News from Indian Country Pcije 7 Spilyay Tymoo April 15, 2004 Pre-Easter collision claims five near Klamath KLAMATI I FALLS (AP) - A colli sion east of here that claimed five lives of a family from Beatty was a tragic end to a willing volunteer's trip to Kla math Falls to pick up Easter supplies for her church. It ended on Oregon 140 cast of Klamath Falls Saturday evening in a collision that killed Cleora Godowa, 60, a daughter Marilyn, 25, granddaugh ters Vijune Arnett, 18, and Jamie Smith, 2, and great-granddaughter Ticrra Wil son, 3. Residents said Godowa readily vol unteered for the 90-mile round trip. "That was just Cleora," said Madeline Hutchinson, a pastor of the town's Assembly of God church. "If she wasn't heading out to help this per son, it was to help that one." The right rear tire on Godowa s car blew out at 4:50 p.m., sending it into the path of an oncoming pickup. All five were ejected and pronounced dead at the scene, state police said. Oregon State trooper Phil Browder said what he saw when he got there 90 minutes later will stick with him for ever. "Stuffed Easter bunnies, chocolates and diapers strewn all over the road," said Browder, who said it was the worst he had seen in more than 20 years on the job. "I got up this morning to put Easter eggs out for my own kids before I left for work. I couldn't help but think, here's a family that won't get to do this toda)'. Just horrific." Trooper Mark Moore said Kevin Newman, 41, of Bly, the driver of the pickup, had no time to take evasive action. "He did everything he could to avoid this, but he really had no chance," Moore said, Moore Amberg, 44, also of Bly, were treated at the scene. Browder said there were "very dis tinct marks on the pavement from a tire failing." Witnesses in another vehicle re ported seeing a plume of smoke near Researchers eye Sacagawea's illness ST. LOUIS (AP) - Sacagawea's near fatal illness during the Lewis and Clark Expedition may have been the result of a miscarriage from a second preg nancy, two St. Louis scholars believe. 1 listory professors Peter Kastor and Conevery Bolton Yalcncius of Wash ington University have been scrutiniz ing the explorers' journals from their 1804-06 westward expedition. The journals, they said, offer clues -through euphemisms common at the time but since largely forgotten - indi cating that Sacagawea may have be come ill while carrying a second child. "We can't tell for sure, we'll prob ably never really know," Yalcncius said Friday. "What we're, trying to do is raise this as a possibility. There's a lot that these journals have to say about how a woman's body was understood." Sacagawea was a Shoshone Indian teenager when she, her husband, French-Canadian fur trader Toussaint Charbonneau, and their infant son joined Meriwether Lewis and William Clark's expedition in what is now North Dakota during the winter of 1804 05. She was the only female on the ex pedition and served as an interpreier as Lewis and Clark explored territory acquired in the Louisiana Purchase. I ler presence also provided proof to other American Indians of the expeditions friendly intentions. Lewis and Clark maintained exten sive diaries that provided a glimpse of the time, helped define boundaries, even offered detailed descriptions and draw ings of previously unrecorded species. But Kastor said scholars have failed to recognize the literary conventions taken by the explorers, including the use of euphemisms, borne partly out of modesty, in describing issues related to women's health. The journals noted that Sacagawea became extremely ill when her son, Jean Baptistc, was about 6 months old. "If she dies, it will be the fault of her husband as 1 am now convinced," Clark wrote. 1 .ewis wrote that Sacagawea suffered from "an obstruction of the mensis (sic) in consequence of taking could (sic)," or "taking a cold." Sacagawea eventu ally recovered. Kastor and Yalcncius deemed it odd that the explorers blamed Charbonneau for Sacagawea's illness. "I ler menstrual periods may have been out of order in some way that's not related to reproduction, because that was a possibility at that time," Yalcncius said. "But we think it's more likely that they were using 'taking a cold' as a euphemism for pregnancy, as was commonly done. She may have had a miscarriage." Another pregnancy so soon after the birth of Jean Baptistc would explain why C Mark blamed Charbonneau for Sacagawea's illness, Yalcncius said, not ing that the explorers apparently thought Charbonneau "should be ex- FBI releases agency documents and passenger "lames BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - The FBI has released nearly 800 pages of ma terial sought by attorneys for Leonard Peltier, the American Indian activist serving two life sentences in the 1975 slayings of two FBI agents on a reser vation in South Dakota. The documents outline agents' work as they checked with informants, in cluding sources within the Seneca In dian Nation, and followed up on sus pected Peltier sightings before his ar rest, attorney Michael Kuzma said. Finder to a Freedom of Informa tion Act request, the FBI turned over 797 of the 812 pages collected by the Buffalo field office in the Peltier