2023 FEBRUARY 05 VK NATIONAL NEWS BROADCAST ON VK1WIA ------------------------------------------------------------* THE BEST NEWS YOU'LL GET ALL WEEK THIS LINK IS A VIDEO VERSION OF NEWS COMPILED BY VK5BD BEVAN tinyurl.com/WIA-News-Videos ------------------------------------------------------------* NATIONAL NEWS FOR WEEK COMMENCING FEBRUARY 5 2023 IN OUR 28th YEAR OF NON STOP NEWS ( 1937 in a mention we've come across relating to weekly broadcasts of information prepared by VK4 was a plea to restart the weekly news service which was on air in the late 1920's ) THIS WEEK:- WIA's Vice President Lee Moyle VK3GK. - President Scott Williams VK3KJ. - Editor-in-Chief Amateur Radio magazine, Roger Harrison VK2ZRH. - - From Amateur Radio Victoria, Peter Cossins VK3BFG.- Also our weekly reminder that all points of contact and more information including links to our stories sources are best read in the text edition of this news service on wia.org.au PLUS MUCH MUCH MORE IN THIS EDITION OF NEWS FROM THE WIRELESS INSTITUTE OF AUSTRALIA WITH THE SHARP RAZOR BLADES AND SISSORS I'M EDITOR GRAHAM VK4BB WIA JOIN THE WIA tinyurl.com/yyj87b9y Hi there, this is WIA Director and President Scott WilliamsVK3KJ and nice to be appearing on the broadcast for the first time in 2023. After a few weeks break over the Christmas / New Year holiday period, the board is now fully back on deck and already has held two Board meetings in January and a special meeting last Tuesday night, which I will talk about a little more shortly. The board throughout 2022 met generally twice a month, Board meetings are split in two halves, with 2 hours set aside each fortnight to cover various items of business.sometimes a little longer. In addition to Board meetings, the Board will also meet informally from time to time with various committees and individuals to workshop and discuss items which need a little more focus or attention. From February, the Board has resolved to meet once a month and we will continue to hold others special meetings as necessary, however frequent they need to be to ensure we address all items that need attention. In regard to our special meeting last Tuesday night, this was with John Seamons (VK3JLS) who is the National and Inwards QSL Manager. John had tabled an excellent report to the Board covering all aspects of the QSL bureau for last year, including sharing some observations and insights to some of the issues that are being experienced. In no particular order the observations are: 1. The bureau distributed 64820 cards for 2022 with NSW 15730, Victoria 13500, QLD 11,801, WA 9000, SA 6540, TAS 3870, ACT 2830 and NT 1540. 2. There were 1234 cards for VK9s, VK0s and special event calls. 3. The amount of cards distributed in 2022 was just ahead of the 63270 cards distributed in 2019. (Due to Covid, number in 2020 and 2021 were significantly less). 4. The amount of misdirected cards in 2022 was 680. These are cards sent to Australia by mistake from other overseas bureaus. 5. Disappointingly, there were 960 cards that were binned in 2022. This is mainly due to individuals not been a member of the WIA, not having an arrangement with one the State / Territory QSL bureaus, not informing the National & Inwards QSL Manager of special event calls and where cards should be directed. John reported that he had a database of over 78 special event callsigns and needed to continually search QRZ and other callsign databases to try and identity where to direct cards. Generally, any card that cannot be identified where to send it or that there is no arrangement in place, is held up to 12 months and then is destroyed. Other issues highlighted included the escalation of bureau postage costs with cards generally being bulk packaged and distributed every 3 months to help minimise cost. The recent meeting also discussed the amount of expected QSL cards over the next few years given the additional activity on the bands due to Solar Cycle 25 and the amount of special event callsigns, contest callsigns (2x1s) and cards received under the AX prefix. Discussion occurred around callsigns for life where of course today a VK2 call sign could be used in VK4, therefore a VK2 QSL card will always end up in the VK2 QSL Bureau, which of course means on some occasions could be incorrect. In summary, there is no doubt we are facing a few challenges with the Bureau, and I know there is consultation occurring