large basket,
sunlight streaming through the window, she
said proudly, “My son went to the woods
and he got this ash for me. And he made my
guages for me. There are about 15 or 20
people here that still make baskets.” Her
cousin, Fred Nicola of Indian Island,
pounds the ash with a mechanical device in
his bam.
Asked about passing her skills along,
Eunice commented, “They want to learn
and I can’ teach them,” because there is no
t
way to earn a living teaching basketry. “I
could teach anyone to weave, but it’ in the
s
preparation o f the stuff,” that the difficul
ties lie, she said.
Eunice, who has several physical ail
ments. said her basket making is good
therapy for her. Eunice markets most of her
baskets out-of-state. Francine said basketry
is becoming “a lost art.”
In the early days, Island people had less
material goods, but they seemed to have
ample good times. "You had that home
made root beer. O f course, the men had
their own kind of beer.”
The sense o f community at Indian Island
changed after the bridge to the mainland
was built about 1950. Eunice said, “They
didn’ have TV, and they didn’ have the
t
t
bridge. You made your own fun. Fourth of
July used to be really something.”
Francine remembers “some beautiful
houses here.” She said many o f the older
homes have been tom down. Francine said
“May walks” were popular, and involved
picnic outings. Corpus Christi was a gigantic
celebration in which nearly everybody
participated.
The Lewey sisters recall that both parents,
Irene Nicola and John Charles Lewey, spoke
Indian fluently. They speak respectfully of
their parents. “We were taught to be selfsufficient and proud,” Eunice said.
Now both women have come home.

Francine Lewey Morphy, left, and Eunice Lewey Crowley, display two of Eunice’ baskets,
s
beside old council house that is now the Crowley home.

Aroostook
News
By Brenda Polchies
HOULTON — A six hour Life Seminar
for young people was held Monday, June
25th at St. Anthony’ Hall, St. Mary's
s
Church. This seminar was sponsored by the
Dept, of Indian Affairs and put on by Orv
Owens and Associates, Inc. of Alexandria,
Virginia. The sem inar’ basic function is to
s
inform and prepare young people to face life
on a realistic basis without resorting to
outside synthetic influences to cope. Un
married Indian and non-Indian students
between the ages of 13 and 21 from
Aroostook County and Canada were invited
to participate.
The Association of Aroostook Indians in
the Houlton area is currently conducting a
day camp from their new location at the
Bowdoin Street School for Indian children
between the ages o f 3 to 7. The hours are
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tues., Wed., and
Thurs. of each week and will continue until
the second week in August. Counselors have
been made available, varied day camp
activities are being featured, and a snack is
provided.
The gals o f the ladies’ softball team, the
Indians, held another all day carwash
Saturday, June 16th at SampsdU’s parking
lot. The funds from this carwash are to help
pay for the gals’ uniforms.
Temporary telephone listing for the
Association of Aroostook Indians in Houl
ton is 532-7369 or 532-7301.

Vose explains position
PERRY — A story in last month's
Wabanaki Alliance stating that State Rep.
Harry Vose of Perry favored state retention
o f the railroad line though Pleasant Point
reservation has been termed misleading by
Vose.
Although Vose reaffirmed his desire that
the state keep possession of the tracks,
which have been temporarily abandoned by
Maine Central Railroad, he denied that his
reason was to keep the tracks available for
the proposed Pittston oil refinery, as
mentioned in the article.
“Pittston did not approach me,” Vose
said. “They would probably benefit, but
that was definitely not my interest (in
opposing return of the railroad property to
the Passamaquoddy tribe).” Vose said he
favored keeping the tracks operational to
serve the industrial park-port complex,
planned in neighboring Eastport.
The railroad, according to Vose is not
considered abandoned until the railroad
commissioner declares it not to be fulfilling
a purpose.

Tidal power may
get added funds

Eunice Lewey [Crowley] appears to be guarding the Old Town float, in this 1943 view of
Indian Island. Actually, someone had handed her the rifle for the photo — nobody
remembers why. Note the absence of the bridge between Old Town and the reservation. It
was not built until seven years later. [Photo courtesy of Eunice Crowley]

PLEASANT POINT — Half Moon Cove
tidal power project may receive $150,000
from federal sources, in addition to $100,000
already slated for the proposed electrical
generating station.
Project director Normand Laberge said
the Department o f Energy has already
assured him an additional $50,000, and that
another $100,000 should be forthcoming
through one or more government agencies.
Laberge had originally sought $250,000 as a
planning and engineering grant for the
tribal project. An additional $150,000 worth
of grants would bring available funds up to
that figure.
Total construction costs are estimated at
$13 million for a five megawatt plant,
operating on twin turbines using the huge
rise and fall o f downeast tides. The dem
onstration plant could be on line by 1985,
Laberge said.

ED ITO R — Richard Tompkins, a Mkmac,
has been hired as editor of Passamaquoddy
Spirit, newsletter of Indian Township reser
vation. So far, he has published two issues.
He said he is grateful to the families of
George Warren Mitchell, Raphael Sockabasin and John Sockabasin, for assistance in
settling into the community. Tompkins is
living at Long Lake Campground.

�Page 15

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

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Wabanaki Alliance, Maine's only
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Take advantage of an opportunity to
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Call or write us for rates and other
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WABANAKI ALLIANCE
95 Main St.
Orono, Maine 04473
Tel. [207] 866-4903

SUBSCRIBE T O

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ALLIANCE
News of
Maine Indian Country

Find out today what opportunities await you in the P ea ce
Corps. Call collect or write: P e a c e Corps, 1405-M John
McCormack POUCH, Boston, MA 02109.

(617) 223-7366. Ext. 4.

FARRELL’S PASSAMAQUODDY
DENTAL LAB
Now Open for Business
We Handle All Removable Denture
Work, including repairs
(18 years experience)
For appointment call
853-4363
EVENINGS
Mike and Alvera Farrell
Pleasant Point
Perry, Maine

TH E WABNAKI BILINGUAL
EDU CATION PROGRAM
announces the following openings
to be filled in Aug., 1979:
1. Program director/staff developer
2. Materials and curriculum developer
For applications and further
information please contact
ROBT. M. LEAVITT.
Indian Township School
Indian Township, Maine 04668
Phone: 1-207-796-2362

VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
Owned Homes For Sale
Throughout The State
Equal Housing
OPPORTUNITY

Minimum Cash Down Payment
Financing Available Through V.A.
30 Year Loans — No Closing Costs
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Anyone Can Buy
You Don't Have To Be A Veteran
See Your Local Real Estate Broker
Or Contact

VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
LOAN GUARANTY DIVISION
TOGUS, MAINE 04330
Tel. 207-623-8411 Ext. 433

m

H OU SE FOR SALE
or for rent
W est Street
INDIAN ISLAND
Contact Elizabeth Ranco
Boothbay Harbor, Me.

Do you have a
drinking problem?
Wabanaki Corporation offers an alco
holism program for Indian people who
need help because of problems with
alcohol.
If you have such a problem and need
help, or know of someone in need, please
contact the Alcoholism Counselor in your
community or area.
Indian Island — Alcoholism Counselors
— Clarence Francis — Rosalie Murphy
— 207-866-5577.
Indian Township — Alcoholism Coun
selors — Martha Barstis — Bernard
I Stevens — 207-796-2321.
Association of Aroostook Indians —
Alcoholism Counselors — Pious Perley
— Harriet Perley — 207-762-3571.
Pleasant Point — Alcoholism Counse
lors — Grace Roderick — Angelina
Robichaud — 207-853-2537.
Central Maine Indian Association —
Alcoholism Counselor — Alfred Dana —
207-269-2653 or 207-866-5577.

Jesuit to attend
Indian meetings
PLEASANT POINT — Brother Larry
Smith, S.J., a Jesuit with St. Ann's Mission
here, recently attended a conference of
Indian religious leaders. He. attended a
native clergy conference of Jesuits from the
U.S., Canada and Mexico, at Thunder Bay,
Ontario, June 8-10. He plans to attend a
National Association o f Native Religious
meetings, Aug. 14-19, at Holy Rosary
Mission, Pine Ridge, S.D.

NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES
AT BERKELEY
The Native American Studies pro
gram at Berkeley is one of the most i
successful program s in the Nation. The
department offers a Bachelor of Arts
degree with emphasis in the areas of
History and Culture, Law, Govern
ment, Community Development: and i
Social Instructions.
i
The NAS major opens up a new i
perspective to Native Americans and
i
non-Native Americans.
Counseling and advice regarding
admission procedures, financial aid,
housing, and tutoring are available
through the NAS counseling unit.
i
For more information, contact:
Margaret DeOcampo Eisenbise
Native American Studies
3415 Dwinelle Hall
University of California
i
Berkeley, CA 94720
(415) 642-0245

HOUSE IN BOOTHBAY HARBOR
*

*

*

*

For sale or for rent
Contact
ELIZABETH RANCO
Boothbay Harbor
Tel.: 633-4194

NOTICE
JOB OPENINGS
The American Indian Community
House, Inc., is seeking a qualified
Individual to act as Program Director for
their Indian Health Service program.
Must possess an awareness of Indian
values and unique problems which affect
health care delivery to Indian people in
an urban setting. Must have at least two
years management and supervisory ex
perience. BS/BA degree in a health or
social service area preferable but will also
accept prior experience in the health and
social service field in lieu of degree.
*
*
*
The American Indian Community
House, Inc., is seeking a Registered
Nurse for their Indian Health Service
Program. This person will be responsible
for pre-screening o f clients, making
home visits to the sick and elderly and
developing a health information system.
Must possess a current license to practice
and have a strong background in medical
procedure on the preventative health
care level.
Interested applicants should submit
resumes no later than August 17, 1979
to:
Walletta M. Bear, Acting Director
Indian Health Service Program
American Indian Community House, Inc.
10 East 38th Street
New York, New York 10016

An appeal to cooks
Wabanaki Alliance is proud to print
Natalie Mitchell’s Nutrition Notes, but
we realize there is another side to good
health, namely, good eating.
We hereby invite our readers to submit
their favorite recipes for traditional
Indian foods, or any other foods. We
promise to print as many of them as we
can. in a new regular cooking column.
We also need a name for this column, so
send in your ideas. If you would like the
job of doing this monthly food column
for Wabanaki Alliance, the newspaper
will pay you a small fee. Write us, at 95
Main St.. Orono, Maine 04473. Or Call
866-4903.

�Page 16

Wabanaki Alliance July 1979

Flashback photo

A FAVORITE AT THE FOURTH OF JULY was this Fassamaqnoddy Indian float, which
joined the Independence Day parade at Calais, in photo taken about 1947. Note the many

1979 Indian events listed
WASHINGTON — The 1979 calendar of
Indian fairs, exhibits, ceremonials, dances,
feasts and other celebrations is now avail
able, U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs said.
Most of the events in the state-by-state
listings occur in the summer or fall months
and are open to tourists and other visitors.
The pocket-size booklet lists more than 500
items, giving the nature o f the activity, dates
and locations.
The booklet also contains some summary
information about Indians in the United
States and the addresses o f Bureau of
Indian Affairs’field offices.
The calendar may be obtained for S2.30
from the Superintendent o f Documents,
U.S. Government Printing Office, Wash
ington, D.C. 20402. The stock number is
024-002-0067-5.

news notes

Gymnastics classes set

INDIAN ISLAND — Weekly gymnastics
classes for Penobscot Indian children
started this month at the tribal communitybuilding here.
The class meets Wednesdays, at 4:30
p.m., according to instructor Vickie Daigle,
who operates the Vickie Daigle School of
Dance in Bangor. The classes are being
sponsored by the Indian Island elementary
school, she said. There are openings for 20
children in the eight week program. The
first class was scheduled July 5, because of
the July 4 holiday. A regular fall gymnastics
program for Indian Island youngsters will
be announced later.

