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   Message 2,294 of 3,036   
   ARNewsline poster to all   
   arnewsline   
   01 Sep 16 23:02:38   
   
   Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2027 with a release date of Friday,    
   Sept. 2, 2016 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.   
      
   The following is a QST. There's a new National Park for hams to    
   activate. A special event station finds two Indiana ham clubs marking a    
   special air show. Youngsters in South Africa sample the International    
   Lighthouse and Lightship weekend. And hams are at the ready as weather    
   threatens the Atlantic Coast and Hawaii. All of this coming your way in    
   Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2027.   
      
   ***   
      
   BILLBOARD CART HERE   
      
      
   ****   
   U.S. HAMS PREP FOR HOLIDAY WEEKEND'S TROPICAL STORMS   
      
   SKEETER/ANCHOR: Our newscast opens this week as more storms threaten to    
   bear down in different parts of the U.S. As Amateur Radio Newsline went    
   to production, hams were going into a state of preparedness, as we hear    
   from Amateur Radio Newsline's Bobby Best, WX4ALA.   
      
   BOBBY: Multiple tropical systems are poised to affect the U.S. over the    
   next 48-plus hours, and amateur radio operators in multiple states have    
   been called on to assist with emergency communications. The area of    
   greatest concern, right now, is Tropical Storm Hermine in the Gulf of    
   Mexico and it's sitting, like a cocked pistol aimed at Apalachicola,    
   Tallahasse, and areas near this region of the Florida Panhandle.   
      
   Late Wednesday night, The National Hurricane Center issued hurricane    
   Warnings for coastal and inland areas from; just East of Panama City,    
   East to Cross City, Florida as well as inland areas that include 9    
   counties due north of this coastal region up to the Florida/Georgia    
   State Line. Outside of this hurricane Warning area, there are tropical    
   storm Warnings from Eglin Air Force Base, east along the coast to just    
   North of Tampa and then North and East including the Dothan, Alabama    
   area and parts of Southern, Georgia, plus a tropical storm Watch is in    
   effect up into portions of southern South Carolina.   
      
   Tuesday in a press conference, Florida Governor Rick Scott said;     
   "our state emergency operations center (or E.O.C.) is at level 2 and we    
   have 8,000 members of The National Guard ready to be mobialized, if we    
   need them"...   
      
   Florida ARES has been activated and members are manning the state EOC.    
   Additionally, over 50 counties in Florida have already been declared to    
   be under a state of emergency and Emergency Management and ARES on the    
   county level across much of Florida have their County EOCs activated and    
   manned by hams also. Plus WX4NHC, the amateur station at The National    
   Hurricane Center is active through The NHC NET on; 20-Meters at 14.325    
   with their primary NET. For additional information on The NHC NET, vist    
   their website at; WX4NHC.org.   
      
   Beyond the current watches and warnings that cover up to 48 hours out,    
   with landfall anticipated late Thursday night, as a Category 1    
   hurricane, the tract of Hermine takes it up the East Coast, North of    
   Washington D.C. up to the New York State area late Sunday when it should    
   start to make an Eastward turn, according to the latest model data.   
      
   If Hermine wasn't enough, hams in Hawaii are bracing for not one but two    
   tropical systems over the next 72 hours. Tropical Storm Madeline is    
   tracking south of the big island of Hawaii, moving westward, as of    
   Wednesday night, local Hawaii time, and is predicted to lose strength.    
   However, behind Madeline is Hurricane Lester. Lester is expected to move    
   across the main Hawaii islands as Category 1 Hurricane, between Saturday    
   and Sunday and as it tracks Northwestward, across the islands, it should    
   continue to weaken.   
      
   ARES members in Hawaii are already activated, in support of the big    
   island effort with Tropical Storm Madeline and additional ARES members    
   will be activated, as needed to support emergency communication efforts    
   through Lester's track through the islands. FEMA has been and continue    
   to fly in supplies to the islands.   
      
   Without a doubt, this will be a very active holiday weekend for hams!!!    
   If this weren't enough though; a new tropical wave has formed in the far    
   Eastern Atlantic. This tropical wave was located a few hundred miles    
   West of the Cabo Verde Islands. This wave will bear watching, around the    
   time our current storms are clearing out and the wave is reaching the    
   Lesser Antilles.   
      
   Reporting from Jasper, Alabama I'm Bobby Best, WX4ALA.   
      
   SKEETER/ANCHOR: Meanwhile in India, monsoonal rains have led to deadly    
   flooding and amateurs have been activated to provide emergency    
   communications. At least 300 have lost their lives as villages in the    
   eastern region were evacuated and residents sought higher ground. In    
   central India, Jayu VU2JAU reports that hams have been deployed to help    
   prevent flood-related accidents as the water levels deepen.The Ganges    
   River floods are reported to have broken previous records, as water    
   levels reached unprecedented levels at four locations in the north. The    
   highest record was measured in the state of Bihar, where flood waters    
   reached 50.52 meters, or 166 feet, as of August 26.   
      
