ill urge studied United Press International WASHINGTON — An- ropologist Richard Leakey, and Dr Roger Lewin biochemist and ience editor of the British journal New Scientist,” dispute the oft- roposed idea that humans are born ith an innate drive to kill each iher. On the contrary, Leakey and Le in, contend that the evidence iggests that we are more coopera- ve than aggressive. Leakey and Lewin, writing in , --i birjust-published book “Origins,” u Sla ‘ 1 S aid there is no doubt that aggres- utionlf^™ 1(1 Mrs. Can istantly f ' or ns tob majesty h •dof ourctj 'emony in| White Hoii weleomii known iinc e Fraalij forme to la| lrs t year of® took over tion 36 vej hy a foreij Shah s reia ovvth of Iri rid leaders^ v came wit more U and territorial struggles are part f modern life but they argue that ais behavior is the product of our nvironment, not our genes. “Anyone who argues for inbuilt ggression in homo sapiens must ee aggression as a universal instinct the animal kingdom,” they wrote. It is no such thing. ’ But Leakey, son of famed an- bopologist Louis Leakey and di- ector of the National Museums of enya, and his co-author do not laim that humans are naturally ood natured toward one another. “It is culture that largely weaves he patterns in human societies,” hey wrote. 165 lai\ ol Slale i. fitll Itudder inur, Rktiaid line mid Cm. i\ it Eiijinm. (I pidiircsaal 137 and 13i.\ elation, Cad# lima of Veil' r in., IDS Ha- Societ), ’ < Mclcoruli?! p.m., Rndit(i liir Cudcl, ' li)i- GikIH. and "l!» itldci Tliealn Looking at lower animals to ex plain the behavior of humans, Leakey and Lewin note that territo rial claims are widespread among different species, but not all animals are territorial. “That territoriality is flexible should not be surprising,” they said. “It is, after all, a biological adaption to environmental conditions so that the species may survive through suf ficient access to food supplies and by unhampered reproduction. “If food resources and space are scarce, then almost certainly there will be conspicious territorial be havior. It is likewise inevitable that some individuals will fail to secure sufficient food or a place in which to rear a brood. These individuals are, of course, the weakest, and this is what survival of the fittest through natural selection really means. “Territorial behavior is therefore triggered when it is required and remains dormant when it is not,” they wrote. “We can say therefore that ter ritoriality and aggression are not universal instincts as such. Rather they are pieces of behavior that are tuned to particular life styles and to changes in the availability of impor tant resources in the environment. ” As far as war is concerned, Leakey and Lewin contend that wars are planned and organized by leaders intent on increasing their power over people and resources, and that it takes cooperation among people to wage war. “Powerful leaders have found more and more to fight about and increasingly effective ways of achieving their ends,” thev wrote. “We should not look to our genes for the seeds of war; those seeds were planted when, 10,000 years ago, our ancestors for the first time planted crops and began to be farm ers. The transition from the nomadic hunting way of life to the sedentary one of farmers and indus trialists made war possible and po tentially profitable.” Leakey and Lewin said what has transformed the possible into reality is the same factor that has made human beings special in the animal kingdom — culture. “It is social and political ideologies, and the tolerance or lack of it between them, that brings human nations to bloody conflict.” “Orgins,” $17.95, is published by E. P. Dutton, New York. Virgin markers always vanish United Press International VIRGIN, Utah — It’s getting harder and harder to find the Virgin in Utah because thieves keep steal ing the road signs leading to the town. “They disappear about as fast as we can get them up,” Transportation Department Sign Forman Val Robb said in the latest issue of the department’s monthly magazine Centerline. Robb said he has tried just about everything to foil the thieves, but to no avail. His latest effort was to bolt one marker atop 12-foot poles. It was gone in a few days. He said he’s going to try extra bolts next time, but he says he frankly doesn’t think that will work either. 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