Date: Fri,  4 Feb 94 11:43:00 PST
From: Info-Hams Mailing List and Newsgroup <info-hams@ucsd.edu>
Errors-To: Info-Hams-Errors@UCSD.Edu
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Subject: Info-Hams Digest V94 #112
To: Info-Hams


Info-Hams Digest            Fri,  4 Feb 94       Volume 94 : Issue  112

Today's Topics:
              "Flexible" 9913 (Was - Re: Coaxial cable)
                       * SpaceNews 07-Feb-94 *
                       ARRL Letter Jan 26, 1994
                    Dayton Parking: Hell on Earth!
                    Skeptical Inquirer: EMF scare
                          Timewave sources?

Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu>
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Archives of past issues of the Info-Hams Digest are available 
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We trust that readers are intelligent enough to realize that all text
herein consists of personal comments and does not represent the official
policies or positions of any party.  Your mileage may vary.  So there.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: 4 Feb 1994 19:04:28 GMT
From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!slip1-13.acs.ohio-state.edu!user@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: "Flexible" 9913 (Was - Re: Coaxial cable)
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu

> 
> At a recent hamfest I bought some "flexible" 9913 coax.  The overall 
> construction is the same (full foil & braid shielding etc.) but the 
> core is stranded instead of solid.
> 
 The best "flexible 9913" I have seen is Aircom Plus from Germany.
It is sold in usa by SSB Electronic, 124 Cherrywood Dr., Mountaintop, PA
18707. 717-868-5643.

It is a different construction that 9913. It has radial plastic ribs with
lots of air as opposed to the spiral plastic retainer of Belden 9913. They
claim
you can bend it at very sharp radius without difficulties. Also they have
special N connectors for it.

73,
Ron Long w8gus.

------------------------------

Date: 4 Feb 94 17:55:23 GMT
From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
Subject: * SpaceNews 07-Feb-94 *
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu

SB NEWS @ AMSAT $SPC0207 
* SpaceNews 07-Feb-94 *
 
BID: $SPC0207
 
 
                               =========
                               SpaceNews
                               =========
 
 
                        MONDAY FEBRUARY 7, 1994
 
 
SpaceNews originates at KD2BD in Wall Township, New Jersey, USA.  It is
published every week and is made available for unlimited distribution.
 
 
* STS-60 SAREX MISSION BEGINS *
===============================
The Space Shuttle Discovery made a spectacular, historic, on-time liftoff 
at 12:30 UTC on 03-Feb-94 from the Kennedy Space Center.  Discovery's launch 
marks the first joint U.S.-Russian Space Shuttle Flight.  This will be the 
first of several joint missions planned in preparation for the development 
of the international Space Station.  Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev, U5MIR, was 
one of the six crew members on board this Shuttle flight.  His fellow 
American crew mates include Commander Charlie Bolden, KE4IQB, Pilot Ken 
Reightler, and Mission Specialists Jan Davis, Ron Sega, KC5ETH, and Franklin 
Chang-Diaz.  
 
The primary payloads on-board Discovery are the Wake Shield Facility, which 
will be deployed and retrieved during the flight and the Spacehab facility.  
Of particular interest to Radio Amateurs is the Shuttle Amateur Radio 
Experiment (SAREX) secondary payload.  
 
The following Keplerian Elements for STS-60 are provided by Ron Parise, 
WA4SIR, at the Goddard Space Flight Center:
 
STS-60
1 22977U 94006A   94 35.13981770 0.00000202  00000-0  58718-5 0    37
2 22977  56.9857 213.2731 0008535 263.0773  96.9324 15.72145611   115
 
Satellite: STS-60
Catalog number: 22977
Epoch time:      94035.13981770         (04 FEB 94   03:21:20.25 UTC)
Element set:     GSFC-003
Inclination:       56.9857 deg
RA of node:       213.2731 deg          Space Shuttle Flight STS-60
Eccentricity:    0.0008535                  Keplerian Elements
Arg of perigee:   263.0773 deg
Mean anomaly:      96.9324 deg
Mean motion:   15.72145611 rev/day      Semi-major Axis: 6730.8981 Km
Decay rate:       0.20E-05 rev/day^2    Apogee  Alt:        358.25 Km
Epoch rev:              11              Perigee Alt:        346.77 Km
 
 
NOTE - This element set is based on NORAD element set # 003.
       The spacecraft has been propagated to the next ascending
       node, and the orbit number has been adjusted to bring it
       into agreement with the NASA numbering convention.
 
