3:36:01
	- He's lying.
- He'll get you into more trouble.
3:36:05
	Forget it.
I want one hero, not two mutineers.
3:36:09
	Call Dr Dixon.
3:36:13
	Dr Dixon, please.
3:36:21
	- How did it go, Tom?
- You know. You've tried it.
3:36:26
	Sure, but you're the old word-king.
You knew what you were doing.
3:36:32
	Yeah, I knew what I was doing.
3:36:40
	Doctor, can a sane man possibly
perform offensive or foolish acts?
3:36:47
	It happens every day.
3:36:51
	Assuming that the captain's conduct
often showed bad judgement. -
3:36:56
	- Would that be inconsistent
with your diagnosis of him?
3:36:59
	No, my colleagues and I didn't find
Captain Queeg a perfect officer.
3:37:05
	- But we found no mental illness.
- Then he was relieved unjustly?
3:37:10
	From a psychiatric standpoint, yes.
3:37:15
	Your witness.
3:37:18
	My background is legal, not medical.
My questions might be elementary.
3:37:24
	You said that Lt. Commander Queeg
had problems which he handled well.
3:37:30
	- Could you describe the problems?
- I object. Queeg is not on trial.
3:37:36
	The question is irrelevant.
3:37:40
	Evidence regarding Queeg's mental
make-up is of great importance here.
3:37:46
	Objection overruled.
3:37:49
	The doctor may answer.
Repeat the question.
3:37:53
	You said that Lt. Commander Queeg
had problems which he handled well.
3:37:59
	Could you describe the problems?