thanks [:x] As the film opens, our unidentified homeless man sits in a store-front with his stereotypical cardboard sign stereotypically begging for whatever change he can accumulate. Before long, he heads off with change in hand to the neighbourhood country store. "Heading to the liquor section," You might think. An emotional punch, without being sappy or overly melodramatic weaves an intertwining story of multiple fates, giving us only glimpses of the lives involved, but these glimpses are all we need to feel the heart put into creating this film. Reminiscent of Kurt Kuenne's award-winning Validation, The Student's Companion to Social Policy by Pete Alcock, Margaret May, Sharon Wright http://tinyurl.com/cta865q In particular, people who have the mindset for social change are not deterred by limitations, and they embrace the belief that small actions do matter.It can be so incredibly simple. A hug. A kind word. A small, meaningful gift. A coin. An unexpected act of mercy.
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Tom Pall <thomas.pall@...> wrote: > > http://www.flickspire.com/m/Share_This/changeforadollar?lsid=161f9da9b76\ 92b6854ca64548e80ab61 >