M*A*S*H (1972–1983): Season 4, Episode 19 - Some 38th Parallels - full transcript

Hawkeye has impotency problems, Frank auctions off the 4077th's garbage, and Radar becomes distraught after a patient he has taken special interest in dies.

[Overlapping Conversations]

- Wanna get that, please?
- Yes, Doctor.

- Almost finished.
- You do nice work.

That's why I get
the big money.

[Hawkeye]
You know, I figured it out.

All the work I've done divided
by the time I've been in the army...

- comes to a nickel an operation.
- Lap sponge.

- How you doin', B. J.?
- Just about there. It's a nasty head wound.

- Yeah, they're getting worse all the time.
- Well, that's war, jocko.

Gimme a hand here,
will you, Father?

- Say the word.
- Go.



- [Indistinct]
- Uh, give me a little Richardson.

No, the big one.
No, no, no. T-The little one.

- Hold that door for us, will you, Klinger?
- Post-op's all jammed, sir.

- Let's put him against the wall, Father.
- We ain't got one free bed.

You'd think we were a motel.
Sorry, Father.

Well, I know
all about motels, Corporal.

Each man prays in his own way.

- Get an I.V. Stand, Klinger.
- Right.

- Another boy from the 43rd.
- Colonel Coner's outfit.

He got hit in one of the Colonel's
famous retrieval sweeps.

No more stands, Doc.
What now?

- Get a hammer. Let's nail this to the wall.
- I wish I had your brains.

- I wish I had your beauty.
- There is that.

Our friend, Colonel Coner, specializes
in trading warm bodies for cold.



He'd send a whole division
behind enemy lines...

in order to pick up
what used to be one human being.

- Hold this, will you, Father?
- Some awful funny people running this war.

Sometimes I'm sorry I bought tickets
for it. I'll see you in a bit.

[Hawkeye]
Three-O silk on a Keith needle.

- Three-O silk.
- [Metal Object Drops]

- Oh...
- Need a hand, Frank?

- I don't need a hand from anyone.
- His own two lefts are enough.

- Mind if I watch?
- Makes me no never mind.

- Oh, Colonel Potter...
- Here.

There's something that's been
bothering me for some time now, sir.

Very simple, Frank. A mommy and a daddy
love each other very much.

Now, the daddy has a seed...

- Put a bridle on it, Pierce.
What's on your mind, Burns?
- Trash.

[Inhales] Sir, I am keenly aware
of the garbage in this camp.

There are tin cans,
eggshells, pussy old bandages...

germy tongue depressors
by the bushel.

It's dumped the regulation 25 yards from
the camp and poses no threat to hygiene.

But we're wasting our waste, sir.
The locals are stealing it.

- They need it to survive.
- Well, they're not entitled
to just walk off with it.

Frank's right. You give these
people a taste of our garbage,
next they'll want New Jersey.

Now, what I'm suggesting is
that we charge them for it.

Make 'em pay for every rind,
every drop of swill.

- You wanna open some sort
of bilious boutique, Frank?
- No, but I do have a plan.

This isn't what I'd call table talk,
Doctors. See me later, Burns.

- It'll be a pleasure, sir.
- [Softly] Maybe for you...

Finished.

Who'd have thought
perfection could be so boring?

- Doctor?
- Hmm?

- What are you doing after?
- Please.

Put a note on the bulletin board
like everyone else.

I'll give you a nickel.

Sold. [Chuckles]
I'm so easy.

Captain Hunnicutt.

I was just walking by and I noticed
this gizmo disconnected...

from the thingamabob and it wasn't
dripping into the doohickey right.

You lost me with all the technical
terms, but I get the picture.

- Is he gonna be all right, sir?
- He will now.

- Whew.
- Radar?

- Yes, sir?
- You may have just saved his life.

Really? Gee, I didn't mean to.

Well, wh-who would've
thought I could? Gee.

- Come on. Help me see if
we can get him into post-op.
- Yes, sir.

Do you have a license to troll for surgeons?
Or is that roll with sturgeons?

- Right this way, my dear.
- You will be gentle.

The army's
ruinin' my hands, you know.

- Mm-hmm.
- My hands are my best feature.

