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[Television static]
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ANNOUNCER
You're watching, History Television.
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[Clock ticks]
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NARRATOR
In 1895 writer H.G. Wells published his science fiction masterpiece "The Time Machine."
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This novel would be one in a long line of literature, motion pictures, and television shows
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depicting man breaking the laws of time and space to travel beyond his present existence.
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One of the great struggles, if not the greatest struggle, has been man versus time.
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I mean, we always want more.
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We are prisoners to time. Mankind has always been fascinated with the idea of escaping from it.
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To be able to go back in time and fix a mistake or change the outcome of a future event.
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It's a tantalizing prospect.
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Could it even be possible? Well what did Einstein think?
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NARRATOR
Due to the extraordinary work of two men,
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Edward Page, his son Richard,
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and the personal tragedy that drove them, time travel became a reality.
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Anne told me that Edward worked for the government,
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but even she didn't know what he did.
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Time Travel? I always that that sounded like a bunch of bull----.
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I can only imagine what it must have been like...
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...to have been there when he actually
did it.
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We're no longer bound to the rules of time,
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but what of the rules of morality?
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It changed everything.
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NARRATOR
Storytellers hold a special place in the history of mankind.
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From the fables of Aesop to the Brothers Grimm,
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we look to storytellers to give us truth about human nature and our place within the world.
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To discuss the genre of time travel,
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it's place within science fiction,
and how it ultimately became a reality,
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we talked with noted author and screenwriter Kevin Ulrich.
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Ulrich is the creator of the popular time travel series "Nic of Time."
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We meet up with him at a book signing in Los Angeles, California.
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Time travel had already been a popular genre even before science fiction.
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You have fantasy stories where someone is magically transported to the past
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like Mark Twain's "A Connecticut
Yankee in King Arthur's Court"
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or they wake up in the future like "Rip Van Winkle."
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Even Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol" has elements of time travel with Christmas Past, Present, and Future.
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NARRATOR
To discuss the history of science fiction becoming science fact
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we talked with Professor Edward Yarborough of Harvard University.
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Prof. Yarborough is a professor of American History
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and one of the world's foremost authorities on the history of time travel.
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Before time travel became a reality mankind was always intrigued with how it could possibly work
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and many ideas and theories were purposed.
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For many years I subscribed to the multiverse theory.
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Which is that there can be numerous timelines
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and parallel universes running concurrently with our own.
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For an example...
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...if I go back in time and stop the Lincoln assassination
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I would immediately create a
new timeline which branches off from the old one.
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It is within this timeline that Lincoln would live.
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If I were to travel into the future,
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it would be the future of that new alternate
timeline not the one I originally came from.
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Another possibility was the fixed timeline theory.
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Now in the fixed timeline theory if you were
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to go back in time and accidentally kill someone you haven't altered the course of history,
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you were already a part of it.
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You were always meant to go back in time and accidentally kill that person.
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Your future was already a part of the past, and you couldn't change it.
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NARRATOR
To discuss the hard science of time travel and the possibility of paradoxes
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with meet with Dr. Jack Fincher of Yale University.
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Dr. Fincher is an astrophysicist specializing
in quantum mechanics
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and the author of two New York Times bestselling books on the subject.
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An interesting side effect to the fixed timeline theory is the infinite loop.
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Now for example, say we take my grandfather's pocket watch...
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...lets say I go back in time and I lose the watch.
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Later on my grandfather finds the
watch and many years later gives it to me.
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Now the question becomes, where did the watch originally come from?
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Had I not gone back in time and lost the watch
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my grandfather never would have found it in order to give it to me,
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my grandfather couldn't have given
it to me if I hadn't lost it.
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So the pocket watch has now become stuck in an infinite loop.
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NARRATOR
The final aspect of time travel we will explore is the moral implication of altering time.
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We meet with philosopher Dr. Adam Lindquist,
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international lecturer and a highly regarded
voice in the world of ethics.
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Most people had a basic understanding of what time travel was,
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or what it could be, from movies, TV shows, and books.
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They also realized the moral can of worms it would open.
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But we were all unprepared for when it actually happened.
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NARRATOR
August 2, 1939, Physicists Leo Szilard and Albert Einstein,
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concerned by Nazi Germany's research into nuclear weapons,
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send a letter to American President, Franklin D. Roosevelt.
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The "Einstein-Szilard Letter" warned President Roosevelt about the Nazi nuclear program
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and urged him to create our own program to counter the threat from Germany.
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NARRATOR
One month latter Nazi Germany invades Poland
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and plunges Europe into war.
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But it isn't until early 1942, when America has entered the war,
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that research into our own program begins in earnest.
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NARRATOR
However by this time Adolph Hitler has already turned his attention to something beyond nuclear fusion.
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In July of 1942 Einstein writes another letter to President Roosevelt.
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Einstein was made aware, by sources back in Germany,
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that the Nazis were experimenting
in the manipulation of time and space.
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Einstein was very concerned about the Nazis actually becoming successful in doing this.
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He considered it and even bigger threat then the Atomic bomb.
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NARRATOR
After receiving Einstein's letter President Roosevelt meets with him in secret.
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Soon after the president establishes a top secret
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research initiative code named "The Indiana Project".
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The project's main objective: To produce a machine
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capable of traveling through and altering time.
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The Indiana Project begins in secret in a small facility just outside Portland, Indiana.
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Initially the program consists of a small group of scientists
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but it soon expands to included several hundred workers.
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Only a select few know about the project's true objective.
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Washington was spending millions of dollars
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to fund the Indiana Project over the course
of the war
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and the Pentagon was not happy with the lack of, tangible, results.
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NARRATOR
By 1944 the tide had turned in Europe and an Allied victory over Nazi Germany was inevitable.
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To offer insight into the Indiana Project's importance
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and place within the Pentagon we talked with General Douglas Sanborn.
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When Germany fell and the Nazi threat was subdued
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the Pentagon couldn't decide what to do with the Indiana Project.
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The project had it's supporters but some saw no reason why they should continue funding it.
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They felt the money could be better spent in preparation for the invasion of Japan.
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NARRATOR
On August 6, 1945 the United States drops
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an atomic bomb upon the Japanese city of Hiroshima.
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[Atomic bomb blast]
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Steadfast the Japanese government refuses to surrender.
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Three days later a second bomb
is dropped over Nagasaki.
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On August 14th Japan surrenders and the second world war ends.
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With the war now over many government projects are either shut down or severely cut,
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but the Indiana Project manages to survive due to it's supporters in the Pentagon.
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They argued that the research could be useful down the line.
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NARRATOR
The Indiana Project's budget is cut and many of the scientist leave for other employment.
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Among the researchers who remains with the project is a young physicist named Edward Page.
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Edward Charles Page was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on March 3rd 1916.
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He grew up in an upper middle class family the son of a doctor and socialite mother.
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He developed a love for reading, especially the science fiction stories of Jules Vern,
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H.G. Wells, and the adventures of Robert Louis Stevenson.
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His love of science fiction would lead to an interest in becoming a scientist himself.
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After graduating high school Edward enrolled at MIT.
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He graduated from MIT in the Spring of 1942,
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he was immediately offered a job from the
government to work at the Indiana Project.
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In addition to government resources and equipment, he was offered a full salary
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and a house for both himself and his wife Anne.
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NARRATOR
Anne Havard was born in Paterson, New Jersey on May 25th, 1921.
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A precocious child Anne had a love of nature and science at an early age.
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Anne moved with her parents to Boston when she was around six years old.
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She attended Brighton High School, graduated valedictorian
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and then was accepted to MIT in the fall of 1939.
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NARRATOR
Anne was working as a research assistant at MIT when she met Edward.
