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Word: heroines (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...attention to clinical findings as well as to what we read. All our statements are documented in medical publications or based on clinical experience. We have no ghost writer from the F.D.A. We have seen patients who have moved from marijuana up through more dangerous drugs to heroin. We do not know of any advantave to be obtained from misrepresenting what we observe...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DR. FARNSWORTH REPLIES | 4/21/1967 | See Source »

...weren't so bad this would be an objectionable sentence. For one thing, it's untrue. Marijuana no more "produces" dependence that driving fast does; people may get hung up or stung on either, but the chemical or car can hardly be blamed, certainly not in the sense that heroin or alcohol can. Marijuana simply does not produce that kind of dependency...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRUG STATEMENTS | 4/18/1967 | See Source »

...arrest. As long as police have such cause for arrest, they can search a suspect for the evidence that may convict him. But two Chicago policemen were sharply challenged in court in 1964 after they arrested one George McCray on a Chicago street corner, searched him and found heroin. At a pretrial hearing, the cops testified that they had been tipped off by a reliable informer, whom they refused to identify. McCray's lawyers demanded the informer's name; if he did not exist, there was no "probable cause" and the heroin evidence could be barred. The judge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Supreme Court: Vital Informers | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...know what's going to happen, don't you?" Felix Donawa asks the pretty, 20-year-old heroin user. "You're going to be out on the street turning tricks." "Let me see your hands," demands another questioner. "No needle marks. Not yet, anyway. You're lucky so far," he continues, then grimly goes into the details of how addicts have to keep looking for new veins to shoot heroin into as old ones collapse. "How would you like it, having to shoot up in your neck?" "I wouldn't," mumbles the girl...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Youth: Turning Off | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...Kennedy was barely distinguishable from a circus sideshow. In a hearing to determine whether retired Businessman Clay Shaw, 54, should be tried on charges of conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald and others to murder the late President, "Big Jim" produced only two prosecution witnesses. One was a confessed heroin addict. The other was a young insurance salesman whose impeccable clothing concealed a mind in considerable disarray and whose memory had to be jogged by means of hypnosis. Yet their testimony was enough, in the view of a three-judge panel in Orleans Parish Criminal District Court, to establish "probable cause...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Investigations: The D.A. Wins a Round | 3/24/1967 | See Source »

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