[Info via Frank H. Bauer, KA3HDO of the SAREX Working Group]
 
 
* AMSAT NET ON GALAXY 3 *
=========================
To all interested satellite users, experiments are underway that uplink the
Houston Area Amsat Net, heard locally on the 147.100 MHz FM repeater, on 
Galaxy 3, Channel 17, (Shop-At-Home Channel) on a 5.8 MHz subcarrier.  This 
net is carried in real-time on Tuesday evening, from approximately 10:00 PM 
Local Time (CST) until completion at approximately 10:30 - 10:45 PM.  This 
is an experiment but could be continued on a regular basis if interest is
sufficient.  Please send reports of your reception and your comments to:
 
        davidsonc@tcd.jsc.nasa.gov  via Internet, or
 
you may call (713) 483-0078 during business hours, or during the uplink
period at (713) 595-2393 and ask for Craig Davidson, WD5BDX.
 
 
* NEWS FROM JAPAN *
===================
NASDA's first H-II rocket was launched at 07:20 (JST=UTC+9h) on 04-Feb-94.
The H-II is designed to serve as NASDA's main space transportation system 
in the 1990's to meet the demand for larger satellite launches at a lower 
cost and still maintain a high degree of reliability.  It is capable of 
sending a single two ton class payload or multiple payload totaling two tons 
onto geostationary orbit.  The H-II is a two-stage rocket equipped with two 
large solid rocket boosters (SRBs) on the first stage for thrust 
augmentation.
 
Principal specifications of the H-II:
 
Overall length: 50
Diameter: 4
Total mass: 260t (payload not included)
Guidance system: Strapped-down inertial guidance system
 
Shape: Blunt-cone shape, Nose radius 1.35m, Diameter 3.40m, Height 1.46m
Weight: Approx. 865kg at launch, Approx. 761kg at re-entry
 
[Info via Yoshiro Yamada]
 
 
* MIR MUSIC REQUEST *
=====================
Ongoing contacts on 145.550 MHz are taking place between the cosmonauts of 
the Russian Mir space station and a few hams in Israel, mainly 4X4LF Shlomo 
on Packet, and Mark 4Z4KX, a native-Russian speaker, on voice.  When Mir is 
overhead, one may often hear Mark and one of the cosmonauts chatting away.
 
Followers of Israeli popular music know well the name Ofra Haza, a singer 
who has made a name for herself, especially in Europe.  Nonetheless, Mark 
4Z4KX was rather surprised when Cosmonaut Alexander Serebrov, R0MIR, on one 
of his overhead QSO's with him, asked Mark to send greetings to Ofra!  
Alexander related that he's a fan of hers, and asked Mark to see if he could 
get a cassette of hers for him.
   
No problem!  As the ham connection goes, 4Z4XC Yair Haza is Ofra's brother, 
and promised to procure her latest CD, which will have to be transcribed to 
cassette, as all they have on board the Mir is a cassette machine.
 
[Info via Shlomo, 4X4LF@4X4LI.ISR.MDLE]
 
 
* FO-20 OPERATION SCHEDULE *
============================
The FO-20 operation schedule is follows.  Analog transponder and digital 
transponder will be ON for a week respectively as they were since last 
December.
 
Analog mode:
09-Feb-94 07:15 UTC -to- 16-Feb-94 07:40 UTC
23-Feb-94 08:05 UTC -to- 02-Mar-94 06:40 UTC
09-Mar-94 07:05 UTC -to- 16-Mar-94 07:30 UTC
23-Mar-94 07:52 UTC -to- 30-Mar-94 08:15 UTC
 
Digital mode:
Unless otherwise noted above.
 
[Info via Kazu Sakamoto, JJ1WTK]
 
 
* THANKS! *
===========
Thanks to all those who sent messages of appreciation regarding SpaceNews, 
especially:
 
      9V1XO    GM2ASU    LX2LA     N2JUX     VK5THA    N9VEM    KF0QS
 
 
* FEEDBACK/INPUT WELCOMED *
===========================
Mail to SpaceNews should be directed to the editor (John, KD2BD) via any
of the following paths:
 
FAX      : 1-908-747-7107
PACKET   : KD2BD @ N2KZH.NJ.USA.NA
INTERNET : kd2bd@ka2qhd.ocpt.ccur.com  -or- kd2bd@amsat.org
 
MAIL     : John A. Magliacane, KD2BD
           Department of Engineering and Technology
           Advanced Technology Center
           Brookdale Community College
           Lincroft, New Jersey  07738
           U.S.A.
 
