:14:02
they had been in the Marine Corps--
and they always told me that...
:14:05
the Marine Corps was the hardest service
to cope with physically and mentally.
:14:09
And I naturally wanted to be
the best at that time,
:14:12
and I looked at the Marine Corps
as being the elite of the elite,
:14:15
the warrior society
in the United States.
:14:18
Now it might sound cliché-ish
to say that,
:14:22
"My country,
may it always be right,
:14:25
but right or wrong,
my country.''
:14:27
But that's how
I felt back in '67.
:14:30
And during my senior year,
:14:33
I said I've got
an obligation to serve.
:14:37
I've got to fulfill it.
:14:40
There's no reason physically
why I would be exempted,
:14:44
and therefore,
I'm gonna enlist.
:15:12
- What you got there?
- Picture.
:15:14
Picture?
How much picture?
:15:16
- Three thousand?
- I go beaucoup hungry. I sell 3,000.
:15:20
- You go here, too much money.
- I buy watch for 1,500.
:15:23
No, you sell to me?
You lie. You lie, you die.
:15:27
-You give massage? What else you give?
- Yes.
:15:30
- [Indistinct]
- Huh?
:15:32
- I buy you one beer, okay?
- You-You buy me one beer?
:15:36
No, no. No money.
Go home, mama-san.
:15:38
- Please, go home, mama-san.
- [Indistinct]
:15:42
- No. Go home, mama-san.
- [Indistinct]
:15:45
No. Go home, mama-san.
Okay? No. Go home, mama-san.
:15:49
- You will like.
- No. No.
:15:57
- Huh?
- [Indistinct]