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Spending long hours in the lab together their relationship soon turned to romance.
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Edward and Anne would marry
in June of 1941.
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When Edward was offered the government job Anne was pregnant and not in the best of health.
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She had wanted to stay on the East coast to be near her parents,
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but being the devoted wife she went with Edward to Indiana.
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She hoped the war would end quickly so they could come home.
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NARRATOR
Soon after arriving in Portland, Anne gave birth to their son, Richard.
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Due to complications the birth had been quite difficult and Anne remained bedridden for several weeks.
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Edward wasn't particularly good with the baby
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and after a few days Anne called me to come stay with them until she was well.
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NARRATOR
Anne's health improved and she grew fond of motherhood and raising young Richard.
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When the war was over Anne hoped they would move back to Boston.
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But in early 1946 Edward accepted the position of head researcher for the Indiana Project.
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He took it very seriously and devoted himself completely to it,
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and as a result his relationship with Anne would begin to strain.
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Edward was spending more and more time in the lab.
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Due to the limited funds he ran a
very tight ship
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and Edward ended up doing most of the lab work himself.
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Anne wrote me a letter in the fall of forty-eight about how lonely she felt.
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Edward was spending more time in the lab and Richard had started elementary school.
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She confided in me that she hoped to have another baby.
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NARRATOR
Unfortunately another child was not in her future.
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In the summer of 1949 Anne had become
sick and was bedridden once more.
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At first Anne just thought she had the flu and so she stayed in bed,
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but Edward was never really good at taking care of anyone especially when they were sick
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so Anne sent for her friend Dorothy to come out and help.
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I came as soon as I heard.
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When I got there she was already frail and was having difficulty breathing.
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I just had a feeling she wasn't going to make it though the night.
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I tried to call Edward at his office but there was no response.
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I decided to call an ambulance
to take her to the hospital.
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Apparently Edward had taken the phone off the hook so that he wouldn't be disturbed.
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So Dorothy sent her husband Mike to the Indiana Project to get Edward
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and bring him to the hospital.
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By the time Mike drives him to the hospital Anne had already died.
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Edward was devastated.
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It wasn't until after she died that we found out she was suffering from polio.
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NARRATOR
Dr. Helen Cagle of John Hopkins University is a specialist in the treatment of infectious diseases.
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We met with her to talk about the polio epidemic in America during the 1940s and 50s.
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In the summer of 1949 there was a serious polio epidemic that swept through Indiana.
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All public activities and gatherings were banned to prevent the spread of the disease.
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We think of polio as something affecting young children, and infants,
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but adults could contract the disease as well.
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Unfortunately Anne was one of the unlucky ones who did.
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Edward had no idea how sick she really was.
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I told him he wasn't home enough to notice.
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I thought Anne's death would change him but it only made him worse.
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NARRATOR
Haunted by the death of his wife Edward completely withdrew from everyday life
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and spent his time in the lab.
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Edward blamed himself for his wife's death.
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I mean here he was a man of science and he couldn't even save his own wife.
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If he could invent a time machine he could go back and save Anne.
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He thought he could cheat death through science.
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All he needed was time.
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NARRATOR
Driven by remorse and regret Edward would
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spend the next twenty years of his life trying to find a way to travel through time.
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[Rock and Roll, electric guitar]
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By the 1960s the Indiana Project was all but forgotten, due to the space race.
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I mean, here we have NASA spending billions,
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to beat the Russians to the moon, but over
here in Indiana still Edward working in his little lab.
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NARRATOR
In the Fall of 1960 Edward's son Richard follows in his father's footsteps when he's accepted to MIT.
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Richard and his father had an unusual relationship since Anne's death.
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Richard admired Edward,as a scientist, and respected him as his father, but they were never truly close.
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Not as close as Richard wanted them to be.
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Deep down I think becoming a physicist
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was a way that Richard thought that he could really connect with his father.
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He had to get inside his world.
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NARRATOR
Richard graduates from MIT in 1968 and accepts a research position at the University of Indiana.
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When the space race was going on NASA overshadowed everything, including the Indiana Project.
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It managed to survived just simply by being under the radar.
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But by the early 70s, with the space race over
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and Vietnam bleeding the Pentagon dry, cuts had to be made.
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That's when the Indiana Project ending up on the chopping block.
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NARRATOR
Despite numerous letters from Edward asking them to reconsider the idea
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the Pentagon shuts down the Indiana Project in the Fall of 1975.
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To them they saw Edward as a relic of the past, a crackpot, and they thought his research was just a joke.
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Edward was devastated. His decades of research, his work, all gone.
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It was like losing his wife all over again.
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He couldn't take it.
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NARRATOR
On November 5th, 1975 Edward Page suffers a major heart attack and dies the following day.
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He was 59 years old.
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Richard takes the death of Edward very hard.
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He waited his whole life, he worked his whole life,
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to have an opportunity to spend some meaningful time with him and it doesn't happen.
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NARRATOR
Richard returns to Portland after Edward's death to sell his parent's home.
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While cleaning out his parent's house Richard makes an extraordinary discovery.
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So Richard is boxing up his father's personal belongings
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when he finds a loose floorboard under the bed.
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Inside is his father's personal journal detailing all of his research into time travel.
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00:21:50,000 --> 00:21:53,300
Richard is blown away by his father's journal.
229
00:21:53,300 --> 00:21:56,720
He knew that Edward had been working for the government and that his job was classified,
230
00:21:56,720 --> 00:22:01,940
but he had no idea that this, was what he
was devoting his whole life toward.
231
00:22:03,060 --> 00:22:06,800
In the journal Richard finds a picture of his mother.
232
00:22:12,680 --> 00:22:19,540
Written on the back, in his father handwriting, is the message "In time, I will save you."
233
00:22:20,920 --> 00:22:24,580
That night Richard just pours over his father's journal
234
00:22:24,580 --> 00:22:30,000
and he realizes his father was very close to making time travel a possibility.
235
00:22:30,900 --> 00:22:35,060
This research was his father's legacy
236
00:22:35,060 --> 00:22:38,440
and Richard took it upon himself to prove his father right.
237
00:22:39,600 --> 00:22:45,658
NARRATOR
Taking up the challenge of his father's work would prove to be more difficult then Richard realized.
238
00:22:45,660 --> 00:22:50,600
He would spend the next decade trying to achieve his father's goal.
239
00:22:51,080 --> 00:22:55,160
The idea of time travel is very seductive.
240
00:22:55,160 --> 00:23:02,040
Richard started out to prove his father's theories correct but it soon became a personal obsession.
241
00:23:02,420 --> 00:23:09,900
Like his father Richard withdrew from society to completely focus on his work.
242
00:23:09,900 --> 00:23:13,420
He rarely, if ever, seen outside the lab.
243
00:23:13,420 --> 00:23:19,540
His students became very frustrated he never showed up to class to lecture he just showed up on test days.
244
00:23:20,020 --> 00:23:26,640
Had Richard not continued his father's journal this important period in his life, and history itself,
245
00:23:26,640 --> 00:23:28,500
would be a lost to us.
246
00:23:30,540 --> 00:23:36,620
November 6th, 1985. I have completed my father's legacy.
247
00:23:36,620 --> 00:23:40,780
Forty years of combined research has
led me to construct a machine to move man
248
00:23:40,780 --> 00:23:44,240
backwards and forward through time.
249
00:23:44,240 --> 00:23:48,040
Today I became the first person to do so.
250
00:23:48,720 --> 00:23:52,080
We know what Richard created and we know that it worked.
251
00:23:52,080 --> 00:23:57,000
But what we don't know, even to
this day, is how he did it.
252
00:23:57,000 --> 00:23:59,800
He never reveals the secrets in his journal.
