Word: presbyterian
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Personal anecdotal testimony is more emphatic. "This year has been the worst," pronounces Marina Gomes, 36, of Monroe, N.Y. Her head is constantly stuffed, her eyes water and itch, and she can't sleep. "It's horrible," she says. Dr. William Davis, director for pediatric allergies at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City, calls 1992 the worst year in a decade. He says he is seeing patients who have not suffered such nasty symptoms for years, and his first-time visits...
Most people use the term allergic freely, but often confuse allergies with other conditions that produce similar symptoms. Surveys have shown that as many as 70% of Americans believe they are allergic to at least one particular food. "That's absolute nonsense," says Columbia Presbyterian's Davis. "The actual number is less than...
...damaged the steering gear, but Fuchida couldn't take his eyes off the fiery death throes of the Arizona. "A huge column of dark red smoke rose to 1,000 ft., and a stiff shock wave rocked the plane," he recalled years later, when he had become a Presbyterian missionary. "It was a hateful, mean-looking red flame, the kind that powder produces, and I knew at once that a big magazine had exploded. Terrible indeed...
Bucking its Mormon, conservative traditions last week, Salt Lake City made Deedee Corradini, a Lebanese-born Presbyterian, its first woman mayor. Corradini, who had never held office before, scored a 55% to 45% victory over Republican Dave Buhler, director of Utah's Department of Commerce. Gender was never an issue in the campaign, where crime and pocketbook concerns prevailed. And Corradini worked so hard to keep the race nonpartisan that when state Republicans held their convention a few months ago, she set up a booth among them to attract support. The mayor-elect's female supporters couldn't help crowing...
...federal bureaucrat, Hoover had thought of becoming a Presbyterian minister before he was hired by the Justice Department as a clerk in July 1917. He so blatantly cultivated an image of pious rectitude that one wit dubbed him "that Virgin Mary in pants." In reality, Hoover was permanently on the take: he decorated his home at government expense, funneled royalties from his ghostwritten books into a private slush fund, accepted free vacations in Florida and California from toadying millionaires. Hoover had no qualms about using gossip about clandestine homosexual encounters for blackmail. Meanwhile, he was seen so often...