 
       <<=- SpaceNews: The first amateur newsletter read in space! -=>> 
 
/EX

--
John A. Magliacane, KD2BD   * /\/\ * Voice   : 1-908-224-2948
Advanced Technology Center  |/\/\/\| Packet  : KD2BD @ N2KZH.NJ.USA.NA
Brookdale Community College |\/\/\/| Internet: kd2bd@ka2qhd.ocpt.ccur.com
Lincroft, NJ  07738         * \/\/ * Morse   : -.-  -..  ..---  -...  -..

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 03:16:34 GMT
From: netcomsv!netcom.com!marcbg@decwrl.dec.com
Subject: ARRL Letter Jan 26, 1994
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu

The ARRL Letter Vol. 13, No. 2 January 26, 1994
Appeals court sides with amateur; tower victory reinforces PRB-1;
     A federal appeals court in Minnesota has found in favor of an 
amateur and against a local municipality, the latest round in a 
three-year battle. The decision could affect how PRB-1, the federal 
declaration preempting local regulations, may be applied in the future.
     Sylvia Pentel, N0MRW, applied in January 1991 for a zoning variance 
for a 68-foot crank-up tower from the city of Mendota Heights. At the 
time, she was using a roofmounted vertical which, she was unaware, 
violated the city's zoning rules (since it was taller than 25 feet). The 
city denied her application for a tower but granted a special-use permit 
to allow her to keep the vertical.
     Pentel sued the city in US district court, saying that its ordinance 
was preempted by PRB-1, which recognizes the needs of both municipalities 
and amateurs, and which requires a "reasonable accommodation" of the 
needs of amateurs. The district court found in favor of the city, and 
Pentel appealed.
     In overturning the lower court's decision, the US Court of Appeals 
for the 8th Circuit said that the FCC in PRB-1 "was attempting to strike 
a balance" between the interests of municipalities and amateurs, and 
exhorted Pentel and the city to work together to "arrive at a 
satisfactory solution."
     The court of appeals said that its decision does not mean that the 
city must necessarily grant Pentel's tower application as it stands, but 
rather that the city must make a reasonable accommodation for her 
interests. The court said that granting a special-use permit for Pentel's 
vertical was not an accommodation "in any practical sense" because the 
record showed it was inadequate for her purposes.
     Pentel's lawyer, John B. (Jay) Bellows Jr, K0QBE, said the 
importance of this decision lies in the court's shifting the burden away 
from the amateur and more toward the municipality.
     "PRB-1 really is not about 'balancing'" Bellows said, "and this 
decision recognized that.
     "I was particularly impressed with the appeals court's grasp of the 
overall subject," Bellows said.
     The court said the distinction between balancing a municipality's 
and an amateur's interests, on the one hand, and accommodating an 
amateur's interests "is important, because a standard that requires a 
city to accommodate amateur communications in a reasonable fashion is 
certainly more rigorous than one that simply requires a city to balance 
local and federal interests when deciding whether to permit a radio antenna."
     Bellows has previously appeared with amateurs at town council 
meetings and helped with the drafting of several local antenna 
ordinances. He appeared with Pentel before both the Mendota Heights 
planning commission and the city council in her quest for a permit.
     Bellows was assisted by an ARRL amicus curiae brief filed by General 
Counsel Chris Imlay, N3AKD. Imlay also provided advice on strategy in the 
case.
     "You never know how a court is going to be swayed by a friend of the 
court brief," Bellows said. "In this case," the League's participation 
did show that there was a national interest in such a matter, and 
demonstrated that the decision of the court could have wide-ranging effects."
Does public service work
     Sylvia Pentel, an amateur since 1988, is primarily interested in 
public service communication. She is National Communications Officer for 
the Emergency Medical Preparedness Office of the National Disaster 
Medical Service.
     She first became involved in public service communication after the 
Loma Prieta (California) earthquake in October 1989. Her local work, on 
VHF and UHF, expanded to the HF amateur bands, and she originally sought 
to replace her vertical with a beam following the earthquake.
     "I especially wanted better HF coverage during the Desert Shield 
buildup to the Persian Gulf War," she said, but the town denied her 
permit at that time.
     Pentel has an illustrious Amateur Radio legacy. Her father was 
Maurice Goldberg, 9APW and later 9ZG, a radio pioneer and early ARRL 
official in his division. His name appears over several technical 
articles in 1920s QSTs.
     Goldberg, who died in 1977, did not live to see his daughter become 
a licensed amateur, but he did lay the groundwork. "Dad tried to teach me 
CW when I was far too young," Pentel said. "I thought it was a family 
thing, the 'Maurice code.'"
     Pentel said getting a permit for her tower has "been a long, 
frustrating haul. I should have just gone ahead and put it up, 
considering there are several other amateur towers in town.
     "Instead, I did the 'right thing,'" she said. "I got the ARRL 
package of materials and made a comprehensive application to the town, 
with engineering drawings and so on."
     After getting favorable signatures from nine neighbors, Pentel ran 
into trouble when a couple of neighbors "began stirring things up at the 
hearings," she said.
     But she is not to be deterred.
     Her lawyer, Bellows, said the next step is to sit down with the the 
town fathers and "talk about accommodation."