When I was born, my father took
one look and said to my mother...

"Thanks a lot
for the eight-pound baby nose."

And my mother said,
"His hands, Amos.

Look at his hands.
He's a musician."

What do you think
my old man did?

Went right out, stole a violin
and stuck it in my crib.

I was one week old.
What did I know from violins?

- I started suckin' on the bridge.
- [Chuckles]

- No kiddin'. I'm not kiddin'.
- I believe you.

- [Chuckles]
- What's wrong?

What's wrong, what's wrong?

You look happy, that's all.
I never see a happy face in the army
outside the latrine.

Oh, l-I was helpin' Captain Hunnicutt
before with a patient, you know?

- Yeah?
- And, uh, the guy's I.V. Bottle went all snafuy.

And so I, uh, fixed it up and Captain
Hunnicutt says to me... He says to me...

"Radar, you may have
saved his life."

- You wanna save another life?
- Huh?

Don't eat that food.

- What's the matter with it?
- You ever pull kitchen duty?

- No, I've been lucky.
- Oh, it's beautiful.

You don't know the conditions.
They paint over the cockroaches.

If you ever saw what they put in the
hash, you'd go screaming into the night.

And later you just might.

Oh, I don't care.
I saved a guy's life.

- Is he still in the army?
- Of course.

Some saving.

Our garbage is the mainstay
of the local economy, sir.

I don't think you realize
how much valuable material
is being looted from our trash heaps.

I guess I just don't have
your head for garbage, Burns.

The late Colonel Blake said I was
the best rubbish officer we'd ever had.

The man knew talent
when he saw it. Smoke?

- Uh, would you like me to, sir?
- Never mind.

What do you think, sir?
Garbage-wise.

I'm not gonna make any decision
until Radar gives me
a breakdown of the situation.

Radar. You got some poop
on the garbage...

Sir, I've been going through the files.
I got the poop on our garbage.

- Shoot.
- "The typical sample of this
hospital's waste products...

contains expended medical supplies,
i.e., e.g., tongue depressors..."

They can take a few hundred of those
and make a hooch.

I've heard a Korean landlord
will kill for the chance
to subdivide a packing crate.

"A few hundred yards of used
and bloody surgical gauze..."

Oh, that can be washed out and used
to make summer clothing.

- Go on.
- "Some stretched-out nurses' bras..."

- They can use those for hammocks, right?
- [Laughs]

- You shut up.
- Don't be abusive.

I'm sorry, Colonel.
It's just my nature.

Enlisted men
have feelings, you know.

I keep forgetting that, sir.

- Continue, Colonel?
- No. I have no interest
in hearing a refuse recital.

Burns, what are you
leading up to?

Sir, it's un-American
to get nothing for nothing.

Now, I propose we auction
our garbage off to local contractors.

- I'd let it go to the highest bidder.
- That's ridiculous.

As per Pentagon Directive,
uh, N/R/358/9-A.

The Trashy
Substances Act, sir.

Really? Burns, some men
are born to greatness...

others have garbage
thrust upon them.

- You've got it.
- I won't let you down, sir.

There's no way you can.

Uh, congratulations, Major.

[Chuckles]

[Woman]
Hawkeye.

- [Laughs] Hawkeye.
- What are you laughing?

- It's not funny.
- Don't worry about it.

I'm not worried.
[Sighs]

- It can happen to anyone.
- So let it. Let it happen to anyone.

Just don't let it
happen to me.

Come on. Sit back.

- Maybe a drink.
- Mm-mmm.

It's almost ready to be drunk.
I hear tomorrow's a very good year.

I don't think
liquor's the answer.

You know, what just didn't happen here
has never not ever happened before.

Well, maybe you just
don't find me attractive.

Oh, that's true. Except for your
face, your mind and your body...

you're a complete dud.

- Come here.
- Careful. I have to give
them back after the war.

- Relax.
- [Sighs Deeply]

What I think's happened
is the damned army started
putting coffee in my saltpeter.

- It's thrown my whole system off.
- Mm.

Tell me about it.

- How 'bout an Oreo first?
- [Knocking]

- Shh! My wife.
- [Radar] Hawk. Hawk?

