Blowin' in the Wind
It's 1960. Rock and roll is cool and the civil rights movement is heating up. <br />Can a small town girl catch the cool and stand the heat?<br />College is just a bump in the road for twenty-year-old Melanie Sedlak who dreams of stardom as a rock and roll drummer.<br />When a chance meeting brings Moses Carter, a black student from Flint, into her life, Melanie is intrigued with the idea of being friends with a Negro—especially a tall, dark, charming man like Moe. <br />Everyone whispers about them and some people are openly hostile. <br />As Melanie's awareness of racial prejudice grows, she wonders if she's a racist, too. <br />Why does Moe keep pushing her away? Is it because of his involvement with the new civil rights group on campus?<br />Music remains Melanie's passion, but problems with her fledgling band challenge her plans. <br />When things heat up and Moe is in trouble, Melanie must make a decision.<br />Can she cross the color line and orchestrate new dreams?<br />Blowin' in the Wind is a touching story of love and misunderstanding, harmony and discord, tolerance and discrimination—and two people whose destinies are shaped by the hostility they face and the love they share.