Summer program involves Indian youth
WASHINGTON— People-to-People pro
grams, funded by President Eisenhower in
1956, include the High School Student
Ambassador program, the Sister City pro
gram, the International Pen Pal program,
and the medical ship, HOPE. These pro
grams are “non-partisan, non-political and
non-profit programs aimed at developing
international friendships in an attempt to
build a world of lasting peace,” according to
a U.S. Bureau o f Indian Affairs (BIA) press
release.
Groups of highly recommended high
school students are being formed in local
communities to participate in the 1979
Student Ambassador program. "It seems
only fitting that American Indian students.

spectators applauding. Also, onlookers atop a building, and inside second story windows,
[Photo courtesy of Virgie Johnson]

the first Americans, join other students from
across the nation in the roll of Student Am
bassadors. Since most American Indian
families cannot afford the full $2,700 per
student cost o f participation, we are seeking
scholarship donations or sponsorships which
can fill the void between an Indian student’
s
family contribution and the actual cost of
participation in the 1979 Ambassador pro
gram,” the release said.
The first Santa Fe, N.M. group par
ticipated in the 16-year-old Student Am
bassador program during the summer of
1978. Three Indian students contributed to
the 1978 program, and their participation
reports and artistic sketches of their ad
ventures earned two of them college credits.

Indian council
to meet in Bangor
WASHINGTON — National Advisory
Council on Indian Education (NACIE) will
hold its next full council meeting on July
16-18, 1979, in Bangor.
The meeting will take place at the Holiday
Inn, 500 Main Street, Bangor, Maine 04401
(207) 947-8651.
Meeting times are 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
daily and will be opened to the public.
The entire day o f Wednesday, July 18, will
be reserved for public hearings. Title IV
project directors, Parts A, B, and C, from
the Northeastern and Eastern States, are
invited to present "written testimony”
summarizing the goals and objectives o f
their current title IV projects; a description
of the amount of Title IV funds spent; and a
list of program accomplishments.

Indian gam es in August
PERTH-ANDOVER — The 1979 New
Brunswick Indian Summer Games will be
held at the Tobique Indian Reserve near
here Aug. 8-12.
More than 700 athletes are expected to
participate m the Games which will offer
competition in baseball softball, track and
field, golf, archery, horseshoes, canoeing,
basketball, volleyball, tennis and cultural
events.

BIA opens office
WASHINGTON — Bureau o f Indian
Affairs will establish an office o f technical
assistance and training at Brigham City,
Utah, on the campus o f the BIA-operated
Intermountain Indian School. U.S. Interior
Secretary Cecil Andrus formally approved
the new unit.
Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs
Forrest Gerard said, “The implementation
o f the Indian self-determination policy has
resulted in increased program responsibility
and authority at the local reservation level.
Consequently, the need for technical assist
ance and training has greatly increased at
this level, also. The new office at Brigham
City will be responsive to this need.”

Lumbee album issued
PEMBROKE, N.C. — “-Proud to be a
Lumbee,” the first album about the
experiences o f the Lumbee Indians of
Robeson County, was recently released by
the Lumbee Indian Education Project of
Lumbee Regional Development Association,
Inc. in Pembroke. It has been acclaimed by
Indian educators and area church leaders as
a valuable asset to the education of Indian
children and as a moving religious album.
The album consists of 11 contemporary
songs written and performed by Willie
Lowery, Miriam Oxendine and several
Indian youths. It was produced through the
Lumbee Indian Education project of LRDA
with foundation monies and contributions
from the Fayetteville Presbytery and the
Pembroke Area Presbyterian Ministry of
North Carolina.

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Non-profit Organization
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Permit No. 15
Orono, Maine

; 7i l O

W abanaki
A llia n ce

October 1979

Thieves take $2,000
from tribal office
PLEASANT POINT — Nearly $2,000
in cash, checks, deeds and other valu
ables were taken from a 200-pound safe
stolen from the Passamaquoddy tribal
community building Oct. 12, in early
morning hours.
Officers o f the Washington County
Sheriffs department, assisted by tribal
police, located the safe on South Meadow
Road, near the reservation, several days
following the theft. Its contents were
missing, according to Passamaquoddy
public safety officer. John Bailey. The
exact amount taken was recorded at
$1,915..
The stolen checks were reportedly
found in a garbage bag behind the
community building by Harold Sockabasin, a Pleasant Point resident. Sockabasin said he was walking his dog, when

the animal uncovered the checks in the
bag.
Although thieves caused over $500 in
damage to three doors to gain access to
the building, the safe was opened without
apparent damage, suggesting the possi
bility of an "inside job.” Bailey said.
The burglary was discovered about 7
a.m. by women who run the snack bar in
the community building. The building’s
night watchman leaves at 5 a.m. The
burglary occurred at some point between
those two times, Bailey said.
The tribal police, who usually cruise
the reservation until 7 a.m. had reported
ly signed off at 5 a.m. that day.
The Federal Bureau o f Investigation
(FBI) joined the investigation because of
the new federal status of the reserva
tion.

Land claim talks continue
PORTLAND — The decision to extend a
deadline on Maine Indian claims was
delayed last month. Meanwhile, the lawyer
for the 12.5 million acre claim says high
level negotiations continue behind closed
doors, under an agreement not to reveal any
JOY — Happiness can be as simple as climbing on the jungle gym at Indian Township, as
information to the press.
Thomas N. Tureen, who has handled the
these Passamaquoddy youngsters demonstrate.
Penobscot-Passamaquoddy case the past
eight years, said in a telephone conversation
from his Portland office the tribal negotiat
ing committee has agreed not to discuss new
developments publicly.
However, Tureen mentioned that a
hearing on whether to grant an extension of
time to negotiate an out-of-court claims
,
country,” and major crimes are subject to settlement is scheduled Nov. 1 in the
BANGOR — William A. Holmes, 22,
federal jurisdiction. Holmes may be the first chambers o f U.S. district court -Judge
accused of manslaughter in the death of
individual to be tried in federal court as a Edward T. Gignoux, Portland.
Penobscot, Adrian Loring, 29, o f Indian
result of that test-case ruling, known as the
Island, has pleaded not guilty by reason of
Sockabasin-Dana case.
insanity. The manslaughter charge was
In an interview, Silver said, “This is
reduced from original charges o f murder, in
the first serious (Indian) case that has been
connection with the alleged July 14 slaying
dismissed in state court and action taken in
on the reservation.
federal court.” Silver believes Holmes, an
Holmes and his lawyer Warren M. Silver
By Brenda Polchies
Alabama native, will be tried “fairly
of Bangor appeared Oct. 5 before U.S.
Area Reporter
quickly; I’ guessing that in the next three
m
Magistrate Edward H. Keith, after Silver
HOULTON — Potato harvest has been in
months there’ be a trial in federal court
ll
argued in state superior court that Maine
progress for a few weeks and everyone is very
right here in Bangor.” He said Judge
had no jurisdiction on the Penobscot reser
busy hand-picking potatoes, working on
Edward Gignoux of Portland will probably
vation, and the judge agreed, dismissing the
m echanical harvesters, driving potato
preside. Gignoux is known for favorable
Holmes case.
trucks, etc. The sight and smell of potatoes
rulings in the Penobscot-Passamaquoddy
The grounds for the dismissal had been
are everywhere and if it's in your blood, the
land claims case.
laid earlier in the summer when the state
urge to get out into the fields is very strong.
Silver told Wabanaki Alliance that
supreme court ruled unanimously that
This is the time o f year when children are let
(Continued on page 9)
Indian reservations in Maine are “ Indian
out o f school for three weeks to help bring in

Holmes pleads innocent
in Island manslaughter case

The Nov. 1 hearing was granted by
Gignoux at the request o f the triber. ac
cording to Tureen. The matter o f an exten
sion was not resolved at a hearing held in
September. The latest claims extension
expired Sept. 1 .
1
The federal government has requested a
dozen extensions since the claims case was
First filed in 1972.
In recent developments, the state has
retained former Nixon laywer James St.
Clair as counsel for the claims case. Tribes
are currently seeking about 300,000 acres in
a $79 million settlement o f claims based on
land taken without Congressional approval
required under the 1790 nonintercourse act.
Maine Indians face an April 1,1980 dead
line for resolving claims.

Indian families fake to fields
for Aroostook potato harvest

Township housing bids exceed budget
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — Two bidders
only offered estimates for construction o f 35
units o f housing at Peter Dana Point, and
the Strip, on the Passamaquoddy reserva
tion here. Neither bid was within a proposed
budget.
Housing director George Stevens Jr. told
Wabanaki Alliance that Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) “will have to
give us an answer pretty soon. They have the

ball. We had planned on starting in August
or September, now it may be October,” he
said.
The bidders on the “phase three” federal
Indian housing project were P. L. Willey of
Caribou, and Shostak, of Augusta. Houses
are estimated at $68,000 per unit in the
current project. Already some planned
houses have been assigned to tribal mem
bers who are eligible.

the potato crop and this gives them a big
opportunity to earn extra money to buy
school clothes, winter boots, and other
needy essentials. Young people, housewives,
and a surprising number o f professional
people and old timers like to get involved in
this activity which requires a lot o f stamina,
physical strength, and, while in the fields,
everyone must cope with the extremes of
weather. Depending on what you are doing
and in a good week, barring rain and
machinery breakdown, you can bring home
an average o f $160 to $200 per week.

Particularly at this time too, large
numbers of Maliseet and Micmac Indians
from Canada come into Aroostook County
to participate in the harvest and remain here
for approximately three months o f the year
to continue working to help finish up with
the crop after the children have commenced
classes. This minority migration, whole
families which consist o f parents, brothers,
sisters, uncles, aunts, and grandparents who
move here and set up semi-permanent
housekeeping arrangements, swells the pop
ulation numbers and contributes favorably
to the economy o f the county. Selling potato
baskets takes on a brisk business and
farmers who are still using the hand-picking
method and are concerned about the
condition o f their potatoes are practically
begging for this much needed item.
After all the hustle and frenzy of getting
the potatoes in, things come to a standstill
and the fields look very empty, forlorn, and
lonely.

�Page 2

Wabanaki Alliance October 1979

editorials
Age as a resource
From time to time this newspaper has carried stories about elderly
Indian persons, their talents and skills.
We print such stories with a special reverence, for we have com e to
believe older people have a great deal to offer. The elders o f the
Maine tribes, whether 60, 70 or 80 and m ore years old, possess a
knowledge o f earlier times and old ways. The oldest surviving
members o f the Maine Indian community are actually a link to the
past century . . . before cars, planes, radio, plastic things and all the
technilogical achievements we take for granted even existed.
Older people may not know very much about computers and color
TV, but they may remember how to weave baskets, how to trap and
hunt, how to speak a language that is heading for oblivion. They may
remember how to tell stories, and how to eke out a living during lean
times when money and sometimes food were scarce.
Perhaps, one could argue, the old people’ skills and knowledge
s
are obsolete today. W ho needs them? The answer is two-fold. First of
all, those old skills are not so useless. In an age when we are
returning to wholesome, natural foods; wood heat and an
appreciation o f natural resources; living off the land, in harmony
with nature’ balances, makes good sense.
s
Secondly, the old people’ knowledge gives Indians their roots. The
s
old people are the most traditional o f us all, because they have spent
more years at it, and their memories may span a generation or two
earlier. The tribal elders are living history books. They provide access
to the past, and access to the lore and wisdom that can only be
accumulated over decades.
Indians traditionally respected their elders, and often let the old
people make critical decisions. While this may not be entirely
possible today, we have another suggestion: Let the old people visit
the schools.
Elderly men and women could share their memories and abilities
with children o f all ages. A simple story re-told by an old person
would be a priceless treat to a young Indian pupil largely unaware o f
his or her heritage. A lesson in making snowshoes, pack baskets,
moccasins or beadwork could capture children’ imagination.
s
Why not establish a program to bring the elderly tribal members
into the classroom on a regular basis, presenting workshops on a
variety o f Indian topics? Not to understand and listen to our old
people is to lose a wonderful resource.

THREE GENERATIONS — Albert Dana, left, an expert fishing guide at Indian
Township, enjoys the company of nephew Joe Hamois, and one year old Sean Cote, son of
Audrey and Anthony Cote. Dana is a board member of this newspaper.

