Panasonic Viera TH-58PZ800 58in Plasma TV
The News Review:
- Panasonic Viera TH-58PZ800 58in Plasma TV
- Diamondbacks 5, Rockies 3: Drew’s Your Daddy?
- Step Into Africa
- Recent CVHS Grads Play Important Roles in ‘Carousel’
- ND telepharmacy project expands across nation
Panasonic Viera TH-58PZ800 58in Plasma TV
TrustedReviews, UK
Colour compatibility. Plus theres a digital audio output, and an SD card slot that can play AVCHD video as well as JPEG images. As we noted in our review of the smaller 50PZ800, its a shame you cant also record to SD cards in the 58PZ800s slot, but who knows; maybe this will happen on next years range. The 58PZ800s screen specifications look pretty awesome too, with a Full HD pixel count being joined in imperious fashion by a claimed contrast ratio of one million to one. Yes, thats 1,000,000:1. Admittedly, this is only possible with the screens dynamic brightness mode in operation, but even the screens native contrast ratio is 30,000:1 enough to have grown LCD TVs crying like babies.
Diamondbacks 5, Rockies 3: Drew’s Your Daddy?
AZ Snake Pit, AZ
Good way to grind any enthusiasm for sport out of those on the receiving end. From there, it was on to a BBQ, accompanied by a healthy dose of 80’s nostalgia, in a variety of ways: audio, visual and a game of the Totally 80’s edition of Trivial Pursuit. I was somewhat hampered here, having grown up in the United Kingdom during that decade, which was clearly a different place from that inhabited by the writers of the questions. Still, much fun was had, entirely unencumbered by any concerns about the Arizona Diamondbacks. We are now back home, having paused only to pick up some ant genocide chemicals, having discovered a colony of the little critters marching in to our bedroom this morning. They are a good deal less cute when nibbling on your toes, than in Pixar CGI-animated movies, let me tell you. Anyway, I guess you are here because you to want to hear about the game, not our pest-control issues or relive my teenage years.
Step Into Africa
Jamestown Post Journal, NY
”And be careful when you care for your mother’s open sores. Put this cream on them daily. ”Fred, acting like a grown man at such a young age, thanks the nurse and the boys return home. Their mother finishes the pills in only a couple of days, and despite the passion of the boys to nurse their mother back to health, she gets sicker. The coughs become more violent and disturbing and the boys sell their few belongings to try to buy more medicine, but it seems as if fate dealt them a raw deal, as their mother dies on the floor underneath a dirty blanket. The boys, scared and alone in the world, wrap her in more blankets and carry her body to a beautiful banana grove, not far from the house. It is there where they dig a hole and lay her inside.
Recent CVHS Grads Play Important Roles in ‘Carousel’
CastroValleyForum.com, CA
With a cast of 60, DirectorDavid Judson calls the show aperfect synergy of professionalactors and home-grown talent. Kat Botz, Class of 07, commutesfrom UCLA to fill the demandingjob of stage manager,the go-to person for cast andcrew. She discovered her love forthe management side of theaterwork when she took the CVHStechnical theater class. Last year, as a UCLA freshman,Botz returned to the CVCenter for the Arts to stage-manageOklahoma.
ND telepharmacy project expands across nation
Washington Observer Reporter, PA
“That’s the point of a telepharmacy. North Dakota lawmakers opened the door for the telepharmacy project by passing legislation in 2001, after dozens of rural pharmacies went out of business. The project began with 10 volunteer sites in 2002 and has grown to 67 locations. The idea is catching on. States that have changed laws to allow for remote pharmacies include Alaska, Idaho, Illinois, Montana, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Wyoming, along with the District of Columbia. More are on the way, according to the leader of North Dakota’s project. “We get calls every day from other states,” said Ann Rathke, director of telepharmacy at North Dakota State University in Fargo.