League testifies at New Jersey RF hearing
     ARRL General Counsel Chris Imlay, N3AKD, and Northern New Jersey 
Section Manager Rich Moseson, NW2L, have led a delegation of hams in 
testifying against a proposed New Jersey state regulation which, they 
argued, could effectively shut down Amateur Radio in the state.
     The regulation, proposed by the state Department of Environmental 
Protection and Energy (DEPE) would require the owners of all 
fixed-station transmitting antennas and certain RF-generating industrial 
equipment to register with the state and pay a hefty annual fee. The fees 
would pay for state inspections -- once every ten years -- to determine 
whether each RF source is in compliance with state limits for exposure to 
non-ionizing RF radiation. (The state limits are the same ones specified 
by ANSI - the American National Standards Institute - in their 1984 
standards.)
     The summary that was issued along with the proposed regulation 
stated that amateurs would be exempted "at this time," but there was no 
specific exemption in the regulation itself. And the department 
specifically invited comments on whether hams should be subject to the 
inspection program in the future.
     The appearance by Imlay, Moseson, and about 10 other hams at a 
public hearing on January 11 in New Jersey's capital capped two weeks of 
intense efforts to spread the word about the proposal and to organize the 
ARRL response.
     The proposal first surfaced the week before Christmas. As details 
emerged, it became obvious that the proposal posed a major threat to all 
ham radio activities in New Jersey. ARRL Hudson Division Director Steve 
Mendelsohn, WA2DHF, along with Moseson, asked ARRL President George 
Wilson III, W4OYI, to authorize Imlay's testimony at the DEPE hearing. 
Wilson agreed, noting the gravity of the threat to hams in New Jersey, 
plus the likelihood that, if the measure was enacted, other states might 
follow New Jersey's lead.
     Some 50 people attended the hearing and about 20 testified, half of 
those being amateurs (although some hams appeared in their professional 
capacities). All of the speakers opposed the proposal, generally arguing 
that the state was duplicating FCC regulations and that those FCC rules 
already assured that workers and the public were protected from excessive 
RF radiation. They saw the fees as nothing more than a new tax on the 
businesses and people of New Jersey.
     The first ham to testify was leadoff witness Vivian Lopez, N2NZN, a 
lawyer familiar with the state regulatory process. She challenged the 
DEPE's authority to enact the regulations at all, charging that the law 
under which they were proposed had been written to deal with threats from 
nuclear radiation, not RF.
     "If the department seeks to stretch that authority as a basis for 
regulating whole industries," Lopez testified, "then the enabling 
legislation ought to first be amended to specifically grant that power."
     Imlay and Moseson appeared on behalf of the ARRL. In his testimony, 
Imlay cited numerous court decisions, dating back to 1927, giving the 
federal government "exclusive" and "expansive" authority to regulate 
radio and TV. He also noted that the FCC had categorically exempted 
amateurs from routine reporting on compliance with RF exposure standards, 
and that RF safety questions are included on amateur license exams.
     Moseson testified as to the likely impact of the regulation on 
Amateur Radio in New Jersey, explaining that annual fees of $1000 or more 
for a typical station would simply force most hams off the air. Without 
ham radio, he said, the state would lose a vital emergency communications 
resource as well as endanger millions of dollars in federal emergency 
management aid, since backup communications abilities would be lost.
Measurements difficult
     Moseson also explained the difficulty of taking measurements at a 
typical ham station, which can operate on many frequencies with 
infinitely variable power levels and radiation patterns, as well as the 
stifling effect that the regulation would have on station changes and 
experimentation.
     Finally, the ARRL representatives reminded the department that FCC 
rules limit state and local regulation of amateur antennas to the 
"minimum practicable" extent required to achieve their purposes, and that 
those regulations may not preclude amateur communication. Applying the 
proposed regulation to hams, the League argued, would effectively 
preclude amateur communication and would therefore be in violation of FCC 
rules.
     The League's testimony concluded with a request that, if the 
department decides to enact the regulation, then, at the very least, it 
should specifically exempt any RF source that is "a component of a 
federally licensed station in the Amateur Radio Service," as defined by 
FCC rules.
     There also was testimony from representatives of broadcasters, 
telephone companies, land-mobile users and municipal government. One 
municipal spokesman was Bill Sohl, President of the Mt. Olive, New 
Jersey, town council (as well as being K2UNK and an ARRL Local Government 
Liaison). He told the panel that, if his town applied the reasoning 
behind the proposed regulation to its police department, then each 
motorist in the town would have to register and pay a fee to the town to 
cover expenses in case the motorist violated a traffic law and a police 
officer needed to take time to write a ticket.
     At the end of the hearing, department officials gave no indication 
of how they might respond to the criticisms leveled at the proposal. At 
the request of several witnesses, however, they did extend the deadline 
for written comments from January 20 to February 22. A final decision on 
