Word: californianism
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Restic has been dropping hints all season that sophomore split end Ron Cuccia will see increased action on passes, runs and options. The Crusaders bottled up the Californian pretty well last week but that is unlikely to happen again. With fullback Jim Callinan coming off his best game ever and halfback Tom Beatrice playing the best ball of his career, Restic will have many options to Multiflex at the Cadets. Look for a lot of points...
Restic finally gave junior (sophomore eligibility) Ron Cuccia a chance at split end and the results proved impressive. The diminutive Californian, who seems to generate excitement whenever he plays, caught a pair of passes and looks like a sure bet to start at one of the receiving posts. "It would be a waste to put either Buckley or Cuccia on the bench," captain Chuck Durst said yesterday, and Restic, commander of the injury-ravaged Crimson, can ill-afford to let prime talent stand idle...
...Reagan was then considered "acceptable" as a President by 64%; the current figure is 54%. Voter confidence in Reagan's ability to handle the economy has dropped from an impressive 75% to 66%, and his perceived competency in foreign affairs has slipped from 72% to 63%. The Californian still worries voters on a basic level: 54% of those surveyed feel that he often does not get his facts straight, and 48% fret that he may be "trigger happy...
...Carter campaign will also paint the Californian as a right-winger out of phase with the more moderate views of most Americans. (Said Reagan last weekend: "I do not think the image of me as Ebenezer Scrooge will sell.") Carter's aides admit Reagan is what they call a "likable ideologue," but they are convinced that he is vulnerable. Says Caddell: "The fact that he is liked does not take away from the fact that people perceive him as far more of an ideologue than most politicians...
...cherubic man who was then story editor of ABC's Family, had the idea for an hourlong series, "a sort of American Scenes from a Marriage. "Richard Burger, then head of dramatic development at CBS, suggested that Jacobs "try something rich and Southwestern instead of middle-class and Californian." Recalls Jacobs: "I went home and wrote a letter to myself about this terribly good-looking, semitrashy lady who marries into a rich Texas family." Jacobs envisioned this character, Pamela Barnes Ewing, taking on heroic proportions, shaking off her shady past and winning the respect of the family...