Word: druggings
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...access to a terminal. The curious can also enter busy hospital record rooms by simply passing themselves off as doctors. Besides learning about a patient's current ailment, the snoops may pick up potentially damaging items from the past, such as a record of bouts with venereal disease, drug addiction or alcoholism, or a family history of mental illness or cancer. Easily copied by duplicating machine and then spread, this sensitive information may eventually appear on the desks of credit and loan officers, personnel chiefs or even college admissions boards...
...North Carolina, and a third on behalf of the White House. All three measures cover mainly institutional records, not those kept by doctors in their private offices. Also, they would continue to allow release of information for such worthy scientific purposes as inquiries into the effectiveness of a particular drug on the course of a disease. But they would prohibit the kind of blanket, open-ended authorizations that are contained in the any-and-all forms. What is more, the patient, who is now practically the only one kept in the dark about his medical records, would finally be allowed...
...doctors have had little help out of this bind, since few precise tests have been generally available to tell them if and how well the body will respond to a prescribed drug. But aid may now finally...
After talking with Colombian authorities and Spradley in the Riohacha hospital, Chief Rogers became convinced that his man might have been seeking something other than drill bits on his ill-fated flight. Said he: "My impression is that it was a marijuana run, a drug deal gone bad. Spradley is not the smartest person in the world." So he decided to head home, leaving Everitt to pick up the pieces...
...bungling duo but hold them in custody for violating Colombia's airspace, an offense punishable by a fine of up to $125,000. The Houston fire department hopes the men will be back home in a few days. They may still, however, face an investigation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, which estimates that several hundred tons of marijuana come in from Colombia each month-minus, of course, the 1,500 Ibs. that may or may not have been intended for Lafayette...