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Watson resigns from Cold Spring Harbor lab

COLD SPRING HARBOR, N.Y., Oct. 26 (UPI) -- James Watson, one of the world's most famous scientists, resigned under fire Thursday from the U.S. lab where he has worked for almost four decades.

The Nobel laureate released a statement saying that at 79 he was "overdue" to step down as chancellor for the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, The New York Times reported.

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Watson caused an uproar with remarks he made to a British newspaper suggesting that people of African descent tend to have lower intelligence. He canceled a British book tour, returned to the United States, and was suspended from his duties as chancellor at the lab.

Rockefeller University, which had awarded Watson its Lewis Thomas Prize, canceled a lecture there, although he will still get the award.

The lab will continue to provide Watson with an office, and he will continue to live in a house on laboratory property, a spokesman said.

Watson, as a young post-doctoral student at Cambridge, worked with Francis Crick to unravel the DNA molecule's structure. Watson, Crick and another British scientist, Maurice Wilkins, won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1962.

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