home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 29American NotesACADEMEOld Bones, New Fight
-
-
- The gesture seemed nice: Stanford University would return
- some 550 ancient remains to the Ohlone Indians. "Indian beliefs
- hold ancestral remains to be sacred," wrote Stanford provost
- James Rosse. The result, though, was one nasty academic fight.
- Bert Gerow, an emeritus professor of anthropology at Stanford
- and curator of the remains for about 40 years, immediately
- announced he was the owner of most of them. Thereupon the
- chairman of Stanford's anthropology department, James Lowell
- Gibbs Jr., had the locks changed on the collection. The wrangle
- grew wider as scientists contemplated the loss of the bones,
- some up to 3,000 years old, which have long been available for
- study. Clement Meighan, head of the American Committee for the
- Preservation of Archaeological Collections, weighed in: "We are
- not talking about somebody's uncle. Some of these people were
- buried in the time of the Greeks and the Romans. Destruction of
- their remains is really unconscionable." Will the Indians ever
- bury those bones? Will academe ever bury the hatchet? Stay
- tuned.
-
-