with all bureaus around Australia to gain feedback and look at ways to create efficiencies. A couple of little reminders are: Make sure you are a member of the WIA and help support this wonderful service Make sure if you are not a member you have an alternative arrangement in place. Make sure if you are using special event callsigns you notify the National Bureau (this is the first-place cards arrive). Make sure special event callsigns and contest callsigns are listed on the QRZ database with any special instructions just in case. And finally, if you are using a VK9 or VK0 callsign, make sure you notify the National Bureau. We have had several DX operations of recent time which have not notified the Bureau and we have hundreds of cards just waiting for distribution. That old saying rings true, sometimes you have to help yourself before you expect others to help you. Finally, thank you to all the wonderful volunteers that assist with the Bureaus around the country. I dont think people realise the effort and amount of work that goes into sorting and distributing cards, both at the national Bureau and each state / Territory Bureau. I would also like to make a special mention of long standing VK4 QSL Manager Mrs June Sim who has decided to retire. Thank you, June, for your tireless work over the years and years and making sure cards are sorted and distributed in QLD. Also, thank you to Laurie Pritchard (VK4BLE) who has been appointed the new VK4 QSL Manager. On behalf of the Board, thank you for supporting the WIA and best wishes to you all. WIA President Scott Williams VK3KJ This is Editor-in-Chief of Amateur Radio magazine, Roger Harrison VK2ZRH. Last Tuesday, the files for the latest edition of A R Issue Number 1 for 2023 were uploaded to the printer's server in Bairnsdale, Victoria. Look out for the issue landing in your letterbox, your Post Office Box, or your local newsagency, late next week. The theme for this issue is Antennas and Propagation. Never mind, Ill get back to that shortly. Here is the BIG news this year, marks 90 years of continuous publication for Amateur Radio magazine. Were going to make a bit of a song and dance about it. 90 years serving Australias radio amateurs in the guise of The Journal of the Wireless Institute of Australia. Matters were rather volatile in the lead-up to the WIAs magazine venture in 1933. The youthful WIA had survived 20 years, the Great War, the Roaring 20s and global depression, during which many commercial magazines catering to audiences interested in the new wireless and radio technologies came and went, it is indeed a wonder the WIAs magazine venture got any sort of start. Well how DID Amateur Radio magazine come into being? WIA Historian, Peter Wolfenden VK3 R V, kicks off Part 1 of a two-part feature article written in his trademark thoroughgoing style. Justin Giles-Clark VK7 T W gets down and dirty or, maybe that should be up and dirty with building a multi-band portable linked dipole. Talking about antennas always raises the subject of antenna tuners. This issue, Lou Destefano VK3 A Q Z returns with a cunningly conceived and constructed homebrew ATU rated to handle 400 watts. Not to be missed. Poignantly, this issue we have a feature article from a well-known author who is now a silent key. Titled How Radio Australia reached the world, a concise historical overview of the life and service of Radio Australia from 1944 through 2017 it was written by Rodney Champness VK3 U G, who died in late October last year. We also include a comprehensive obituary on him, compiled by his friend and colleague, Vic Pleuger VK2 V P. Amateur Radio magazine, Volume 91, Issue Number 1 for 2023. Serving Australian radio amateurs since 1933. Available in print and online. Always published to a schedule, never random. This has been AR magazine Editor-in-Chief Roger Harrison VK2ZRH for VK1WIA News. EDUCATION Amateur Radio Victoria is about to run two different on line Tutorials. The first is for Foundation level and commences Monday 13th February 7 9 PM for 3 nights. The recommended text is Your Entry to Amateur Radio available on line from the Wireless Institute of Australia or Amateur Radio Victoria websites. The charge for the Tutorial is $60 and enrolments via the Amateur Radio Victoria website are now open. An Advanced Tutorial commences Wednesday 1st March 7 9 PM for 12 nights. The charge for this is $150.00 and enrolments are also open via the Amateur Radio Victoria website. Recommended texts are Radio Theory Handbook for Amateurs by Fred Swainston or Radio Theory Handbook Beginner to Advanced by Ron Bertrand. Enrolment numbers are limited due to the fact that an assessment service is offered at the end of each Tutorial. The Tutorials are conducted via Zoom from the Ham Shack of myself, Peter Cossins VK3BFG and includes various live presentations and short videos. 