Chicago Sun-Times

U. OF I. CANCELS SCIENTIST’S TALK OVER BACKLASH

- AP

URBANA — The University of Illinois has canceled plans to host a talk by Nobel Laureate James Watson after faculty raised concerns about his discredite­d views on race and intelligen­ce.

Carl Woese Institute for Genomic Biology director Gene Robinson told The News- Gazette the center dropped plans to host the scientist before a date had even been set.

Watson, 89, co- discovered the structure of DNA in 1953 and has a history of racially in sensitive comments.

Robinson said Watson initially reached out to the institute to give a “narrowly focused scientific talk” about his cancer research in conjunctio­n with a planned visit to a colleague’s lab. Robinson said he wasn’t surprised by faculty members’ reaction.

“We tried to consider this very carefully in going forward, and different perspectiv­es on the possibilit­ies of him giving a science- based lecture,” he said. “With respect to his past, the email that I sent out stated very clearly that we didn’t condone any of his past comments, racist comments and sexist comments. And we noted that he had apologized and thought about all those very carefully.”

Watson’s most notable racially insensitiv­e comments were made during a book tour in 2007, when he told the Sunday Times of London he was “inherently gloomy about the prospect of Africa” because “all our social policies are based on the fact that their intelligen­ce is the same as ours — whereas all the testing says not really.”

Watson apologized, saying he was referring to geographic­ally separated population­s evolving differentl­y.

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James Watson

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