01:34I thought the cat next door had gotten Woodstock.
01:37But it was only an old yellow glove.
01:40But it proved one thing, didn't it?
01:43It proved you were willing to give your life for your friend.
01:47You could have been killed.
01:48So you finally did it.
01:54You got into a fight with the cat next door.
01:57Come into the house.
01:58We may have to call a vet.
02:00What's that all over your tongue?
02:08Yuck, cat hair.
02:09How's our hero?
02:14I'm going to take him to the vets.
02:16That's good.
02:17He probably needs a tetanus shot.
02:20Actually, four or five good tetanus shots.
02:24Tetanus shots of our horses.
02:26Well, he looks like he was stepped on by a horse.
02:29The vet said you really took quite a beating, Snoopy.
02:35He said he's going to give you a long-lasting penicillin shot.
02:43Woodstock would have been proud of you, Snoopy.
02:46After all, you really thought you were fighting to save his life.
02:50That was no ordinary cat either.
02:53Are you going to keep on reading War and Peace?
03:09We just got a call from the people next door.
03:12Guess what?
03:13They claim that you attack their kitten.
03:16I'm going over to our neighbors and apologize for Snoopy attacking their kitten.
03:21The whole thing was really my mistake, Charlie Brown.
03:25You stay here.
03:26I'll go over and explain to them what happened.
03:29Whoa!
03:33That's no kitten.
03:35That's a thousand-pound goalie cat.
03:44A centimeter?
03:46If any centimeters come crawling into this room,
03:49I'll step on them.
03:51I'll step on them.
03:56Yes, ma'am.
03:59For show and tell today, I have brought this leaf.
04:03You will note that I left the tree where it was.
04:10Yes, ma'am.
04:11A man in the truck drove to the zoo.
04:17He said to the zookeeper,
04:20I've got some good news for you
04:22and some bad news for you.
04:25Another C-minus.
04:33You know what?
04:41I always enjoy speculating on what our life would be like
04:46if you and I ever got married, Schroeder.
04:50I'll bet we'd have a son.
04:52And he'd probably be a great musician just like you.
04:57But I wonder what he'd look like.
04:59I wonder if he'd have my sensitive expression.
05:03What do you think our son would look like?
05:07Well, perhaps.
05:09But I'd like to think that his nose wouldn't be quite that big.
05:15Beethoven was born on December 16, 1770.
05:19That was a very good year.
05:22That was the same year that Gainsborough painted the Blue Boy.
05:26Maybe we'll have another year like that pretty soon.
05:29I hope so.
05:30We're overdue.
05:32As a young boy, Beethoven was powerfully built.
05:35He was short of stature, had broad shoulders,
05:39a short neck, a large head, and a round nose.
05:43He sounds kind of cute.
05:45Beethoven was not cute.
05:49Today is the 200th anniversary of the birth of Beethoven.
05:54I shall celebrate it by giving you a kiss on the nose.
05:58How quaint.
05:59The kiss will be supplied by my representative.
06:03Happy Beethoven's birthday.
06:06Ow!
06:19But is it art?
06:39Hey, manager.
06:41I think we should call the game.
06:43Call the game?
06:45Why should we call the game?
06:47It's raining on my cake.
06:51What are you doing, Charlie Brown?
06:54Go on home.
06:56The game has been called.
06:58Don't you think I know that?
07:00I'm here for tomorrow's game.
07:02Come back, everybody.
07:06We can still play.
07:08A little water doesn't hurt.
07:10The waves aren't that high.
07:12There aren't even any whitecaps.
07:17Good grief.
07:19I'm floating out to sea.
07:21This is ridiculous.
07:24I'm floating out to sea on a pitcher's mound.
07:27Help!
07:29There's never an umpire around when you need him.
07:32Hey, look!
07:35Your brother's floating out to sea on a pitcher's mound.
07:39You should wave to him.
07:41You'll probably never see him again.
07:43So long, big brother.
07:46Floating out to sea on a pitcher's mound.
07:49I can't believe it.
07:51Charlie Brown's in trouble, Snoopy.
07:53We should do something.
07:57Help!
07:58I'm floating out to sea!
08:00Help!
08:00Somebody save me!
08:03Hang on, Charlie Brown!
08:05I have good news for you!
08:08You're not floating out to sea!
08:10You're floating down a driveway!
08:13And into an alley behind a supermarket!
08:17And home.