73 Peter VK3BFG tinyurl.com/ytmmtvhx arv@amateurradio.com.au pcossins@bigpond.com ------------------------------------------------------------* INTERNATIONAL NEWS With thanks to IARU, RSGB, RAC, ARRL, NZART, eHam, AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE, Radioworld.com and the World Wide sources of the WIA. REGION ONE IRELAND Resignation of the President of the IRTS The IRTS Committee have received a letter of resignation from the President of the IRTS, Larry EI9CN. The Committee thanked Larry for his hard work and offered him best wishes for the future. Further information will be provided when it becomes available. UNITED KINGDOM As part of the Charles 3 Coronation celebration activities, Ofcom has approved R as the optional Coronation regional secondary locator prefix for all UK radio amateurs. They will be able to use this for the whole of May and June 2023. More information will be reported closer to the date of the Coronation. HUNGARY YOTA Summer Camp 2023. This is the 11th year and this year it's in Hungary. The event itself will be held from 5th to 12th August. 100 ambitious youngsters from around IARU Region 1 including guest teams from Regions 2 and 3 have been invited. REGION TWO CANADA An amateur astronomer from southwestern Nova Scotia has captured a dazzling time-lapse of the green comet that's making a rare pass near Earth. The last time the comet was this close to our planet was 50,000 years ago. Many Canadians are looking up at the stars this week. Tim Doucette with the Deep Sky Eye Observatory near Yarmouth, N.S., is among them. He took a two-hour time-lapse of the comet during the early-morning hours of Jan. 28. "If you've got a telescope, are in Canada and you look closely at the comet and the background stars, it's travelling relative in our sky about one-quarter degrees per hour," he told CBC Radio's Mainstreet Halifax. "So within a few minutes you can see that the comet's actually making motion in the night sky." tinyurl.com/3d5p95wt CHILE - ARGENTINA A truck-sized asteroid that suddenly loomed out of the darkness with the Earth in its sights then sailed harmlessly past us on Thursday 26th. Asteroid 2023 BU whizzed past without incident and back out into the blackness of space. The rock, which was spotted by an amateur stargazer in Crimea, came closest to the southern tip of South America at around 0029 GMT Friday, according to scientists who were tracking it. bit.ly/3HiVtTQ ------------------------------------------------------------* REWIND Morse Code is making a comeback! Children as young as FIVE are learning the once ground-breaking form of communication - spurred on by K-Pop bands who use it to leak hints about upcoming songs to fans Now whist the youngsters are learning CW do you need to learn what K-PPOP is? K-pop or Korean Pop is the internationally popular, aesthetic-driven, style-bending, trendsetting, music genre of the 21st century. Originating in South Korea, K-pop draws influence from a range of genres like pop, experimental, rock, hip-hop, R&B, electronic, and dance South Korean boy bands NU'EST and TXT have both used Morse Code within their music videos, and even communicate hints about upcoming songs to fans. At the start of TXT's song Crown, Morse Code is used to spell out the title before the song gets underway. Similarly, NU'EST's song Help Me spells out its title at the start of the song. NU'EST even had flashing lights, communicating in Morse on their website to reveal the titles of their upcoming songs. This prompted young fans of the bands to scour the internet trying to find out the hidden meaning of the beeps - and morse was rediscovered BUT even the Beatles Strawberry Fields Forever has at the beginning of the song right after Lennon sings "Let me take you down, cause I'm going to" (0:16) a sequence of very faint beeps that spell out the initials J.L. The B-52s - Planet Claire: -Pretty much the first 30 seconds is morse