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N9PMO  > LETTER   09.12.16 02:23l 660 Lines 29034 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
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Greg Walden, W7EQI, to Chair Powerful House Energy and Commerce
Committee

ARRL Transitioning to New Digital Publishing Platform

FCC Affirms Penalty for Unlicensed Amateur Operation, Making False
Distress Call

The Doctor Will See You Now!

National Parks on the Air Update

Use of New Web Log Upload App Encouraged for ARRL 10 Meter Contest
Participants

Reminder : December 11 Special Event will Commemorate Transatlantic
Reception Anniversary

Emergency Communication Exercise Uses "HamsphereŽ " to Introduce Youth
to Virtual Ham Radio

Contribute to ARRL through Your IRA

ARRL Foundation Board Approves Two New Scholarships for Young Radio
Amateurs

Elves at OF9X Bring the Spirit of Christmas to Ham Radio

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

Greg Walden, W7EQI, to Chair Powerful House Energy and Commerce
Committee

US Rep. Greg Walden, W7EQI (R-OR), who has championed the Amateur
Radio Parity Act (H.R. 1301) as the chair of the Subcommittee on
Communications and Technology, will chair the US House Energy and
Commerce Committee when the 115th Congress convenes in January. Energy
and Commerce is considered one of the most powerful congressional
panels on Capitol Hill.

US Rep. Greg Walden, W7EQI.

Walden defeated the more senior Rep. John Shimkus (R-IL) and Rep. Joe
Barton (R-TX) to succeed Rep. Fred Upton (R-MI), who is stepping down
from the chairmanship because of term limits. Members of the House GOP
Steering Committee elected Walden on December 1 in a closed-door
meeting.

Walden, who represents Oregon's 2nd congressional district, gained
favor within the Republican Party after serving two terms as head of
the National Republican Congressional Committee. The nine-term Oregon
lawmaker had campaigned around the country with House Speaker Paul
Ryan (R-WI) during the run-up to the November election, and Walden's
selection to head Energy and Commerce over a more senior colleague is
being considered recognition of his role in the GOP's election
successes.

During a Capitol Hill hearing last January, Walden, a cosponsor of
H.R. 1301, called the measure "a commonsense bill" and urged his
colleagues to support reporting the bill favorably to the full
committee. In July, Walden had recommended the amended version of the
bill to his colleagues as "a good balance." The Amateur Radio Parity
Act bill has been awaiting action in the US Senate.

ARRL Transitioning to New Digital Publishing Platform

ARRL is moving to a new digital publishing platform! The January 2017
digital edition of QST will be the first produced using PageSuite.
ARRL Publications Manager Steve Ford, WB8IMY, said the transition from
the current Nxtbook platform to PageSuite not only will improve
members' reading experience, it will be more convenient.

"PageSuite provides a sleek, modern design that runs on desktop
browsers, mobile browsers, and within apps for mobile devices," Ford
said. "PageSuite does not require Flash but uses HTML5 instead. This
alleviates many security concerns and makes the magazine more broadly
compatible."

New QST issues, beginning with the January 2017 edition, will take up
less space on mobile devices, speeding up download time. ded features
include digital bookmarks to save a page and pick up right where you
left off, and a clipping tool to save or share important passages as
JPEG files. Video files will be hosted on YouTube in high resolution.

The new application is compatible with Android devices, iOS devices --
including iPhones, iPod touches, and iPads -- and will be newly
available to Kindle Fire. These apps will receive regular, quick
updates in order to keep the application running smoothly.

A sample of the digital edition of QST produced using the PageSuite
platform (click for larger image).

Ford said the link to the digital edition of the monthly journal will
remain in the same spot on the QST website, and members will continue
to be notified of its release via e-mail.

ARRL has compiled a "how-to" guide to help members navigate PageSuite,
which will be available on the QST web page on the day the January
digital edition is announced. The announcement concerning the
availability of the January issue of QST in the new desktop/laptop
version, the how-to guide, and the new digital QST apps, will be
forthcoming.

Members can use the online digital QST feedback form to comment on the
new platform when it is available. To ease the transition, Nxtbook
applications will continue to function on iOS and Android devices
until January 1.