case. It withheld 15 pages, citing exemptions for national security concerns and to prqtect the privacy of agents, accord-. ':ing 'to" Court documents. Peltier's attorneys said Monday they would fight to see the withheld mate rial. "We're going to argue that the ex emptions are being improperly in voked," Kuzma said. Peltier supporters are seeking tens of thousands of pages of FBI docu ments from field offices nationwide as they fight to overturn his conviction. "I believe the sheer volume of ma terial that wasn't released or turned over to Leonard's defense attorneys warrants Leonard's immediate release from prison," Kuzma said. "Unfortu nately, it doesn't work that way." A Nov. 14, 1975, memo outlines an unidentified source's claim that he saw Peltier at an Indian convention at a Buffalo hotel in October 1975, four months after the shooting. Another source believed hc spotted R'ltier in Steamburg, near the Sciiccas' Allegany reservation, teaching Indian dances, Kuzma said. Paul Moskal, an FBI spokesman in Buffalo, said he was unfamiliar with the content of the documents, released through the agency's Washington head quarters March 16, and could not com ment. Peltier, 59, was convicted in 1977 of killing the two F'BI agents during a standoff on the Pine Ridge Indian Res ervation. Both agents, who the FBI said were searching for robbery suspects, were shot in the head. Peltier was charged with taking part in the slayings, but whether he fired the fatal shots was never proved. The case has become a rallying point for American Indian and human rights activists, who believe Peltier is a politi cal prisoner. I Ie was the subject of sev eral documentary films' and the :ocst' selling novel "In the Spirit of Crazy I lorse" bv Peter Matthiessen. Community club offers support Navajo boxer will jab at Olympics the tire about the time it veered across the center line and was broadsided by the pickup. Moore said investigation is continu ing but that it appears none of the five was wearing a seatbelt. About 800 people live in the unin corporated Beatty area. Most are mem bers of the Klamath tribe, as were the five victims. Word spread quickly through the town. "They call this place the Indian Tri angle," said Brittany Baldwin, 18, Godowa 's great-niece who grew up with Arnett and graduated with her last spring from Bonanza 1 ligh School. "Native Americans live by each other every day. We know all about each other and are always helping one an other out." Pastor Hutchinson said Godowa's volunteerism, from driving neighbors to doctor's visits to cooking meals at the community center, was well known. "You never know what's going to happen," she said. "This was a day that everyone thought they'd be happy on Easter. It just didn't end that way." Godowa is survived by her husband, James, three sons, a daughter and grandchildren. Plans for a memorial service are pending. PI IOENLX, Ariz. (AP) - Sixteen-year-old Lowell Babe jabs at the air, his feet dancing around the threadbare ring in the tiny Navajo outpost of Chinle. I Ie turns up the CD of OutKast's "I Like the Way You Move" to help him concentrate as he does his evening workout. "Any day I don't practice, I feel an emptiness," Lowell said. "If I didn't box, I'd be bigger, fatter. I'd talk back, have no respect. "I'd just be an ordinary person." Lowell hopes boxing will take him to college and to the Olympics in 2008. For hundreds of kids, a humble gym built by Lowell's father, Cal, has been the center of their struggle to stay away from smoking, drinking and gangs, to learn discipline and respect, to break past ordinary to extraordinary. The gym, home of the Damon-Bahe Boxing Club, recently served as the set for an independent film, "Black Cloud," produced by former child star Rick Schroeder, who was in the boxing movie "The Champ" in 1978. "I was inspired by what 1 heard about this man helping kids overcome alcoholism and gang violence through the sport of boxing," Schroeder said. "I drove up to meet him, watched box ing tapes of Lowell, his other sons and other boxers he's trained. "1 asked if I could use their story as a launching point for a dramatic movie. Their boxing club was the genesis for it." The foundation of the gym was poured where the corral of the family's sheep camp used to stand. "I spent everything I had on it," Cal said. Boxing was the ticket out of trouble for Cal, who at 13 had been arrested in nearby I Iolbrook. "I was in and out of jail, arrested for breaking and entering, and about to go to reform school," Cal said. The judge released him if he prom ised to leave town. He and his mother went to Fort Defiance and lived with his grandfa ther, Lee Damon, a Marine who won all -service championships, had qualified for the ( Mympic trials and was running a boxing gym. I Ie put Cal into the ring. "Boxing pulled me out of trouble," Cal said. "It gave me something to do. It showed me I wasn't bad. It was the key thing that changed me." In 1978, when Damon died of al coholism, Cal took over the boxing club, moving it to Ganado. In 1985, he moved it to Chinle. About 10 years later, he built the gym next to his house. "When a kid has poor grades, I try to find out why he is having