Time Travelers Page #2
- Year:
- 1976
- 78 min
- 77 Views
for years without any luck at all.
So unless somehow, miraculously...
you have discovered Dr. Henderson's
diaries in the last couple of hours-
Well, have you?
I'm afraid the only personal effect
of Henderson's that was ever found...
was... this gold watch.
It was given to him
by his wife in 1854.
The Chicago Museum loaned it to me.
It has a rather beautiful
inscription on the back.
"To my beloved, my
most beloved husband."
Adams, I'm really not interested in the mementos
of a man who's been dead over a hundred years.
Of course.
But wouldn't you like
to talk to Dr. Henderson?
Ask him a few medical
questions, perhaps?
Hi, come on in. We're
Dr. Earnshaw, Dr. Sanders.
-Helen. Nice to meet you.
How do you do?
He likes degrees. She's got five.
Caltech, Oxford-
-Cut it out jeff.
Would you like some coffee, uh,
Clint, is it? -No, thank you.
I had some on the plane. -Good.
We're on a tight schedule anyway.
I was gonna put a Thermos in here,
but- -That is a thing of beauty.
The boys certainly have
worked fast. -What is that?
Why, it's a medical bag.
Look, everything's Victorian.
The 1870s, exactly as
it should be. Only, uh...
see in here?
It's transistorized. It has
enough power to run for five hours.
A miniaturized centrifuge? -And we thought
you might want to do a blood analysis...
so we put a special
microscope in there too.
Only, for heaven's sakes, don't let
anyone back in Chicago get a look at these.
Back in... Wait a minute.
What's going on here?
When you made that crazy crack about talking to
man who's been dead for over a hundred years...
I thought you meant in a sance or
some other nutty spiritualist thing.
He didn't tell you that
we do time research here...
that you're going to
travel back in time to 1871?
I'm what?
[Sighs] Oh, jeff, really.
I'm sorry, but I was afraid you
might just jump out the plane.
I mean, I know if I were in your shoes,
and somebody I never heard or'...
said we're gonna go back a hundred years
-
I think it's time
he meets the boss.
Dr. Earnshaw, Dr. Cummings.
I guess you have heard
of Dr. Amos Cummings.
I was under the impression that
you'd moved to Africa, Doctor.
No, no, no.
I just moved out of NASA.
Ran away from my chair in
physics. Oh, what a relief.
That's a strange reaction
Not at all.
I just got rid of
specialization... that's all.
Now I can start at the beginning...
examine the whole tree of knowledge.
Dr. Cummings. [Chuckles]
Are you actually claiming
that you can transport me back?
Well, I'll be with
you. I'm going too.
Snoring all the way,
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