- Malloy stops to drop off laundry before his shift. While there, the manager confronts a young man tying up a dryer. Malloy arrests him for drying marijuana. On shift, they take a call about a fight where a divinity student is fighting men over taking the Lord's name in vain. A bus driver reports a young girl left on his bus. They take her to the station as she does not speak English. By trial and error, they learn she is from Finland. They take her to back track her route to find her relative's home. When they return her, they have to handle a neighbor dispute across the street where a man's boys are trashing his neighbor's property again. Later, the laundry manager reports a man and woman looking for their friend. The police use the license plate of their car to track them down. Malloy purses the girl in the car while Reed must handle the man on foot. Back at the laundromat, Reed learns Malloy was dropping off his laundry, plus his girlfriend's.—Anonymous
- Before the start of his Sunday shift, Malloy drops his laundry off at the laundromat. The laundromat clerk, Thelma, gets into an argument with a young man hogging one of the dryers. Malloy soon learns that his intervention is more than just being a good Samaritan as the man is drying his stash of marijuana. Beyond arresting the man, who refuses to speak including not giving his name, Malloy and the narcotics division must find out how widespread his drug network is within the community. Adam-12's first call takes them to a lumber yard, where a young man has gotten into an altercation with the staff over an issue that is important to him but did not justify his actions: their use of the Lord's name in vain, problematic for him as a Divinity student. Next, they deal with a young girl who is lost as she got on the wrong bus. The problem is that she doesn't speak English, and they have no idea what language she is speaking or otherwise understands. Then, they mediate a continuing neighbor dispute where the Morris children continually throw garbage into Mrs. Alltoff's back yard. Mr. Morris does not seem to discipline his children for their actions. The problem this time is that they threw their father's collectible comic books into her back yard, which she may destroy if she knew their value just out of spite. As Malloy and Reed head back to the laundromat to get some information from Thelma, Malloy shows a little more about the status of his romantic life than he would have wanted.—Huggo
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