problems," Judy said. "They feel more secure here than anywhere else." When kids join the boxing team, they must adhere to strict rules, one of the reasons the club has produced 24 na tional boxing champions. Lowell has won the All-Indian Na tionals six times and National n his wins," Cal said. "He started boxing at 7 and was at his first tournament at 9." Smith, of the Native American Sports Council, said this year is pivotal because Lowell turns 17 and can com pete at the adult level. crcising proper husbandly restraint so as not to get her pregnant again so quickly." Amy Mossett of New Town, N.I)., a national scholar on Sacagawea, doubts that the teenager was pregnant again so soon after her first child's birth. "I think she was just suffering com plications from her first childbirth, which was real common then," Mossett said. "I guess all we can do is specu late." But David Borlaug, president of the I-ewis and Clark Fort Mamlan Foun dation in Washburn, N.D., noted an other journal reference to Sacagawea's pelvic inflammation. "1 would say that if not pregancy, something of a female health issue was going on," Borlaug said. "It's certainly possible. Probable? Who know s." Kastor and Yalcncius plan to present their findings at a conference on "Health and Medicine in the Lewis & Clark Era." Judge adds payback to jail sentence TACOMA, Wash. (AP) - A judge has ruled that a man sen tenced to 14 years in prison for stealing geoducks should return $1.1 million he stole from the state and Indian tribes. Pierce County Superior Court Judge John McCarthy on Friday ruled Douglas Tobin should pay back $879,408.40 for 196,412 pounds of geoduck he took, and $247,803.20 for 72,905 pounds of crab he took between 2000 and 2002. c ; Those amounts include' $164,500 the government spent on the investigation. Deputy prosecutor Tom Moore said it's unlikely Tobin will be able to pay back any mi ney. If he does, money for the crab would be distributed between the state Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Nisqually Indian tribe. The geoduck money would be distributed among the depart ments of Natural Resources, Fish and Wildlife and the Nisqually, Squaxin Island and Puyallup tribes. Prosecutors say Tobin, who owned Toulok Seafoods process ing plant in Fife, harvested geo duck and crab in the South Puget Sound area at times and places closed under state and tribal law, then sold his catch to buyers in Canada, California and a local man who paid cash. Tobin had been charged with 160 crimes, including leading or ganized crime. I Ie pleaded guilty last April to reduced charges. Tobin was sentenced in De cember for theft, unlawful pos session of a firearm and 35 felony and misdemeanor fishing violations for taking geoduck and crab in South Puget Sound. Casino money pays for education Please support the businesses you see in the Spilyay. LOS ANGELES (AP) - California Indian tribes that have raked in mil lions of dollars from their casinos are tunneling some of that money to vari ous universities for the study of Na tive American issues. Tribal representatives said their do nations are an extension of generous philanthropy that totals an estimated S"0 million annually. The tribes have been one of the largest political contributors over the past five years, spending more than S120 million on local and statewide campaigns. Some critics believe that academic integrity is at risk when special inter ests influence higher education. But some experts said the tribes are follow ing the example set by other compa nies that have funded school projects. "It's almost like the tribes are com ing of age," said Sheldon Krimskv, a Tufts University professor who stud ies conflicts of interest that arise when private money funds scientific research. "Drug companies and chemical com panies have long given professorships or funded graduate education to help shape the agenda of higher education." Tribal representatives said university programs addressing the Native Ameri can culture have long gone underfunded and now money is avail able to make them stronger. The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, who operate a casino in San Bernardino County, gave $4 million to the University of California, Los An geles Law School. The money will be used to estab lish a new center that will develop courses on California native issues and provide tribal internships for students. Carole Goldberg, a UCLA law pro fessor who heads the advisory board ot the law school's Native Nations Law and Policy ("enter, said the tribe's gift would not affect the way existing courses are taught. "It's n t as if those topics are taught now and the tribes want them taught differently," she said. "It's more like they are not taught at all." The San Manuel and the Pcchanga Band of Luiseno Indians will fund a UCLA Law School conference next week on media coverage of tribal is sues. San Manuel also gave S3 millic n to California State University, San Bernar dino, which named its student union tor a historic leader of the tribe. "We're trying to build relationships," said San Manuel Chairman Deron Marquez. "Its another way for Indian people to get the population educated about our issues."