253
00:24:00,660 --> 00:24:04,080
I can only imagine what it must have been like...
254
00:24:04,080 --> 00:24:06,740
...to have been there when he actually did it.
255
00:24:11,580 --> 00:24:15,560
The only thing we do know about that night comes from the video camera that Richard set up.
256
00:24:15,560 --> 00:24:17,940
First there's the time machine itself.
257
00:24:17,940 --> 00:24:22,660
It's surprisingly small, it looks like two VCRs stacked on top of each other with a controller.
258
00:24:23,400 --> 00:24:26,640
NARRATOR
Inspired by H.G. Wells' "The Time Machine"
259
00:24:26,640 --> 00:24:31,120
Richard wanted something round that could be turned either direction to control the device.
260
00:24:31,860 --> 00:24:35,440
His ultimate choice was quite appropriate
for the 1980s.
261
00:24:36,980 --> 00:24:41,000
Richard Page built a time machine out of an Atari!
262
00:24:42,900 --> 00:24:45,240
NARRATOR
Using the control knob of an Atari gaming
263
00:24:45,240 --> 00:24:48,478
system Richard could move himself through time.
264
00:24:48,478 --> 00:24:53,059
Turning the controller to the right sends you into the future.
265
00:24:53,059 --> 00:24:57,480
Turning the knob to the left sends you into the past.
266
00:24:58,480 --> 00:25:04,280
The first time Richard uses the device he decides to make only a very small jump.
267
00:25:10,660 --> 00:25:14,520
He turns the knob and is sent one minute into the future.
268
00:25:17,320 --> 00:25:21,040
However Richard reappears to us
only a second latter.
269
00:25:23,020 --> 00:25:25,480
This Richard is from the future.
270
00:25:25,820 --> 00:25:33,340
Now this "Future Richard" waits exactly one minute for the arrival of "Past Richard."
271
00:25:34,860 --> 00:25:41,460
This "Future Richard" then tells "Past Richard" to travel back in time one minute.
272
00:25:54,600 --> 00:25:59,440
"Past Richard" travels back in time to become "Future Richard."
273
00:26:00,000 --> 00:26:01,700
Wrap your head around that.
274
00:26:02,020 --> 00:26:08,800
Richard in his excitement of time traveling and meeting himself, decides to go back even further.
275
00:26:12,540 --> 00:26:17,479
Without thinking it through Richard decides to go back in time one day.
276
00:26:17,479 --> 00:26:21,300
He turns the knob to the left, vanishes.
277
00:26:26,720 --> 00:26:32,112
When he goes back in time one day Richard fails to take into account
278
00:26:32,112 --> 00:26:38,841
that there will not be a time machine waiting for him because he has yet to complete it.
279
00:26:38,841 --> 00:26:46,920
So he ends up spending the night in a broom closet waiting for his past self to finish the machine.
280
00:26:49,360 --> 00:26:52,880
Richard quickly learned the dangers of using such a device.
281
00:26:53,100 --> 00:26:58,680
He realized that the machine must be portable,
282
00:26:58,680 --> 00:27:01,820
otherwise you could stuck in the past with no way to come back.
283
00:27:02,840 --> 00:27:07,300
To call Richard's achievement ground breaking would be an understatement.
284
00:27:07,300 --> 00:27:11,100
We are no longer bound to the rules of time.
285
00:27:11,100 --> 00:27:13,740
But what of the rules of morality?
286
00:27:13,740 --> 00:27:19,480
A machine that can alter history is power that could be very dangerous in the wrong hands.
287
00:27:20,080 --> 00:27:27,440
NARRATOR
Aware of the potential danger in such a device Richard vows not to go back in time and change things.
288
00:27:28,020 --> 00:27:30,160
But he just can't help himself.
289
00:27:31,180 --> 00:27:36,420
Pandora's Box has just been opened.
290
00:27:59,280 --> 00:28:05,343
There was one thing that Richard always wanted, and that was to see his mother again.
291
00:28:05,343 --> 00:28:09,400
He has a machine that can do that
292
00:28:09,400 --> 00:28:13,136
and not only can he see her again, he doesn't have to lose her at all.
293
00:28:13,136 --> 00:28:15,180
At the time that she died the Polio vaccine was still several years away,
294
00:28:15,180 --> 00:28:22,440
but in the 1980s that's no longer an issue.
295
00:28:24,120 --> 00:28:27,780
Richard thinks long and hard about what he plans to do.
296
00:28:27,780 --> 00:28:33,360
He weighs the options, the pros,
the cons, but in the end he decides to do it.
297
00:28:34,660 --> 00:28:39,080
NARRATOR
Richard works for several months to make a portable version of the time machine.
298
00:28:39,080 --> 00:28:42,400
Unable to make it any smaller
299
00:28:42,400 --> 00:28:46,860
Richard determines that the machine would be something you wear like a backpack.
300
00:28:50,120 --> 00:28:55,880
Now the machine only moves you through time, not space.
301
00:28:55,880 --> 00:29:02,320
You can't start off in New York
and go back in time to ancient Rome.
302
00:29:02,320 --> 00:29:07,700
In order to do that you would have to physically be in Italy.
303
00:29:08,720 --> 00:29:11,020
Anne was born and raised in Paterson, New Jersey
304
00:29:11,020 --> 00:29:14,360
before her family moved to Boston so Richard would need to go there first.
305
00:29:14,360 --> 00:29:18,340
So he makes some calls and tracks down the house she grew up in.
306
00:29:18,860 --> 00:29:22,160
NARRATOR
Acquiring a series of polio and booster shoots.
307
00:29:22,160 --> 00:29:27,480
Richard will travel back to the 1920s and
inoculate his newborn mother.
308
00:29:28,220 --> 00:29:30,460
[Automobile engine]
309
00:29:31,180 --> 00:29:38,860
December 13th 1985. I am currently sitting in a motel near my Mother's childhood home.
310
00:29:38,860 --> 00:29:43,080
Polio vaccination and booster shots lay on the table next to me.
311
00:29:43,080 --> 00:29:49,360
In a few minutes I will use them to cure my mother's illness and save her from death.
312
00:29:49,360 --> 00:29:55,740
I write this with the knowledge that my actions today may yield unintended ramifications.
313
00:29:55,740 --> 00:29:58,640
I only pray that it works.
314
00:30:00,080 --> 00:30:04,020
It works. The time machine works.
315
00:30:04,380 --> 00:30:09,920
December 5th 1987 will go down in history as one of the most important dates for mankind.
316
00:30:09,920 --> 00:30:12,980
Richard and Aden have finally fulfilled their father's work.
317
00:30:12,980 --> 00:30:17,530
It wasn't just a triumph for
mankind but a personal triumph as well.
318
00:30:17,900 --> 00:30:21,060
NARRATOR
However the triumph was to be short lived.
319
00:30:21,060 --> 00:30:25,920
Immediately after their first successful test
Richard passes out.
320
00:30:25,920 --> 00:30:29,820
Aden rushes his brother to his hospital and begins treating him.
321
00:30:30,820 --> 00:30:36,520
Even though he was a well respected doctor Aden is stumped by his brother's sudden illness.
322
00:30:36,520 --> 00:30:39,860
He was concerned it might be a side effect of the machine.
323
00:30:40,380 --> 00:30:44,420
Now you have to remember that Aden has only been working with the device for the past few months.
324
00:30:44,420 --> 00:30:47,500
Richard had been working on it for thirteen years.
325
00:30:47,500 --> 00:30:52,140
Aden was worried that there might be some correlation with long time exposure to the device.
326
00:30:53,300 --> 00:30:58,560
Richard was in a comatose state for three days. Aden was baffled.