08:20What are you doing home?
08:22I thought you had floated out to sea.
08:24No, I guess not.
08:26I ended up in an alley behind a supermarket.
08:29It was a terrible experience.
08:33I suppose you're going to want your room back.
08:42Sit down, please.
08:45I'm going to ask you a question, and I want you to answer me truthfully.
08:50You see?
08:52Physicians can learn a lot about a patient by asking what may even sound like a very simple question.
08:58All right, now answer me truthfully, which do you prefer, a sunrise or a sunset?
09:06Well, a sunset, I guess.
09:09I thought so.
09:11You're just the type.
09:12I might have known.
09:14What a disappointment.
09:15People who prefer sunsets are dreamers.
09:18They always give up.
09:20They always look back instead of forward.
09:23I just might have known you weren't a sunrise person.
09:26Sunrisers are go-getters.
09:28They have ambition and drive.
09:31Give me a person who likes a sunrise every time.
09:34Yes, sir.
09:35I'm sorry, Charlie Brown.
09:38If you prefer sunsets to sunrises, I can't take your case.
09:43You're hopeless.
09:45Actually, I always sort of prefer noon.
09:51Charlie Brown!
09:54It's that time of year again.
09:58Dum-dum-be-dum-be-dum-be-dum-bum-pum.
10:00I'll hold the ball, Charlie Brown, and you'll come running up and kick it, okay?
10:06Okay.
10:09She thinks I'm stupid.
10:12She plans to pull the ball away when I come running up and kick it.
10:16But this year, I'm gonna fool her.
10:20This year, I'm just gonna make her wait.
10:23If I have to, I'll sit here in that house until midnight.
10:30Oh, Bee, she's sound asleep.
10:38This is my big chance.
10:40She really slipped up this time.
10:45Ah!
10:49We fanatics are light sleepers, Charlie Brown.
10:56Linus has a stupid new green blanket.
10:59I like you, Linus.
11:01I like you and I admire you.
11:04But I could like you even more if you give up that blanket.
11:07I don't really care if you like me or not.
11:11I look forward to the day when I'll understand girls.
11:28Hey, Snoopy, I need a favor.
11:31Now listen carefully, you stupid beagle.
11:33This is what I want you to do for me.
11:36I'm going to try to kick this blanket habit once and for all, but I need your help.
11:42I want you to keep my blanket for me.
11:45And don't give it back, no matter how much I plead, no matter how much I beg, no matter how desperate I become.
11:54And this isn't going to be fun.
11:56And this isn't going to be fun.
11:57Do my eyes deceive me?
12:01Are you actually going to bed without your security blanket?
12:06I gave it to Snoopy to hold for me.
12:09I'm going to break the habit this time if it kills me.
12:13I told him not to give it back, no matter how much I beg.
12:17I wouldn't trust that stupid beagle with anything.
12:21Why not?
12:22I'm sure he's put it away in very safe keeping.
12:27I haven't slept for two days.
12:31I want my blanket back.
12:34I thought I could give it up, but I can't.
12:38I've got to have it back.
12:40Please give it back.
12:42Please, please.
12:45Come out and bring that blanket with you.
12:48Do you hear me?
12:50Come out.
12:52My blanket.
12:55He had my blanket made into a sport coat.
12:59I'm going crazy.
13:01I gave you that blanket to keep for me, only to see if I could give it up.
13:06And you had it made into a sport coat.
13:10Do you know what that stupid beagle of yours did?
13:16He had two sport coats made out of my blanket.
13:20This is all that's left.
13:22It's all your fault, Charlie Brown, because you own such a stupid beagle.
13:28Do you know what I just read in the medical journal?
13:31It's said that a person who is deprived of his blanket by a stupid beagle who has it made into a sport coat cannot survive for more than 48 hours.
13:43That must be an interesting medical journal.
13:45Please let me touch my blanket.
13:49I know it's your sport coat now.
13:52I don't deny that, but I've got to touch it.
13:56Let me touch your coat, please.
13:59My hands aren't shaking.
14:04I'm not dizzy anymore.
14:06My stomach doesn't hurt.
14:08I'm actually hungry.
14:10I made it through the weekend without my blanket.
14:13I did it!
14:14I did it!
14:15I did it!
14:16And I did it my way.
14:18That's the screaming and shouting and pounding on the ground, making a fool out of yourself way.
14:39Linus, I have a surprise for you.