code, which can be translated to "NAWS DE CFH II ZKR F1 3394 4156.66238......". One theory is that it is a transmission from a Canadian Naval base in Nova Scotia signalling to ships. NAWS was the name when signalling out to "any or all allied warships", DE means "this is", CFH is the call sign of CFS Mill Cove, II signals a hyphen or dash, ZKR means "I am listening in and guarding this frequency" and F1 refers to radio teletype mode. The numbers that follow are the different frequencies. So it would be "To any or all allied warships this is Canadian Forces Station Mill Cove - I am guarding the transmission, in Radio teletype mode frequencies 3394, 4156, 66238". Or something like that. Morse does appear inadvertently on a pop track from the early 70's Forever immortalized on Tubular Bells: Coastal Radio Station, GBR VK3GK Lee Moyle continues our morse in music story:- YOU CAN HEAR GBR TRANSMITTING, ON THE "TUBULAR BELLS" RECORDING BY MIKE OLDFIELD. The morse signal from GBR inadvertently entered the Tubular Bells recording and can be heard on the CD and decoded today. This great story features a radio station called Rugby Radio Station (GBR) that was in Warwickshire, in the heart of England, and the famous mansion / studio The Manor that Richard Branson of Virgin made available to Mike Oldfield for whom he worked at Tubular Bells between 1972 and 1973. Located 60 kilometres from The Manor, where Mike Oldfield spent long months producing his great album, was Rugby Radio, where it was built at the end of the Great War and during the Second World War it was used as a very low frequency radio station for communication with submarines in the North Atlantic and for telephone service between England and the United States. This station stopped broadcasting in 2003 and closed in 2007. See the decoding process on YouTube youtube.com/watch?v=b1g_wJQKihc And we couldn't possibly go QRT with this segment without mentioning THE TOP TRACK on the Billboard top 100 for the past 6 weeks. That's number one with a "bullet" as we old jocks used to say. The song? SOS by SZA) I'm John VK4JJW (WIA - DAILYMAIL) tinyurl.com/36bm9t4p ------------------------------------------------------------* HAM RADIO OPERATIONAL NEWS - IT'S A CONTACT SPORT -------------- NOW CONTEST WISE:- -------------- 2023 -------------- -------------- FEBRUARY 25 - 26 New Zealands Jock White Memorial Field Day This annual ZL contest is named to honour Jock White ZL2GX, NZART Contest and Awards Manager for over 40 years, for the service that he gave to NZART during that time The Jock White is always held the last full weekend in February Saturday 1500-2400 NZDT Sunday 0600-1500 NZDT and on 40 and 80 meters. Overseas stations in the South Pacific area are welcome and a special category exists for "us". (nzart) -------------- MARCH 18 - 19 (the 3rd Weekend) John Moyle Field Day UTC 0100 Saturday to 0059 Sunday. (wia.org.au) -------------- YOTA CONTEST Youngsters On The Air 1st round 22nd April 0800 1959 UTC ham-yota.com/contest/ -------------- MAY 1st Saturday Harry Angel Memorial Sprint 106 mts an annual 80m contest event, first established in 1999, to commemorate the life of Harry Angel VK4HA who at the time of his becoming a Silent Key was the oldest licensed amateur in Australia. (106) The duration of the contest is 106 minutes one minute for each year of Harry's life. (wia.org.au) -------------- MAY 20-21 Don Edwards Memorial Slow Morse Contest begins the weekend after Mother's Day. 80m section Saturday 20th May 6 to 9pm Sydney time. 40m section afternoon of Sunday 21st of May, 1 to 4 Sydney time. (vk2wi) -------------- -------------- -------------- DX WINDOW -------------- -------------- The Special Event Station VI 100 MB is active during 2023, celebrating the centenary of VK2's Manly & District Radio Club. (Richard Murnane) -------------- VI 10 SOTA all year from summits in VK1 -------------- In the Gamba operating is C 5 YK until February 24th. Listen on 20, 17, 15, 12 and 10m, mostly using the digital modes. QSL via Logbook Of The World and eQSL, or to home call ON 7 YK direct or via the bureau. (ARNewsLine) -------------- TIMOR-LESTE Again active from Timor-Leste (OC-148) is 4W / JH 2 EUV until March 3rd. Activity 10-12-15-17-20m FT8. QTH is the Palm Beach Hotel, Dili. QSL via LoTW, buro. (dx-world) -------------- GUAM. QRV is N 7 JVJ until April 28 on 40 to 10 meters using SSB and FT8. QSL via