She always hawks like that.
Yes, dear?

- Captain B.J. Wants you in post-op.
- Radar, can't it wait?

What happened
to your voice?

I got a new pair
of shorts from home.

Sorry to leave you in mid-grope
like this, but Hippocrates calls.

- When will you be back?
- Before you can whistle Carmen.

## [Whistling]

- I'm sorry to interrupt you.
- That's okay, Radar.

You saved me from contusions of the ego
and compound embarrassment.

- How's your patient?
- He's really Radar's.

He alerted me to his condition.

I had a hamster used to get the same look
in his eyes when he wasn't feeling good.

Let me see his chart.
You can go get some lettuce.

He's less responsive.
B.P.'s going up, pulse dropping...

signs of increased
intracranial pressure.

- I'd stick close for a while.
- Right.

- Can I too? Stick close?
- Of course.

And if you have to,
I'd put in another burr hole.

Fair enough.
That sound right to you, Radar?

Huh? Oh, yeah, sure.
Sounds pretty good to me.

What do you think? Should we get
a second corporal's opinion?

- [Sighs]
- Should we ask some people in...

- or should we just be boring on our own?
- Whatever.

- You're not drinking?
- I think I'll stop for a while.

- Mm.
- Getting nasty notes from my liver.

- I've never seen you wear those.
- Oh, I never do.

If you wear 'em, they get dirty.

If I keep washing 'em,
they stay clean forever.

They're actually just
to remind me of better times.

Argyle socks, angora sweaters,
Woody Herman, fumbling in rumble seats.

- Rumbling in fumble seats.
- That too.

What do you
think of Nurse Able?

If I wasn't married...

I'd start nibbling
at Nurse Able's toes...

and stop when I got
to her hairpins.

There is something there
to arouse a male.

Unless he's been dead
six months.

[Inhales]
She was in here before...

um, with me, alone.

[Laughs] That's one of the worst
kept secrets of the war.

She was in here before
and, uh...

I, uh...

uh...

couldn't.

Couldn't what?

The big "couldn't."

Oh, that "couldn't."

Maybe I tried too hard.

Maybe I didn't try hard enough.

Maybe it was her perfume.

Maybe it was mine.

She looks a little like my mother.
Maybe Oedipus wrecked it for me.

It's perfectly understandable. You've
been going full tilt since you got here.

Your nerves are brittle enough
to use for kindling.

- Tension.
- The war.

- Happens to everyone.
- Right.

- Ever happen to you?
- Never.

Fink.

- We got fresh wounded in pre-op, sirs.
- Right. Thanks, Klinger.

Don't thank me.
Thank the Chinese.

- Hi, Frank.
- I'm doing the best I can.

- What have we got?
- Chest wounds here,
leg wounds there. I've seen worse.

- Only after you get through with them.
- Doctors.

- [Chuckles]
- I want my boys to have the best.

- These guys from your unit?
- I'm Colonel Coner.

Oh, yeah. The famous advance man
from Forest Lawn.

Pay no attention, sir.
Their sense of patriotism is stunted.

Comes from smoking too many flags.
Let's get started on this guy.

Nothing personal, Colonel.
Just that we don't appreciate...

your making so many dead soldiers
out of live soldiers...

by trying to retrieve
so many dead soldiers.

Every one of our fallen boys
deserves an American coffin.

- Prep him.
- Do me a favor, Colonel.

If you find out I've died, just let me
lie there in the crabgrass.

- I don't wanna help you
make the cover of Life.
- Or Death. Whichever comes first.

Let's get
an X ray on him, huh?

Well, shall we repair
the effects of heroism?

After you,
my dear Schweitzer.

- Hi.
- Hi.

- I'm just going off.
- I'm just going on.

- You okay now?
- Yeah. I was a little upset
for a while, but it's passed.

For sure?

Well, at least
my mouth is still working.

Okay, now we need a green piece
for the sunglasses.

- Hm.
- Is this it?

No. It looks sort of like,
uh, Italy but with a low heel.

Where were you originally born?
I mean, as a child.

Chicken Falls, South Dakota.
Twenty miles from Mount Rushmore.

- Oh, hey, I was there.
- Yeah?