327
00:30:59,200 --> 00:31:12,200
[Hospital heart monitor beeps]
328
00:31:12,660 --> 00:31:19,540
On the third day Richard literally jumps out of bed and happily embraces his brother.
329
00:31:19,540 --> 00:31:26,620
Aden was taken aback. He said Richard hugged him as if they haven't seen each other in years.
330
00:31:27,600 --> 00:31:33,880
NARRATOR
Aden runs some test but finds nothing medically wrong with his brother and releases him that evening.
331
00:31:33,880 --> 00:31:39,940
Returning to the lab Richard tells his brother about a dream he had while he was in the hospital.
332
00:31:40,220 --> 00:31:45,300
[Birds sing, wind blows through the tress]
333
00:31:45,780 --> 00:31:51,740
It's a dream about their mother and what their life would have been like had she not died giving birth to Aden.
334
00:31:57,380 --> 00:32:00,040
It's the one thing they both have always wanted.
335
00:32:00,040 --> 00:32:02,740
Aden more so because he never knew her.
336
00:32:02,740 --> 00:32:05,880
It's the reason why he became a doctor.
337
00:32:05,880 --> 00:32:12,600
Richard tells him, if a doctor had been there when their mother went into labor she wouldn't have died.
338
00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:18,120
Aden begins to figure out where Richard is going with this train of thought.
339
00:32:18,500 --> 00:32:20,720
And he wants nothing to do with it.
340
00:32:20,720 --> 00:32:25,660
He had a hard enough time with the fact that his brother had actually built a working time machine.
341
00:32:25,660 --> 00:32:33,100
But to go back in time and deliver
yourself? It was just too much.
342
00:32:33,640 --> 00:32:37,320
It's actually not that crazy if you really think about it.
343
00:32:37,920 --> 00:32:46,400
Richard and Aden debate throughout the whole night until Aden reappears. The machine works!
344
00:32:46,400 --> 00:32:50,560
Aden has now become the first person to travel through time.
345
00:32:53,040 --> 00:32:56,640
Richard asks Aden what it felt like to travel through time
346
00:32:56,640 --> 00:33:01,300
but before he can say anything
Aden inexplicably passes out.
347
00:33:02,340 --> 00:33:08,520
NARRATOR
Richard takes Aden to the hospital where he spends the next three days in a coma.
348
00:33:11,680 --> 00:33:15,760
When Aden wakes up from his coma he is by all accounts perfectly healthy.
349
00:33:15,760 --> 00:33:18,860
The doctors can't find anything wrong with him.
350
00:33:18,860 --> 00:33:25,500
Medically speaking the cause of Aden's coma remains unknown. There's just very little evidence to go on.
351
00:33:25,500 --> 00:33:29,460
The only rational explanation is
the time machine.
352
00:33:30,340 --> 00:33:35,500
Curiously Richard is not at his brother's bedside during those three days.
353
00:33:35,500 --> 00:33:41,600
He only returns on the day that Aden wakes up from the coma.
354
00:33:41,600 --> 00:33:46,020
It's almost as if he knew what was going to
happen.
355
00:33:46,020 --> 00:33:49,460
Considering he built a time machine, maybe he did.
356
00:33:50,460 --> 00:33:58,780
January 29th, 1990. I arrived at the hospital this morning anticipating the Aden would soon recover.
357
00:33:58,780 --> 00:34:04,180
A few minutes after I entered his room Aden wakes from his coma.
358
00:34:04,180 --> 00:34:08,840
He told he understood what had happened to him and what we needed to do.
359
00:34:11,000 --> 00:34:14,260
Those fourteen years that Richard and Aden
360
00:34:14,260 --> 00:34:20,700
spent while working together on the time machine were leading up to an ultimate goal.
361
00:34:21,420 --> 00:34:27,780
When Anne died they were left with a cold and distant father.
362
00:34:27,780 --> 00:34:34,340
They thought if only they could go back in time and change one thing, just one,
363
00:34:34,340 --> 00:34:36,980
everything else would work itself out.
364
00:34:38,020 --> 00:34:46,540
Using the time machine they would go back in time to 1953 and stop the car accident that killed their mother.
365
00:34:49,140 --> 00:34:51,880
They we're unprepared for what was about to happen.
366
00:34:53,780 --> 00:34:57,480
The time machine was on and it was stable.
367
00:34:58,320 --> 00:35:01,860
NARRATOR
Sixteen years after their father's death his sons had completed his life work
368
00:35:01,860 --> 00:35:07,240
and built the world's first time machine.
369
00:35:07,820 --> 00:35:13,880
It is one of the great moments, if not the greatest moment in the history of science.
370
00:35:13,880 --> 00:35:17,660
The word history takes on a whole new meaning now.
371
00:35:17,660 --> 00:35:23,640
History is a living science because of
what they did.
372
00:35:24,280 --> 00:35:30,820
NARRATOR
Despite their accomplishments personal tragedy casts a long shadow over their work.
373
00:35:31,880 --> 00:35:38,740
Their mother's suicide in 1955 haunted them for the rest of their lives,
374
00:35:38,740 --> 00:35:45,840
and I think it's what really drove them, just like their father, to try and create the time machine.
375
00:35:46,440 --> 00:35:56,420
Edward was so obsessed with the machine that he completely overlooked the warning signs with Anne.
376
00:35:56,420 --> 00:36:00,820
All her life she had been plagued by terrible nightmares.
377
00:36:01,160 --> 00:36:07,120
She had this reoccurring nightmare where she was being repeatedly stabbed with needles.
378
00:36:07,940 --> 00:36:09,800
She never understood why.
379
00:36:10,520 --> 00:36:19,740
Even though Anne was a lovely person and a wonderful mother she had a dark side that was tormenting her.
380
00:36:21,040 --> 00:36:27,500
After narrowly surviving a car wreck in 53 Anne became a different person.
381
00:36:40,000 --> 00:36:47,100
She confided in me that she never understand why she was still here.
382
00:36:47,100 --> 00:36:51,080
She thought she should have died
in the accident.
383
00:36:51,820 --> 00:36:57,080
Edward quite sadly is oblivious to his wife's pain and suffering.
384
00:36:57,080 --> 00:37:03,080
He is so obsessed with creating the time machine that he is squandering the time he has.
385
00:37:03,080 --> 00:37:08,560
In Edward's mind once he
has the machine built he'll have all the time in the world.
386
00:37:13,740 --> 00:37:17,000
NARRATOR
Unfortunately for Edward time ran out.
387
00:37:17,000 --> 00:37:26,540
On February 29, 1956 after sending Richard and Aden to school Anne commits suicide.
388
00:37:26,540 --> 00:37:29,280
She was 35 years old.
389
00:37:29,720 --> 00:37:36,220
She left a note saying it was the only way to cure her illness.
390
00:37:37,720 --> 00:37:44,260
Richard and Aden come home from school and find their mother dead.
391
00:37:44,980 --> 00:37:50,640
Richard was fourteen and Aden was only five.
392
00:37:52,500 --> 00:37:57,382
I can't imagine what that does to you, psychologically
393
00:37:57,382 --> 00:38:03,860
and I have no doubt that it was on their minds as they were finishing the machine.
394
00:38:04,780 --> 00:38:09,720
The temptation was certainly there for them to go back and to try and stop it
395
00:38:09,720 --> 00:38:14,900
but Richard realize that the best way to save their mother was through their father.
396
00:38:16,740 --> 00:38:23,900
March 6th 1994. After much debate Aden and myself have concluded that the reason
397
00:38:23,900 --> 00:38:28,140
our mother committed suicide was the that our father was never there for her.
398
00:38:28,140 --> 00:38:34,100
His obsession with the machine caused her to feel alienated and alone.
