:03:02
Name? Name?
:03:05
Richard Dadier.
:03:06
Business, please.
:03:08
I've been here before.
It's about the English teacher's job.
:03:11
- Sit down, please.
- Yes, thank you.
:03:13
Not at all.
:03:22
Mr. Dadier, Richard.
:03:29
Good luck.
:03:31
- In case anything turns up...
- We'll call you, Mr. Lefkowitz.
:03:37
- Mr. Dadier?
- Yes, sir. Thank you.
:03:44
What college did you attend?
:03:46
Well, I believe it's right there
on the form, isn't it, sir?
:03:50
But that was an all-girls school.
:03:52
Yes, well, they took in veterans
after the war, you see.
:03:54
I believe they still do. With so many of us
coming back all at once, it was a little...
:03:59
...difficult to find a school or college.
:04:01
- Veteran, huh?
- Yes, sir. The Navy.
:04:03
I beg your pardon?
:04:05
- I was in the...
- You speak very softly.
:04:07
Can you be heard at the back
of a classroom?
:04:10
Well, I did some dramatics at college, sir,
and they could always hear me...
:04:15
...even in the last row.
- Really?
:04:19
- Shall I project a little, sir?
- Go ahead and project.
:04:24
Once more unto the breach,
dear friends, once more.
:04:29
Or close up the wall
with our English dead.
:04:34
In peace there's nothing so becomes
a man as modest stillness and humility.
:04:39
But when the blast of war
blows in our ears...
:04:44
...then imitate the action of the tiger.
:04:47
Very aptly chosen. Henry IV, wasn't it?
:04:52
It was Henry V, I believe.
:04:54
Right. Give your credentials to
Miss Brady in the outer office.