Yeah. Army was
cleaning out Lincoln's nose.

- Oh, that's an earlobe.
- Oh.

- I can't wait to get back home.
- Yeah, me neither.

You know, once I called that number
to get the time in Kansas City.

I listened
for over an hour.

Really made me feel
a lot better too.

What do you miss the most
about back home?

- The most?
- Yeah. One thing.

Oh.

Well, the grass, I guess.

Or the sky.

Everything.

Yeah.

- Radar.
- Oh, yes, sir?

- Where have you been hiding?
- I was just helping out with Private Phelan.

[Potter]
Did you order the new specimen bottles?

- Oh, yes, I did, sir.
- Let's watch this batch.

Don't let any damn fool
try to play songs on 'em again.

- How 'bout the V.D. Films?
- Uh, I ordered two new ones, sir.

Uh, Clean as a Whistle
and Buy You a Drink, Sailor?

- Fine. What about those notes...
- Also, I typed those notes...

- I left on my desk to be typed?
- You left on your desk.

- My notes on equestrian etiquette?
- Yes, sir.

They're in your "in" basket
underneath your toenail clippers.

- Hmm.
- Uh, sir?

Why do women
ride sidesaddle?

Would you marry
a woman that didn't?

- No, sir.
- How are you feeling, son?

- Okay, sir.
- He's gonna be just fine.

Thank you, Doctor O'Reilly.
That's an elbow.

Oh, yeah. Hey.

Wow. Look at that.
It's gonna be Jane Russell. See?

Uh, can we do this
later, Radar?

I'm gettin' kinda tired.

Oh, yeah, sure.

Oh, we couldn't have
finished it anyway.

Major Houlihan confiscated
all the best parts.

- Colonel Potter?
- Burns.

I just wanted you to know I'm about
to hold my first garbage auction, sir.

Fine.

- Would you like to see it?
- No, thanks. I'll wait till the movie comes out.

- The least you could do is wish me luck.
- Luck.

How do I look?

Almost lifelike.

All right, gentlemen,
right this way.

Please take a seat.
Any seat.

Come on. Mush. Chop. Chop.

Now, may I have
your attention?

First, let me welcome
each and every one of you...

wish you joy and, uh, chang-yo.

- "Chang-yo"?
- Yeah.

You wish each of us
a prostitute?

I must have looked up
the wrong word.

- We don't mind.
- Well, I mean "prosperity."

Worked out the same.
[Laughs]

- [Laughing]
- All right, let's not get carried away, huh?

I guess people will always
think it's funny...

when one of their betters
makes a mistake.

Now, you've all had a tour
of the camp garbage dump.

And you have seen for yourself that
America throws away only the best.

Now, this waste will be
auctioned off today...

and similar auctions
will be held once a month...

twice a month
when it gets warmer.

We're not too late
for the big garbage sale?

- I wanna get something for my apartment.
- A Chippendale orange peel...

would be perfect
for my breakfast nook.

All right. Here we go.

Now, how much am I bid
for lot number one...

150 pounds of prime
U.S. Army grade-A garbage?

- Hmm?
- He could sell brass knuckles to Gandhi.

- Fifty. Do I hear fifty dollars?
- One buck.

One buck.
Do I hear one and a half?

One and a half. Very good.
One seventy-five, seventy-five, anyone?

Listen, Beej, whatever the highest
bid is, bid five over it for me, okay?

You're gonna buy
this garbage? Really?

- Really.
- What are you going to use it for?

Well, if I tell you now, then you won't
be surprised at Christmas.

Two seventy-five. Three dollars.
Three dollars. Do I hear fifty?

Right on time.

- Oh, thank you.
- You sure you don't mind being seen with me?

- Of course not.
- Some girls feel strange with married men.

Hi, kid.

[Sighs]

I did everything
I could, Radar.

How could he be alive like
that one second and dead the next?

There's not much more
than that in it.

[Exhales]

It's not fair.

Fair's the last thing it is.

I mean,
you operated on him twice.

The damage was just
too extensive.

I could give you
a lot of medical reasons, but...

understanding doesn't
make it less painful.

Oh!

We got to be friends...

in just a few hours.