   (WIRELESS INSTITUTE OF AUSTRALIA, BBC)   
      
      
   **   
      
   IN MAINE, A NEW NATIONAL MONUMENT TO ACTIVATE   
      
   SKEETER/ANCHOR: The United States' National Parks system is celebrating    
   its centennial by welcoming amateur radio operators into the parks from    
   coast to coast to work the bands and possibly the world. Now there's one    
   more scenic wilderness to consider, thanks to a gift from a foundation    
   created by a multimillionaire businesswoman. Amateur Radio Newsline's    
   Heather Embee, KB3TZD, tells us more.   
      
   HEATHER: Just call it MN84. The nation's newest national monument within    
   the U.S. National Parks Service is much more than that, of course. It's    
   not quite 87,500 acres in northern Maine and it will be known as the    
   Katahdin (Kuh-TAH-Din) Woods and Waters National Monument. The land    
   donation, valued at $100 million, was given to the federal government by    
   Elliotsville Plantation Inc., a foundation created by philanthropist    
   Roxanne Quimby, who created the property over a period of years by    
   buying parcels up from lumber companies. It is not far from Maine's    
   Baxter State Park and Mount Katahdin, the highest peak in Maine.   
      
   National Parks on the Air participants are now able to make plans for    
   the site, which features the east branch of the Penobscot River and a    
   section of the Maine Woods popular among cross-country skiers,    
   snowshoers, canoers and fishing enthusiasts. Add to that list now all    
   those amateur radio operators who will no doubt soon be setting their    
   sights on MN84.   
      
   For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Heather Embee, KB3TZD.   
      
   (WLBZ-TV, NATIONAL PARKS SERVICE)   
      
   **   
      
   SPECIAL EVENT STATION HIGHLIGHTS INDIANA AIR SHOW   
      
   SKEETER/ACHOR: Pilots and amateur radio operators share a love of being    
   on the air, so the combination seemed natural for one special event    
   station in Indiana. Amateur Radio Newsline's Neil Rapp, WB9VPG, tells us    
   how hams and an annual air show honor the memory of one local pilot.   
      
   NEIL RAPP: A special event station operated in a joint effort by two    
   radio clubs will take place in Madison, Indiana on Sunday, September    
   18th. The Clifty Amateur Radio Society, W9EFU, and the Ivy Tech    
   Community College-Madison Campus Amateur Radio Club, KC9WQI, will be    
   operating in conjunction with the 15th annual Riley Memorial Air Show.    
   The fly-in is in memory of the late Doctor H. Schirmer Riley, a local    
   physician who was also an avid pilot and the co-author of the book, "Two    
   Pilots, One Engine," which describes his flight around the world. A    
   lifelong pilot, he died in April of 2010. Clifty Amateur Radio Club    
   officer and Faculty Sponsor of the Ivy Tech club Jerry Barnes, KA9PIJ,    
   explains the cooperation of the two clubs.   
      
   JERRY BARNES: We do a lot of our projects together. We ran Field Day    
   together and we are going to do the air show together. So folks can    
   receive a certificate. If they are lucky enough, they will make contact    
   with both groups on the same date.   
      
   NEIL: Listen for the clubs near 7.268 on 40 meters, 14.268 on 20 meters,    
   and 28.440 on 10 meters. To get your electronic certificate for working    
   the special event, submit your request to ka9pij@cinergymetro.netby    
    Friday, September 25. Certificates    
   for valid contacts will only be sent to your email address. No printed    
   QSL cards will be available. Reporting for Amateur Radio Newsline in    
   beautiful southern Indiana, I'm Neil Rapp, WB9VPG.   
      
   **   
      
   AVES ISLAND DXPEDITION PUT ON HOLD   
      
   SKEETER: The activation of Aves Island, a much-coveted DXCC entity, has    
   been postponed. Amateur Radio Newsline's Stephen Kinford, N8WB, tells    
   disappointed amateurs why it's not going forward, at least not now.   
      
   STEPHEN: If you've been waiting for the big DXpedition to Aves Island,    
   one of the world's top DXCC entities, you may have to wait a little    
   while longer -- or even longer than that. Steve W4DTA reports that the    
   plans for YX0V have been put on hold due to weather conditions. The    
   activation was to have started in late August.   
      
   Reporting on behalf of the team, Steve indicated that safety concerns    
   were paramount, especially in light of the potential for storms. He    
   hoped to provide updates in time. The expedition was to have operated    
   for as many as 10 days, concluding on Sept. 10. Now its future is unclear.   
      