the proposal must be made by December 6, 1994.
     One week after the hearing, a new governor took office and appointed 
as DEPE commissioner a state legislator with a reputation for trying to 
accommodate business as well as environmental concerns. Moseson said he 
and others plan to work with the new state leadership.
     (This story was reported by ARRL Northern New Jersey Section Manager 
Rich Moseson, NW2L.)
League seeks primary 902-MHz slots
     The ARRL has petitioned the FCC to provide the amateur service with 
primary allocations from 902 to 904 MHz and from 912 to 918 MHz, with 
certain geographic limitations.
     Amateurs already are allocated from 902 to 928 MHz on a shared basis 
with several other services, including government radio-location; fixed 
and mobile services; industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) equipment; 
and various nonlicensed, low-power, "Part 15" devices.
     Last spring, the FCC proposed to expand Automatic Vehicle Monitoring 
(AVM) systems in the 902 to 928 MHz range, and also has suggested 
permitting non-government wind profiler systems in the band.  In June 
1993 the ARRL said that further study of the band was needed.
     In its January 13, 1994, petition, the ARRL said that these FCC 
proposals jeopardize Amateur Radio use of 902 to 904 and 912 to 918 MHz, 
segments that the League said have not interfered with AVM systems and 
which are critical to the development and continuation of specialized 
communication techniques by amateurs.
     The ARRL petition said that since the 902 to 928 MHz band was made 
available to amateurs in most of the US in 1985, its use has grown, 
particularly for weak-signal work and television; the two primary 
segments sought by the League would be aimed at those users.
     The League mentioned, again, that two current Commission agenda 
items -- the first an inquiry into placing non-government wind profilers 
on the band (in Docket 93-59), and the second, a proposal to expand AVM 
systems in the band -- were a departure from the US position at the 1979 
World Administrative Radio Conference, at which amateur access to the 
band was first addressed.
     The League said that the adoption of the requested primary segments 
for amateurs would not "prejudice" the development of AVM systems or wind 
profilers.
     The ARRL petition said that the FCC had considered the availability 
of 902 to 928 MHz to amateurs in its decision to take 220 to 222 MHz away 
from them.
     And the League said since amateurs now rely more and more on the 
902-MHz band, a significant reduction of its usefulness would "constitute 
a breach of the Commission's previous assurances" of continued availability.
     The League cited as an example the Los Angeles area, where a local 
band plan works around AVM operations. Use of the 902 to 903 MHz segment 
is "heavy," the League said, with not only weak-signal operation there, 
but point-to-point links and repeater inputs as well. Similarly, 912 to 
918 MHz is heavily used, the League said, for digital wideband, ATV 
simplex, and ATV repeater operation.
     This local band plan is an example of the sharing arrangements 
necessary in a crowded RF environment, the League said, and it points up 
the need for the primary amateur allocations being sought.
     The exceptions to the primary allocations for amateurs that the 
League seeks in its petition would be restrictions in certain parts of 
Texas and New Mexico, where such restrictions already are in effect to 
protect government operations. 
ARRL Board of Directors meeting highlights
     The ARRL Board of Directors met in Rocky Hill, Connecticut, on 
January 21 and 22, 1994. The following is a summary of meeting 
highlights. Details will appear in March QST.
     * The Board re-elected its present slate of officers: President 
George Wilson III, W4OYI; First Vice President Rod Stafford, KB6ZV; Vice 
President Jay Holladay, W6EJJ; Vice President Tom Frenaye, K1KI; 
International Affairs Vice President Larry Price, W4RA; Treasurer Jim 
McCobb, K1LLU; Secretary and Executive Vice President David Sumner, K1ZZ; 
and Chief Financial Officer Barry Shelley.
     * Elected to the Executive Committee were Rocky Mountain Division 
Director Marshall Quiat, AG0X; Hudson Division Director Stephen 
Mendelsohn, WA2DHF; Delta Division Director Joel Harrison, WB5IGF; and 
Great Lakes Division Director Al Severson, AB8P.
     * An interim report and band plan recommendation of an ad hoc 
committee was adopted, looking to the early implementation of the 
expected allocation of 219 to 220 MHz for limited amateur use.
     * The 1994-95 ARRL budget plan was adopted.
     * The Volunteer Resources Committee was tasked with studying the 
feasibility of a system of technical awards to recognize achievement in 
fields ranging from design and construction to the creation of innovative 
communication systems, and to develop appropriate criteria.
     * The League will file a petition for rule-making seeking to remove 
overly restrictive rule provisions concerning the use of spread spectrum 
techniques, and an ad hoc committee was created to recommend technical 
standards.
     * The Membership Services Committee will study the possibility of 
relocating the
 40-meter Novice subband. The committee will report back to the Board in 
July.
     * The Board approved a revision of the ARRL/Red Cross Statement of 
Understanding.
     * ARRL Headquarters will begin to notify members of license 
expirations, and will include a Form 610 to effect license renewals.
     * The Administration and Finance Committee will study the 
feasibility of offering group legal defense insurance to ARRL members to 
cover legal costs in antenna cases and RFI lawsuits.
