This isn't a transcript (and it's a pretty awful article as well) but here's what Channel Five put up on their website about the interview.
There's also a video there of the interview, which I cn't run. Maybe you'll have better luck. Follow this link, and click on video.
http://www.thebostonchannel.com/ente...51/detail.html
Museum Of Science Welcomes Einstein Exhibit
Exhibit Includes Play About Scientist's Theories
BOSTON -- The Museum of Science is opening a unique new exhibit on the life of Albert Einstein, but if you think it's all theories and equations, you'll be surprised.
NewsCenter 5's J.C. Monahan reported that a play accompanying the exhibit, "God's Dice" explores some of Einstein's theories that lead to scientific breakthroughs.
"What I'm trying to do here is take you inside the head of a physicist on the verge of a major breakthrough," said playwright Max Burbank.
Burbank wrote the play to show scientists as human beings dealing with moral and ethical dilemmas with each new discovery. It was something Burbank said Einstein faced after realizing his theory behind e=mc2 was leading to the atomic bomb.
"He came up with the theory which allowed that work to go ahead but he never thought about it. He never though about what happens next. It just wasn't where he was working," said Burbank.
The play's director, Dan Dowling, hopes the play gets people to question their own position on scientific advancement.
"My favorite response is, 'It got me to think,'" said Dowling.
Of course, the play is only part of what the museum has to offer.
When Einstein's exhibit opens on March 13, it will not only will it demonstrate his most important scientific theories, including the effect of gravity and gravity's effect on time and space, but it will also touch upon his personal life -- love letters to his wife, his diary, even a letter highlighting his involvement as a political figure. Many of Einstein's personal items have never been seen in the United States.
Through science, theatre and artifacts, the exhibit strives to show Einstein as more than just a brain.
"And that's what I want people to walk away with. The knowledge that these great scientists, these great thinkers were people as well," said Burbank.
The Museum of Science's Einstein exhibit will be open to the public from March 13 to June 6.