   For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Stephen Kinford, N8WB.   
      
   **   
      
   BREAK HERE:   
      
   Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio    
   Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including WA6TST,    
   the linked repeater system of the Barstow, California, Amateur Radio    
   Club on Tuesdays.   
      
   **   
   HAM RADIO OUTLET REOPENS FORMER AES LOCATION   
      
   SKEETER: Ham Radio Outlet has opened its doors at the Milwaukee store    
   that had once been headquarters to Amateur Electronic Supply, and a    
   number of AES employees have been hired on to continue working at that    
   location. Amateur Electronic Supply announced several weeks ago that    
   after 59 years it was going out of the ham radio business. The Milwaukee    
   store has since been renovated and has become the largest such retail    
   outlet operated by HRO. The company announced its Saturday, Aug. 27    
   opening on Twitter, generating big excitement on social media. The    
   store, with a total of 5,000 square feet, is considered to be HRO's    
   Superstore.   
      
   (TWITTER, ARRL)   
      
   **   
      
   ACTOR, ADVOCATE BRIAN RIX, G2DQU, BECOMES SILENT KEY   
      
   SKEETER/ANCHOR: While fans of Britain's Brian Rix will miss his comedic    
   talents and his presence on stage and screen, amateur radio operators    
   are grieving too. The bands will be that much emptier without him. We    
   hear more from Amateur Radio Newsline's Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.   
      
   JEREMY: The amateur radio world, along with the entertainment world and    
   the world of disability advocates, are all mourning the death of British    
   actor Brian Rix G2DQU. An honorary vice-president of the Radio Society    
   of Great Britain, Lord Rix died on Saturday the 20th of August in London.   
      
   A radio amateur since his early teens, he credited his older brother,    
   Malcolm, G5GX, with first sparking that interest when they were    
   children. Lord Rix became an actor as a young man and was later to enter    
   the realm of politics as well as charity. An advocate for the rights of    
   those with disabilities, he became president of Mencap, an organization    
   that assists people with learning disabilities. Knighted in 1986, Lord    
   Rix began service in the House of Lords in 1992, taking particular    
   interest in issues that impacted telecommunications and any matters    
   having to do with amateur radio, including the fight against    
   interference from the polluting Power Line Telecommunications technology.   
      
   Brian Rix became a Silent Key at age 92.   
      
   Vale Brian Rix G2DQU - SILENT KEY   
      
   For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.   
      
   (WIA, IMDB, THE LONDON TELEGRAPH)   
      
      
   **   
      
   KIDS TAKE A SHINE TO LIGHTHOUSES   
      
   SKEETER/ANCHOR: A group of young South African amateurs known as the    
   Hammies helped activate a well-known lighthouse in the city of Port    
   Elizabeth. Amateur Radio Newsline's Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells us why    
   these kids are likely to consider this year's International Lighthouse    
   and Lightship Weekend one to remember.   
      
   GRAHAM: Donkin Reserve is a noted historical spot in the South African    
   city of Port Elizabeth, but on Sunday the 21st of August, it also made    
   some history for a group of youngsters and their ham radios.   
      
   The Eastern Cape Hammies Club ZS2ZU worked the bands during the    
   International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend with the help of the Port    
   Elizabeth Amateur Radio Society ZS2PE. The youngsters landed some DX    
   contacts and worked nine other lighthouses from the one at the reserve,    
   which was built in 1861.   
      
   The young amateurs also got another experience worthy of the history    
   books. They worked the bands from a microbus outfitted with radios and    
   antennas and owned by Al Akers, ZS2U. The camper became their radio    
   shack for several hours, and though it never moved from its parking    
   spot, it nonetheless transported the youngsters for miles and miles over    
   the radio waves.   
      
   For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.   
      
   (PORT ELIZABETH AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY)   
      
   **   
      
   THE WORLD OF DX   
      
   In the World of DX, Bob, VK2BOB, will work from Samoa as 5W0BOB between    
   September 10-17th. Listen for him on 40 and 20 meters using mainly SSB.    
   Send QSL cards via VK2BOB direct only. His log will be uploaded to ClubLog.   
      
   Gordon, K7TRB, will use the call sign 7P8VA from Maseru in Lesotho    
   between now and November 5th. He will be on the bands from 80-10 meters    
   and possibly on 6m as well. Listen for him on SSB and in the Digital    
   Modes. Send QSLs to his home callsign, direct, by the Bureau and check    
   to see whether he is on LoTW -- as of press time he had not yet decided.   
      
   Alejandro, LU9VEA, will be on Easter Island, working as CE0Y/LU9VEA    
   between September 26th and 30th. Listen for him on a variety of HF    
   bands, working SSB. Send QSL cards to IK2DUW.   
      
