Madame Curie
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:04:00
I have little time for friends.
:04:02
Usually, there's some young men.
:04:07
I'm interested in physics
and mathematics.

:04:09
Yes, so am I.
:04:11
Yet, I have a wife and a home
:04:13
a daughter
and two granddaughters

:04:17
I'm afraid
I will not be up to that.

:04:19
Your desire is to
go back to Poland and teach?

:04:22
Yes.
:04:24
Your parents are still in Warsaw
:04:26
My father is a physics professor
He is old.

:04:30
When I have my degrees
I shall go back and live with him.

:04:33
You love Poland.
:04:35
Oh, yes. I love Poland.
:04:37
Physics and
mathematics and Poland.

:04:41
Yes.
:04:43
Eat your soup.
:04:52
Thank you very much.
:04:54
The Society of Natural Industry
has asked me

:04:58
to recommend someone
:04:59
to make a study of the magnetic
property of rare steel.

:05:04
I would be glad to recommend you
if you wish.

:05:07
There would be some
cumbersome costs

:05:10
I don't know exactly what.
Oh, it wouldn't matter.

:05:13
Really it wouldn't.
I would be so grateful.

:05:14
Of course, that our cumbersome
equipment too cumbersome

:05:18
for our laboratories, I'm afraid.
:05:20
However, I know a scientist
of great merit

:05:24
who works in the school
of physics and chemistry.

:05:26
Perhaps he might have
recommendation available.

:05:29
Come and have tea Sunday
with my wife and me.

:05:32
I will ask him to come, too.
:05:34
You probably know his name.
It is Pierre Curie.

:05:39
Oh, thank you so much. Thank you
:05:41
You have been very kind.
:05:43
Not at all. Not at all.
:05:45
Good bye then. Until Sunday.
:05:47
Sunday. Good night.
:05:50
Good night.

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