Poetry

The Kennebecs

Questions/Answers
We look, searchingly, to others
only to find mirroring quests
can we find our answers
through the eyes of creation?
or by listening to the earth?
by watching the sky?
Is it under the rocks or ocean?
or in the death we’ taught to fear,
re
the coming o f darkness o f night.
Red Hawk
Untitled
The night was tainted
by my painted
face at the bar.
More wine, song and dance
to a rumpled morning.
Loved by no one
and screwed again.

(The Abenaki was a loose confederation
o f five Maine tribes. The last Kennebecs
died over one hundred years ago — their
language is dead. Elements o f the four tribes
remain.)
The Kennebecs are gone
like the elk’ breath in winter.
s
Echoes
ring Abenaki councils
touch the Passamaquoddy
memory
moves the Micmac and Maliseet
portent
stirs the Penobscot.
Their words are lost
and leaf mold covers flint chips.
Arnold Perrin
Belfast

Red Hawk

B u reau cratese
Wabanaki Alliance

Vol.3,No.lO

October 1979

Published monthly by the Division of Indian Services [DIS] at the Indian Resource Center,
95 Main St., Orono, Me. 04473.
Steven Cartwright, Editor
William O ’
Neal, Ass’ Editor
t.
DIS Board of Directors
Jean Chavaree [chairman]
John Bailey, Public Safety Coordinator
Albert Dana, Tribal Councilor
Timothy Love, Representative to State Legislature
Jeannette Neptune, Community Development Director
Jeannette LaPlante, Central Maine Indian Assoc.
Susan Desiderio, Assn, of Aroostook Indians
Maynard Polchies, President, Aroostook Indians
Melvin L. Vicaire, Central Maine Indian Assn.
Reuben C. Cleaves, Representative to State Legislature

Indian Island
Pleasant Point
Indian Township
Indian Island
Indian Township
Orono
Houlton
Houlton
Mattawamkeag
Pleasant Point

DIS is an agency of Diocesan Human Relations Services, Inc. of Maine. Subscriptions to
this newspaper are available by writing to Wabanaki Alliance, 95 Main St., Orono, Me.
04473. Diocesan Human Relations Services and DIS are a non-profit corporation. Contri
butions are deductible for income tax purposes.

Will inflated words never cease? We are living in an age o f bu zz
words, big words and bogus words. People no longer “d o ” things;
they “ impact” or “implement” things. But d o they honestly d o any
thing at all? Why not use plain talk to describe something simply and
clearly?
We live in the noun age. We hear about “facilitation” instead of
action; “capability” and “specialist” instead o f skill and worker.
Where has good old-fashioned skilled work gone? Many o f these
puffy words are obvious attempts to impress the reader that
something very important is going on.
A recent press release from the Interior Department says “Acting
Bureau o f Indian Affairs deputy Commissioner Sidney L. Mills has
announced that the M inneapolis Area Office reorganization task
force is working on the implementation o f the reorganization o f the
M ineapolis office. The final restructuring o f the office is scheduled to
be completed by April 1980.” We can hardly wait.

�Wabanaki Alliance October 1979

Page 3

letters
Prison culture group

Father was guide

New York City
Elmira, N.Y.
To the editor:
To the editor:
I
am writing for five reasons. First to say I read your account o f your trip down the
Allagash.
“thank you” for your efforts through the
When I was only a small boy my father
Alliance. A friend o f mine receives your
guided hunting parties down the Allagash.
paper, and that is how I learned o f you,
Mostly businessmen from Boston and New
which brings me to the second reason for
York. I used to listen to his stories about the
writing. I would like very much to receive
trips and I always swore I would make the
your paper if this is possible. We Natives in
trip myself someday.
prison hear very little concerning our people
My father didn’ remain a guide for long.
t
out there. To receive your paper would be
He only made two or three trips. He became
both an honor and also a need cared for.
disgusted with his charges. He said, “They
Third, would you be interested in printing
shoot a moose and they only take the head.
some Native poetry and articles I have
They leave the rest o f the body to rot!” He
written? I would be glad to send them, just
didn’ want to be a part of it, so he quit. But
t
say the word. Yawaha. My fourth reason for
he loved the woods, and if it hadn’ been for
t
writing is to ask you if it’ possible to get the
s
the slaughter, he probably would have con
address of a chief you spoke o f in a past
tinued to guide parties whenever he could
edition. His name is Chief William Rattle
have gotten away from the farm.
snake Jackson, of the Southeastern Chero
I guess he must have communicated his
kee Confederation, Inc., Georgia.
love o f nature and the woods to me. When
My fifth purpose in writing you is o f great
ever we went for walks together and he saw a
importance. We Native Americans, present
new bird or plant or flower, he would point
ly confined in Elmira Correctional Facility,
it out to me and tell me about it and what
Elmira, New York, have been approved to
made it special.
begin a Native American Culture Group.
Before I close I want to tell you that you
We are in need o f support, not actually
did a fine job on that story. You not only
monitary support, but rather we need items
made the story come alive, but the people as
such as literature (strictly Native American
well. Incidentally, you can tell Nick Dow
cultural material, past and present). Also we
that my dad used to paddle standing up too.
are looking for small bead looms, needles,
And I’ seen him flip the water out with a
ve
beads, etc. We are also looking for distribu
paddle until it was dry. And lots o f other
tors of Native American books, films, and
tricks, too. We spent a lot o f time together
tapes so we might purchase these things for
on the water, when we weren’ too busy with
t
our group. “And we need your spiritual
the chores on the farm.
support.”
Thanks for bringing back a lot of
We are ambitious, and very concerned
memories.
with establishing a permanent culture group
Charley Colcord
here — not only for our own good — but for
the good of all Natives to unfortunately
follow us through this prison. Any and ail
support, or letters o f interest would be very
New Britain, Ct.
much appreciated with deep gratitude. And
To the editor:
Wabanaki Alliance, thank you for being
I will appreciate information about your
there.
work and resources. I am compiling a file on
Andrew F. Ramage
resources of Indians in the Eastern United
States, for use o f students in my courses.
#77a-2502, Elmira
Jack A. Lucas
Correctional Facility,
Associate Professor
New York 14902.

An inquiry

Lost c friend
To the editor:
Haven’ received my August issue yet, and
t
I feel that I’ lost a friend! No letter from
ve
home during August! Perhaps my subscrip
tion has run out. Please renew. Thank you
so much.
Jean Watson

Alaska request
Unalaska, Alaska
To the editor:
Would it be possible for you to send a
couple of issues o f the Wabanaki Alliance
newspaper to me? The Indians here are very
interested in what the paper contains; etc. I
would appreciate your reply/newspaper.
Glenda Currier

A SWINGER — Stephanie Bailey, five, of Pleasant Point, gets a posh from Ricky
Soctomah, while her brother Peter, eight, and Percy Moore, seven, look on.

Police incident points to deeper conflict
AKWESASNE — Strife at the 27,000 acre
St. Regis Mohawk reservation here stems
not so much from a recent confrontation
with white man’ law, but from the collision
s
of traditional Indian and modern non-In
dian values.
According to recent reports in Akwesasne
Notes and The New York Times, from
50-200 Mohawks barricaded their homes
following a police raid involving reservation
and New York State Police. The raid
followed the arrest o f traditional Chief
Loran Thompson, charged with grand
larceny after he seized chainsaws belonging
to a reservation YACC (Young Adult Con
servation Corps) program.
But the conflict runs deeper. Thompson
represents an undetermined number of the
Mohawks who call themselves traditional.
Another group of reservation Mohawks
follow elected leaders. The YACC crew, part
o f a federal project, was clearing land to

Health center explains appointment rules
The Penobscot Indian Medical Center
operates on an appointment system. The
system is designed to give you quality health
care with less waiting time.
When you request an appointment, it
facilitates matters if you state a reason for
the appointment. Different procedures re
quire different lengths o f time. For example:
a physical examination requires 30-40 min
utes, a sick patient may require more or less
time, a change of dressing about ten
minutes and a shot just a few minutes. This
is important to know, so that we can give
you as prompt an appointment as possible.
Emergencies have priority.
If you come or call in the morning you
may get an appointment that very day. How
ever, appointments may be scheduled many
days ahead, if the appointment schedule is
filled. When you come for your appoint
ment, check with the receptionist and let her
know you have arrived. Wait in the waiting
room area until your name is called.
If you are unable to keep an appointment,
please, try to notify the clinic in advance and
make another appointment, if needed.
When you are late for an appointment, the
appointment becomes invalid, but you may
be seen as a walk-in patient. Other patients
may be seen ahead o f you.
Walk-in patients will be seen on a firstcome-first-serve basis as can be worked in
between appointments.

PRIMER — Passamaqaoddy language teacher Lorraine Gabriel, right, works with pupils at
Indian Township elementary school. Students have one native language lesson per day.

erect fences. Lawyer William M. Kunstler of
New York City said fencing in Mohawks
contradicts Indian culture. Kunstler ap
pealed to New York Governor Carey to
avoid a confrontation that could be worse
than the 1973 Wounded Knee incident in
South Dakota.
Traditionals argue that the 1794 treaty of
Canandaigua says Indian legal disputes
must be settled by a council o f chiefs. That
treaty was made between the U.S. and Six
Nations (Mohawk. Oneida, Onandaga, Cay
uga, Seneca and Tuscarora). The Six
Nation Iroquois confederacy was founded at
least 400 years ago.
Meanwhile, some Senecas, on the Cattar
augus and Allegheny reservations, call them
selves modem Indians — with programs for
health, vocational training, housing. But
Tonawanda Senecas, on another reserva
tion, reject the influences and programs
from outside.

If you have any questions or feel you have
some special problems, please contact Ruth
Davis or Phoebe Gray by calling 827-6101.

You can make an appointment by con
tacting the receptionist at the medical
facility at any time between 8:00 a.m. and
4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. The
number is 827-6101.

Indian Cookery
Sweet Pickled Beaver
1 beaver, skinned and cleaned
Vz cup vinegar
1tablespoon salt
2 teaspoons soda
2 tablespoons dry mustard
3 tablespoons mixed pickling spice
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Vzteaspoon ground cloves
Vz cup brown sugar
Vz cup dry white wine or apple juice
1 cup pineapple juice
Juice and grated rind o f 1 lemon
Wash beaver thoroughly with salt water,
then let soak overnight in enough cold water
to cover, adding Vz cup vinegar and 1 table
spoon salt to the water.
The next day, remove the beaver from the
brine, wash and cover with a solution o f 2
teaspoons soda to 2 quarts o f water. Bring to
a boil, reduce heat and simmer 10 minutes.
Drain and rinse the beaver, then place it
in a clean pot. Add water just to cover.
Sprinkle mixed pickling spice on top, bring
to a boil, reduce heat and simmer 20
minutes.
Drain and rinse beaver, pat dry and place
in roaster.
Mix mustard, spices, sugar, wine and
fruit juices and spread over beaver.
Cover and roast at 325° F. until tender,
basting frequently.

�Page 4

Wabanaki Alliance October 1979

An Indian decides
to play it straight
ORONO — Tom Thurlow has reached
the age of 30, but the turning point in his life
is not age, but attitude.
Thurlow has just been released from
Maine State Prison, although he had been
working outside prison walls for several
months through a pre-release center in
Bangor. Kicking criminal habits hasn’ been
t
easy for Thurlow, currently employed by
Central Maine Indian Association o f Orono.
“All along, since I’ been getting into
ve
trouble. I’ been figuring it’ a game. I was
ve
s
in state school; I was in the correctional
institute; and I was in Thomaston,” said
Thurlow, adding, “And when I was in the
service, I was at Leavenworth.”