FCC Affirms Penalty for Unlicensed Amateur Operation, Making False
Distress Call

The FCC has affirmed a $23,000 penalty against Daniel Delise of
Astoria, New York, for operating without an Amateur Radio license on
147.96 MHz and for transmitting a false officer-in-distress call on a
New York City Police Department (NYPD) radio channel. The FCC's
December 5 Forfeiture Order follows its August 31 Notice of Apparent
Liability for Forfeiture (NAL), which detailed a history of complaints
and alleged illegal radio operation by Delise dating to 2012.

"The penalty represents the full amount proposed in the Notice of
Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, and is based on the full base
forfeiture amount as well as an upward adjustment reflecting Mr.
Delise's decision to continue his misconduct after being warned that
his actions violated the Communications Act and the Commission's
rules," the FCC Forfeiture Order said. The FCC said Delise's response
to the NAL offered "no reason to cancel, withdraw, or reduce the
proposed penalty."

Last summer, ARRL Hudson Division Director Mike Lisenco, N2YBB,
credited the intervention of New York Rep. Peter King with getting the
case "off the back burner and up to the front of the line." Lisenco
and ARRL General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD, met with the Republican
congressman in January to discuss ongoing interference issues in the
Greater New York City/Long Island area. King subsequently wrote FCC
Chairman Tom Wheeler to urge "timely and visible enforcement."

The September 15 response to the NAL did not deny that Delise violated
the Communications Act and FCC rules but argued that the FCC should
reduce or cancel the fine because he is currently incarcerated and has
no income or assets. The FCC turned away that argument, saying that
Delise did not provide any documentation to substantiate his claim of
inability to pay.

Last April, the FCC Enforcement Bureau issued a Notice of Unlicensed
Operation, after determining that Delise was transmitting on 147.96
MHz, a repeater input. Not long after, the NYPD informed an FCC field
agent that police had taken Delise into custody for "sending out false
radio transmissions" over the NYPD radio system and for possessing
radios capable of operating on NYPD frequencies, in violation of state
law.

Delise, who could have been fined more than $140,000, has 30 days to
pay the fine. He's now in prison as a result of the false police call
and guilty pleas to other charges.



The Doctor Will See You Now!

"Yagi Antennas" is the topic of the latest (December 1) episode of the
"ARRL The Doctor is In" podcast. Listen...and learn!

Sponsored by DX Engineering, "ARRL The Doctor is In" is an informative
discussion of all things technical. Listen on your computer, tablet,
or smartphone -- whenever and wherever you like!

Every 2 weeks, your host, QST Editor-in-Chief Steve Ford, WB8IMY, and
the Doctor himself, Joel Hallas, W1ZR, will discuss a broad range of
technical topics. You can also e-mail your questions to
doctor@arrl.org, and the Doctor may answer them in a future podcast.

Enjoy "ARRL The Doctor is In" on Apple iTunes, or by using your iPhone
or iPad podcast app (just search for "ARRL The Doctor is In"). You can
also listen online at Blubrry, or at Stitcher (free registration
required, or browse the site as a guest) and through the free Stitcher
app for iOS, Kindle, or Android devices.

If you've never listened to a podcast before, download our beginner's
guide. Next time: "Antenna System Troubleshooting."

National Parks on the Air Update

With 3 weeks to go until the end of ARRL's National Parks on the Air
(NPOTA) program, Activators continue to operate from qualified NPS
sites in record numbers. The contact count stands at more than
953,100, an increase of nearly 40,000 since December 1.

There are NPOTA activations every day -- plenty of opportunities to
work stations, increase your NPOTA totals as a Chaser, and contribute
to the goal of #1MillionQSOs.

Thirty-eight activations are scheduled for the week of December 8-15,
including Saint Paul's Church National Historical Site in New York,
and Franklin Delano Roosevelt National Memorial in Washington, DC.
Details about these and other upcoming activations can be found on the
NPOTA Activations calendar.

Keep up with the latest NPOTA news on Facebook. Follow NPOTA on
Twitter (@ARRL_NPOTA).

Use of New Web Log Upload App Encouraged for ARRL 10 Meter Contest
Participants

One of the more popular annual operating events -- the ARRL 10 Meter
Contest -- is this weekend, December 10-11, beginning at 0000 UTC on
Saturday (Friday evening in US time zones) and winding up 48 hours
later at 2359 UTC on Sunday. The object is simple: Exchange contact
information with as many stations as possible on 10 meters. The ARRL
10 Meter Contest is open to all radio amateurs, because Technician
licensees have access to the band. More contest newbies are active in
the 10 Meter Contest than in any other event, and it's a good time to
get acquainted with contesting techniques too.

