To: PartyTime who wrote (685 ) 2/7/2004 10:28:32 AM From: Arthur Radley Respond to of 173976 A two part test! (1)When did the mandatory drug testing requirement for military pilots go into effect(Give month and Year)and (2) when did Shrub disappear from his military service and never fly a military plane again(Give month and year). This is a simple test, because guess what? If you get the right answer to the first one you answer, then you have a 100 on the test....so go for the easiest one first! Did Bush drop out of the National Guard to avoid drug testing? The young pilot walked away from his commitment in 1972 -- the same year the U.S. military implemented random drug tests. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - By Eric Boehlert Feb. 6, 2004 | One of the persistent riddles surrounding President Bush's disappearance from the Texas Air National Guard during 1972 and 1973 is the question of why he walked away. Bush was a fully trained pilot who had undergone a rigorous two-year flight training program that cost the Pentagon nearly $1 million. And he has told reporters how important it was to follow in his father's footsteps and to become a fighter pilot. Yet in April 1972, George W. Bush climbed out of a military cockpit for the last time. He still had two more years to serve, but Bush's own discharge papers suggest he never served for the Guard again. It is, of course, possible that Bush had simply had enough of the Guard and, with the war in Vietnam beginning to wind down, decided that he would rather do other things. In 1972 he asked to be transferred to an Alabama unit so he could work on a Senate campaign for a friend of his father's. But some skeptics have speculated that Bush might have dropped out to avoid being tested for drugs. Which is where Air Force Regulation 160-23, also known as the Medical Service Drug Abuse Testing Program, comes in. The new drug-testing effort was officially launched by the Air Force on April 21, 1972, following a Jan. 11, 1972, directive issued by the Department of Defense. - - - - - - - - - - - -