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date: 2017-12-15 08:38:00
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Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2094 for Friday, December 15, 2017

Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2094 with a release date of Friday, 
December 15, 2017 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. Hams respond to the California wildfires. A 
group of Jewish radio operators make a wish at Hanukkah -- and in 
Illinois, a terminally ill ham gets the gift of a lifetime. All this and 
more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2094 comes your way right now.

**

BILLBOARD CART

**

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES SPUR HAM RESPONSE

DON/ANCHOR: We open this week's newscast with a report about amateur 
radio response to the California wildfires. As Amateur Radio Newsline 
went to production, firefighters were still struggling to contain the 
massive Thomas Fire in southern California, where residents were being 
evacuated. As more evacuations were being planned on account of winds 
spreading the blaze, the need for ham assistance remained an open 
situation, especially in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. Hams were 
actively supporting shelter communications and staffing at least four 
evacuation centers. Amateur Radio Newsline will continue to follow this 
story and updates will be posted on our Facebook page and on Twitter.


**
AMATEURS NOT SNOWED BY WINTER WEATHER IN U.S. SOUTH

DON/ANCHOR: In other extremes of weather, hams stepped up recently to 
the challenge of major snow in the American South as we hear from 
Stephen Kinford N8WB.

STEPHEN'S REPORT: The weather system that dumped the earliest snow that 
portions of Alabama have had in 54 years may have defied all reliable 
and trusted weather models but it was no match for amateur radio. The 
Dec. 8 snowfall surprised broadcast meteorologists and many at the 
National Weather Service but hams had already got down to helping the 
Alabama Emergency Management Agency pass along traffic from their 
various posts at EOC stations around the state. Hams staffing WA4EMA in 
Tuscaloosa County passed traffic to ARES members in the field across 
western Alabama throughout the day. One of the state's primary SKYWARN 
repeaters, the regional 2-meter station W4CUE in Birmingham, passed 
along reports that went to the Birmingham National Weather Service. In 
the east, WB4GNA, Alabama's highest 2-meter repeater at Cheaha 
(CHEE-HAH) Mountain, got reports from the east and west and even from 
Georgia.

The Alabama State ARES Net frequencies were also buzzing, especially 
into Saturday as the snowfall was being tallied up.

By Sunday, the city of Jacksonville Alabama had the distinction of the 
highest snowfall recorded - 12 inches - in Alabama. Jacksonville is 
located just west of the Georgia border. The rare snowfall turned out to 
be tough sledding for many in Alabama except, of course, the hams.

For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Stephen Kinford N8WB.

(BOBBY BEST WX4ALA)

**
VISITING AS A MOBILE IN NEW BRUNSWICK? NOT SO FAST

DON/ANCHOR: If your travels have you thinking of operating mobile from 
Canada's province of New Brunswick, Kent Peterson KC0DGY has this 
cautionary tale.

KENT: Since 1952 Canadian and American Amateur Radio licensees have been 
able to operate in each others countries. But the language in a recently 
passed distracted driving law in the province of New Brunswick allows 
mobile radio operation to only licensed Canadian hams.  Newsline spoke 
with George Dewar VY2GF who lives in the neighboring province, Prince 
Edward Island.

GEORGE: I think the American amateurs should know that if they come to 
New Brunswick and use their microphone here that they could be held in 
violation of the highway traffic act.  News Brunswick was the only one 
that came up with this business you can't use a microphone in a car 
There were certain exceptions like a CB in a semi trailer was OK, you 
could use it for commercial purposes.

KENT:  Dewar points out driving regulations are not set by the Canadian 
federal government and can vary from province to province.

GEORGE:  I think somebody would be doing a great service if they could 
draw up a matrix of Canadian provinces of what the rules are and how you 
might be caught in them.

KENT: Dewar hopes a ham organization might be able to influence perhaps 
the New Brunswick tourism ministry.

GEORGE:  The third biggest industry here in Prince Edward Island is 
tourism.  If the minister of tourism in New Brunswick got wind of the 
ARRL putting out a press release saying the 750,000 licensed amateurs in 
the US were to avoidance going to new Brunswick they'd get the message.

KENT: And Dewar shared with me his opinion of the new regulation.

GEORGE:  The legislation is ill conceived and what the did was declared 
amateurs who have a long history of public service to be idiots, and as 
far as I'm concerned only an idiot texts while driving.

KENT: Reporting for Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.


**

GRANTING ONE HAM'S FINAL WISH

DON/ANCHOR: Wish fulfillment holds a special place in everyone's hearts 
at this time of year. For one terminally ill amateur radio operator, the 
fulfillment of a wish to get on the air one more time meant everything, 
as we hear from Paul Braun WD9GCO.

PAUL: Spending time listening to certain parts of 20, 40 and 80 meters 
often makes you wonder about our hobby. But then something happens that 
reminds you why a lot of us got into amateur radio in the first place. 
The story of John Nugent, WA2EQJ, will hopefully restore your faith in 
your fellow hams.

I spoke with Chris Brown, NY9X, of the Lake County, Illinois RACES 
organization about how granting a dying Vietnam veteran a final wish 
came to happen:

BROWN:  John is at the Federal Health Center over here at Great Lakes 
and has cancer and apparently does not have much time left. He had 
talked to his caseworker about being a ham radio operator and his love 
for the hobby. He’s been a ham for most of his life. He had a wish of 
getting on the air one more time and so the case worker started asking 
around as to how we could get this done, is there anybody who would be 
willing to help?

PAUL: They finally got in touch with the hams at RACES who quickly came 
up with a plan to make that possible:

BROWN: Our guys went over and set up a wire antenna outside on the 
grounds of the hospital and ran the coax in the front door and had a 
table there. They brought him down. We had a radio that was there — he 
loves his Yaesu so they brought that down and just set it on the table 
next to him.

PAUL: Brown next went looking for possible contacts:

BROWN: I just went down the band - I went down 20 meters and there was a 
QSO just wrapping up. There was a guy from California and I broke in and 
said, “Hey, is there any chance you can do me a favor and come up the 
band?” I explained what was going on, that we were Lake County RACES, 
and before I knew it he was already up there and he was almost like net 
control for 10, 15 minutes with John.

PAUL: The afternoon was a success and created a definite bright spot in 
the final days of the long life of one ham.

BROWN: His son was on the air too and just thanked everybody and said 
the expression on John’s face was fantastic with what he could do and he 
was talking.

PAUL: Hams helping another ham in time of need. That, at the core, is 
what this hobby is about. All of us here at Amateur Radio Newsline will 
keep John Nugent and his family in our thoughts as he nears the end of 
his journey.  For Amateur Radio Newsline, I’m Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

**

SPOTTING THE SUNSPOTS OF LONG AGO

DON/ANCHOR: It is said that there is nothing new under the sun - or even 
inside the sun, as Mike Askins KE5CXP tells us.

MIKE: Sunspot patterns, it seems, have been a human obsession for at 
least 200 years -- at least that's what can be believed from a recent 
discovery made in the state of Maine.

A report that appears on Space.com tells of a journal found inside a 
small house in that New England state with pages containing writings 
from some 200 years ago. The subject? Sunspots!

The journal's contents in an academic paper coauthored recently by solar 
scientist William Denig of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration and historian Michael McVaugh of the University of North 
Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The 19th century devoted sun-watcher was a Congregational minister named 
Jonathan Fisher. The clergyman had at one time practiced a more 
scientific look at the heavens as a math and science student at Harvard 
University in the 18th century. When he graduated, however, he took up 
the clerical cloth. Still, he never forgot his lessons in science and 
when the Northern Hemisphere experienced what historians recall as a 
"year without a summer" in 1816, the reverend kept meticulous drawings 
of his observations in those now-faded pages.

Clearly we have more advanced ways of tracking sunspots now but it's a 
comfort to know we hams aren't the only ones who have a tradition of 
keeping a watchful and sometimes nervous eye on the sky.

For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Mike Askins KE5CXP


(SPACE.COM)


**

BREAK HERE

Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline 
heard on bulletin stations around the world including the N5OZG repeater 
in New Orleans, Louisiana on Sundays at 8 p.m.

**
HAMS HOPING FOR A HANUKKAH MIRACLE

DON/ANCHOR: A group of Jewish amateur radio operators has big hopes for 
reviving a very old - and very beloved - net. Neil Rapp WB9VPG has that 
story.

NEIL: The Jewish holiday known as Hanukkah is about miracles and one 
group of amateurs is hoping for a miracle or at least an unexpected 
opportunity to restart a beloved net begun long ago that linked Jewish 
amateurs across the miles.

BOB: The organization was called Chaverim and it’s for Jewish hams, as 
we call ourselves the kosher hams. The organization had existed for many 
years. About 3 or 4 years ago because many of the members were getting 
old, the organization was more or less dissolved, although we did 
continue the nets.

NEIL: That was Bob Schoenfeld, WA2AQQ. With only one chapter left and 
with original members growing older a Facebook group tried to resurrect 
more at one point. Bob has another suggestion too:

BOB: We have been trying to get younger members. If they want to… If 
anybody’s interested when they hear this, they can contact me at my 
call, WA2AQQ@arrl.net and I will get in touch with them and we can 
arrange, you know, for either meeting… eyeball meetings, or eyeball 
QSOs, or whatever. If things are looking good I can even arrange, since 
I don’t have any equipment over here except that I can get on Echolink 
with my tablet or my cell phone, I might be able to arrange an Echolink 
net to start again.

NEIL: Again, if you have an interest in reviving this net for Kosher 
hams, contact Bob at wa2aqq@arrl.net. Reporting for Amateur Radio 
Newsline, I'm Neil Rapp WB9VPG.

**
RADIO SCOUTS FILE FINAL JOTA REPORT

DON/ANCHOR: Radio scout activations are fairly quiet this week but 
there's still Jamboree news, as we hear from Bill Stearns NE4RD.

BILL'S REPORT: This week in Radio Scouting, it's quiet on the activation 
front as the winter holiday season sets in, however we have our final 
report out for JOTA 2017, we're looking towards JOTA 2018, and we talk 
about a new callsign becoming active.

JOTA 2017 numbers are in for the U.S., and activity was down from 2016, 
but they were right in line with 2014 & 2015.  7,872 scouts, 4,753 
vistors and 958 Amateur Radio Operators, making 7,177 recorded contacts, 
made up the U.S. reportable numbers for this year.  The feedback and 
comments received will go a long way into improving the guides we have 
for leaders and the advice we can pass on to future activators for 
making your event a success.

With 2017 in the can, we have 10 months to prepare for JOTA 2018. It's 
time to take stock in what worked and what didn't.  I, for one, will 
have to think about planning for wind in my 2018 activation.  We were 
being hit by 25 to 40 mph winds at the park where we had our event, 
causing some of our equipment to go airborne.  What changes are you 
going to implement in your 2018 plan?  Now is the time to start that 
planning.

A few people have started following some of the early chatter from the 
@NA1WJ_Scouting's twitter account.  NA1WJ (or North America 1 World 
Jamboree) is the currently planned callsign and source of information on 
the radio scouting activation at the 2019 World Jamboree being held at 
The Summit in West Virginia.  World Jamboree is held every four years at 
locations around the globe, and this time it has landed in North 
America.  Please follow NA1WJ and K2BSA on this journey to make the 
World Jamboree a spotlight event for Scouting, STEM, and Amateur Radio.

For more information on radio scouting, please visit our website at 
www.k2bsa.net.

For Amateur Radio Newsline and the K2BSA Amateur Radio Association, this 
is Bill Stearns, NE4RD

**
GERMANY OPTS OUT OF NEW ENTRY LEVEL LICENSE

DON/ANCHOR: It looks like hams in Germany won't be seeing a new entry 
level license anytime soon, as we hear from Ed Durrant DD5LP.

ED'S REPORT: Hopeful radio enthusiasts who were counting on the 
introduction of a new entry level amateur radio license in Germany are 
going to have to wait a little longer - in fact, they're going to have 
to wait indefinitely.

The license won't be happening, despite the fact that recent reports 
from Germany show that licensing is on the decline in that nation. 
Statistics show Germany having a peak of 80,000 licensed amateurs in 
2002. By 2015 the number of license holders had slipped to 67,349.

In recent years, the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club, or DARC, has been 
promoting amateur radio among young people and has been offering a free 
online training course. Figures show an increase in 2015 in the numbers 
of applicants taking license exams but, for now, there will be no 
entry-level category for radio operators.

For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Ed Durrant DD5LP.

(SOUTHGATE)

**
EVEN SANTA NEEDS A BREAK

DON/ANCHOR: If this time of year has you believing in reindeer that fly 
and a bearded ham in a big red suit, you may want to hear this report 
from John Williams VK4JJW.

JOHN'S REPORT: Where does Santa Claus stop to refuel on his journeys? If 
you said eastern Europe, that correct response would land you squarely 
on his "nice" list. A special event station in Romania, featuring Santa 
and his elves, is on the bands all month with the call signs YP2XMAS 
through YP9XMAS as well as YP0XMAS. The event is being sponsored by the 
Romanian Radioclub Association, which will also send QSL cards along 
with awards that are delivered electronicallly to any station working at 
least three different YP XMAS call signs. Sorin YO2MSB will be among 
those to reprise the role of Santa - and yes, he'll have his elves with 
him. Join the pileup and your name will be entered in this year's Yule Log.

For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm John Williams VK4JJW.

(ROMANIAN RADIOCLUB ASSOCIATION)

**
WORLD OF DX

In the world of DX, be listening for lots of signals coming from 
Vietnam. Dirk, DF2XG, is active as 3W9XG from Hai Phong where he is 
working as a project manager for an industrial venture. Listen for him 
on 40 meters through 10 meters. He will be running 20 watts and 
operating CW. For QSL information, visit QRZ.com.

Also in Vietnam is John KB4FB, who will begin operating as 3W9FB from Da 
Nang sometime in early January. He will then move on to Laos and operate 
as XW4FB before returning to Vietnam in February. He will be on a number 
of different HF bands throughout. Send QSLs via LoTW. QSOs will be 
uploaded to LoTW in March 2018.

In the Gambia, Przemyslaw, SP3PS, will be active as C5/SP3PS between the 
30th of December and the 12th of January. Listen for him on 40, 20 and 
10 meters. Send QSLs via his home callsign.

**

KICKER: 'TWAS THE END OF THIS WEEK'S NEWSCAST

DON/ANCHOR: Finally, we hope you enjoyed the holiday gift Amateur Radio 
Newsline gave you last year at this same time because, well....we're 
giving you the same gift again this year as we close this week's 
newscast. It's the popular amateur radio interpretation of a Clement 
Clarke Moore classic -- and we promise to deliver with no QRM. Here's 
Jim Damron N8TMW:

JIM: Twas the night before Christmas and all through the shack
The rig was turned off and the mic cord lay slack

The antenna rotor had made its last turn, the tubes in the linear had 
long ceased to burn.

I sat there relaxing and took off my specs, preparing to daydream of 
Armchair DX
When suddenly outside I heard such a sound, I dashed out the door to see 
what was around.

The moon shone down brightly and lighted the night. For sure propagation 
for the low bands was right.

I peered toward the roof where I heard all the racket and there was some 
guy in a red, fur-trimmed jacket!

I stood there perplexed in a manner quite giddy: Just who WAS this 
stranger? di di dah dah di dit?

He looked very much like an FCC guy who'd come to check up on some bad TVI.

I shouted to him: "Old man...QR-Zed?"
"Hey you by the chimney all dressed up in red!"

I suddenly knew when I heard sleigh bells jingle
The guy on the rooftop was Jolly Kris Kringle

He had a big sack full of amateur gear which was a big load for his 
prancing reindeer.
Transmitters, receivers, for cabinets and racks
Some meters and scopes and a lot of co-ax.

He said not a word 'cause he'd finished his work.
He picked up his sack and he turned with a jerk.
As he leaped to his sleigh, he shouted with glee
And I knew in a moment he'd be QRT.

I heard him transmit as he flew o'er the trees
"Merry Christmas to all, and to all seventy-three."

"Ho Ho Ho"

(over Santa):  For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Damron, N8TMW.

**

NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Alan Labs; Bobby Best WX4ALA; the Capital 
Gazette; CQ Magazine; Hap Holly and the Rain Report; Mark Bova W2PAW; 
Ohio-Penn DX Bulletin; Romanian Radioclub Association; Southgate Amateur 
Radio News; Space.com; Ted Randall's QSO Radio Show; Wireless Institute 
of Australia; WTWW Shortwave; and you our listeners, that's all from the 
Amateur Radio Newsline. Please send emails to our address at 
newsline@arnewsline.org. More information is available at Amateur Radio 
Newsline's only official website at www.arnewsline.org.

For now, with Caryn Eve Murray, KD2GUT, at the news desk in New York, 
and our news team worldwide, I'm Don Wilbanks AE5DW in Picayune, 
Mississippi saying 73 and as always we thank you for listening.

Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2017. All rights reserved.


***

As a Service to the HAM Radio Community and HAM Operators all over the world,
this Amateur Radio Newline(tm) message has been gated from the internet and
posted to you by Waldo's Place USA, fidonet node 1:3634/12. We hope you
enjoyed it!

Please address all comments and questions to the ARNewsletter editor as
described in this posting. If you have any specific questions related to the
actual posting of this message, you may address them to
hamfdn(at)wpusa.dynip.com.

Thank you and good day!

-73- ARNTE-0.1.0-OS2 build 42
(text/plain utf-8 quoted-printable)


* Origin: (1:3634/12)

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