Tom Thurlow
Thurlow spent several years at Pleasant
Point Passamaquoddy reservation with his
mother, Gloria Moore, who died seven years
ago. He attended Portland High School,
dropped out, and later received his GED in
the Army, where he spent two years.
Thurlow dubbed Maine State Prison “the
criminal school.” He said, “You’ be sur
d
prised what you learn in there. How to get
around alarm systems . .
Thurlow said
crime quickly becomes an inevitable way of

life, “Especially if you meet guys when
you’ out that you knew when you were
re
inside. They say, hey, come with us, we’
ve
got a big score.”
Tom Thurlow is playing straight now, and
he thinks he can keep it up. “I decided I’
d
just had enough o f it. And I was ready for a
change,” he said. “My brother’ in Cum
s
berland County jail right now,” he added.
Thurlow also has two sisters living in South
Portland.
Thurlow was sentenced one year ago to 18
months in prison, on aggravated assault
charges. He has also faced breaking and
entering charges. He would still be in prison
were it not for the five-year-old pre-release
center, a concept he praised.
Now that Thurlow has been discharged,
he wants to work with Maine’ inmate popu
s
lation, providing counseling and other
information. Ironically, while at the pre
release center, Thurlow was not permitted
within prison walls. He can now visit
Thomaston, Maine Youth Center at South
Portland, and Maine Correctional Center at
South Windham.
Thurlow wants to “reach” Indian inmates
and try to give them something to hope and
work for. “It’ not just the Maine tribes;
s
we’ got the Sioux, Cherokee,” he said.
ve
As an example o f his work, Thurlow de
scribed a 14-year-old boy at Maine Youth
Center. Thurlow has found officials “more
than willing” to cooperate in attempts to
find a home for the boy, where he could get
a fresh start on life.
Central Maine Indian Association is
seeking 515,000 for Thurlow’ project, and
s
CMIA director Tom Vicaire is all in favor of
it. At a recent supper and meeting o f CMIA
membership and staff, Vicaire called Thur
low a hardworking and valuable employee.
Thurlow said he had never heard o f
CMIA until he met Richard Tompkins, a
Micmac and fellow inmate at Thomaston.
Thurlow hopes to help inmates find jobs and
stay straight. Most o f all, he wants to travel
around the state, “Making sure that if they
want to talk to someone, there’ someone to
s
talk to.”

New fishing regulations provide for tribes
per week for gill netting and for purse
seining.
The granting of additional fishing time to
the Indians is grounded in numerous court
tests, including the landmark decision of
The new regulations will be effective
U.S. v. Washington, which held that treaties
immediately since the salmon season began
o f 1854 and 1855 give the Indian tribes the
June 24th.
opportunity to catch one-half the total U.S.
The area affected by the regulations is in catch in the Indians’ accustomed fishing
places. This arrangement was upheld in a
and around the Strait of Juan de Fuca,
which separates the southern end of different case by the U.S. District Court in a
Vancouver Island, Canada, from the north test brought in 1977 by non-Indian fisher
edge of the Olympic Peninsula in the United men of the Puget Sound area.
Last year, the Indians, with an additional
States, and in Northern Puget Sound. These
s
are the waters where Puget Sound meets the day’ fishing each week, caught 18 percent
Pacific Ocean, and where major runs of of the U.S. share o f sockeye salmon. It is
salmon are expected to seek their native expected that they will catch about the same
streams in the Fraser River system for percentage o f the combined U.S. sockeye
and pink salmon catch this year.
spawning this summer.
The terms o f the U.S.-Canada treaty
Non-Indian fishermen will be allowed a
require an equal split o f the fish between the
basic two days per week o f sockeye and pink
two countries and adequate escapement to
salmon fishing this season under regulations
perpetuate the runs in future years. The
of the International Pacific Salmon Fisher
Departments o f Commerce and the Interior
ies Commission (IPSFC). Following the
will perform a continuing monitoring service
pattern set over the last two years, the State
to carry out needed adjustments in the
Department approved the regulations on
fishery throughout the season in response to
May 30, except as to U.S. Indians fishing
information provided by the IPSFC to be
under the regulations o f the Interior
sure terms o f the Canadian Treaty are met.
Department. Canadian Indian subsistence
Fishermen are kept advised o f these changes
fishing is not regulated by the IPSFC,
by hot-line telephone service.
although it also occurs in waters coming
The Indians affected by the regulations
under the joint U.S.-Canadian treaty which
are the Makah Tribe, the Lower Elwha and
established the IPSFC.
Port Gamble Bands o f the Clallam Tribe,
Between July 15 and September 22 in Suquamish Tribe, Lummi Tribe, Noosack
designated areas the regulations allow the Tribe, Swinomish Indian Tribal Community
treaty Indians about two additional nights and Tulalip Tribe.

WASHINGTON— Extra sockeye salmon
fishing time under long-standing treaty
rights will be provided members o f eight
Washington State Indian tribes.

Dan Mitchell employs traditional ash splitter In making work baskets. The triangular device
through which ash is pulled and separated belonged to Teddy Bear Mitchell, a relative.

Erlichman says tribes need spokesman
SPOKANE, Wash. — John Erlichman,
former White House staff member to dis
graced President Nixon, told Indian leaders
here that tribes who do not assert their water
rights may lose them.
“Obviously tribes can’ outnumber the
t
opposition. To gain political clout you’ got
ve
to out think them,” Erlichman told United
Indian Planners, at their August conven
tion. He urged Indians to have a single
spokesman similar to the late Martin Luther
King Jr., who spoke for blacks in the U.S.
“When he spoke the White House listened,”
Erlichman said.

Erlichman noted that tax dollars are
“getting tight,” and minority programs may
lose funding; also, energy resources located
on reservations are being eyed by a needy
nation.
Commenting on a seige o f Bureau of
Indian Affairs headquarters in 1972, Erlich
man said that Nixon at the time was con
sidering revamping the Washington, D.C.
offices, but gave up the idea after Indians
occupied them as a protest.
Erlichman warned against “political
duress” or violence, saying Indians will have
to be politicians, “ as odious as that sounds.”

Aroostook Notes
By Brenda Polchies
Area Correspondent
CARIBOU — A successful Community
Garden which consisted o f tomatoes, tur
nips, onions, and green and yellow beans
has been harvested. Ten acres o f privately
owned property was rented locally in
Caribou on the Van Buren Road but five
acres was actually planted and harvested
with the help o f workers from the Migrant
and Seasonal Farmworkers program. Be
cause 150 lbs. o f onion sets had to be
planted by hand, extensive volunteer help
was recruited. Those involved in planting
and harvesting the garden were Elizabeth
Zemicke, Peter McDonald and family,
Marylou Caparotta and family, the Connelly
family, Helen Ciganik, and Nancy Bither.
Vegetables were divided equally and dis
tributed to Indian families throughout j
Aroostook County. Plans are being made to
plant a larger garden for next year.
HOULTON — A late afternoon going
away party was held recently here at the
Association o f Aroostook Indians office in

Corrections
A story in September’ Wabanaki Alli
s
ance about Kristin Johnson, a Penobscot
girl caught up in racial tensions in Alabama,
incorrectly identified Indian Island resident,
Ruth Davis, as Kristin’ aunt. Mrs. Davis is
s
her grandmother.
A report in last month’ Wabanaki Alli
s
ance about Indian Olympics at University of
Maine at Orono should have credited Indian
Island recreation committee with organizing
the event, according to Michael Ranco,
committee member. Ranco said four Island
youths received outstanding athletic awards:
Debbie Clavette, Chris Ranco, Joe Knapp
and Sherri Mitchell.

Houlton to honor Fred Moore o f Pleasant
Point. Moore recently completed a summer
long assignment at the AAI through a work
release program from the Aroostook County
Half-way House in Houlton. Co-workers,
staff workers, and friends were in attend
ance at the gathering and presented gifts
and good wishes to Moore. Cake and re
freshments were served. He plans to do some
travelling in the States but mail can reach
him at Pleasant Point, Perry, Maine 04667.

Do you have a
drinking problem?
Wabanaki Corporation offers an alco
holism program for Indian people who
need help because o f problems with
alcohol.
If you have such a problem- and need
help, or know o f someone in need, please
contact the Alcoholism Counselor in your
community or area.
Indian Island — Alcoholism Counselors
— Clarence Francis — Rosalie Murphy
— 207-866-5577.
Indian Township — Alcoholism Coun
selors — James Mitchell — Bernard
Stevens — 207-796-2321.
Association o f Aroostook Indians —
Alcoholism Counselors — Pious Perley
— Harriet Perley — 207-762-3571.
Pleasant Point — Alcoholism Counse
lors — Grace Roderick — Angelina
Robichaud — 207-853-2537.
Central Maine Indian Association —
Alcoholism Counselor — Alfred Dana —
207-269-2653 or 207-866-5577.

�Wabanaki Alliance October 1979

Page 5

The making of an ash basket
INDIAN ISLAND — “It’ something to
s
do. It’ an ambition. You got to do some
s
thing; keep moving around, know what I
mean?”
That’ how Dan Mitchell, 69, describes
s
his Penobscot basketry. It is a skill that was
passed down generation to generation, but
in Dan’s case, it was his son, George
(Murray Mitchell, who got him interested
in reviving his skill.
Dan lives alone in a small, almost bare
but tidy house. He has a radio and televi
sion, but he said they just don’ satisfy him
t
the way weaving a basket does. Dan learned
basketry from his father, Joseph Daylight
Mitchell. He in turn taught George, at age
10 or so, to make baskets from split ash.
A few weeks ago, father and son decided
to team up and make some baskets, and
thereby some cash. (George Mitchell is
currently seeking full time employment.)
They decided to make ‘‘
shopper baskets,” a
convenient and simple rectangular basket
with a carrying handle.
One log o f ash will make a dozen or more
baskets, but finding ash is difficult, despite
an old custom that Indians may take the
trees where they find them. After a search,
George found a man willing to sell an ash
log, and when Dan saw it, he said, “It’
s
going to make some beautiful baskets, nice
and white.”
Despite Dan’ fine craftsmanship, he calls
s
his baskets “All coarse work. Women folks
take care o f the fancy stuff.”
Dan remembers living in the old Daylight
homestead, next door, which burned. “ It
was three or four days before Christmas,
when that thing burned down. It was a short
circuit or something. This was just a shack,”
he said o f his house. “It wasn’ much o f a
t
place to live, but we had to live here.
“You see, my family used to make these
baskets and swap them for food. There
wasn’ much money then, when I was 10 or
t

12. My father would hunt (deer, moose) in
the fall. My mother had a method o f putting
it up in jars, and it would come out just as
fresh...”
Dan remebered making egg baskets that
held a half bushel. Those baskets sold for 20
cents each. “ I’ been through it I know,”
ve
said Dan o f lean times in the past. “I
worked all over the state o f Maine. I worked
in the woods quite a bit. We made $10, $12,
$16 a week,” he said.
Dan was content to work in silence, but he
exclaimed, “Yeah, that’ good,” as he
s
peeled back strips o f ash, using a splitter
that belonged to Teddy Bear Mitchell, a
relative.
Trapping along Birch stream is another
memory for Dan, who recalls setting 140
traps to get muskrat, mink and otter.
“That’ how the Indians lived,” he told the
s
reporter. Looking out a window, he said,
“This used to be all garden when my father
was living. He cleared an acre o f land.”
Dan uses brown ash for baskets. The
heart of the tree is dark, and used for
standards (uprights). The outer layers are
for other standards, and “weavers.” Dan
isn’ up to pounding the logs, so George
t
does that chore. But Dan isn’ fading, and
t
it’ hard to find a flaw in any o f his baskets.
s
A fellow Penobscot said with a grin,
“There’ no nails in Dan’s baskets.” There
s
is nothing but ash.
Dan has a son, Francis, who works at
Diamond International and lives next door.
Another son, David, works in Quincy,
Mass., as a computer operator. His three
daughters are Andrea, who works for
Central Maine Indian Association, Barbara
' o f Saco, and Clara o f New Mexico. He likes
visits from grandchildren.
Dan Mitchell remembered his first bas
ket, made when he was “ about 10 or 12.
And it wasn’ a very good one. My father
t
said, you can unravel it and make a better
one.”

Father and son operation: George Mitchell and father Dan, at w o * in Dan’s small Indian
Island house.

George Mitchell, son of Dan Mitchell, gets a good swing with maul to pound red ash log in
preparation for basket-making.

