set gArticles = [["Partwork"], ["animation", "cutting", "cutting", "cutting", "cutting", "cutting"]]
set gDates = [[], [0, "The Times, Oct 19, 1962", "Sunday Times, May 26, 1968", "Sunday Times, April 17, 1983", "Sunday Times, Jan 7, 1990", "The Times, July 26, 1985"]]
set gName = getat(["Watson"],1)
@[]#BRITONS AND AMERICAN SHARE NOBEL PRIZE#RIDING HIGH ON A SPIRAL #THE STUFF OF LIFE ITSELF#HARNESSING NATURAL HEALERS#MAKING BRAIN WAVES
Neither Crick nor Watson seemed at first sight to be suited to the work that brought them fame. Crick's early work was on X-ray crystallography, while Watson was a zoologist#Crick had still not completed his PhD at the age of 36#Crick was not a self-effacing man, and there was tension between the two. "I have never seen Francis Crick in a modest mood", wrote Watson in his best seller The Double Helix#Crick was known for his multipurpose refusal card which said "unable to accept your invitation to write a book, deliver a lecture, cure your diseases... etc"#Crick gained further notoriety when he stated that life on earth had not originated from a primordial soup, as was generally thought, but that it had arrived in an unmanned rocket carrying microbial spores sent by an advanced civilisation billions of years ago#DNA testing is now being used in experiments to track down wanted criminals