399
00:38:34,100 --> 00:38:40,100
Had my father been able to complete his research in her lifetime things may have turned out differently.
400
00:38:42,080 --> 00:38:46,080
We can only speculate what might have happened had they actually tried to go back.
401
00:38:56,040 --> 00:39:01,180
NARRATOR
July 1944. Racing against time the Indiana Project
402
00:39:01,180 --> 00:39:07,280
works around the clock trying to find the break through they desperately need.
403
00:39:09,480 --> 00:39:13,620
The Manhattan Project was making great strides with the atomic bomb
404
00:39:13,620 --> 00:39:20,100
but the Indiana Project was falling way behind, until Edward Page comes along.
405
00:39:20,740 --> 00:39:26,400
NARRATOR
Edward Page, a young researcher who had been working in the Indiana Project for several years,
406
00:39:26,400 --> 00:39:33,280
stuns his colleagues when he not only creates a series of equations that would produce time travel
407
00:39:33,280 --> 00:39:37,160
he builds a functioning prototype as well.
408
00:39:57,380 --> 00:40:00,080
Edward's research was years ahead of it's time.
409
00:40:00,080 --> 00:40:04,360
We're still not sure how he was able
to reach the conclusions that he did.
410
00:40:04,360 --> 00:40:08,120
People would ask him and he just would say "It came to me."
411
00:40:11,240 --> 00:40:17,980
As far as the military was concerned we now possessed the power to rewrite history as we saw fit.
412
00:40:17,980 --> 00:40:24,840
They wanted to immediately go back in time and assassinate Hitler. End the war before it even starts.
413
00:40:25,100 --> 00:40:29,280
NARRATOR
Now in control of a power far greater then the atomic bomb
414
00:40:29,280 --> 00:40:36,480
the United States prepares
to alter history and avoid the horrors of World War II.
415
00:40:48,480 --> 00:40:55,360
However President Roosevelt has second thoughts and he orders the Indiana Project to stand down.
416
00:40:55,360 --> 00:41:01,980
He felt that altering time was too risky and could have unintended ramifications.
417
00:41:02,560 --> 00:41:05,700
Roosevelt was right that we shouldn't be playing God.
418
00:41:05,700 --> 00:41:10,040
Our responsibility was to see that time
travel doesn't fall into the wrong hands.
419
00:41:11,880 --> 00:41:14,680
NARRATOR
However it was already too late.
420
00:41:14,680 --> 00:41:21,560
On January 17th, 1945 Soviet agents, who had infiltrated the Indiana Project,
421
00:41:21,560 --> 00:41:25,700
steal Edward's prototype along with all of his research.
422
00:41:25,700 --> 00:41:29,820
They plant a bomb that destroys several buildings at the facility.
423
00:41:29,820 --> 00:41:34,780
The spies manage to make their
way back to Moscow with the time machine.
424
00:41:35,200 --> 00:41:38,080
[File cabinet closes, bomb blast]
425
00:41:38,780 --> 00:41:45,940
If you thought the idea of Hitler with an atomic bomb was a bad idea,
426
00:41:45,940 --> 00:41:49,920
then Stalin with a time machine was terrifying.
427
00:41:50,240 --> 00:41:53,059
The Indiana Project was in shambles.
428
00:41:53,060 --> 00:41:57,560
They say not to put all your eggs in one basket, well the Indiana Project did.
429
00:41:57,560 --> 00:41:59,840
The Soviets now had the golden goose.
430
00:42:00,580 --> 00:42:07,820
Surviving the explosion with minor injuries Edward was tasked with rebuilding the prototype.
431
00:42:07,820 --> 00:42:14,260
Unfortunately most of his research and notes were either stolen or destroyed
432
00:42:14,260 --> 00:42:19,560
and he claimed it would take several years to rebuild it.
433
00:42:19,560 --> 00:42:21,940
Several years they did not have.
434
00:42:23,480 --> 00:42:27,720
NARRATOR
From the ashes of World War II a new conflict rose.
435
00:42:28,140 --> 00:42:30,200
The Cold War.
436
00:42:30,200 --> 00:42:36,080
The United States and the Soviet Union had emerged from the war as the two dominant superpowers.
437
00:42:36,080 --> 00:42:41,980
Immediately a battle for ideological and military supremacy began.
438
00:42:42,760 --> 00:42:47,900
With the time machine the Soviets clearly had an unbelievable advantage over us.
439
00:42:47,900 --> 00:42:51,080
Fortunately for us we still had Edward.
440
00:42:51,920 --> 00:42:55,240
Unfortunately Edward had not yet built a functioning prototype.
441
00:42:55,240 --> 00:42:57,614
Everyone was wondering what was
going on.
442
00:42:57,620 --> 00:43:02,180
Edward kept saying his research has been set back by several years
443
00:43:03,740 --> 00:43:08,200
but by 1947 the Pentagon began to become deeply concerned.
444
00:43:08,880 --> 00:43:14,700
Edward had built a time machine before. Why couldn't he do it again?
445
00:43:14,700 --> 00:43:19,060
Suspicion was beginning
to mount. What was he hiding?
446
00:43:20,080 --> 00:43:24,400
People began to suspect that Edward could be working for the Soviets.
447
00:43:24,400 --> 00:43:30,620
They pointed to the fact that once the prototype was stolen he conveniently forgot how to build it.
448
00:43:31,820 --> 00:43:37,420
The FBI and the newly formed CIA had both begin monitoring Edward's activity.
449
00:43:38,100 --> 00:43:44,700
Anne wrote me in the fall of 47 about how how strange Edward's behavior had been of late.
450
00:43:45,460 --> 00:43:51,240
He had become quite paranoid and was convinced that people were following him.
451
00:43:52,000 --> 00:43:57,980
NARRATOR
On June 20th, 1948 Edward resigns from the Indiana Project
452
00:43:57,980 --> 00:44:02,720
and takes a teaching job at Marshall College in upstate New York.
453
00:44:03,900 --> 00:44:08,040
Edward claimed he wanted to spend more time with his family.
454
00:44:08,040 --> 00:44:15,220
Anne was expecting their second child and he wanted to move back East so she could be closer to her parents.
455
00:44:15,900 --> 00:44:19,860
The Pentagon was very troubled when Edward left the Indiana Project.
456
00:44:19,860 --> 00:44:24,260
Especially going into academia where they felt he might run into communist sympathizers.
457
00:44:24,260 --> 00:44:28,760
In fact many of them felt it was only a matter of time before Edward ended up in Moscow.
458
00:44:29,080 --> 00:44:31,480
[Ticking clock]
459
00:44:31,880 --> 00:44:34,880
NARRATOR
Meanwhile recent developments had convinced the Pentagon
460
00:44:34,880 --> 00:44:39,500
that the Soviets were already altering time for their own purposes.
461
00:44:39,500 --> 00:44:45,560
[Ticking clock]
462
00:44:48,920 --> 00:44:49,940
[Tick]
463
00:44:49,940 --> 00:44:52,920
[Boom]
464
00:44:59,840 --> 00:45:05,600
We really can't comprehend what the Soviets did to the fabric of time.
465
00:45:05,600 --> 00:45:13,740
All that we know is that they beat us at everything, things they shouldn't have even known about.
466
00:45:15,640 --> 00:45:18,920
Time travel was the only possible explanation.
467
00:45:19,940 --> 00:45:25,980
With the time machine the Soviets could have gone back in time and prevented America from ever existing.
468
00:45:25,980 --> 00:45:28,600
But they were smarter then that.
469
00:45:28,600 --> 00:45:36,400
They realized that if they alter the past previous to Edward Page inventing the time machine,
470
00:45:36,400 --> 00:45:40,700
that he might never invent it at all.