   In Santana, Madeira Island, listen for Dieter/DK4QT, Thomas/DL6TK,    
   Kalle/DM3BJ and a few others starting September 19th and running through    
   the 28th. THey'll be active as CT9/homecall on 80 through 10 meters   
   using CW, SSB and RTTY. They also plan to be in the CQWW DX RTTY    
   Contest, which is taking place September 24th and 25th, signing as CR3W.    
   Send QSLs to CR3W via DL5AXX. Send QSLs to all others via   
   their home callsigns.   
      
   (OHIO PENN DX BULLETIN)   
      
   **   
      
   AT 104, HE PUTS THE "O" IN OM   
      
   SKEETER/ANCHOR: Think you've been a ham for a long time? Meet Cliff    
   Kayhart, who's had his license for 79 years -- and that's just a    
   fraction of his lifetime. Cliff, W4KKP, is 104 years old. We hear from    
   him now, as Amateur Radio Newsline's Paul Braun, WD9GCO closes out this    
   week's newscast with a few reflections from this very seasoned OM.   
      
   PAUL'S REPORT: There are OMs in amateur radio - and then there are    
   REALLY OMs! Cliff Kayhart, W4KKP, of White Rock, South Carolina,    
   definitely falls into the latter category. Kayhart is 104 years old and    
   has been an active licensed ham for 79 years and counting. I recently    
   had the privilege of speaking with Mr. Kayhart, who was first licensed    
   in 1937. I asked him how he got interested in amateur radio.   
      
   CLIFF: Well, as a kid, I think I was 10 years old, and a buddy of mine    
   came along and put earphones on my head and I heard radio for the first    
   time. I lived about 10 miles form the Bell Laboratories there in New    
   Jersey and they were experimenting all the time with broadcasting, so a    
   big light lit up and I said "this is for me." And it turned out to be    
   that way. I worked in radio all of my life.   
      
   PAUL: In fact, his hobby earned him one of his first adult jobs.   
      
   CLIFF: So having been active in radio since I was a kid, I built every    
   radio that I could find a circuit diagram on. And I did that for quite a    
   long time, just a kid! Then I saw that RCA was looking for somebody with    
   my experience so I wrote them a letter, they called me in and when I got    
   there they said "well you have no experience!" I said "yes I do, I've    
   been building radios since I was a young kid and I'm still building    
   them. I've been using your tubes for a long time, I know how your tubes    
   work, what they're designed to do and what circuits they're in." I said,    
   "I tell you what, why don't you hire me for one month and if I don't pan    
   out, you can fire me." I worked there for five years.   
      
   PAUL: Kayhart is still active on the air, even moving in to a retirement    
   home couldn't stop him.   
      
   CLIFF: I'm living in sort of a retirement place here and I sort of    
   missed my ham radio right away because I had been very active ever since    
   the war was over and still enjoyed it. But I came down here and living    
   in this home I wondered, "could I have radio in here?" And so talked    
   around a little bit and I got permission to install my radio equipment    
   here. Local amateurs in a local radio club, they volunteered to come    
   down and put up my antenna and they put up a nice 52-foot center fed    
   antenna and it has worked beautifully. I've worked Australia from here,    
   I work all over the place in the United States. Right now I'm on on the    
   40 meter band but I work all bands. So I'm enjoying radio.   
      
   PAUL: So listen for W4KKP on the air and try to work the man who may    
   possibly be the oldest active ham in the world. For Amateur Radio    
   Newsline, I'm Paul Braun WD9GCO.   
      
   SKEETER: There are a lot more stories Cliff Kayhart has to tell. To hear    
   more about his experiences on and off the air, listen to his full    
   conversation with Paul Braun in an Amateur Radio Newsline "EXTRA." Just    
   visit our website, ARNewsline.org and navigate to the "Extra" page.   
      
   **   
      
   NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Alan Labs; the ARRL; the BBC; CQ    
   Magazine; CNN; DXNews; DXCoffee; Hap Holly and the Rain Report; Ham    
   Radio Outlet; Irish Radio Transmitter Society; Internet Movie Database;    
   the London Telegraph; Ohio-Penn DX Bulletin; Port Elizabeth Amateur    
   Radio Society; QRZ; Southgate Amateur Radio News; 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 located 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 Skeeter Nash, N5ASH, in Topeka, Kansas,    
   saying 73 and as always we thank you for listening.   
      
   Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2016. All rights reserved.   
      
      
   --    
      
      
      
   73   
   James   
   KB7TBT   
   www.arnewsline.org   
      
      
      
   ---   
   This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.   
   https://www.avast.com/antivirus   
      
      
   ***   
      
   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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