operator's instructions. (eHam) -------------- TURKEY Many Special event stations with prefix and numeral TC 100 are on air all year long. TC100TC, TC100TA, TC100TR, and TC100YEAR are celebrating the centenary of the Turkish Republic. QSL via bureau. (eHam) -------------- WALLIS AND FUTUNA ISLANDS. Jean-Gabriel, F4CIX, signing FW 1 JG until January 2024. He is active on 40 to 6 meters using SSB and FT8. QSL via LoTW. (arrl) ------------------------------------------------------------* WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- ARDF WIA ARDF COORDINATOR VK3WWW Jack vk3www@wia.org.au users.mackay.net.au/~ron/ homingin.com ardf.org.au Kraken Direction Finding SDR If youre in the Hobart region save the date of 1st March 7:30pm for Ollie VK7NFI who will be presenting and demonstrating the crowdsupplied (funded ) Kraken Software Defined Radio that is built specifically for direction finding. He will be in the REAST club grounds Five antennas are placed into a circle and used to direction find using a notebook or the smart phone application which integrates nicely with Google Maps to let you know what the closest driven path to the radio (FOX) is. Ollie will be showing REAST the hardware and demonstrating the software and if lucky, there may be some Amateur Radio Direction Finding around the Queens Domains Clubrooms. crowdsupply.com/krakenrf/krakensdr (vk7wi news) WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS ATV (Every pixel tells a story) - tinyurl.com/WIA-News-Videos THAT LINK IS A VIDEO VERSION OF THIS NEWS COMPILED BY VK5BD BEVAN FADE TO BLACK The IRTS (Irish Radio Transmitting Society) are reporting the SSTV unit aboard the ISS has completely failed. The interface card connecting the radios with the computer suffered damage beyond repair. New laptops are also being used, which require a new interface components from the ARISS-Russia team. ARISS-Russia is developing this new interface and is consulting the ARISS-International hardware and software team. Sergey Samburov, RV3DR stated that they don't expect to complete the SSTV development efforts until early 2024 and the hardware will be transported to the ISS on a Progress flight later in 2024. Until then there will be no more SSTV broadcasts. (irts) WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS - FINAL FRONTIER AMSAT-VK Secretary - secretary@amsat-vk.org SWISS STUDENTS' SATELLITE PREPARES FOR LAUNCH An educational satellite built by Swiss students is being prepared for an important launch in February With the help of a ham radio antenna donated by the Vaudois Amateur Radio Club, HB 9 MM, high school students in Switzerland will be learning how to download telemetry data and photos from a satellite they have helped build in a laboratory at Orbital Solutions in Monaco. They will be able to send commands to the CubeSat to select telemetry and picture download or to switch it into its VU transponder mode so that amateurs around the world will be able to communicate over the small satellite. The downlink using BPSK and AX25 is on 436.825 MHz and when the transponder is enabled, its uplink will be on 145.850 MHz. The launch is expected to take place on the 14th February at the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. RoseyCubesat-1 is the first educational satellite of its kind to be created through the companys STEMSAT programme. Le Rosey is the name of the Swiss learning institute that the students attend. (ARNewsLine) SpaceX successfully performed the first WDR of Starship Booster 7 and Ship 24 on Monday. This is a major milestone in any rockets march towards a first launch, especially for a super heavy lift monster like Starship, which will have more than twice the thrust of the Saturn V. SpaceX loaded 4.5 million kg of cryogenic propellant into the fully reusable, two-stage rocket (causing it to shrink noticeably) and performed a countdown as it would on launch day. A 33-engine static fire is now the next dramatic step toward an orbital launch (ANS) WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- RADIO AMATEUR OLD-TIMERS qcwa.org raotc.org.au Hallo everyone, this is Clive VK6CSW reminding you that tomorrow is the first Monday of the month, time for the Radio Amateurs Old Timers Club of Australia's monthly bulletin to go to air. This month as well as the latest Club news * I'll be talking about The Super regenerative receiver, * This will be followed