471
00:45:40,700 --> 00:45:44,760
Recent history however would be up for grabs.
472
00:45:44,760 --> 00:45:50,700
The Soviets found the time machine
to be an invaluable tool for espionage.
473
00:45:51,260 --> 00:45:54,280
The Pentagon would be developing a new secret weapons system
474
00:45:54,280 --> 00:45:56,840
and somehow the Soviets would have one first.
475
00:45:56,840 --> 00:46:01,600
We would be developing a new aircraft and before we could even approve a prototype
476
00:46:01,606 --> 00:46:04,230
the Soviets would be flying the damn thing.
477
00:46:04,230 --> 00:46:08,620
It became quite clear what the Soviets were doing.
478
00:46:08,620 --> 00:46:14,320
They would wait for us to develop something, a new tank, missile system, whatever,
479
00:46:14,320 --> 00:46:18,960
and Soviet spies would smuggle the design back to Moscow.
480
00:46:18,960 --> 00:46:26,160
Then the Soviets would use the machine to go back in time and "invent" it before we did.
481
00:46:26,600 --> 00:46:31,120
Sputnik was based from an entirely American design.
482
00:46:31,540 --> 00:46:38,020
The day the blueprints were finalized was the same day the Soviets launched it into orbit.
483
00:46:39,180 --> 00:46:46,440
The Pentagon was understandably going ballistic but there wasn't anything we could do about it.
484
00:46:46,440 --> 00:46:53,300
The Indiana Project was lost without Edward, but there wasn't really anyone who trusted him.
485
00:46:54,680 --> 00:46:59,660
NARRATOR
Soon after Edward begins his new career as a college professor in upstate New York
486
00:46:59,660 --> 00:47:04,700
Anne gives birth to their second son, whom they name Aden.
487
00:47:04,700 --> 00:47:12,240
This was a relatively happy period for the Page Family, despite the shadow of suspicion hanging over Edward.
488
00:47:12,240 --> 00:47:19,020
Edward was still convinced that he was being followed and his paranoia frightened Anne
489
00:47:19,020 --> 00:47:24,740
but as long as he was working in the basement with the boys his delusions would subside.
490
00:47:25,480 --> 00:47:29,220
Richard and Aden loved working in the basement with Edward.
491
00:47:29,220 --> 00:47:35,430
They would spend all their time
together. They love being Dad's assistants.
492
00:47:36,500 --> 00:47:37,000
NARRATOR
Richard and Aden would follow in their father's footsteps
493
00:47:37,000 --> 00:47:44,420
and become physicists as well, both graduating from MIT.
494
00:47:45,060 --> 00:47:47,760
When Richard and then Aden moved out of the house to go to college
495
00:47:47,760 --> 00:47:57,820
Edward was left alone in his lab. His paranoia had again returned and Anne became concerned.
496
00:47:57,820 --> 00:48:00,640
Especially after the moon landing.
497
00:48:00,640 --> 00:48:04,040
[News Report Music]
498
00:48:04,040 --> 00:48:10,756
This is a special report from KRNK News. The space race is over.
499
00:48:10,760 --> 00:48:14,440
Man has landed on the Moon.
500
00:48:16,760 --> 00:48:19,240
I've just been handed an update.
501
00:48:19,240 --> 00:48:25,600
We have a message from, Yuri Gagarin, the first man to set foot upon the moon.
502
00:48:25,600 --> 00:48:27,020
It reads...
503
00:48:27,020 --> 00:48:34,420
"It's one small step for Russia, one giant leap for Communism."
504
00:48:35,140 --> 00:48:38,720
It was bad enough to have lost the Vietnam War in 68
505
00:48:38,720 --> 00:48:43,540
but to have them beat us to the
moon, it was just salt in the wound.
506
00:48:43,940 --> 00:48:47,960
It one of those moments you just don't forget,
507
00:48:47,960 --> 00:48:55,660
like when President Nixon was assassinated in Dallas. We all remember where we were.
508
00:48:55,660 --> 00:49:03,740
NARRATOR
What was suppose to be America's greatest triumph had become a national nightmare.
509
00:49:06,920 --> 00:49:13,340
The moon landing really galvanized Edward to want to rebuild the time machine.
510
00:49:13,340 --> 00:49:20,160
America had started its decline, Soviets had become the dominant superpower
511
00:49:20,160 --> 00:49:26,559
and Edward was determine to rebuild the machine, go back in time, and stop them.
512
00:49:27,640 --> 00:49:32,040
NARRATOR
As Edward secretly begins rebuilding the time machine in his basement
513
00:49:32,040 --> 00:49:35,740
Anne becomes ever increasingly concerned.
514
00:49:36,260 --> 00:49:40,760
Edward would spend all of his time down in the basement, Anne told me.
515
00:49:40,761 --> 00:49:45,339
She would ask him what he was up too and he wouldn't tell her.
516
00:49:45,340 --> 00:49:49,260
He would become very defensive.
517
00:49:49,260 --> 00:49:54,140
He told her that as long as she doesn't know anything they couldn't hurt her.
518
00:49:54,140 --> 00:49:56,840
She didn't know who "they" were.
519
00:49:57,840 --> 00:50:01,760
Edward's concerns were actually reasonably justified.
520
00:50:01,760 --> 00:50:09,000
He had kept a low profile since leaving the Indiana Project but the CIA still had an open case file on him
521
00:50:09,000 --> 00:50:12,180
and were waiting for him to do something to raise a red flag.
522
00:50:12,760 --> 00:50:16,060
The Soviets had also been keeping an eye on Edward.
523
00:50:16,060 --> 00:50:22,520
They had hoped that the bombing of the Indiana Project back in 45 would have killed him as well,
524
00:50:22,520 --> 00:50:27,160
but when he survived they feared he would rebuild another time machine.
525
00:50:27,740 --> 00:50:33,720
When Edward left the Indiana Project under a cloud of suspicion the Soviets determine
526
00:50:33,720 --> 00:50:37,740
that he would not attempt to rebuild the machine.
527
00:50:37,760 --> 00:50:43,640
But if he ever did he would become a major
threat.
528
00:50:44,860 --> 00:50:48,460
NARRATOR
Edward's work progresses but without government resources
529
00:50:48,460 --> 00:50:52,120
he lacks access to equipment he desperately needs.
530
00:50:52,120 --> 00:50:56,160
Edward decides to contact his sons for help.
531
00:50:57,140 --> 00:51:01,240
By the mid 1970s Richard and Aden were both working for MIT.
532
00:51:01,240 --> 00:51:08,060
Richard was a teacher in the physics department and Aden was a researcher working at the university.
533
00:51:08,560 --> 00:51:14,180
Edward needed access to equipment at MIT in order to continue his experiments
534
00:51:14,820 --> 00:51:18,500
but he'd have to tell Richard and Aden what he was up to.
535
00:51:19,140 --> 00:51:25,879
Edward tells them about the Indiana Project and his involvement in the creation of a time machine.
536
00:51:25,880 --> 00:51:29,820
Richard and Aden aren't sure what to believe.
537
00:51:29,820 --> 00:51:33,860
Now here's the part wherethe story takes a really strange turn.
538
00:51:33,860 --> 00:51:40,920
Edward tells Richard and Aden that he did not invent the time machine.
539
00:51:41,720 --> 00:51:43,000
They did.
540
00:51:54,900 --> 00:51:59,460
Edward tells Richard and Aden that back in 44
541
00:51:59,460 --> 00:52:05,500
when he was working for the Indiana Project that two time travelers from the future
542
00:52:05,509 --> 00:52:10,006
gave him the time machine as well as their research papers.
543
00:52:10,006 --> 00:52:14,500
He tells Richard and Aden that they were the two time travelers.