�Page 6

Wabanaki Alliance Octobei

School board member
foresees Indian high school
PLEASANT POINT — “I just want a Nicholas, who has been a school board
good school, that turns out people, not
member 12 years, and has visited Indian
robots,” said Passamaquoddy school board schools in New Mexico and South Dakota.
chairman John Nicholas.
He said if an Indian high school is built, it
Nicholas envisions an Indian high school, would probably be best to locate it at Indian
to take care of reservation education beyond Township, where more land is available.
the junior high level. High school age pupils Pleasant Point students could be bused to
from Pleasant Point attend school in East- school, he suggested.
port, or are away at boarding schools.
Asked about his views on education,
Nicholas said high school pupils at ,Nicholas said, “I hate to see things shoved
Pleasant Point and at Indian Township have down the kids’ throats. Let them decide for
often received inferior educations, without themselves; if they’ interested and want to
re
benefit of counseling or an understanding of find out who they are.”
special problems o f Indians. Asked if the
A father of ten children, Nicholas, 53,
high school he wants would be for Indians graduated from Shead Memorial High
only, Nicholas said that no, it would be open School in Eastport, in 1944. He served in the
to all ethnic groups.
Army’ occupation forces in Italy, following
s
“It’ been my dream for 25 years,” said World War II. He has four grandchildren.
s

Township school board members elected
INDIAN TOWNSHIP - Three new
schoolboard members were elected late last
month in a race which included four people
running and two write-in candidates.
Elected were Sonja Dorn, Sam Dana, and
Simon Sockabasin, a write-in candidate.
Also running were Francis Tomah, Joseph
Sockabasin, and write-in candidate, Richard
Dana.
The new members will be joining Albert
Dana and John Stevens on the board, and
will be replacing George Stevens, whose
term expired, and Carl Nicholas, who re
signed. Sockabasin, who just completed a

term, will be resuming his old position, due
to his write-in victory.
Dorn, receiving the most votes, will serve
a three year term. The other two candidates
tied with 49 votes each. Since ranking in the
election determines number o f years to be
served, an agreement was reached in which
Dana will serve the two year stint and
Sockabasin, the one.
The newly constituted board held its first
meeting in early October and elected Albert
Dana, chairman. Sockabasin was named
vice chairman.

S en a te cuts BIA b u d g et
WASHINGTON — The Senate Appro
priations Subcommittee cut the 1980 BIA
appropriation figures some $53 million
compared with the $996 million passed by
the House.
The $943 million approved by the Senate
subcommittee is $31 million less than the
$974 million in the President’ budget and
s
$114 million less than the $1,057 total
appropriation for 1979.
The Subcommittee also moved to force
closure o f three off-reservation boarding
schools: it ordered mid-year closure of
Chilocco and Seneca Indian schools in
Oklahoma and the Albuquerque Indian

School programs in Albuquerque. The AIS
operations are to be transferred to Santa Fe
to the campus o f the Institute o f American
Indian Arts.
The Subcommittee’ reductions from the
s
House-passed figures include a $31 million
reduction in construction and a $25 million
reduction in the operation o f Indian
programs, mostly in education and trust
activities.
The Subcommittee included $6 million
for implementation o f the new tribally-controlled Indian Community College Act. This
was an increase o f $2 million over the
House.

T
, / , * ~ V "* * a “u Hucsuon aooni now ruth grader Adeline Levesque of
;n;n^ Ihp P P V«lin mlinnl .t„fT
P
f f her teaCfaer’Deborah Mortland, a native of Unity who this fall
Iflinpfl I
joined the P C P Q n school staff.
reservation

Act supports tribal colleges
WASHINGTON — Regulations imple
menting the provisions o f Tribally Con
trolled Community College Assistance Act
are being published in the Federal Register,
U.S. Interior Department official Rick Lavis
said.
The regulations prescribe procedures for
providing financial and technical assistance
to Indian community colleges and, in a
separate part, to the Navajo Community
College.
The regulations state that it is the policy
o f the Department o f the Interior “to
support and encourage the establishment,
operation and improvement o f tribally con
trolled community colleges to ensure con
tinued and expanded educational oppor
tunities for Indian students, and to assist the
Indian tribes in implementing social and

economic development efforts leading to the
fulfillment o f tribal goals and objectives.”

Area director appointed
WASHINGTON — Burton Rider, a Gros
Ventre-Cree, has been named assistant area
director for the Bureau o f Indian Affairs’
Billings, Montana office.
Rider, 49, has been Superintendent o f the
Fort Peck Agency at Poplar, Montana. His
appointment in the area office will be effec
tive October 21. He succeeds Maurice W.
Babby who has accepted a job in the office
o f the commissioner in Washington, D.C.
An Army veteran, Rider began work with
BIA in 1954 and has held jobs in various
agency and area offices.

Forest service didn't ask Indians
to attend hearing

PASSAMAQUODDY language teacher, Marine Tomah, goes over some of her day’
s
lessons at Indian Township school. The Indian bi lingual program has been seeking a new
director, along with renewed funding for instruction at two reservation schools.

BROOMALL, Pa. — Maine Indians were
inadvertently left out o f a U.S. Forest
Service meeting on spruce budworm spray
ing in Maine, according to USFS officials
here.
A so-called “scoping session” was held in
Augusta Sept. 11, to determine the role of
the federal government in Maine’ 1980
s
spruce budworm control program, but no
Indians were reported present at the
meeting. The absence of Indians was an
"administrative oversight,” according to
Kenneth Knauer, U.S. Forest Service
official. Indians in Maine were contacted
later, and their opinions solicited.
Bob Wolfe, staff entymoiogist with the
forest service, said “We conducted a scoping
session to get input . . . we endeavored by
newspaper articles and letters” to get
participation. Wolfe said the USFS, a
branch o f the U.S. Department of Agricul
ture, later contacted the state Indian Affairs
office, the U.S. Bureau o f Indian Affairs
(BIA), and officials o f the Passamaquoddy
and Penobscot tribes.

Federal regulations state that at public
meetings such as the Augusta session, the
USFS shall “invite participation o f any
affected Indian tribes.”
Wolfe said he had reassured Maine
Indians — in response to an inquiry — that
offshore islands will not be sprayed in the
budworm control efforts. “We are making
every attempt to get input from Indians, and
we send them our draft environmental state
ments,” Wolfe said.
John Chansler, a USFS assistant area
director for the northeast, said he is
“seriously considering” another public
meeting, probably in the Bangor area, to
hear additional information on future
budworm spraying and its effects. “ I guess
there are people who feel we have not in fact
captured all o f the issues,” he said,
specifically mentioning people from “downeast” Maine. Chansler said a meeting would
likely be held before 1980.
Indian participation will be invited, he
said.

�Wabanaki Alliance October 1979

Page 7

Penobscot revives
service station
INDIAN ISLAND — The building has
stood empty a couple of years, testimony to a
failed tribal project, and beginning to show
signs o f vandalism.
But the former Amoco gas station on the
reservation has been salvaged by John Love,
24, a Penobscot. Love’ Auto Repair, a full
s
service business, will open soon, with Love s
wife, Vicki, as bookkeeper. This month, the
Penobscot tribal council voted SI,000 to
help Love with a Small Business Adminis
tration (SBA) loan, and in a surprise move,
assigned Love title to the property at the foot
o f Oak Hill, near the lagoon.
The gas station was first constructed by
PIE (Penobscot Indian Enterprises), and
included a home heating oil business. Man
agement problems led to the closing o f the
station, open only one summer. Now, after a

year o f negotiating. Love can obtain a
$34,500 loan, using the council’ $1,000,
s
plus $1,000 o f his own money, and $2,000
from Commissioner Charles Rhynard o f the
state Department of Indian Affairs.
Love, a graduate o f Old Town High
School, expects to be open for business
sometime next month. He has gained ex
perience as a mechanic working at Thorn
ton’ Amoco, Old Town, and when PIE
s
operated the Island station, drove the oil
truck. The truck is parked at the station,
and Love said the engine has seized up. Love
hopes to eventually revive the heating oil
business.
He has repaired plumbing at the station,
and already owns tools. One thing he will
have to do before opening day is change the
price on gas pumps. A gallon o f regular is
listed at 52 cents, the price two years ago.

N ew ell a sk s h igh er anti-pollution
rating fo r reservation
PLEASANT POINT — Tribal Gov.
Robert L. Newell has asked the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency to up
grade the Passamaquoddy reservation’s air
quality rating from class II to class I.
The change in classification is being
sought under the federal Clean Air Act of
1978, and if approved will strictly limit the
level o f air pollution permissible at the reser
vation. According to a story in Quoddy
Tides, the higher rating will protect the
tribe’ aquaculture projects at Halfmoon
s
Cove, and will generally guarantee a cleaner
environment for Passamaquoddies.
Also, the tribe has publicly stated its
opposition to a proposed oil refinery at
nearby Eastport. The Pittston Company,
which seeks to build the refinery, must
obtain EPA Clean Air Act approval before
construction could begin.
Newell recently sent an explanatory letter
to Eastport city council, with the assurance
that a class I designation ‘‘
will have no

significant effect on present or planned
activities in either our reservation area or
your city/town limits.” The letter points out
that nearby Moosehorn and Campobello
parks have class I ratings.
“ We seek this classification to support
proposals to fund and implement only such
local resource-based activities as will main
tain and/or improve our environment,
produce work for our labor force based on
renewable resources, supplement the socio
economic life style we all want for our
future, and guarantee the careful, consid
erate use of those natural resources we now
enjoy, and to protect the health and
economy o f our own and future genera
tions,” the letter stated.
Newell indicated he would like support of
the request to EPA from neighboring com
munities.
The city council tabled a reply to Newell’
s
letter until its Nov. 5 meeting, with the
intent o f obtaining more information.

Indian travel agents meet
LAKEWOOD, Colo. — The American
Indian Travel Commission (AITC), a non
profit national organization established to
promote travel to American Indian/Alaska
Native owned and/or operated tourism
enterprises and to assist tribal tourism
related projects, adopted a resolution at
their Sept. 14, board o f directors meeting
urging Indian interests be represented on
the newly established travel and tourism

industry advisory council to the Senate
committee on energy and natural resources.
Copies o f the resolution were addressed to
the chairman o f the committee on energy
and natural resources, Henry M. Jackson,
members o f the travel and tourism industry
advisory council, and to members o f the
merchant marine and tourism subcom
mittee who nominated council members.

I

Micmac visitors from Big Cove, Nova Scotia, Henry Levi, Franklin Levi, G eorge Wayne
Solomon, and Allen Levi. Allen w rote the commentary on the right.

John Love prepares to open his service station at Indian Island.

Police cadet program helps youths
INDIAN TOWNSHIP — Public Safety
Director Warren Mitchell has started a
police cadet program designed to train
youngsters in reservation police work.
Mitchell said the program also helps to
guide its members past some o f the social
problems found on the reservation.
Carl Nicholas, Jr. and Patrick Sabattus
are currently enrolled in the program.

Mitchell said he hopes to add two or three
more youngsters.
The cadets work with the reservation
police, riding in the cruisers. Although they
are strictly observers and carry no arms,
Mitchell said they occasionally put in calls
for assistance for the officers with whom
they are riding.
Mitchell said he hopes to start-a fire cadet
program, as well.

Halt on herbicide spraying sought
NANAIMO, British Columbia — Possible
contamination of Indians’ drinking water
has prompted a delay in spraying o f herbi
cides along Canadian Pacific railway land
on Vancouver Island.
Herbicides (listed as Tebuthiron, Bromacil, 2, 4-D; and 2, 4, 5-T ) should not be
used until environmental impact is assessed,
according to Wayne Edwards, spokesman

for United Native Nations. ‘There is no
‘
guarantee that the herbicides will not reach
water bodies and native Indian land through
natural drainage,” he told Indian News, a
Canadian government publication.
The railroad has agreed to postpone
spraying along its right-of-way between Vic
toria and Courtenay until hearings on the
matter are completed.