     * The ARRL Letter will be offered to affiliated club newsletter 
editors free of charge, on a trial basis.
     * The Administration and Finance Committee was asked to investigate 
the development of a multi-media production capability for Headquarters, 
to keep pace with the changing technology in today's personal computing 
revolution.
     * Perry Williams, W1UED, was commended for 40 years of dedicated 
service and congratulated on the occasion of his forthcoming retirement 
from the Headquarters staff, in April 1994.
BRIEFS
     * Beginning March 1 the FCC will accept only the new version of its 
Form 610, as explained in February QST (page 103). March QST "Exam Info" 
reprints the new form and will have further information on its use. Use 
of the new form applies to everyone, from new licensees to renewals, call 
sign changes, etc.
     In early February the ARRL-VEC's newsletter, VE Express, will 
include a full-size version of the new Form 610. The ARRL-VEC also will 
mail bulk quantities of the new form to all of its 650-plus "field 
stocked" VE teams. The ARRL-VEC will recommend that its VE teams begin 
using the new form on February 12, to allow for sufficient turnaround time.
      * In 1993 ARRL members sent about 7.25 tons of QSLs to the ARRL 
Outgoing QSL Service for shipment to bureaus overseas. This was 2,182,000 
cards for DX destinations. The US Incoming QSL Bureau's volunteers sorted 
just over two million cards in 1993, as well.
     Information about these services is on pages 98 and 99 of QST for 
January 1994.
     * Tucson Amateur Packet Radio has scheduled its annual meeting for 
March 4 through 6 in Tucson at the Best Western Inn at the Airport. The 
annual meeting will feature presentations and papers on several new 
hardware projects, discussions of projects in progress, hands-on 
demonstrations, and a minisymposium on the future directions of amateur 
packet radio. For more information contact Program Chairman Keith 
Justice, KF7TP, at 602-461-8687.
     And TAPR has a new address: 8987-309 East Tanque Verde Road, No. 
337, Tucson AZ 85749. Their voice mail system number is 817-383-0000; the 
fax number is 817-566-2544.
  * Shack in the USSR: Tandy Corp. has opened its first Radio Shack in 
Russia. The Moscow store, which officially opened January 14, is 
"identical in look and layout" to stores in the US, according to Tandy. 
The store is franchised to the Trident Group, a Florida-based 
international distribution company, and is managed by Trident A/O, a 
Russian company.
     * The American Digital Radio Society has acquired the RTTY Digital 
Journal, and will retain Dale Sinner, W6IWO, as its editor. For more 
information on the ADRS and a copy of its newsletter, write to ADRS, Box 
2465, New York NY 10185 (BBS at 212-698-2102).
     * Fred Doob, AA8FQ, will once again run, for ICOM and charity, in 
the Los Angeles Marathon on March 6. As in the New York Marathon last 
November, Doob will operastore, with his son Don Busick, K5AAD, until his 
death.
     * Two more shuttle astronauts have received their amateur call 
signs: Charles Bolden is KE4IQB, and Ronald Sega is KC5ETH. Both are 
members of the STS-60 crew, scheduled for a February 3 lift-off, and are 
Technician class licensees. Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev, U5MIR, is 
also an STS-60 crew member.
     * NASA Television has moved to satellite Spacenet 2, transponder 5, 
C Band, 69 degrees west longitude, on 3880 MHz, horizontal polarization, 
with audio on 6.8 MHz. During space shuttle flights NASA Select TV 
occasionally carries Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX) activity.
     * The Foundation for Amateur Radio will administer 49 scholarships 
for the 1994-95 academic year to assist licensed amateurs who are 
students. The awards, from $500 to $2000, are available to full-time 
college students, including those who have been accepted for 1994. 
Additional information and application forms should be requested before 
April 30, 1994, from FAR Scholarships, 6903 Rhode Island Ave., College 
Park MD 20740.
     * In the days following the earthquake near Los Angeles on January 
17 you may have heard or read about an experimenter named Jack Coles, of 
San Jose, California. Coles listens to the 10 to 12 kHz range for 0.5 to 
2 second pulses and is one of a group of experimenters who think this may 
be a way to predict earthquakes. Coles says he's always been interested 
in radio and is currently studying for an amateur ticket.
10 Years Ago in The ARRL Letter
     The ARRL Executive Committee authorized the League's counsel, Chris 
Imlay, N3AKD, to file friend of the court briefs in two local cases 
involving Amateur Radio. One of them, involving John Thernes, WM4T, was 
ultimately successful, and has been cited in later cases, including 
Pentel v. Mendota Heights (see accompanying story).
     The first Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX) video was 
unveiled, produced by Roy Neal, K6DUE. The 28minute film featured the 
first SAREX flight, of W5LFL on STS-9. This film was superseded by one 
titled "SAREX," a general-interest film that the ARRL still widely 
circulates to clubs, and another, "Ham Radio in Space," which 
concentrates on how schools can use the SAREX program.
  The League was meeting informally with the FCC to promote Amateur Radio 
third-party message service at the Olympic Games that summer in Los 
Angeles, although it was unclear if security concerns would allow 
stations to be set up in the Olympic Village.
     ARRL membership rose in 1983 from 124,000 to 126,000, a 1.6% 
increase, after a 12.5 percent decline in 1982 following a dues increase. 
(League membership growth in the US for 1993 was 2.05 %).

