:10:02
I asked for a table alone.
:10:04
I'm sorry, madame,
there is no room for a table alone.
:10:13
Please don't bother getting up.
:10:20
You're an American?
:10:22
- And my name's Bill Tenny.
- Mary Treadwell.
:10:27
Yes, madam?
:10:30
I'll have the pate
and the Rheinischer Sauerbraten.
:10:36
- You, sir?
- You got a steak?
:10:38
- Yes, sir.
- Thick?
:10:40
We will do our best.
:10:46
I'd better stick to the simple stuff.
:10:48
I was in Veracruz trying to teach
them greasers to play ball.
:10:51
Man, they tried to poison me.
:10:53
You know, I had the runs
for three weeks.
:10:57
How interesting.
:11:00
I'd like to hear more about it.
:11:04
Herr Rieber, I hear that you publish
a national magazine...
:11:08
...with certain intellectual features.
:11:11
A garment trade magazine,
but modern. Modern.
:11:15
Good afternoon.
I'm Willie Schumann, the ship's doctor.
:11:18
The captain sends his regrets.
:11:20
He's unable to come to lunch,
because of ship's business.
:11:23
Doctor, I am Siegfried Rieber.
:11:25
This is Professor Hutten,
Frau Hutten.
:11:27
- Please.
- No, no allow me. Their dog, Bebe.
:11:30
This charming young lady
is Fraulein Spockenkieker.
:11:33
Herr Freytag, Frau Schmitt, Herr Graf
and his nephew Johann.
:11:37
Don't let me interrupt
your conversations.
:11:39
We were just discussing
Herr Rieber's magazine.
:11:41
I have invited writers
from all over the nation...
:11:44
...to contribute on one topic:
:11:46
How we can expunge
foreign influences...
:11:49
...and restore Germany
to its national greatness.
:11:52
What foreign influences?