The Scottish-born winner of the
Nobel Prize for Chemistry took a jab Wednesday at US presidential candidate
Donald Trump, who has bragged that he was "smart" to avoid paying
taxes.
"I am not very smart. The IRS
(Internal Revenue Service) will run off with a third of it," said
Northwestern University professor Fraser Stoddart, referring to his portion of
the eight million Swedish kronor (around $933,000 or 832,000 euros) award, which
he shares with Jean-Pierre Sauvage of France and Bernard Feringa of the
Netherlands.
"Did you all get that? I'm not
very smart," Stoddart added, to laughter and applause during a
champagne-fueled press conference to celebrate the Nobel win.
Trump, the Republican nominee for US
president, has refused to release his tax returns.
In the first presidential debate on
September 26 Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton suggested that Trump is hiding
"something terrible," and suggested that he had not paid any federal
income tax. Trump's answer: "That makes me
smart."
Days later, the New York Times
published a bombshell based on a leaked copy of his 1995 tax documents, showing
he declared a loss of nearly $1 billion, and could likely have avoided paying
taxes for almost two decades.
Stoddart listed a number of his
favorite universities as potential recipients, including his alma mater, the
University of Edinburgh, the University of California Los Angeles, Northwestern
University, and the universities of Birmingham, Sheffield, Cambridge, Durham
and Imperial College. Stoddart, Sauvage and Feringa won
for developing the world's smallest molecular machines, which may some day have
uses in cancer treatment, robotics and prosthetics.
Stoddart described their work as
"a fundamental advance in chemistry" that will take some time before
it translates into real-life applications. He also urged young people to press
on with their goals, even if they face detractors and doubts.
"Through the early years you
take some criticism because people don't understand why you are doing what you
are doing," he said. "But that eventually ebbs away
and then the recognition starts to come."
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