:24:01
I'll take responsibility.
:24:02
I'll be the only person
who's willing...
:24:04
...to take responsibility
for anything.
:24:06
-I think I got bruised.
-Did somebody hurt you?
:24:10
You have to remember
it took Charles de Gaulle...
:24:13
...four years to extricate
himself from Algeria.
:24:16
Not that I'm comparing
myself to de Gaulle.
:24:19
-Wars are extremely hard to stop.
-You're right.
:24:21
Rose, these young--
You're very becoming this morning.
:24:24
These ladies want
to see the President.
:24:26
Our President has the weight
of the free world on his shoulders...
:24:30
...and he doesn't have time
to see any old person.
:24:34
Hello, girls.
:24:35
How are you?
:24:36
Come on in.
:24:37
The President will see you now.
:24:41
Not you, Henry.
:24:43
That's all right.
I'm late for an interview anyway...
:24:46
-...with the Nobel Committee.
-Right.
:24:50
I'll be a monkey's uncle...
:24:52
...if these aren't
the yummiest cookies I've ever had.
:24:56
Thanks. It's a secret recipe.
:24:59
Secret, eh?
:25:01
Anyway...
:25:03
...there doesn't seem
to be any point to it.
:25:05
Point to what?
:25:07
The war.
:25:12
See, girls...
:25:14
...we're fighting the Communists
because Communism is immoral.
:25:19
That's the whole point.
:25:21
Don't you think it's more important
what's going on here?
:25:24
What do you mean?
:25:25
Well, I mean...
:25:28
...nobody at our school's
worried about Communism...
:25:30
...but everybody talks about Mac
Washington because he got killed there.
:25:34
-And Betsy's brother just got drafted.
-He's maintaining.
:25:37
He's maintaining?
:25:40
Good for him.
:25:42
I think people would like you
better if you stopped the war.
:25:45
Well, don't worry your
pretty little heads. Okay?
:25:49
I think we know what we're doing.
:25:53
I guess so.
:25:59
Can we walk Checkers now?