-- 
Marc B. Grant       fax 214-231-3998    voice 214-246-1150
marcbg@netcom.com   Amateur Radio N5MEI
marcbg@esy.com      Richardson, TX

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 1 Feb 1994 18:04:28
From: ftpbox!mothost!schbbs!njohnson.ia03.comm.mot.com!cnj002@uunet.uu.net
Subject: Dayton Parking: Hell on Earth!
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu

In article <2im1g0$i6v@oak.oakland.edu> prvalko@vela.acs.oakland.edu (prvalko) writes:
>From: prvalko@vela.acs.oakland.edu (prvalko)
>Subject: Dayton Parking: Hell on Earth!
>Date: 1 Feb 1994 16:54:24 GMT

>Well folks, if you've read the latest Ham Radio Newsline you MIGHT have
>noticed the casual mention that their MIGHT(?) not be busses available
>to shuttle people around from hotels to Hara this year.
.
.
.
.


I attended the Dayton Hamvention for the first time last year.

The first day (Friday) my friend and I tried parking close to the arena (We 
had to leave early to pick up a friend at the airport in Cincianti). We ended 
up walking several blocks.  It was a rainy weekend and we figured the private 
lot would turn into a mud pit very quickly (It did).

The next day we tried parking at the Salem Mall, one of the satellite parking
lots.

We were close to the bus (50 ft). The Busses (sp ?) arrived every 10 minutes, 
and it only took a couple of minutes to get to the arena.

It worked so well that we made serveral trips back and forth carrying  our 
purchased treasures to our car.

(The lots were patrolled by security personel)

Needless to say, that's what we did for the rest of the Hamvention and plan on 
doing this year.

Oh, and it was FREE too! 

I hope that the DARA keeps this service, it's an excellent idea!


-Neil Johnson, N0SFH
-Network Analyst
-Motorola, Land Mobile Products Sector
-Mount Pleasant, IA 

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 15:40:07 GMT
From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!sdd.hp.com!sgiblab!pacbell.com!amdahl!netcomsv!netcom.com!aeldra@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: Skeptical Inquirer: EMF scare
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu

The recent cellular telephone cancer scare got America thinking about
electromagnetic fields in the air around us.  Do they cause cancer?  Is at
even *possible* that they could cause cancer?  This quarter's Skeptical
Inquirer examines the various claims and arguments on this convoluted issue.