by Bill, VK3BR who tells us about the almost forgotten inventor of radio', Canadian born Reginald Fessendon. Everyone, RAOTC members and non-Members alike, is most welcome to listen to the program and join in the call backs afterwards. Full details of all transmissions times and modes can be found on the RAOTC website at www.raotc.org.au or just Google RAOTC broadcasts. If none of the transmission times suit you, you can download the audio file at any time from today from the club website. Members and Friends of the RAOTC in Perth are reminded that the next lunchtime meeting at the new venue, the Woodbridge Hotel, East Guildford, will be on Tuesday February 14th. All are welcome; further details are published on the RAOTC website, under subheading Luncheons. Once again, tune in tomorrow for the February RAOTC bulletin, enjoy the program and please join in the call backs afterwards. 73 from Clive VK6CSW. WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- IOTA iota-world.org Troubridge Island IOTA number OC-139. Troubridge Island is an island located in the south west corner of Gulf St Vincent in South Australia near the eastern edge of the Troubridge Shoals. Adam, VK2YK, Chris, VK5FR, Ivan, VK5HS and a team of other VK hams will be using the callsign VK5TIL from Troubridge Island on the 7th, 8th and 9th of February. They will operate CW, SSB and digital modes on various bands. QSL via MOXO's OQRS, LoTW and eQSL. (ARNewsLine WIA) WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP --- MILITARY Recordings of military transmissions can be found on the Signal Identification Guide Wiki at sigidwiki.com/wiki/Category:Military The RCA CR-88 was a radio receiver made to work in top-secret government eavesdropping stations. As you might expect, these radios are top-of-the-line, performance wise, at least when they are working correctly. Hackaday have a story where a Mr. Carlson has one on his bench, and they and now us get to watch the show on his recent video that you can see in the link we like best read at wia.org.au and click the current news text. Interestingly, Mr. Carlson uses some Sherlock Holmes-like deductive reasoning to guess some things about the radios secret history. The radios design is decidedly heavy-duty, with a giant power transformer and many valves, IF transformers, and large filter capacitors. The underside of the radio reveals neat wiring and some big metal shields. The metal shields and filters have a very specific purpose. The radio was probably in a bank of radios, and you dont want them interfering with each other. In addition, you might not want someone tracking your super-secret listening post by its RF emission. hackaday.com/2023/01/30/inside-a-1940s-spy-radio/ ------------------------------------------------------------* 2023 Social Scene Clubs are welcome to submit text with audio for this section Details of all WIA affiliated clubs and societies can be found on the WIA website, including email addresses and website links. vk2wi) VK6 - PARGFEST in Mandurah Western Australia February 11th. (vk6qi) Peel Amateur Radio Group - PARGFEST and Raffle. Last call for PARGFEST. Come and join in the fun next Saturday morning when the Peel Amateur Radio Group in Mandurah Western Australia celebrates PARGs 40th Anniversary. This year the event will be bigger and better than ever before - the huge swap-meet, tech talks by invited presenters, club displays and WAs amateur radio vendors will be there. And by popular demand, if you get the hungries or need a cuppa, well be able to help with that too. Plus were running a huge raffle which will be drawn on the day. Just think - you could share in $3,300 worth of prizes and could walk away as the proud owner of an Icom IC-7300 HF Transceiver, an IC-2730A, a Hustler 5 Band HF Trap Vertical an IC-T10 and other great prizes. So as usual, the event will be held at the Mandurah Bowling Club, 89 Allnutt Street, Mandurah - just a short walk from the light rail station. Doors open at 8am for exhibitors and sellers, and 9am for visitors - $5 per person for entry and theres no table charge. PARGs emergency Comms trailer PARG1 will be set up - so call CQ PARG on the VK6RMH repeater on 146.850MHz with a 91.5Hz sub-tone on the way in or on your way home and chat to VK6ARG on the South West AllStar net. And what about taking the opportunity to sell some of your treasures by booking a swap-meet