Word: breaching
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Dudayev: The West ignores Russian tactics of state terrorism. Russian forces have destroyed all our hospitals and schools. Our people pick up the pieces of their children's bodies after Russian bombings. And yet you deplore Chechen terrorism. Those two cases you mentioned, however, were a serious breach of my orders. We'll wage a war of sabotage in Russia, but there won't be any terrorism or hostage taking...
...formerly low profile was blown sky-high in November, during a controversy over CBS' 60 Minutes' cutting back a segment on cigarettes because of fear of legal retaliation. Wigand was revealed to be CBS' Deep Throat, and B&W immediately slapped him with a lawsuit charging theft, fraud and breach of contract, stemming from a confidentiality agreement he had signed when he left B&W in 1993. Wigand nevertheless gave his Mississippi deposition. After somebody leaked a copy of his testimony to the Wall Street Journal, which published key excerpts and lofted the entire document onto the World Wide...
...call of their country, spilled their blood and selflessly laid down their lives. Harvard, as a great institution, is entrusted (key word "trust") with the preservation of such gifts and memorials. It is beneath the dignity of our University to willingly participate in such a breach of sacred trust...
...showed her cancer had spread; her disease was now classified as Stage IV metastatic breast cancer. Given the standard therapies available, it was a death sentence, but her oncologist, Dr. Mahesh Gupta, warmly assured her there was hope. He recommended she consider a bone-marrow transplant and, in a breach of Health Net procedure, skipped the usual channels for making referrals and arranged a consultation with a physician he knew, Dr. Robert McMillan, an oncologist at the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla. Christy's sister, living in Colorado, had urged her to see a leading bone-marrow transplanter...
...private are medical records? Not very--to the point that medical information, easily stored in computer data banks, is being brazenly bought and sold by interested individuals and companies. Such were the disturbing revelations at a Senate hearing on a measure that would impose penalties on those who breach confidentiality, as well as give patients the right to see and correct their records. Critics maintain, however, that the bill is not strong enough; worse, they say, it might encourage the creation of more extensive medical data banks...