An excerpt follows:

------------------

ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELD CANCER SCARES

BY SID DEUTSCH

Do electromagnetic fields cause cancer?  Those who claim that they do
cause cancer seek ascientific explanation for the phenomenon.  In this
sense, it is not a paranormal claim, but it is a "fringe science" claim
and is therefore a valid subject for the Skeptical Inquirer. Asingle
example illustrates the importance of the subject (Fischetti 1993).  In
the United States, in 1993, 17,500 of us will develop brain cancer
(according to the National Cancer Institute).  About one out of 50
people use handheld cellular telephones.  Statistically, therefore, 350
of the people who use these telephones will develop brain cancer.  It is
reasonable to estimate that 10 of these tumors will occur on the side of
the head near where the telephone is held.

On January 21, 1993, David Reynard of St. Petersburg, Florida, blamed
his wife's use of a handheld cellular telephone for her death due to
brain cancer.  The media, ever eager to protect hapless citizens,
exposed this hitherto unknown cause of cancer.  In a few days,
cellular-phone stock prices dropped by 17 percent, and the Cellular
Telecommunication Industry Association has pledged to spend $15 million
to $25 million in the next three to five years to study the issue.

A great deal of research has been, and will be, done to determine safe
limits of electromagnetic energy.  I was personally involved in a
project some 30 years ago in which the eyes of anesthetized rabbits were
held against the open end of a microwave waveguide.  Not surprisingly,
when the microwave energy was sufficient to cause a sustained
temperature rise to abnormal levels, the eyes were damaged (Rosenthal
1976). This, incidentally, illustrates one of the boundary conditions: 
If incident energy induces an appreciable temperature rise anywhere in
the body, it is potentially dangerous.  This is, of course, the
microwave-oven effect.  Bear in mind, however, that a
7-degree-Fahrenheit fever is one of the body's normal defense
mechanisms.

It happens that it is a relatively simple procedure to calculate and
measure temperature rise in tissue.  If it were only a matter of an
artificial fever, however, there would be no controversy.  The problem
is that the David Reynards and their lawyers and many in the media
maintain that cancer is somehow caused or aggravated by electromagnetic
energy that is below the level of appreciable temperature rise.  Fringe
science resides in the word "somehow."

------------------

So begins this issue's featured article from Skeptical Inquirer magazine.

This article and others from Skeptical Inquirer Magazine and additional 
publications are available free from The Electronic Newsstand, a service 
which collects articles, editorials, and table of contents from over 50
magazines and provides them to the Global Internet community.

Access to The Electronic Newsstand is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a 
week via Gopher, an information navigation and retrieval technology from the
University of Minnesota.

For those without a local Gopher client program, The Electronic Newsstand
provides a telnet account which will allow you to use a text based Gopher
client to access our service.

To access The Electronic Newsstand, 

 via Local Gopher Client:

  Hostname: gopher.internet.com
  Port:  2100

 via the Gopher Home Menu at U of Minn:

  Other Gopher and Information Servers/
    North America/
      USA/
        General/
   The Electronic Newsstand (tm)

 via Gopher Link Information:

  Name=The Electronic Newsstand
  Type=1
  Port=2100
  Path=1/
  Host=gopher.internet.com

 via Telnet:

  Hostname:  gopher.internet.com
  Loginname: enews
  Password: <not required>

 via World Wide Web:

  URL:  gopher://gopher.inter.com/

If you have any suggestions on how we might improve this service, or
need more information, please email  staff@enews.com

 --The Electronic Newsstand Staff

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 31 Jan 1994 08:03:39 GMT
From: swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!news.unt.edu!news.oc.com!csci-wiermac.etsu.edu!user@network.ucsd.edu
Subject: Timewave sources?
To: info-hams@ucsd.edu

I'm interested in getting some prices on the Timewave DSP
units.  In checking the Feb 94 QST I find about $20
discount between the company itself and Texas Towers.
With sales tax, it makes 'em basically even (since I'm
in Texas).  I havn't seen 'em in any of the other ads so
far. Anyone know who else carries 'em? 

THANKS
  & 73 - de WB5KXH


    ======== insert usual disclaimers here ===========
keeper of the Adobe Photoshop, MC68HC11, ICOM mailing lists
      Bob Wier, East Texas State U., Commerce, Texas
      wier@merlin.etsu.edu (watch for address change) 

------------------------------

End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #112
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