table or three? For more information, email our Secretary Jenny VK6JEN parg.secretary@gmail.com Check parg.org.au for details, links to the Raffle and for COVID updates on the day. PARGFEST - WAs Best. See you there amongst the raffles and bargains - Saturday morning February 11th at 89 Allnutt Street in Mandurah. VK4 - SUNSHINE COAST CAR BOOT SALE FEBRUARY 12 VK - WIA AGM May 13 at 10:30am AEST proposed for Canberra (vk8zz) A hybrid event conducted both in person and by video conference and able to be viewed on an internet streaming platform. Submitting news items If you would like to submit news items for possible inclusion in the VK1WIA broadcasts, please email your item in text to nationalnews@wia.org.au and don't JUST send url's links or posters, but take the time to pen YOUR contribution. To submit audio, email nationalnews@wia.org.au and send BOTH the audio and the text We would appreciate items certainly no longer than 1.5 mts in length as we only have a half hour. Remember the sooner you submit material the more the likelihood of it being broadcast in the very next edition of WIA National News. Each recorded item will only be broadcast once, if you want a couple of mentions, please submit different slants to keep your event 'fresh' and always if the news room is to read your item --- write it in the 3rd person. (First if YOU are reading your own item) Promote your local rebroadcast; details on wia.org.au/members/broadcast/contribute/ A reminder when supplying HamFest info we obviously can't plug DEALS from commercial traders "on air", but we at the WIA will put your supporters 'goods' in this text edition "no worries." We will not give blatant 'plugs' to raffles, be it raffles at the event or "on-line". ------------------------------------------------------------* Oh... and to contact us with your news because If It Matters To You It Matters To Us! Click the links below to download the most recent edition of National News, BUT this is ONLY the backup site! WIANEWS backup thanks to Brendan VK4BLP can be found on wiaq.org.au BACKUPS OF THE BACKUP!! thanks to Tony VK7AX www.vk7ax.id.au/wianews/ wia.org.au/members/broadcast/wianews/ (This is the link to the original text version and original audio on wia site) ------------------------------------------------------------* WIANews - we've reported...YOU decide. TWITTER twitter.com/VK1WIA Societies and Club News Letter Editors can EXCHANGE a feed prior to the actual broadcast date, e-mail nationalnews@wia.org.au Call-backs follow the RF editions, but also for text readers you may lodge a quick reply to let us know you read it, who knows, you might even get a "cheerio call". Thanks to our dedicated band of broadcast volunteers who utilize their time and equipment in bringing you this weekly broadcast. Who and where are they? wia.org.au/members/broadcast/where/ Promote your local rebroadcast; details on wia.org.au/members/broadcast/contribute/ The purpose of "WIANews" is to rapidly provide news of interest to WIA affiliated clubs and active amateurs residing in Australia and the globe. We strongly encourage membership in the Wireless Institute of Australia and participation in the activities of local clubs. Opinions expressed in "WIANews" are those of the writers who submit material and do not necessarily reflect those of the rebroadcasters, nor the National WIA, but IF broadcast, are done so in the spirit in which they were submitted." If you would like to see the call-backs reported each broadcast, OR have call-backs to contribute to the National News call back tally then please send through your call-backs to callbacks@wia.org.au How do I join this National News List? (subscribe for an automatic weekly feed.) Email to vk1wia-news-join@lists.wia.org.au from the email account that you wish the emails to go to. How do I leave this National News List? (unsubscribe your weekly feed) Open mail program which sends mail from the address you want to unsubscribe from. Send unsubscribe to the list unsubscribe address vk1wia-news-leave@lists.wia.org.au You will be sent a confirmation mail and must follow the instructions given in that mail to complete the unsubscription. Once your unsubscription has been processed, you will probably receive a message confirming your unsubscription from the list and at that point you should stop receiving messages. ------------------------------------------------------------*