News

Harvard College Will Ignore Student Magazine Article Echoing Hitler Unless It Faces Complaints, Deming Says

News

Hoekstra Says Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences Is ‘On Stronger Footing’ After Cost-Cutting

News

Housing Day To Be Held Friday After Spring Recess in Break From Tradition

News

Eversource Proposes 13% Increase in Gas Rates This Winter

News

Student Employees Left Out of Work and In the Dark After Harvard’s Diversity Office Closures

DNA Conflict

By Douglas W. Oman

Anne Sayre '43, author of "Rosalind Franklin and DNA," said Thursday that James D. Watson, former Cabot professor of Natural Sciences and a Nobel laureate for his experiments in elucidating the structure of DNA, committed "extensive robbery" of Franklin's experimental results in X-ray crystallography.

Watson yesterday refused comment. "I never want to respond to Anne Sayre in my life," he added.

According to Sayre, Watson took Franklin's experimental results and then in 1968, several years after Franklin's death, wrote "The Double Helix" which called upon "every known prejudice against intellectual women" to degrade Franklin and justify the theft.

Sayre said her book is an attempt to set the record straight and added that she is pleased that a number of biology textbooks have been revised in light of her book.

But Watson's book is still "on the reading list of almost every New York state high school," she added.

The talk was the first of a series of five lectures on women's issues sponsored by the Radcliffe Union of Students and the Radcliffe-Harvard Women's Center.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags