Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) Report 1962 April 24 2015
Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1962 with a release date of Friday,
April 24, 2015 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1,
The following is a QST. An Australian ham radio floater balloon makes a
trip around the world; the FCC proposes new privacy rules for amateur radio
operators historical information; the 2014 CQ World Wide SSB contest
disqualifies some hams and warns others; Palmyra Atoll DX operation announced
for early 2016; Barbados warns CBers and hams not to use excessive power and
possibly the greatest selfie is taken by a ham radio operator on the I-S-S.
Find out who took it on Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1962 coming your
way right now.
(Billboard Cart Here)
**
HAM RADIO NEAR SPACE: AUSTRALIAN FLOATER BALLOON CIRCUMNAVIGATES THE GLOBE
After being released in Victoria Australia on Monday April 6th, a foil party
balloon called PS-41 has achieved the longest range in Project Picospace and
has circled the globe. This became official on Thursday April 16th as PS-41
crossed 144.903 degree longitude marking a completion of its epic voyage.
Bryan Pliatsios, VK3GR, of the WIA News reports:
--
[ Bryan ] The latest solar powered helium filled balloon PS-41 launched by
Andy Nguyen, VK3YT, on April 6, has an HF payload, transmitting 25mW on the
30 meter and 20 meter bands, sending WSPR spots and JT9 telemetry.
The high-attitude balloon PS-41 took a path over Tasmania , then south of
New Zealand , the southern tip of South America , directly over the South
Georgia and South Sandwich Islands , well south of Africa , and back across
to Australia . While south of Tasmania , it abruptly changed course to be on
a southerly track, but it has encircled the globe.
Another balloon PS-42 made its way to the Southern Pacific between New
Zealand and South America . These have been extensively tracked via JT9 by a
network in VK, ZL, South America and South Africa , and Ireland . WSPR spots
have as received all over the world.
--
[Anchor] In an earlier attempt, PS-42's sister balloon PS-30 went down on
January 16th in suspected poor weather off the east coast of Africa near
Madagascar .
(VK3PC)
**
RESCUE RADIO: NEW SPRATLYS INCIDENT DELAYS EMERGENCY EVACUATION OF SICK HAM
RADIO OPERATOR FROM PAG -ASA
The emergency medical evacuation of a sick amateur radio enthusiast from
Pag-asa Island was delayed for several days. This after a Chinese naval
vessel reportedly harassed a Philippine Air Force patrol flight in the
Spratly Islands on Monday, April 20th forcing the cancellation of other
flights to the disputed territory.
Leo Almazan, WA6LOS, is a member of the Mabuhay DX Group. He told
InterAksyon.com they had gone to Pag-asa to set up an amateur radio operation
and to test a portable solar power system in coordination with the
Philippine Navy Research and Development Center . They were also conduct a
small scale medical mission as one of their members is a doctor.
However, over the weekend, one of the team members, Chito Pastor, WW6CP,
came down with a kidney infection from drinking the highly saline local water
after the supply of drinking water the ham radio enthusiasts had brought with
them ran out. The morning of Monday, April 20th, Almazan said the Philippine
Navy was getting ready to send an Islander aircraft to fly Pastor off Pag-asa
for medical treatment. However, the mercy flight was cancelled after a
Chinese frigate fired an illumination round on a military patrol aircraft.
Almazan said that although the rescue aircraft was later cleared to fly to
Pag-asa on Wednesday morning, it developed engine problems and would be
delayed. He later said he had received another message from Navy
headquarters. It said that a civilian aircraft has been cleared to fly the
medical mission. Pastor was successfully evacuated to Puerto Princesa City
on April 23rd.
This would be the latest in a long string of run-ins over the Spratlys where
China has embarked on an aggressive reclamation and construction spree on
disputed islands and reefs. It follows an incident on April 13th where a
Chinese coast guard vessel fired water cannon on Filipino fishermen near
Scarborough Shoal.
(DO NOT READ: More is at
www.interaksyon.com/article/109278/new-spratlys-incident-delays-emergency-evac
uation-of-sick-ham-radio-enthusiast-from-pag-asa)
(interaksyon.com)
**
RADIO LAW: FCC PROPOSING NEW PRIVACY RULES FOR AMATEUR RADIO OPERATORS
HISTORICAL INFORMATION
The FCC has initiated a proceeding in WT Docket No. 15-81 to amend its rules
of organization. This as applied to amateur radio licensee address
information that is routinely available for public inspection.
Specifically, the FCC proposes to revise its rules to specify that past
amateur radio licensee address information will not be routinely available
for public inspection. To implement this change the FCC proposes to remove
from public view in the Universal Licensing System an amateur radio
licensee's address information that is not associated with a current license
or pending application. Current licensee address information would remain
public.
The FCC said in the Notice of Proposed Rule Making that it believes these
steps will enhance an Amateur Radio operators' privacy and doing so without
undermining the public interest in knowing who is authorized to operate on
amateur spectrum.
The Commission is also seeking comment on whether this approach should be
extended to individual licensees in any other Wireless Radio Services, such
as the General Mobile Radio Service, commercial radio operator licensees, and
individuals who hold ship station or aircraft station licenses.
Comments on WT Docket No. 15-81 are due by June 16th. Reply comments must
be filed by July 16th.
(FCC)
**
RADIOSPORTS: CQ WW SSB 2014 DISQUALIFICATIONS AND WARNINGS
The CQ World Wide Contest Committee has published a list of those amateurs
who were disqualified from the 2014 CQ World Wide SSB contest or who received
warnings for their operation. Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, has the details:
--
[Bill] The CQ World Wide contest site carries a statement that explains the
action. It says and we quote:
"The CQ World Wide Contest Committee takes its job as referee for the
contest very seriously. Each year a group of dedicated members spends many
hours pouring over logs, listening to S-D-R recordings, and following up on
input from the contest community. We do not always have perfect information
and it is difficult when each entrant is operating from their own station
without any outside observer. Even so, the logs and recordings often tell us
a clear story. It is our job as referees to call them as we see them."
The statement goes on to say that each disqualified entrant will have been
notified of the decision and given 5 days to respond. This is to allow
everyone the opportunity to present an explanation of what appears in the log.
For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, in the newsroom
in Los Angeles .
--
[Anchor] The CQ World Wide Contest is the largest Amateur Radio competition
in the world with over 30,000 participants. The list of disqualified
stations and those issued warnings is at tinyurl.com/cq-ww-ssb-2014-blog.
(CQ WW Blog)
**
DX UP FRONT: PALMYRA ATOLL DXPEDITION IN EARLY 2016
In DX up-front, Craig Thompson, K9CT, and Lou Dietrich, N2TU, have announced
that they will be heading up a DXpedition to Palmyra Atoll to take place in
January of 2016. With them will be a team of 12 highly experienced operators
and veterans of many DXpeditions. They plan to operate five stations over a
14 day period on 160 to 6 meters using all modes. A callsign for this
operation will be announced at a later date. Palmyra , which has the prefix
KH5, ranks in the top ten on the Most Wanted List and is number 2 most wanted
in Europe . More is on the web at Palmyra2016.org.
(OPDX)
**
DX UP FRONT: THREE 2015 OPERATIONS APPROVED FOR CREDIT
ARRL DX Advisory Committee Staff Liaison, Dave Patton, NN1N, reports that
several operations have been approved for DXCC credit. These are all in the
2015 time frame and include 3XY5M from Guinea , E30FB from Eritrea and C21EU
from Nauru . You can file for DXCC credit for working these operations now.
(DXCC)
**
BREAK 1
Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline,
heard on bulletin stations around the world including the including the K0
ASH repeater of the Ashland Amateur Radio Club in Ashland , Nebraska .
(5 SEC PAUSE)
**
ENFORCEMENT: LINDEN NJ POLICE TAKE UNLICENSED BROADCASTER OFF THE AIR
WITHOUT FCC HELP
The programs have stopped coming from an unlicensed radio station operating
out of a home in Linden , New Jersey . Amateur Radio Newsline's Stephen
Kinford, N8WB, has the details of how the station was taken off the air
without the intervention of the FCC:
--
[Stephen] On Monday, April 13th, officials from WKXW, likely better known
to its listeners as New Jersey 101.5 FM, contacted the city of Linden police
with a complaint that another station was operating illegally on a frequency
of 101.3 FM.
In a statement, Captain James Sarnicki said that the letter sent by 101.5 FM
indicated the station had conducted its own investigation. In doing so it
had identified the illegal transmission as coming from a private home and
included pictures of a large antenna on the roof. Station officials also
noted that they had received multiple listener complaints about bad reception
since the unlicensed station was interfering with their signal.
According to Captain Sarnicki, the Linden police contacted the FCC and were
old an investigation could take a couple weeks to complete. They then
reached out to the city's municipal code enforcement officials who found the
home violated zoning ordinances.
Under these regulations, the unidentified station operators would not be
allowed to run a business in a residential area. The antenna being more than
20 feet high qualified as an illegal structure on the roof.
Captain Sarnicki said police notified the homeowner of the complaint and
that summonses and fines would follow if the antenna stayed up and the
station continued operating. A few days later on April 15th New Jersey 101.5
FM was notified that the antenna was removed and the unlicensed transmitter
was off the air.
For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Stephen Kinford, N8WB, in Wadsworth ,
Ohio .
--
[Anchor] Operating an unlicensed radio station above a tiny power output and
without a license is a fourth-degree crime in New Jersey . It is one of two
states, along with Florida , where such an action is a criminal offense.
(NJ.com, other published News Reports)
**
ENFORCEMENT: BARBADOS WARNS CBERS AND HAMS NOT TO USE EXCESSIVE POWER
The Telecommunications Unit in the Barbados ' Division of Energy and
Telecommunications has reminded the island nation's amateur radio operators
and CB'ers that they must not operate their equipment at power levels which
exceed the legal limit.
Investigations of interference have revealed that some operators were using
between 1000 and 5000 watts. Telecommunications Officer, Ishmael Cadogan,
explained that some hobby CB'ers and amateur radio operators who were using
excessive power and this was causing interference with televisions, radios,
telephones and even pacemakers.
Both Cadogan and fellow Telecommunications Officer Jason Haynes stressed the
vital role that amateur radio and CB operators played, especially during the
hurricane season and other disasters. Haynes noted that there were fewer
issues with the amateur radio operators because of the requirements for
successfully obtaining a license. On the other hand, CB'ers simply had to
apply for a license.
There are 140 licensed CBers and 155 licensed amateur radio operators in
Barbados . Haynes said that while the interference problems being
experienced involved a select few, it was important to deal with the
offenders because of the impact their actions were having not only on their
communities but on fellow radio operators.
You can read more at
http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/66466/cbers-amateur-radio-operators-
warned
(nationnews.com)
**
RESCUE RADIO: ARRL HAM AID HF GEAR ARRIVES IN MICRONESIA
An ARRL Ham Aid kit of High Frequency gear has arrived in the Federated
States of Micronesia as part of a relief effort in the wake of Tropical
Cyclone Maysak. That storm ravaged many of the nation's islands in late
March and early April, wreaking major damage and causing some deaths.
According to the ARRL the Ham Aid equipment accompanied a shipment of other
radio gear, tools, and supplies that John Bush, KH6DLK/V63JB, took from
Hawaii to the storm devastated area.
In this case only the High Frequency gear was sent. Ham Aid kits containing
both High Frequency and VHF/UHF equipment had been shipped to Hawaii last
fall, as the massive Puna volcanic lava flow threatened some communities on
the Big Island .
The full ARRL story at
www.arrl.org/news/arrl-ham-aid-hf-gear-arrives-in-micronesia-in-wake-of-tropic
al-cyclone
(ARRL)
**
RESCUE RADIO: SPAIN HOLDS 6TH ANNUAL ENCE RESCUE RADIO EXERCISE
Spain 's 6th Emergency Communications National Exercise or ENCE was to be
held on Saturday April 18, from 16:00 to 17:00 UTC , and was open to
international participation.
This years ENCE was devoted to Voice over Internet Protocols that included
Echolink, IRLP, D-Star and System Fusion.
Aware that if a disaster occurs, the Internet can be one of the first
resources to fail in the affected area. But outside the immediate disaster
zone it is a very powerful emergency response tool to consider.
This years EMCE emphasized the use of technologies that allow attaching
radio and the Internet without sacrificing classic modes of communication.
The overall purpose of the exercise was to bring an opportunity to all those
radio amateurs interested in practicing operational skills.
More info in Spanish is at www.fediea.org/emergencias
(EMCE)
**
EDUCATION: HAM RADIO AT UNIVERSITIES GROWING IN IMPORTANCE IN EUROPE
Germany's national amateur radio society, the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club
or DARC reports that amateur radio groups in colleges and universities are of
growing interest in that nation. Amateur Radio Newsline's Bruce Tennant,
K6PZW has the details:
--
[Bruce] DARC Officer Annette Coenen, DL6SAK, and Joachim Posegga, DL7JP, of
the University of Passau say there are now 36 universities with ham radio
groups listed in the German speaking world. Also, these German universities
are being complemented by English speaking colleges in neighboring countries
such as Switzerland and Austria .
An e-mail network exists to facilitate the exchange of information on
planned amateur radio activities at the universities. The goal of this
link-up is to promote young talent and organize training courses.
A list of European universities with amateur radio groups can be found in
the German language posted at tinyurl.com/university-link-up.
For the Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Bruce Tennant, K6PZW, in Los Angeles .
--
[Anchor] The first in person meeting of participants in this project will
take place on Saturday, June 27th at the annual HAM RADIO convention in
Friedrichshafen , Germany .
( Southgate )
**
HAM HAPPENINGS: ZL100ANZA COMMEMORATING ANZAC DAY IN NEW ZEALAND
New Zealand telecommunications regulator Radio Spectrum Management has given
permission for use of the special call ZL100ANZA until May 26th. This to
assist hams in that nation to help commemorate the ANZAC centenary. Amateur
Radio Newsline's Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has more:
--
[Jim] Anzac Day is one of the most important national commemorative
occasions down-under. This year it marks the 100th anniversary of the first
major military action fought by Australian and New Zealand forces during the
First World War.
To commemorate the ANZAC centenary here in New Zealand , ZL100ANZAC will be
activated by a group of amateur radio operators, all of whom responded to
register interest in operating the callsign. Its operation will start on
April 25th at midday New Zealand time and will last of one month.
All logs will be collated by John Balsillie, ZL1ALZ and on a regular basis
posted to both Logbook of the World and Club Log to enable other operators to
check their QSOs.
The QSL manager is Phil Holliday, ZL3PAH. An Oh QRS will be available via
Club Log for both direct and bureau cards. Cards sent to the QSL manager
directly or via the bureau will also be accepted.
For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, down-under in
Nelson , New Zealand .
--
[Anchor] The acronym ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army
Corps, whose soldiers were known as Anzacs.
(NZART, Southgate )
**
NAMES IN THHE NEWS: ZS6SF AND ZS6QL ELECTED TO LEAD SARL
Some names in the news. The South Africa Radio League has elected Fritz
Sutherland, ZS6SF, as its President and Nico van Rensburg, ZS6QL, as its Vice
President. The voting took place at he first Council meeting following the
organizations Annual General Meeting that was held Saturday, April 18th.
(SARL)
**
NAMES IN THE NEWS: ZS6SGM GIVEN SARL ICOM EXCELLENCE AWARD
Also from South Africa comes word that the Icom Excellence Award, which is
considered the premier award of the South African Radio League, was presented
to Stewart Moss, ZS6SGM. Moss has been instrumental in getting the WSPR
propagation research off the ground, having supported several clubs and
individual amateurs experimenting with this mode. He is also credited with
having set up the ZS6SRL WSPR beacon, has written tutorials and analyzes the
results. All of this data will be included in reports to South Africa
telecommunications regulator ICASA.
(SARL)
**
NAMES IN THE NEWS: ASTRONAUT MIKE FINCKE KE5 AIT TO APPEAR AT DAYTON YOUTH
FORUM
According to Carole Perry, WB2 MGP , astronaut Mike Fincke, KE5 AIT , will
be coming to speak at her Dayton Hamvention Youth Forum. Also the American
Radio Relay League is sponsoring her eight young presenters attend a lunch
with him afterwards. They will be joined by other young hams chosen from the
audience. WB2 MGP 's Youth Forum is scheduled for Saturday, May 16th from
9:15 to 11:45 in Meeting Room 2 of the Hara Arena in Dayton , Ohio . The
full rundown of Hamvention 2015 forums is at Hamvention.org.
(WB2 MGP )
**
BREAK 2
This is ham radio news for today's radio amateur. We are the Amateur Radio
Newsline with links to the world from our only official website at
www.arnewsline.org and being relayed by the volunteer services of the
following radio amateur:
(5 sec pause here)
**
EMERGING TECHNOLOGY: NEW ALUMINUM BENDABLE BATTERY
Scientists have built a flexible aluminum battery which they say could be a
cheap, fast-charging and safe alternative to current designs.
The prototype consists of a soft pouch, containing aluminum for one
electrode and graphite foam for the other and all surrounded by a special
liquid salt. It can recharge in less than a minute and is very safe and
durable compared to lithium-ion batteries.
The only drawback is that the new design currently only delivers about half
the voltage but work is ongoing to improve this. On the plus side and unlike
other designs, this battery will not catch fire even if accidentally
punctured or drilled through.
The work appears in the journal Nature. You can find it at
tinyurl.com/aluminum-salt-battery
( BBC , Nature.com, Science Today)
**
HAM RADIO IN SPACE: FOX -1C AND FOX -1D INCLUDE L-BAND UPLINK
AMSAT has announced plans to incorporate a 23 centimeter L band receiver in
the Fox-1C and Fox-1D ham radio satellites. The addition will allow ground
commanded selection of the normal Fox-1VHF and UHF bands or the new L Band
1.2 GHz mode. Both bands will operate as FM single channel.
Rather than adding a complete new receiver, the L band "Project Downshifter"
will convert the received L band signal down to the Fox-1 uplink frequency
and feed it to the regular UHF receiver on the Fox-1 satellite. The design
will not require an additional antenna on the satellite because the existing
UHF antenna will work for L band receive as well.
(AMSAT)
**
HAM RADIO IN SPACE: HABEX-10 IS SET TO LAUNCH ON APRIL 25
The High Altitude Balloon Experiment or HABEX will be taking to the skies
for the 10th time on Saturday April 25th. The payload will include an APRS
tracker active on 144.800 MHz signing ZS6 COG dash 11, a simplex repeater on
438.550 MHz and s Slow Scan amateur television camera streaming still images
from altitude. It will operate on 433.400 MHz FM using the Scottie 1 mode.
This launch is part of the Global Space Balloon Challenge which sees more
than 250 balloon launches worldwide during April. For more information and
an information sheet on HABEX-10 visit the site www.habex.za.net.
(SARL, Southgate )
**
HAM RADIO IN SPACE: FUNCUBE-1 TRANSMITTING TELEMETRY ONCE AGAIN
FUNcube-1 also known as AO-73 is again transmitting telemetry. The CubeSat
had stopped transmitting at around 20:18 UTC on Wednesday, April 15th. A
restart took place during a pass over Europe at 09:30 UTC on Thursday, April
16th. Controllers are still investigating what caused the bird's telemetry
to go silent but they have concluded from earlier data transmissions that it
was safe to switch back to nominal operations.
( Southgate )
**
PROPAGATION STUDY: NEW FREQUENCY AND TRANSMITTER FOR GB3ANG BEACON
The GB3ANG 432MHz propagation beacon located just north of Dundee , Scotland
, has received a new transmitter. It has also altered its operating frequency
to 432.453 MHz to comply with the new IARU Region 1 band plan.
The changes were made on April 13th by the beacon keeper Allan Duncan,
GM4ZUK, with assistance from A.G. Marsden, GM4 FEI . The old beacon
transmitter had been built by Brian Flynn, GM8BJF, and was in continuous
service for 33 years.
There are three other beacons are co-located at GB3ANG transmitter site.
These are on 70, 144 and 1296 MHz but their operational parameters remain the
unchanged.
(GB2RS)
**
DX
In DX, S55OO will be active as 9H3OO from Malta between April 24th and May
2nd. His operation is on 40 through 6 meters using CW, SSB and the digital
modes. QSL via his home callsign, direct, by the bureau. Electronic QSL's go
via Logbook of the World and eQSL. Look for his location and some photos to
be posted on QRZ.com.
JH2DF, will be active as T88DF from the Republic of Palau between April 27th
and May 1st. Operations will be on the High Frequency bands and 50 MHz using
CW, SSB, RTTY, SSTV, WSPR and JT65A. QSL via his home callsign, direct, by
the Bureau, Logbook of he World and eQSL.
ON6VJ and ON1CH will be on the air stroke MJ from Jersey Island from May
14th to the 18th. Their operation will be on 160 through 6 meters using SSB
only. QSL via each operator's home callsign.
DL2RPS will be active as S79RPS from the Anse National Park on Praslin
Island between May 2nd and the 8th. This operation will be on 80 through 10
meters using CW and SSB, depending on conditions. QSL via his home callsign,
direct by the bureau. Electronic QSL's go via eQSL or the OQRS on ClubLog.
F4WBN will be operational as 5U5U from Niger between May 30th and June 16th.
Activity will be holiday style on 40 through 6 meters using SSB and some
RTTY. QSL via his home callsign direct only.
Lastly, IU2CIQ, IZ1UJE and IZ1ZHG will be on the air from Monaco as 3A
stroke IU2CIQ between June 5th and the 7th. Activity will be on 80 through
10 meters using mainly SSB, but some CW and RTTY. QSL 3A/IU2CIQ via IU2CIQ
via the bureau,. Cards for IZ1UJE direct or electronically using Logbook of
the World.
(This weeks DX news courtesy of the Ohio-Penn DX Newsletter)
**
THAT FINAL ITEM: IZ0UDF SPECTACULAR SELFIE FROM THE ISS
And finally this week, almost everyone on Earth has taken a selfie in
various locations and occasions. But International Space Station astronaut
Samantha Cristoforetti, IZ0UDF, has made every selfie-taker jealous of her
out-of-this-world photo as we hear from Amateur Radio Newsline's Heather
Embee, KB3TZD:
--
[Heather] Samantha Cristoforetti, IZ0UDF, is an Italian astronaut from
European Space Agency currently living and working on the International Space
Station. On Friday, April 17th, she shared her selfie on Twitter taken on
board the orbiting space laboratory. In it, Cristoforetti was dressed as
Captain Kathryn Janeway of Star Trek: Voyager, with a tiny ISS pin in place
of the traditional chevron. Over her shoulders through a viewing window is
the Space X Dragon cargo craft that delivers supplies to space station crews.
The text of her tweet is an in-joke that fans of the Voyager series will
recognize. In the fifth episode, titled The Cloud, when Janeway's told that
there's energy in a nearby nebula she quips about her favorite beverage.
Followers were giving thumbs up to her selfie, saying that she looks a lot
like the famous Delta Quadrant pioneer of the Starfleet.
As well as carrying out an extremely busy science program in Europe's
Columbus laboratory, IZ0UDF has been busy with the final ATV-5 cargo vehicle
and the new SpaceX and Orbital vehicles as well as supporting multiple
space-walks. She has also found time to operate one of the ARISS ham radio
stations on-board the ISS.
For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Heather Embee, KB3TZD, in Berwick
Pennsylvania .
--
[Anchor] Samantha Cristoforetti is aboard the ISS to perform several
scientific experiments in the space stations microgravity laboratory. Her
team's study is part of the Futura mission which was launched in November
2014. She will return to Earth in mid-May.
( ESA , dailytimesgazette.com)
**
NEWSCAST CLOSE
With thanks to Alan Labs, AMSAT, the ARRL, CQ Magazine, the FCC, the Ohio
Penn DX Bulletin, Rain, the RSGB, the South African Radio League, the
Southgate News, TwiT-TV , Australia 's WIA News and you our listeners, that's
all from the Amateur Radio Newsline. Our e-mail address is newsline (at)
arnewsline (dot) org. More information is available at Amateur Radio
Newsline's only official website located at www.arnewsline.org. You can also
write to us or support us at Amateur Radio Newsline, 28197 Robin Avenue ,
Santa Clarita California , 91350.
Before we go, a reminder that Amateur Radio Newsline is seeking nominations
for its 2015 Young Ham of the Year Award. For consideration, a nominee must
have used amateur radio in some way that has benefited his or her community
or encouraged technological development directly or indirectly related to
communications.
Nominees must be 19 years or younger, and reside in the United States
including Hawaii , Alaska and Puerto Rico , or any of the Canadian Provinces.
The individual must also hold a currently valid United States or Canadian
Amateur Radio license.
The deadline for submitting an application is May 30th 2015 and the decision
of the judging committee is final. To obtain an application, send a self
addressed, stamped envelope to 2015 Young Ham of the Year Award, in care of
Amateur Radio Newsline, 28197 Robin Ave. Santa Clarita , CA 91350 . You can
also download a form in Microsoft Word format at www.arnewsline.org/yhoty,
clicking on the word "here" and saving the file to print at a later time.
Presentation of the 2015 Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of the Year Award
will take the weekend of August 15 and 16 at the Huntsville Hamfest in
Huntsville Alabama .
For now, with producers Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, in Los Angeles plus our news
team world wide, I'm Skeeter Nash, N5 ASH , saying 73 and as always we thank
you for listening.
Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2015. All rights reserved.
***
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