Driving Miss Daisy
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1:17:14
Now what you think I am, Miss Daisy?
1:17:17
What do you mean?
1:17:18
The invitation to this dinner...
1:17:20
...came in the maiI a month ago.
1:17:22
Now, if did be you wanted me to go
with you...

1:17:26
...how come you wait tiII we in the car
on the way before you asked me?

1:17:30
What? AII I said was
BooIie said you wanted to go.

1:17:35
Next time you want me to go somewhere,
you ask me reguIar.

1:17:39
You don't have to carry on so much.
1:17:41
Let's just Ieave it aIone.
1:17:43
HonestIy!
1:17:49
TaIk about things changing.
They ain't changed aII that much.

1:18:00
I'II heIp you to the door.
1:18:01
Thank you, Hoke, I can heIp myseIf.
1:18:13
...can see that the South
has marvelous possibilities.

1:18:17
Yet in spite of these assets...
1:18:20
...segregation has placed the South...
1:18:22
...socially, educationally, and economically
behind the rest of the nation.

1:18:28
Yet there are, in the white South,
millions of people of good will...

1:18:33
...whose voices are yet unheard...
1:18:36
...whose course is yet unclear...
1:18:39
...and whose courageous acts
are yet unseen.

1:18:43
These millions are called upon...
1:18:46
...to gird their courage, to speak out...
1:18:50
...to offer leadership that is needed.
1:18:53
History will have to record...
1:18:55
...that the greatest tragedy
of this period of social transition...

1:18:59
...was not the vitriolic words
and the violent actions of the bad people...


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