The deh u m an ization p rogra m
Commentary
By Allen Levi
It is extremely detrimental for the Native
North American to continually pursue his
fight for human rights, so consistently un
prevailing against those destructive forces of
the white world in an exceedingly disil
lusioned manner.
I do not agree with people when they say
to me the Indian is nothing but a drunk, and
a welfare bum, nor do I agree when I see the
tremendous amount o f discrimination en
forced on the Indian. I can only agree with
people who say that the Indian is in pretty
bad shape.
The white government realized a long
time ago that Indians also had minds and
emotions, just as any civilized white persons.
But instead o f treating them as part o f the
human race, as equals, they deliberately
destroyed good relations with our ancestors
by their obsession and greed, which resulted
in the occupation of Indian land by white
settlers. It was in this time the white man
began dismantling the beliefs o f the Indian
peoples. His main objective was to disillu
sion the native perspective of life. His
strategy mostly employed: alcohol, religion
and government laws, which in no time at all
gained control over the Indian. Through this
access, the government forced the Natives to
learn a system totally different from theirs, a
system altogether unfit for human survival.

Besides placing the Indian on reserva
tions, the government also put him in
schools where he was taught about a
different God, a God which never seems to
touch his people, unlike the creator whom
every Indian felt and saw in his mind and
through nature.
Through these tactics, the great white
chief proceeded to brainwash his fellow man
replacing old Indian beliefs with his own
beliefs, his fantasies! Pure ludicrous indul
gences. As time passed by, it became
apparent that the white man had succeeded
in weakening our minds. However the
Indian is still surviving. We have our souls.
We have our values as we have our God. We
know that someday the indictments of this
white man shall be bestowed upon him, and,
though we still live under his rule, we must
realize the rule of destiny. We must be able
to understand this, for it is our only escort
through life’ lonely road.
s
If we do not begin to show more o f our
Indian nature, if we do not stop experi
menting with our lives according to white
man’ beliefs, then our destiny shall remain
s
in the predicament o f mankind.
Editor’ note: Allen Levi is a Mtemac
s
youth from Big Cove reservation, Nova
Scotia. He recently came to Maine to find
work and is employed by Young Adult
Conservation Corps (YACQ at Indian
Island.

�Page 8

Wahanaki Alliance October 1979

Dumping fill on Pleasant Point dam, April 1,1936.

Tidol power

C h ip p ew a to h ea d BIA

Cooper's dream
PLEASANT POINT — In the 1930’
s,
engineer Dexter Cooper had a vision o f a
gigantic power project that would con
vert the great rise and fall o f downeast
tides into electrical power.
The idea caught on, and several dams
were built in the Cobscook-Passamaquoddy area, under the Roosevelt ad
ministration. An entire town, Quoddy
Village, was constructed to house work
ers and their families. But almost as
though it were jinxed, the Quoddy Pro
ject has never truly materialized.
Over the years, various studies have
claimed the project is entirely practical,
and recommended. No action was taken.
Only recently has a study been more
critical o f the tidal power theme, and
that study’ conclusions seem ironic in an
s
age of oil and gas shortages, high prices
and dwindling non-renewable resources.
Now, despite the negative report o f a
study last May by U.S. Corps of
Engineers employee Robert C. Leblanc, a
small version o f Quoddy may be built.
The small tidal power station at Half
moon Cove is a project of the Passama-

Carlow Island dam, southerly view, Dec. 21,1936.

quoddy tribe, under the direction o f Dr.
Normand Leberge.
Laberge, who has spent more than
three years on Halfmoon Cove plans, is
waiting release o f $100,000 in federal
Department of Energy funds, for a pre
liminary engineering study. The money
was awarded to the tribe last spring, and
Laberge said he cannot understand the
delay. The firm of Charles T. Main of
Boston has been selected to conduct the
preliminary study.
Meanwhile, Laberge has almost com
pleted a Coastal Energy Impact study,
with funds from the State Planning
Office. He also had expected to meet
with Leblanc, author o f the Corps of
Engineers study, but Leblanc did not
show up, he said.
Cobscook Bay Labs, a division of
Suffolk University, have completed an
environmental impact study that will
help the project, Laberge said.
Cost of constructing a projected five
megawatt plant could be $13 million,
and it would take several years to build,
according to Laberge.

WASHINGTON — William Hallett, a
Red Lake Chippewa, has been appointed
commissioner of Indian Affairs, by Presi
dent Carter.
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus said in a
press release that “filling the Commis
sioner’ post with a competent, knowledge
s
able man like Bill Hallett will be go for both
the Indian community and the Department
o f the Interior.”
Hallett’ nomination was sent to the
s
Senate Sept. 28. A tentative date o f Nov. 13
has been set for the confirmation hearings.
Hallett is the HUD Assistant Regional
Administrator, Office o f Indian Programs,
in the Denver region.
As Commissioner o f Indian Affairs,
Hallett would be responsible for directing
the programs and day-to-day operations of
the Bureau o f Indian Affairs.
Hallett was born May 18, 1942 in Red
Lake, Minnesota. He graduated in 1960
from the Red Lake Indian High School.
After two years at Brigham Young Univer

sity, Hallett completed studies for a
Bachelor’ degree in business administra
s
tion at Bemidji State College, Minnesota in
1965. He did post-graduate work in public
administration at the University o f New
Mexico under the HUD Career Education
Program.
From 1965 to 1967 Hallet was a personnel
technician for the Chicago Police Depart
ment. He then became director o f housing
and manpower programs on the Red Lake
Chippewa Reservation, where he set up and
directed the Tribal Home Construction
Company. From 1968 to 1970 he was
director o f industrial development for the
National Congress o f American Indians.
In 1970 Hallett served as a consultant to
the National Council o f Indian Opportunity
and the President’ National Advisory
s
Council on Minority Business Enterprise.
Hallett went to the Denver HUD office in
1970 as a special assistant to the regional
administrator for Indian affairs. He was
named regional administrator in 1975.

Indians seen as new energy "arabs”
ALBUQUERQUE — Sam Brown, direc
tor o f the Federal agency ACTION, told
Indians at the National Congress o f Ameri
can Indians (NCAI) convention in Albu
querque “Native Americans might replace
Arabs as the people to blame for the energy
crisis and inflation.”
Brown said the focus o f public anger over
the energy crisis could shift from OPEC to
the American Indians as they begin to
benefit from huge energy resources on their
tribal lands. He added, “The irony o f all this
is that you will be simply doing what many
major corporations have done for years.”

Brown said that the Indians would be
affected by the country’ political mood
s
shifting from social justice to fiscal pru
dence as the measure o f good government.”
Noting that Native Americans own an
estimated 20 percnt of America’ energy
s
resources, Brown said, “You will be con
tending with a society which more than ever
wants what you have.”
Brown concluded that the Indians needed
to become more active in poltics to protect
their interests. He urged unity and coor
dinated action to give them an impact out
weighing their numbers.

AMERICAN INDIAN JOBS/SKILLS BANK
The Administration for Native Americans (HEW) and the Division of Indian and
Native American Programs (Dept, of Labor) are sponsoring the development of a
matching system which will assist qualified Indian applicants in obtaining jo b s in
the Federal government at the GS-9 level and above.
If you w ould like more information about this service and feel you are qualified
for placement in this GS range, please contact:

Pleasant Point dam, looking north along Cobscook Bay, Jane 9, 1936. Reservation homes,
church and school are visible.

INDIAN JOBS/SKILLS BANK
ACKCO, In co rp o ra te d
1200 Pearl
Boulder, Co. 80302

From Alaska, Hawaii and Colorado
call collect: 1-303-444-3916
From other states call toll free:
1-800-525-2859

�Wabanaki Alliance October 1979

Page 9

Andrus urges tribes to develop
natural energy resources
WASHINGTON — U.S. Interior Depart
ment Secretary Cecil Andrus said the
national energy crisis challenges tribes to
break their dependence on the federal
government.
“For too long, too many Indian people
have been — through no fault o f their own
— too dependent upon the Federal govern
ment,” Andrus said in a speech to National
Congress of American Indians in Albuquer
que, N.M. “The energy crisis offers an
opportunity for many tribes to break that
cycle o f dependence which has plagued your
people.”
The Secretary praised the Indians for
their efforts to accelerate energy develop
ment on reservations and to become
partners in energy-producing projects. In
dian reservations contain coal and uranium,
among other things.
“You are seeking independence — the
type o f independence that comes with
employment opportunities on the tribal
lands, from adequate housing, from im
proved health,” Andrus said.
“By developing your resources wisely, you
can attain the independence American
Indians seek while helping all Americans
attain the national energy independence
goal.”
Andrus said President Carter’s program,
including the windfall profits tax, energy
security corporation, and the energy mobili
zation board, are important to the tribes. He
said that to be effective, the national
program would have to include measures to

help Indians develop vast energy resources
on Indian lands.
“This is not only equitable, it is essential
to increased energy supply,” Andrus said.
The Secretary reviewed efforts by Interior
Department to help tribes make informed
decisions on energy development and man
age their natural resources.
“Decisions on the development o f energy
resources on tribal lands will be made in the
final instance by tribal leaders,” Andrus
said, responding to concern expressed by
Indian leaders that a proposed energy
mobilization board would override estab
lished rights o f tribes to control their own
natural resources.

Noted alcoholism
counselor to speak
PORTLAND — The Reverend Joseph
Martin, nationally known alcoholism work
er will speak Friday evening, October 26, at
7:45 in the gymnasium o f University of
Southern Maine, 96 Falmouth St.
In addition to lecturing throughout the
country, Father Martin has narrated several
films on alcoholism. He is probably best
known for his work on the film Chalk Talk.
Anyone wishing more information on the
lecture is invited to contact George Paul of
Central Maine Indian Association in Port
land, tel.: 1-775-1872.

Holmes enters innocent plea
(Continued from page 1
)
Alabama fugitive from justice charges
. against Holmes have been dropped. The
charges o f second degree burglary involved
$6 taken from a trailer, he said. Asked to
comment on Holmes at first being presented
in news reports as an Indian, Silver said he
“honestly” did not know if Holmes had
Indian blood or not. He said he doubted
Holmes knew the answer, either.
Silver said a reported wedding engage
ment between Holmes and Eloise Francis, a
Penobscot and witness in the case, may be

CHD awards
$6 million in grants
WASHINGTON — More than six million
dollars in grants and loans have been
awarded to self-help projects by the national
Campaign for Human Development (CHD),
Father Marvin A. Mottet, CHD executive
director, said.
Grants and loans totaling $6,317,700 have
been approved for 125 projects which
include a community organizing and lead
ership training program in the South Bronx;
farmworkers’ housing cooperatives in Cali
fornia; a national land reform advocacy pro
gram based in Washington, D.C.; an out
reach program for sugar cane workers in
Louisiana and a utility rate reform project in
Wisconsin.
This most recent series o f grants and
loans brings the total amount allocated from
the national CHD in its 10-year existence to
more than $50 million. An additional $20
million has been distributed at the diocesan
level, bringing the overall CHD total to $70
million.
The Campaign for Human Development
was established by the American Catholic
bishops in 1969 as the church’ domestic
s
anti-poverty justice education program.
According to Fr. Mottet, as the Campaign
marks its 10th anniversary and looksforward to the next decade, CHD recommits
itself to working for justice and to helping
change policies, institutions and conditions
which perpetuate poverty and injustice.
Wabanaki Alliance is supported in part
by a CHD grant.

I

“off.” Holmes worked in construction at
Indian Island for three months, Silver told
the magistrate in court.
Silver said he took the case because it
interested him from a legal perspective. He
acknowledged that defending Holmes does
not increase his popularity with the Indian
community. Silver has represented Wab
anaki Corporation, an Indian alcoholism
agency in Orono, on several occasions.
Asked his opinion o f the state supreme
court ruling backing federal jurisdiction.
Silver said he fully supports it, although he
was “amazed” at the decision.
Can Maine make the transition to federal
jurisdiction on Indian reservations for major
crimes, with Indian jurisdiction for minor
ones? “We’ certainly a capable group up
re
here; I don’ see why we can’ do it. Initially
t
t
there’s going to be-a problem changing over,
but I don’ see where it can’ be accom
t
t
plished,” Silver said.