Friends don't need more.

Gee, I hope I don't cry.

It's no sin, Radar.

When was the last time
you felt like crying, sir?

What time is it?

Very good, sir.
You hit the ground.

Oh, afternoon, Pierce.
Try your luck?

- I used to play as a youngster.
- Well, have a go.

Finally stopped
when I realized my right arm...

had become three inches
longer than my left.

Good try. In '25,
I made the semifinals at Fort Dix.

I aced out a 300-pound supply sergeant.
He blubbered like a baby.

Don't try so hard.
Let it go a little later.

- Good. Bang on target.
- Thank you.

First time I scored in days.

- Been a rough one?
- Well, about normal.

We're tossing horseshoes, and four
miles away they're tossing grenades.

- Uh-huh.
- Frank's selling prewar
garbage at postwar prices...

to people who can't even afford
the ground they're eating off.

- Uh-huh.
- And I'm impotent.

Uh-huh.

I think I see your problem.

Aim two feet beyond the stake.

You've gotta learn to unwind, son.

When's the last time
you really let go of the reins?

The back of a fruit truck...

on a pile of rotting peaches.

I had a copy of Fanny Hill.

The truck went over a bump
and I was in heaven.

You need a hobby.

I toss horseshoes.
The wife needlepoints migratory fowl.

Grandpa Roy
whistles moose calls.

I knew a woman collected clippings
of mine shaft accidents.

There you go.
If it's any comfort to you...

I had the same problem
in World War I.

- And you got over it?
- Mm-hmm.

But not until World War II.

- Ah.
- [Horseshoe Lands]

Want some more coffee?

Uh, no, thank you.
Army coffee has made me a soprano.

- Colonel?
- Please.

Listen to this. "The fastest
amputation in medical history...

"was performed by Dr. R. Liston
in 1801 without an anesthetic.

"It took 33 seconds
and cost the assistant...

three fingers
by his master's saw."

I like a heavy tipper.

- Morning.
- Morning.

Major Burns said
I'm fit to leave.

Major Burns
is an expert on fits.

I ordered your jeep, Colonel.
Be ready in a minute.

- Boy, I'm starved.
- Extracurricular carnage
really builds up an appetite.

Private Phelan
died last night, Colonel.

Who? Phelan?

Gerald Phelan.
He was one of yours.

Wounded last time he went out
looking for coffin refills.

I remember that mission. We retrieved
every Joe that bought it on Hill 911.

- And how many men did you lose?
- Our losses were insignificant.

- How many kids in an "insignificant"?
- Two.

Phelan makes three.

We knocked out
15 or 20 Reds, old buddy.

That makes my kill ratio eight and
a half to one. Maybe nine and a half.

Do I hear ten? Sold to
the grim reaper in the third row.

Good morning, Colonel. Colonel.
My, we have a lot of colonels here.

We're up to our brass in 'em.

I used to think you were clever till you
bought all that garbage at the auction.

- [Laughs]
- You bought the garbage?

Well, you said get a hobby.

Captain Pierce,
Colonel Coner's jeep's ready, sir.

Everything's ready, sir.

Well, I guess it's
about that time.

Well, have
a nice trip, Colonel.

Yes. Colonel.

Colonel.

Come on.

What's going on, Pierce?

I thought we'd give Colonel Coner
an appropriate aloha.

Well, what are we lookin' at?

Beautiful! Beautiful!
A Tintoretto in barf. Mmm!

- I had dreams like this all through puberty.
- [Chuckles]

I didn't see any of it,
but I loved it.

- You're a pistol.
- That's my garbage.

- No, it's my garbage, Frank. I got a receipt.
- Oh!

Hey, buy you a drink, sailor?

- Uh, not right now. Thank you.
- [Chuckles]

I got the time if you still
got that nickel.

- All I've got's a quarter.
- No problem. I think I can make change now.

- [Film Projector Humming]
- How'd your date go?

- I don't kiss and tell.
- Sorry.

It was terrific.

Now, look, sir. We charge the men
a dollar each for helicopter rides.

Add that to our garbage income and
we'll be in the black inside a year.

This is a hospital, Burns. I don't
want us listed on the stock exchange.