544
00:52:15,660 --> 00:52:19,440
Richard and Aden believed their dad had gone crazy.
545
00:52:19,440 --> 00:52:25,160
His paranoia had turned into a full
fledged delusion.
546
00:52:25,160 --> 00:52:30,319
Edward asked if he could run some experiments in Richard's lab. Richard said no.
547
00:52:30,800 --> 00:52:33,799
So Richard and Aden take their father home.
548
00:52:33,799 --> 00:52:38,839
They talk with their mother about Edward's
mental state and how he needs psychiatric help.
549
00:52:38,840 --> 00:52:43,489
Edward keeps insisting he's not crazy,
but no one will listen.
550
00:52:43,900 --> 00:52:47,280
Edward was not going to take no for an answer.
551
00:52:48,240 --> 00:52:55,980
NARRATOR
On the night of July 28th, 1975 Edward is caught breaking into Richard's lab at MIT.
552
00:52:57,180 --> 00:53:02,660
Edward is booked with breaking and entering and is taken to the police for questioning.
553
00:53:03,900 --> 00:53:09,592
When Edward was question by the police they asked him what was he doing in the lab
554
00:53:09,600 --> 00:53:14,600
and he told them he was gathering things for a time machine.
555
00:53:15,180 --> 00:53:18,960
He told them about the Indiana Project, the time travelers,
556
00:53:18,960 --> 00:53:23,760
and how KGB and CIA were keeping tabs on him.
557
00:53:24,060 --> 00:53:28,920
Edward's arrest certainly drew the attention of the CIA and the KGB.
558
00:53:29,420 --> 00:53:35,000
The police records indicated that he talked to them about the Indiana Project.
559
00:53:35,000 --> 00:53:38,560
Now whether the police believed it or not was irrelevant.
560
00:53:38,560 --> 00:53:45,059
Edward was now a liability and the Pentagon was afraid he would go to the press.
561
00:53:45,840 --> 00:53:47,780
But who would believe him?
562
00:53:48,120 --> 00:53:53,702
NARRATOR
Edward is released into Richard and Aden's custody and they take him home to Anne.
563
00:53:53,702 --> 00:53:58,270
They discuss the possibility of having Edward committed.
564
00:53:58,270 --> 00:54:02,700
The next day Richard and Aden meet with the university president
565
00:54:02,700 --> 00:54:05,640
to discuss having the charges against Edward dropped.
566
00:54:06,420 --> 00:54:14,040
Richard and Aden are able to have the charges dropped on the condition that Edward gets psychiatric help.
567
00:54:14,040 --> 00:54:18,400
They return to their parent's home to tell them the good news...
568
00:54:20,460 --> 00:54:22,840
...and that's when they found them.
569
00:54:26,720 --> 00:54:29,340
They found Edward first in the kitchen.
570
00:54:29,340 --> 00:54:37,320
One bullet to the temple. They found Anne in a bedroom closet where she had been hiding.
571
00:54:37,920 --> 00:54:43,940
Richard and Aden were devastated. They took the death of their parents very hard
572
00:54:43,940 --> 00:54:47,039
but circumstances remained unclear.
573
00:54:48,840 --> 00:54:51,760
NARRATOR
The police investigation into Edward and Anne's death
574
00:54:51,760 --> 00:54:55,240
ruled that the crime was a murder suicide carried out by Edward,
575
00:54:55,247 --> 00:54:58,106
a man suffering from serious delusions.
576
00:54:58,106 --> 00:55:02,060
Aden and Richard remained skeptical.
577
00:55:03,680 --> 00:55:07,320
Despite Edward's delusions Richard and Aden just couldn't believe
578
00:55:07,320 --> 00:55:10,935
that their father would murder their mother and then kill himself.
579
00:55:10,935 --> 00:55:16,289
It just didn't make sense. Too many things just didn't add up.
580
00:55:16,289 --> 00:55:25,075
This was no suicide. This was clearly a coordinated hit on a high value target.
581
00:55:25,080 --> 00:55:29,080
They never found finger prints on the gun.
582
00:55:29,080 --> 00:55:34,871
Edward shoots himself in the head and then wipes his own fingerprints from the gun?
583
00:55:34,880 --> 00:55:39,060
Give me a break. This was a complete cover up.
584
00:55:39,060 --> 00:55:45,559
The only question is who
was behind it. The KGB or the CIA?
585
00:55:46,840 --> 00:55:51,297
NARRATOR
While the cause of Edward and Anne's death would be shrouded in controversy
586
00:55:51,300 --> 00:55:59,860
for Richard and Aden there was little for them to do but try to move on with their lives.
587
00:56:15,880 --> 00:56:23,170
NARRATOR
Twenty years later Richard and Aden are contacted by a realtor about selling their parent's home.
588
00:56:25,520 --> 00:56:29,820
After their parent's death Richard and Aden never went back.
589
00:56:31,000 --> 00:56:35,799
The house was abandoned. It fell into disarray as did much of the surrounding neighborhood.
590
00:56:35,799 --> 00:56:39,400
A corporation came in and begin buying a lot of the property to build a factory
591
00:56:39,400 --> 00:56:43,530
and Richard and Aden agreed to sell.
592
00:56:45,780 --> 00:56:51,340
NARRATOR
Richard and Aden return to their parent’s home the day before it is scheduled to be torn down.
593
00:56:51,340 --> 00:56:56,700
They spend several hours looking around the house to see if anything is worth saving.
594
00:56:56,717 --> 00:57:02,104
In their parent’s bedroom, Richard, makes an extraordinary discovery.
595
00:57:02,104 --> 00:57:12,240
After stepping on an uneven floorboard and prying it loose Richard finds his father’s journal.
596
00:57:15,280 --> 00:57:19,300
Richard and Aden are floored by what they
read.
597
00:57:19,300 --> 00:57:22,880
Their father had been telling them the truth, the whole time,
598
00:57:22,880 --> 00:57:31,420
about The Indiana Project, about the Soviets, the spies, the KGB, time travelers, everything.
599
00:57:33,680 --> 00:57:38,940
NARRATOR
Inside the journal Richard and Aden find a photo of their parents.
600
00:57:40,980 --> 00:57:46,540
Written on the back
is the message “In time you will save us.”
601
00:57:46,540 --> 00:57:52,280
Richard and Aden realize what they must do.
602
00:57:56,720 --> 00:58:00,700
Richard and Aden begin the task of rebuilding the time machine.
603
00:58:00,700 --> 00:58:04,760
Edward's journal would provided the basic blueprints for building the machine
604
00:58:04,760 --> 00:58:07,500
but they would have to fill in the blanks.
605
00:58:08,360 --> 00:58:10,620
The reason Edward was not able to rebuild
606
00:58:10,620 --> 00:58:17,000
the time machine was because he never had a chance to reverse engineer it before the Soviets stole it.
607
00:58:17,500 --> 00:58:24,180
The journal was just a holy
grail of information but it was incomplete.
608
00:58:24,180 --> 00:58:28,340
It would be up to then to finish their father's
work.
609
00:58:31,140 --> 00:58:34,760
They used whatever they could find to help build the machine.
610
00:58:34,760 --> 00:58:39,980
Spare parts, old machines, things that the university wouldn't miss.
611
00:58:41,300 --> 00:58:44,340
They would have used an Atari if they had one.
612
00:58:45,120 --> 00:58:50,100
NARRATOR
Richard and Aden's activity draws the attention of the university.
613
00:58:50,100 --> 00:58:55,779
It also draws the attention of both the CIA and the KGB.
614
00:58:56,740 --> 00:59:04,115
After Edward and Anne's "death" the KGB kept tabs on Richard and Aden's activity.