Quaker group
sets workshop

FAMILY — Donald Stanley believes hard work teaches good living habits to his sons,
Scooby, left, six, and John 11. The trio was doing yardwork at the Stanley homestead at
Pleasant Point. Not shown is April Skawaban, six months old.

Parent wants Indian teachers
PLEASANT POINT — Donald Stanley,
father o f three children, believes reserva
tion schools should have more Indian
teachers, and that pupils have a “right” to
their language and culture.
“ I’ like to see more Indian teachers in
d
there,” said Stanley, gesturing toward
Beatrice Rafferty elementary school at this
Passamaqouddy reservation. “An Indian
teacher can relate to an Indian child better
than a non-Indian teacher.”
On Passamaquoddy language, Stanley
said, “It’s difficult to teach the language
because o f mixed marriages. There’ about
s
45 mixed marriages here.” Stanely said In
dians who marry non-Indians should not be
permitted to live on the reservation. “At
least if you marry another Indian you’ not
re
diluting Indian blood,” he said. Stanley is
separated from his wife, who lives in Law
rence, Mass.
Stanley believes in “The children’ right
s
to learn the language and the culture.” He
said, “The people here are going the right
way . . . my boy Scooby has an Indian
teacher.”
Stanley remembers attending school in

the old building, now vacant, where “The
only language I had was Indian; and I could
speak pig English.” He remembers, “I got
caught speaking my tongue and got hit by a
pointer — knocked me clear across the
room. That turned me off to religion.”
Stanley, 35, worked his way through high
school. He later handled steel beams, and
lived 12 years in Massachusetts. He con
siders himself a traditional Indian, wear
ing his hair long, and wearing a “Custer had
it coming” patch on his jacket.
Stanley said he was disappointed in the
progress on a nation house for Passama
quoddy traditionalists. “I tried to keep the
men together. I started the project. I even
designed the nation house,” he said,
complaining that other members o f the tribe
have discouraged participation by their
actions.
The logs for the nation house are piled in
a field in an area tribal administration has
considered for a ski slope. There are no
signs o f recent activity. Meanwhile, Stanley
has built a new fence around his homestead
so that none o f it will be used for roads or
parking area for a planned health center.

HOULTON — Learning and teaching
about Maine Indians will be the theme o f a
conference slated Oct. 27, from 9-5, at
Association o f Aroostook Indians.
The workshop is sponsored by an Indian
subcommittee o f American Friends Service
Committee, a Quaker group. The associa
tion headquarters are located in the fortner
Bowdoin Street School, Houlton. A fee will
be charged participants. For further infor
mation contact Mary Griffith, 22 Riverview •
Road, Brunswick.

SUBSCRIBE T O

WABANAKI
ALLIANCE
News o f
Maine Indian Country

FRUITS OF THEIR LABOR — Actually they’ radishes, being shown off by Janice
re
McDougall [left] and Cheryl Libby, Youth Conservation Corps workers in the community
garden at Indian Island.

�Wabanaki Alliance October 1979

A look at Indian religious rights in prison
By David Stotter
WASHINGTON, D.C.— A pioneer Qua
ker, William Penn, believed prison to be a
sanctuary where man could cogitate about
his salvation, become reacquainted with
God, and do penance.
But is an inmate entitled to cogitate over a ’
special kosher menu? Can he become
reacquainted with God while high on
peyote? Can an American Indian prisoner
build his own "sweatlodge" to do penance?
Two hundred years after Penn, the
nation's courts and prison experts are
joining in an escalating debate over whether
incarcerated men and women should be
allowed to observe the most basic tenets—
and some provocative new ones— o f their
religious faith.
Because o f discrimination complaints
lodged by Muslims, Jews, American Indians
and others, the U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights has, for the first time in its
21-year history, put a national focus on tb
matter.
As a cautious first step, the Feder;
fact-finding body convened a consultation o
national experts in Washington, D.C., this
spring.
While examining the impact and implica-'
lions of religious discrimination nationall;
the conferees also debated the issue: to what
degree is the free-exercise-of-religion clause
of the First Amendment subordinate the the
interests of maintaining prison security,
enforcing inmate discipline and avoiding
administrative inconvenience and expense.
Larry Taylor, warden at the Federal
Correctional Institution in Lompoc, Califor
nia. told the commissioners that in a facility
where 4,800 meals a day are served to
prisoners, "special dietary arrangements
present difficult administrative, budgetary
and time problems.”

But recent court decisions have required
prison oficials to accomodate the dietary
needs o f Black Muslims and Orthodox Jews
whose religion forbids them to eat pork.
Mark Stern, an attorney who has success
fully represented prisoners seeking special
diets, said inmates sometimes resent it when
other prisoners get “favored” treatment. A
priosner can “get stabbed in the back over a
Kosher TV dinner,” he said.
Warden Taylor also commented, “ What
ever we do for one religious group, we must
be willing to do for all religious groups.”
Other prison officials complained that
they’ now receiving some spurious dietary
re
requests.
Alvin Bronstein, Director o f the National
Prison Project o f the American Civil
Liberties Union, found a “subtler, yet more
pervasive problem than the free o e rris
clause:” the First Amendment prohibition
forbidding the government from granting
preferential treatment to a religion.
Bronstein cited the practice o f recording
attendance at religious functions on an
inmate’ prison record. "What troubles
s
me." he said, “is if these notations are in the
files, it is highly conceivable that parole
decisions may be made based upon a
prisoner’s nonattendance at religious activi
ties.”
“ It is equally unfair not to note an
inmate’s religious activities for paro’e
purposes,” Gair Cripe, General Counsel for
the Bureau o f Prisons, said, since this
provides "the complete picture o f what an
inmate is doing.”
Another official added that such records
are necessary to calculate prison budgets.
When Indian inmates o f the Native
American Church wanted a sweatlodge at

Lompoc, Warden Taylor’ immediate reac
s
tion was "No, because we didn’ know
t
anything about sweatlodges.”
A sweatlodge is a small wooden hut
covered with blankets or a tarp which
provides an effect similar to a sauna.
Virtually all tribes in this country use it as
part o f a purification ceremony.
Faced with a court suit, Taylor’ staff did
s
some research and relented to the inmates’
demands.
"W e had to be concerned about what
kind o f precedent we set,” said Taylor. “We
don’ build synagogues for Jews or mosques
t
for the Muslims in our population.”
The Native American Church believes
peyote, a hallucinogenic cactus plant, is
both a sacramental object, similar to the
bread and wine in certain Christian
churches, and is itself an object of worship
much like the Holy Ghost.
It's not permitted in prison, but Waiter
Echo-Hawk, staff attorney for the Native
American Rights Fund (NARF), said Native
American Church members are discriminat
ed against because they are prohibited from
using peyote while on parole, even though
Federal law permits its use for bona fide
religious purposes outside o f prison.
William Collins, an American Correction
al Association official, said it is not always
easy to define what is a legitimate religion.
He cited the Church o f the New Song
(CONS), an inmate-created religion which
one court characterized as a “non-structured, free-form, do-as-you-please philoso
phy. the sole purpose o f which is to cause
disruption o f established prison discipline
for the sake o f disruption.”
When correctional officials attempted to
suppress the incipient church, its founder,

federal prisoner Harry Theriault, brought a
free exercise suit against the Atlanta,
Georgia, penitentiary. A District Court held
that until CONS demonstrated otherwise,
the movement was to be considered a bona
fide religion.
Shortly after this victory, a sect within the
church nearly provided such a demonstrtion
by making a formal request to the Federal
Bureau o f Prisons for 700 porterhouse
steaks and 98 bottles o f Harvey’ Bristol
s
Cream Sherry to celebrate the sect’ rituals.
s
While Theriault immediately proclaimed
the request "unsanctioned,” officials in
other prisons have forced many CONS
chapters to go to court to prove their
sincerity; so farrthe courts have reached
contradictory decisions.
Litigation frequently occurs when prison
regulations governing personal appearance
conflict with the tenets o f an inmate’
s
religion. Some religions require adherents to
wear long hair and beards, requirements
that prison officials said hinder prisoner
identification while also providing inmates a
way to conceal weapons and contraband.
Conferees also discussed the difficulty of
scheduling prayer hours so that they do not
interfere with prison routine. Warden
Taylor told o f a Lompoc inmate who
believed in chanting at sunrise. Disturbed
by the noise, a fellow inmate assuited the
chanter.
The multitude o f unresolved issues which
were raised prompted the Correctional
Association’s Collins to comment that
judicial clarification is needed:
"What is the test? The courts have yet to
clearly decide what scale is to be used in
balancing the religious demands of an
inmate and the demands of a correctional
institution.”

Federal Indian school programs merged
WASHINGTON— U.S. Interior Assistant
Secretary Forrest Gerard announced that an
agreement has been reached with Indian
Pueblo Council to transfer senior high
programs o f the Albuquerque Indian School
to the campus o f the Institute o f American
Indian Arts in Santa Fe.
The IAIA program will be continued at
Santa Fe this year, under its own separate
administration, for returning second year
students only. This will allow the post-sec
ondary school’ students to complete their
s
normal two-year program. No new students
will be enrolled.
According to tha agreement with the
council, programs for approximately 200
students in the 7th, 8th, and 9th grades will
remain at the Albuquerque campus this
school year.
Gerard said that he would establish a
review team to analyze the educational
programs o f the Institute and its future
location.
The art institute, established in 1962, had
been a high school with a post-secondary art

BIA lists job openings

SCHOOL DAYS — These kids at Pleasant Point don’ seem too depressed about the start of
t
a new school year ... or maybe it was just that classes were out for the day. The sign was
painted by the members of the junior high.

WASHINGTON — The Bureau o f Indian
Affairs has been recruiting to fill 45 clerical
and professional positions in its Central
Office o f Indian Education in Washington,
D.C., Director Earl Barlow announced.
The openings have been created by a
change in BIA’ central education office to
s
meet current education needs o f Indians
and Alaska Natives.
There are positions to be filled, Barlow
said, in elementary and secondary educa
tion, post-secondary education, education of
the exceptional child, student support
services, planning and program develop
ment and administrative support. They
include jobs for clerk-typists, clerk-stenos,
analysts, education specialists and super
visory education specialists.
Qualified Indian applicants will be given
preference in filling all these positions.

program. The high school had been phased
out and enrollment at the junior college level
had remained low. This spring the school
was operating at less than half o f capacity
with high costs.
The Albuquerque Indian School, started
in 1881, was operated by the Bureau o f
Indian Affairs as an off-reservation board
ing school for Indians from various tribal
groups, mostly from the Southwest. Since
1977 the school has been operated by the
Indian Pueblo Council under contract with
£he bureau and has served a predominantly
Pueblo student body. The buildings and
facilities on the Albuqeurque campus are
quite old and would need to be replaced or
renovated if the school were to continue
there.

BIA buildings assessed
NEW YORK— Parsons Brinckerhoff, an
architectural and planning firm, has com
pleted fieldwork in an inventory survey of
facilities operated by the Bureau o f Indian
Affairs at the Papago, Salt River, Ford
McDowell, Fort Apache, San Carlos, and
Colorado River Reservations in Arizona,
and the Riverside Reservation in Southern
California. The project staff examined over
600 buildings, as well as qtilities, streets,
and grounds. The survey, which is part of a
nation-wide inventory the BIA is conducting
o f its facilities, requires the evaluation of
architectural, structural, mechanical, elec
trical and sanitary systems, and includes an
independent safety analysis and an energy
retrofit analysis o f the Theodore Roosevelt
School in the historic Fort Apache Reserva
tion.
The study was conducted on land owned
by the Papago and Apache tribes, although
no tribal buildings were evaluated. The
government facilities included schools, ad
ministrative offices, maintenance facilities,
and residences of BIA workers. They ranged
in age from a 100-year old horse stable to a
modem Indian High School at the Riverside
Reservation in California.

�Wahanaki Alliance October 1979

Page 1
1

c
o

u&gt;

STILL ON THE DRAWING BOARD — This Pleasant Point recreational park is only a
dream now, but it may become reality soon.
co
WOOOOOOOCOSOOOOOOSeOOOSOOOCOMOCCCOSOOCOOOCOOOCCOC'

o
&gt;

o

t

write Dept.74

VETERANS ADMINISTRATION

items to choose.

