Subj : Newsline Part 4 To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Dec 23 2016 07:23 am WORLD OF DX Sila, AK0SK, will be on SSB from Kenya, until January 6th, working as 5Z4/AK0SK. Listen on 80m through 10m. QSL to the home call. Listen for Jeff, K5WE, from the Cayman Islands through December 30th. He is using the call sign ZF2WE, and working CW and some RTTY on all the HF bands. He will upload his logs to Logbook of The World. Send QSLs via the home call. Harry, JG7PSJ, returns to the Ogasawara Islands, where you can hear him through January 1st. Listen for the call sign JD1BMH. Please note that Ogasawara counts as a separate entity for DXCC. Its reference number is AS-031 for the Islands on the Air Award. And there's some encouraging news for DXers: The German communications authority issued a notice on their website on December 19th, giving German class A Amateur radio enthusiasts access to the 5.3MHz (60 metre) band, as per the WRC15 (15KHz wide) frequency range and (15w EIRP) power limitations on a non-interference. Enjoy adding some new contacts there to your log! ** KICKER: 'TWAS THE END OF THIS WEEK'S NEWSCAST JIM/ANCHOR: It's now time for Amateur Radio Newsline to celebrate the holiday with a little gift to our listeners, and we preface this gift with apologies to Clement Clarke Moore. The author of the classic "Night Before Christmas" wasn't a ham - and the author of the poem you're about to hear probably is - or was at one time. Either way, we hope you enjoy it, and give it a good signal report. 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: "OM! QRZ?" "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 seven-three." ** NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to ABC News; Alan Labs; AMSAT-UK; the ARRL and ARRL Pacific Section; CQ Magazine; Hap Holly and the Rain Report; IEEE Spectrum; Ohio-Penn DX Bulletin; RadioInfo.com.au; Radio Society of Great Britain; 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 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 Jim Damron, N8TMW, in Charleston, West Virginia, saying 73, and as always, we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2016. All rights reserved. Posted by VPost v1.7.081019 .