02036cgm a2200313u 450000500170000000700030001700800410002004000150006104300120007624502140008826000560030230000540035844000620041250001820047450802730065652004120092953800090134154600220135065000520137265000270142465000370145165000470148865100520153565100290158770000210161670000170163771000290165471000390168320190501202428.0vz051229s1998 meu057 g vleng d aSPLdWaOLN an-us-me00aHealing woodsh[videorecording] :b(Indian Township, Maine)cMaine Public Television ; executive producer, Katherine Arno ; series producer & project director, Brad Smith ; produced and directed by Brad Smith. a[Lewiston, Me.] :bMaine Public Television,cc1998. a1 videocassette (57 min.) :bsd., col. ;c1/2 in. 0aOur stories : culture, community and family in Maine ;n3 aSeries created by and originally broadcast on Maine Public Television, May 10-13, 1998. Funded through a television demonstration grant from Rural Development, part of the USDA. aEdited by Brad Smith, Daniel Peltz, Bill Moulton; assoc. producers, Donald Soctomah, Daniel Peltz; Passamaquoddy music by Blanche Sockabasin, Regina Petit-Fry, Wayne Newell, Spirit of the Dawn Drum Group; aerial photography, Richard Searls, Michael Peavey, Brad Smith. aMaine is known for its timber and paper pulp industries, but a tribal community who has been hunting, fishing and trapping this land for over 10,000 years has a somewhat different view of this resource. In this episode we turn to the easternmost tribe of Wabanaki Indians-the Passamaquoddy. Healing woods looks at the tribe as community and as family on the Indian Township reservation of Washington County. aVHS. aClosed captioned. 0aPassamaquoddy IndiansxSocial life and customs. 0aCommunity lifezMaine. 0aDocumentary television programs. 0aVideo recordings for the hearing impaired. 0aIndian Township (Me.)xSocial life and customs. 0aMainexRural conditions.1 aArno, Katherine.1 aSmith, Brad.2 aMaine Public Television.1 aUnited States.bRural Development.