14:41Surprise for you, too, Charlie Brown.
14:43Guess what?
14:44I have finally...
14:45I felt responsible for losing your blanket, so I bought you a new one.
14:51Oh, no!
14:54I had it licked and now I'm hooked again!
14:59I bought Linus a new blanket.
15:02I thought it was doing the right thing.
15:04Hmm.
15:05I'm not quite sure how I can put this, Charlie Brown.
15:09But let me say this.
15:11In all of mankind's history, there has never been more damage done than by people who thought they were doing the right thing.
15:20Five cents, please.
15:21This is really quite fascinating.
15:33Have you ever read anything about mass communications, Charlie Brown?
15:37It's interesting to see Charlie Brown.
15:39the effect that TV programs have and things like newspapers and comic books have on children and other...
15:49and other people.
15:52And how we are sometimes led to believe that...
15:55you're not listening!
15:57It's a story I've been reading called The Pit and the Pendulum by Poe.
16:11And it's about this man, see, who's a prisoner.
16:15He's tied to a table, and this big pendulum keeps swinging back and forth above him, getting nearer and nearer.
16:23It sounds like an exciting story.
16:27I'll have to read it.
16:28I think you'd enjoy it.
16:30I really do.
16:32That Edgar Allan Poe was a riot.
16:34There I was, standing in the front of the whole class, and I forgot what I was going to say.
16:44I could feel my face turning red.
16:47You know how it feels.
16:49It's like when you're upside down, and all the blood rushes to your head.
16:54That's a good example.
16:57Maybe my faithful dog will rescue me.
17:00Maybe he'll discover that I'm gone, and he'll come looking for me.
17:05Dogs have an unusual sense of loyalty.
17:08He's bound to have missed me.
17:13Every time you think things can't get any worse, they get worse.
17:20This time, however, I don't know.
17:24What could be worse than being tangled in a kite string, and hanging upside down from a tree?
17:29If you're tangled in a kite string, and hanging upside down from a tree, it's nothing to worry about.
17:40Eventually, the string will get wet from the rain, and dry out in the sun, and then it will weaken and break.
17:46It's nature's way of protecting the kite flyer.
17:56It's nature's way of protecting the denkst.
17:58It's nature's way of protecting the kite.
17:59It's nature's way of Europe, so it's so strange that I've given the air BER.
18:01It's a big one.
18:04It's nature's way of getting better.
18:05It's nature's way of protecting the caption.
18:06I love it.
18:08It's nature's way of putting it in my enough detail.
18:13I hate it.
18:15You know that I don't think it's going keep away the hearing.
18:17I don't know.
18:47Dogs are a stupid lot.
19:08Oh, I don't think so.
19:10I think dogs are pretty smart.
19:13I think we're lucky to have dogs with us.
19:15I think having dogs around has made this a better world.
19:22What's this?
19:24Oh, I said a nice word about dogs.
19:27And now he hangs on me all day.
19:29I guess he appreciated what you said.
19:33Yes, I guess he did.
19:39Schroeder, do you like dogs?
19:41Oh, yes. I'm a great dog lover.
19:43I firmly believe that this is a better world because of the presence of dogs.
19:50Free!
19:52Do you like dogs, Charlie Brown?
19:54Hey, that's not fair.
19:56You have to answer.
19:58Oh, good grief.
20:01Yes, I love dogs.
20:02I think having dogs with us has made this a better world.
20:08Free!
20:10Anybody around here like dogs?
20:13How about it?
20:14Are there any dog lovers around here?
20:17Real dog lovers?
20:19How about it?
20:20What do you say?
20:22Anyone around here like dogs?
20:24How about it?
20:25Huh?
20:25What do you say?
20:26Anybody around here like dogs?
20:37Huh?
20:38Any dog lovers around here?
20:42What's going on, Chuck?
20:44All I did is say something nice about dogs.
20:48And he's been hanging on me ever since.
20:50Did you mean what you said?
20:52Sure.
20:52I really like dogs.
20:56He just gave my arm an extra little squeeze.
21:14Listen to what it says here in the latest issue of the medical journal.
21:17If a dog hangs onto a person's arm too long, it could conceivably do that arm serious damage.
21:34There.
21:34Now, don't say I've never helped you.
21:39Girls are kind of strange, aren't they?
21:42Oh, I don't know.
21:43I think they're pretty smart.
21:45In fact, I think this is a better world because of the presence of girls.