615
00:59:04,120 --> 00:59:09,519
For twenty years they monitored them waiting on them to make a move.
616
00:59:10,280 --> 00:59:15,020
Richard and Aden both begin to spend all of their waking hours working on the time machine
617
00:59:15,020 --> 00:59:18,340
and their colleagues and students at MIT begin to take notice.
618
00:59:19,040 --> 00:59:22,800
Students complained that Aden only showed up to class to give tests.
619
00:59:22,800 --> 00:59:26,400
Richard, his colleagues very worried about him,
620
00:59:26,400 --> 00:59:30,540
that he was spending way too much time on non-university related projects.
621
00:59:31,140 --> 00:59:34,460
The blackout is what really got them in trouble.
622
00:59:35,000 --> 00:59:40,740
NARRATOR
On the evening of March 8th, 1995 at approximately 7:43pm
623
00:59:40,740 --> 00:59:44,960
a power surge causes the MIT campus to go dark.
624
00:59:44,960 --> 00:59:49,120
The source of the power surge is traced back to Richard's lab
625
00:59:50,480 --> 00:59:53,880
Richard and Aden are both brought before the university President
626
00:59:53,880 --> 00:59:57,880
and reprimanded for misusing school equipment for their own purposes.
627
00:59:57,880 --> 01:00:00,600
They're both placed on temporary suspension.
628
01:00:01,100 --> 01:00:04,280
The blackout makes national headlines
629
01:00:04,280 --> 01:00:09,400
and a CIA investigation concludes that Richard and Aden are building a new time machine.
630
01:00:09,400 --> 01:00:11,340
That's when they decided to pay a visit.
631
01:00:12,960 --> 01:00:16,400
On their way home from the meeting with the university president
632
01:00:16,400 --> 01:00:23,019
both Richard and Aden are intercepted by the CIA and taken to an undisclosed location.
633
01:00:28,000 --> 01:00:33,393
The CIA inform Richard and Aden that they know they are trying to rebuild the time machine.
634
01:00:33,393 --> 01:00:38,647
They warn them that the KGB is aware of their activities and will try to kill them.
635
01:00:38,647 --> 01:00:43,470
The CIA offers them protection and funding in exchange for the time machine.
636
01:00:43,470 --> 01:00:48,079
Richard and Aden really don't have a choice.
637
01:00:48,080 --> 01:00:49,960
It's an offer they can't refused.
638
01:00:50,800 --> 01:00:55,440
NARRATOR
The Indiana Project which had been defunct for decades is reopened
639
01:00:55,440 --> 01:00:58,880
as Richard and Aden set up a new research lab.
640
01:01:00,380 --> 01:01:02,340
Richard and Aden make great strives towards
641
01:01:02,340 --> 01:01:06,820
completing the machine but they're under extreme pressure from the Pentagon to do so.
642
01:01:07,260 --> 01:01:12,640
They now know the intense scrutiny their dad was under when he was in their position all those years ago.
643
01:01:13,860 --> 01:01:20,380
NARRATOR
With unlimited government resources Richard and Aden are able to fill in the gaps in their father's research.
644
01:01:21,060 --> 01:01:26,160
The problem that Edward was having when he originally tried to reverse engineer the machine
645
01:01:26,163 --> 01:01:30,982
was that many of the components were beyond the limits of 1940s technology.
646
01:01:30,982 --> 01:01:35,920
Richard and Aden were able solve these problems with relative ease.
647
01:01:37,100 --> 01:01:44,180
NARRATOR
On November 12th, 1996, fifty years after Edward's time machine was lost
648
01:01:44,180 --> 01:01:47,660
Richard and Aden successfully rebuild it.
649
01:01:48,880 --> 01:01:55,973
Richard and Aden had no intention of turning the machine over to the Pentagon when they finished it.
650
01:01:55,980 --> 01:02:00,913
Edward's journal made it very clear what they should do.
651
01:02:02,000 --> 01:02:06,800
Richard tells Aden that he himself must do it alone.
652
01:02:07,360 --> 01:02:10,620
The only question is would it work?
653
01:02:12,000 --> 01:02:14,520
That's the question that we'll never know the answer to.
654
01:02:15,440 --> 01:02:22,020
NARRATOR
The explosion that brought an end to Edward's prototype also brought an end to the Indiana Project.
655
01:02:22,020 --> 01:02:27,256
With their research set back by years and the war drawing to a close
656
01:02:27,260 --> 01:02:31,220
the Pentagon permanently shuts the project down.
657
01:02:32,980 --> 01:02:38,140
Once the war was over the Pentagon saw no reason to keep funding the Indiana Project.
658
01:02:38,140 --> 01:02:39,440
Time travel?
659
01:02:39,440 --> 01:02:42,280
I always thought that sounded like a bunch of bull----.
660
01:02:42,840 --> 01:02:46,799
Edward's research into time travel had been the most promising
661
01:02:46,800 --> 01:02:51,700
and had it not been for that accident it could have been a much different story.
662
01:02:52,980 --> 01:02:55,180
Who knows what could have happened?
663
01:02:55,720 --> 01:03:02,540
There's so many unknowns, so many possibilities, so many might have beens.
664
01:03:03,440 --> 01:03:09,973
The Indiana Project teaches us what is truly important about time and that is making every second count.
665
01:03:10,620 --> 01:03:14,380
The accident really woke Edward up to what his priorities were,
666
01:03:14,380 --> 01:03:17,340
and that was spending time with the ones he loved.
667
01:03:18,700 --> 01:03:21,000
NARRATOR
Edward and his family move back to Boston
668
01:03:21,000 --> 01:03:24,300
where he accepts a teaching position at MIT.
669
01:03:24,300 --> 01:03:31,680
After giving birth to their second child, Aden, Anne return to research work in the late 1950s.
670
01:03:32,080 --> 01:03:35,880
Richard would follow in his father's footsteps and become a physicist.
671
01:03:36,720 --> 01:03:40,380
Aden becomes a doctor specializing in neurology.
672
01:03:41,060 --> 01:03:47,980
After a short battle with cancer Edward dies peacefully in his sleep at the age of 77.
673
01:03:47,980 --> 01:03:51,380
Anne passes away two years later.
674
01:03:52,000 --> 01:03:57,020
In 1996 after a failed experiment Richard suffers a stroke
675
01:03:57,020 --> 01:04:03,760
and slips into a coma where he remains to this day under the watchful eye of his brother.
676
01:04:04,440 --> 01:04:09,920
We were so close to making time travel a possibility.
677
01:04:09,920 --> 01:04:15,660
It would have changed the world, but will
we rediscover it?
678
01:04:17,220 --> 01:04:19,240
I think it's only a matter of time.
679
01:04:20,800 --> 01:04:25,720
And when we do there's going to be a lot of questions to answer.
680
01:04:26,800 --> 01:04:33,240
One of the great things about being a science fiction writer is the possibilities of "What if?"
681
01:04:33,240 --> 01:04:37,380
What if Edward Page had invented time travel?
682
01:04:37,380 --> 01:04:40,120
How would that effect us?
683
01:04:40,120 --> 01:04:46,160
We experience time as we perceive it, but if time could be altered
684
01:04:46,160 --> 01:04:55,520
and was being altered would we perceive that? Would we? That's the big question.
685
01:04:55,520 --> 01:04:57,460
Would we even notice?
686
01:04:59,140 --> 01:05:04,875
NARRATOR
But until such a time when man is able to leave the boundaries of time and space
687
01:05:04,880 --> 01:05:11,420
the history of time travel will remain within the realm of science fiction.
688
01:05:12,920 --> 01:05:21,740
For Science Fiction Television this has been The Theory of Time Travel.
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