GREY OWL
Indian Craft Manufacturing Co.
150-02 Beaver Road, Jamaica, N.Y.

^

212 526-3660

t= J

j

Equal Housing
OPPORTUNITY

BOSTON INDIAN COUNCIL
IS SEEKING
DIRECTOR FOR
COMMUNITY SERVICES
Responsibilities: Include developing and
managing a social services program at
Boston Indian Council, Inc.
Qualifications: High school diploma or
equivalent and three years experience, or
BSW/MSW.
The position becomes available Novem
ber 1 1979. All interested parties are
,
invited to send their resumes to Cliff
Saunders, executive director, Boston
Indian Council, 105 S. Huntington Ave.,
Jamaica Plain, Mass. 02130.

coa -

Owned Homes For Sale
Throughout The State
Minimum Cash Down Payment
Financing Available Through V.A.
30 Year Loans — No Closing Costs
9V2% Interest.

Anyone Can Buy
You Don't Have To Be A Veteran

M O R N IN G S T A R
A K C CA IR N T E R R IE R S

See Your Local Real Estate Broker
Or Contact

Stud Service

VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
LOAN GUARANTY DIVISION
TOGUS, MAINE 04330
Tel. 207-623-8411 Ext. 433

Phone 412-368-3274
P O R T E R S V IL L E , P A . 16051

r

THE LIFE AND
TRADTIONS
OF THE RED MAN
By Joseph Nicolar
“ The best account we have o f the Indian E p ic o f
Glusgehbeh (Glooscap o f the M icm acs) . . . A grandson ofLt.
Gov. John Neptune, Joseph Nicolar {As whites wrote his
name) came from a long line o f shamans and inherited the old
lo re. . . ”
Fannie Hardy Eckstrom
Originally published in Bangor, Maine in 1893 this book
is now available at bookstores everywhere or from the
distributors for the Eastern U.S.;
The University Bookstore
University o f Maine
Orono, Maine 04469
Price is $6.95
Please include 75c for shipping and handling. Maine residents add 5% Sales Tax.

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF FINDING OF NO
SIGNIFICANT EFFECT
ON THE ENVIRONMENT
OCTOBER 8,1979
PENOBSCOT INDIAN NATION
COMMUNITY BUILDING
INDIAN ISLAND
OLD TOWN, MAINE 04468
(207)827-7776
TO: ALL INTERESTED
AGENCIES, GROUPS AND
PERSONS:
The above named Penobscot
Indian Nation, Penobscot County,
Maine has requested release of
Community Development Block
Grant Funds from the U.S. De
partment of Housing and Urban
Development under Title I o f the
Housing &amp; Community Develop
ment Act o f 1974 (PL 93-383) to
be used for the Community De
velopment and Housing needs.
$61,000.
It has been determined that
such request for release of funds
will not constitute an action sig
nificantly affecting the quality of
the human environment and has
decided not to prepare an En
vironmental Impact Statement of
the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (PL-91-190).
The reasons for such decision
not to prepare such statement are
as follows:
No significant degradation of
the environment is expected.
An Environmental Review
Record respecting the within
project has been made by the
Penobscot Indian Nation, Pen
obscot County which docu- -

ments the environmental review
of the project and more fully
sets for the reasons why such
statement is not required. This
Environmental Review Record
is on file at the^above_address
and is available for public ex
amination and copying upon
request at the Grants and Con
tracts Division, Community
Building. Indian Island, Old
Town, Maine 04468 between
the hours of 8 a.m. and 4:30
p.m.
No further environmental re
view o f each project is proposed
to be conducted prior to the
,request for release o f Federal
funds.
All interested agencies; groups
and persons disagreeing with this
decision are invited to submit
written comments for considera
tion by the Tribal Council o f the
Penobscot Indian Nation to the
office o f the undersigned. Such
written comments should be re
ceived at the Community Build
ing, Indian Island, Old Town,
Maine 04468, on or before Octo
ber 17, 1979. All such comments
will be considered and the Pen
obscot Indian Nation, Penob
scot County will not take any
administrative action on the with
in project prior to the date
specified in the preceding sen
tence. Wilfred Pehrson
Governor
Penobscot Indian Nation
Community Building
Indian Island
Old Town, Maine 04468
October 17,1979

�Page 12

Wahanaki Alliance October 1979

news notes

Flashback photo

Tribal charter
rules proposed

'

.

Boston area Indians
join Allagash trip

ORONO— Five young men from the
WASHINGTON— Regulations for Indian Dorchester area o f Boston, recently par
tribes seeking to form tribal constitutions or ticipated in a week-long expedition on
charters or make changes, are being the Allagash Wilderness Waterway.
proposed by Bureau o f Indian Affairs.
The canoe trip, sponsored by Wilderness
The purpose o f the new regulations is to Pursuits o f Orono under the leadership of
provide uniformity and order in holding Nicholas Dow, is part o f Wabanaki Corpor
elections on constitutions and bylaws or ation’s alcoholism and drug abuse preven
charters.
tion efforts. The trip provides a wilderness
A significant change, introduced by the
experience and the chance to share feelings
proposed regulations, is that petitioning by
and learn to cooperate in facing challenges.
tribal members will no longer be recognized
It is a chance for youngsters to develop
as a way to initiate a tribal reorganization.
self-confidence and trust in others.
The process, under the proposed regula
Sammy Sapiel, recreation director for
tions can only be initiated by a valid request
Boston Indian Council, coordinated the
from a tribe’s governing body or a
participation o f the Boston youths. They
representative committee.
were Steve Marshall, 12; Derrick Stevens,
The purpose of this change is to require
13; John Quigley, 16; Jeffrey Gunther, 13;
tribal members to work through their
and Cedric Cromwell, 1
4.
government rather than around it. The
petitioning process remains valid where
tribal constitutions recognize it and where
the Indian Reorganization Act provides for
it as the means whereby the Secretary o f the
A Federal jury in North Platte, Neb., has
Interior may be requested to issue a charter
awarded $300,000 to an Oglala Sioux
o f incorporation.
woman who charged the city o f Gordon and
one o f its police officers with violating her
civil rights and causing her to have a mis
carriage.
Jo Ann Yellow Bird has accused Gordon
Indian tribal businesses are flourishing, police of kicking her in the stomach, threat
The U.S. News and World Report, a ening to shoot her, throwing her into a
“drunk tank” and denying her medical
national magazine, reported recently.
A four page story says commercial Indian attention following a bar brawl in Septem
ventures in timber, coal, oil, resorts, ber, 1976. Fifteen days later she lost her
factories and farming are paying off. The unborn child.

Miscarriage award

_________

H

H

*M

HOME ON THE FARM — Mary Stevens, well known Indian in Houlton, poses with dog, at
left. At right is photo of Rosemary Joseph and several children, at Indian Township. The
boy is Newell Tomah. [Photo courtesy of Ramona Stackhouse]

Boy scou tin g for Indians u rged

Magazine reports
tribes prospering

full-time staff member assigned. There is
NORTH BRUNSWICK, N.J.— A major
also an active American Indian Relation
effort to spur increased use of the Scouting
ships Committee, headed by Brantley Blue,
program among American Indian youth was
of Washington, D.C. During the past five Indian household median income is now
announced here.
years this committee has sought outside higher than that for blacks, Puerto Ricans
The Boy Scouts o f America in cooperation
LOWELL, Mass. — Area Indians here
funding for the additional support now- and Mexican Americans, the article said. camped, danced and sang in celebration of
with the National Indian.Activities Associa
Gains in education were also reported, with
announced.
s
tion has established the American Indian
an estimated 40,000 Indians currently the harvest season, at what’ called the
Five specific goals are seen, according to
historical Pawtucket Indian site. The fair
Scouting Outreach Program. Two other
attending college. Featured were business
Hess and Homer.
took place Oct. 13-14. The site is located in
groups assisting with the project are the
The outreach program will serve to developments at Warm Springs, Minnesota
Idaho Inter-Tribal Policy Board and the
a state forest.
develop a deeper understanding by tribal Chippewa, and Ak-Chin reservations.
Indian and Native American Programs
leaders of the need for a greater ‘
push’ for
offfice o f the U.S. Department o f Labor .
Scouting programs for Indian youth. It will
According to Pete Homer, Jr., president
develop an increased awareness on the part
o f the National Indian Activities Associa
of volunteer and professional Scouters that
tion, the project is designed “to develop the
American Indian youth can and will be
capacity o f Indian communities to use the
benefited by Scouting programs.
Scouting program to serve Indian youth.
It will develop stronger communication
BSA officials estimate that about 1,000
links between local tribal leaders and local
native Americans currently are associated
Scouting council personnel. It will develop
with the Boy Scout program.
workable patterns o f operation needed to
The project also is designed to develop,
support Scouting on Indian reservations and
through collaboration between local Indian
in urban areas having concentrations of
tribal and community groups and local Boy
Indians. And it will increase the number of
Scout councils, community-based support
Indian youth within the Scouting member
services to help ensure continuity o f the
ship and the number o f tribal chartered
program.
Scouting units.
James A. Hess, veteran professional
Kenneth Gould, acting executive director
Scouter, will serve as executive director of
o f NIAA. and Lonnie Racehorse, director o f
the program for 13 months through
F O R
T H E
B H I f f E J F I T
O F
T H U
the Idaho Inter-Tribal Policy Board, have
September 1980. Hess, who has been
also cooperated in arrangements.
director o f BSA’s Community Relationships
Hess comes to the program’s leadership
Service, will be headquartered in South
with a background in Scouting-Indian
Brunswick. N.J., and will work with Indian
cooperation. He has been secretary to
communities in eastern states.
Scouting’ American Indian Relationships
s
Assisting Hess will be two American
Committee for the past five years and has
Indian associates, still to be named, who will
coordinated support o f Indian seminars on
be headquartered in the NIAA office in
Scouting during this period. An Eagle Scout
Oklahoma City. They will work with
jfhd veteran o f World War II military
selected Indian communities west of the
service, Hess is a graduate of Mt. Union
Mississippi River.
College. He has served in Scout executive
Since 1957, the BSA has provided
posts in Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, and
A L L A R E R E Q U E S T E D T O W E A R IN D IA N C O S T U M E S .
national staff services to Indian communi
ties. and for several years there was a Minnesota.

Harvest festival held

P R - imWLO- tlttt
E MG - U- EH
( L E T ’S H A V E A D A N CE.)

At the Upper Hall, Mian Island,

MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 25th,
PENOBSCOT UMIAfl BftflD

2

C A

S H

P J b t li&amp; J iiw

S

ONE FOB THE PRETTIEST DOSTOIBED COOPLE,
“ “
“ )U0ST FBHTBSTID

Pleasant Point planners organize
PLEASANT POINT — The Passamaquoddy tribe has organized a planning
department here, with a staff o f three
persons.
In charge is Charles Lewis, an Eastport
area native who has been working for the
tribe several months. Lewis, after a military
career in the U.S. Army, worked for Indian
legal services in Calais, and later worked
with land claims lawyer Thomas N. Tureen,
who represents the Passamaquoddies in
their land claim to northern Maine.

Lewis said a meeting was planned “to pull
all the planners together — then we’ have
ll
more direction and hopefully coordination.
Lewis recently completed a so-called tribal
specific health plan for Indian Health
Service, the federal agency that funds
medical services on the reservation.
Hired to work with Lewis were Peter
Bailey, a member o f the Passamaquoddy
tribe who will work on future housing, and
Robert Mendoza, a Creek Indian who will
serve as assistant planner.

Floor Managers: J. S. SHAY, M M NICHOLA.
. .
tfosic: INDIAN ISLAND ORCHESTRA, (4 Pieces)

Admission,
10 Cents.
Dance, Including Admission, 50 Cents.
OLD HANDBILL for a dance at Indian Island. Does anyone know the date of this event?
The Upper Hall is gone, but the recently built commnnity boilding would be suitable for a
revival of these good times. Perm-gur-wul-de-netch.

�</text>
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Julia Brush</text>
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