The increasingly active Ethiopian Amateur Radio Society's ET3AA was on
during the 2015 ARRL 10 Meter Contest: (L-R) Robel Hayelom, Biniam
Kassahun, and Efrim Dessalew. [Ken Claerbout, K4ZW, photo]

Participants submitting logs for the ARRL 10 Meter Contest are urged
to take advantage of the new web upload app. This app makes it easy to
submit a Cabrillo-formatted log, plus it makes sure the log is
properly formatted before it's accepted. The article, "Online Log
Upload for ARRL Contests," on page 82 of the November issue of QST,
explains how to use the app.

A wide range of entry categories is available for this event, and you
can operate CW, SSB, or both. Stations in the US and Canada send a
signal report and state or province. Alaska and Hawaii count as
states; this is also one contest where the District of Columbia (DC)
also counts as a multiplier. DX stations -- including KP2, KP4, etc.
-- send a signal report and a sequential serial number starting with
001. Stations in Mexico transmit a signal report and state. Maritime
mobile stations send a signal report and their ITU region (R1, R2, or
R3).

A happy Dwight Brown, AD5DX, with his WAS certificate earned during
the 2015 ARRL 10 Meter Contest. [Dwight Brown, AD5DX, photo]

In this contest, multipliers count twice -- once on phone and once on
CW -- so there's an extra incentive to give both modes a try, even if
you're a CW beginner!

No matter how many -- or few -- contacts you make, submitting a log
helps to improve the quality of log checking, and you might even find
yourself in line for a certificate! If you're lucky, you could take a
shot at one of the contest records. Post contest comments and photos
of you and your station to the ARRL Soapbox page. Your story could be
included in the ARRL 10 Meter Contest results article in QST. Read
more.



Reminder: December 11 Special Event will Commemorate Transatlantic
Reception Anniversary

An Amateur Radio special event on December 11 will commemorate the
95th anniversary of the first transatlantic shortwave reception
between Greenwich, Connecticut, and Ardrossan, Scotland. ARRL, the
Radio Society of Great Britain (RSGB), and the Radio Club of America
(RCA) are partnering in sponsoring the activity. The Greenwich
Historical Society will also participate.

ARRL's "Successful Overseas Listener" Paul Godley, 2ZE, returned to
the US "a conquering hero," QST said in 1922.

On December 11, 1921, a radio signal transmitted from the location of
1BCG in Connecticut, was heard in Scotland by Paul Godley, 2ZE, during
the second ARRL transatlantic tests. The special event will use N1BCG,
the call sign of Clark Burgard of Greenwich, a radio history buff who
was instrumental in making arrangements for the event.

The N1BCG special event, which will be set up at a school near the
original 1BCG site, will begin on Sunday, December 11, at 1200 and
conclude at 0300 UTC on December 12. Operation will be on AM on 75 and
40 meters; CW and SSB on 40 meters, CW on 30 meters, and CW and SSB on
20 and 17 meters. Approximate frequencies are 3.880 (AM), 7.290 (AM),
7.235 (SSB), 7.040 (CW), 10.112 (CW), 14.280 (SSB), 14.040 (CW),
18.125 (SSB), and 18.088 MHz CW.

The event will include an attempt at a two-way contact between N1BCG
and GB2ZE in Ardrossan.

Emergency Communication Exercise Uses "HamsphereŽ" to Introduce Youth
to Virtual Ham Radio

Fifty students in Dominica were introduced to ham radio on November
23, in the form of a simulated emergency drill conducted via the
virtual Amateur Radio platform HamSphere. W1AW at ARRL Headquarters
monitored the exercise. HamSphere is a virtual Amateur Radio
transceiver, available for iOS and Android devices. Under supervision,
selected youth teams competed for speed and accuracy in a hurricane
emergency communication drill, dubbed "Haminica 2016," while becoming
familiar with this virtual version of Amateur Radio.

Brian Machesney, K1LI/J75Y (left), who helped to organize "Haminica
2016," works with some students during the exercise.

Sponsoring the project was Dominica's National Telecommunication
Regulatory Commission (NTRC), and NTRC Executive Director Craig Nesty
and Engineer George James, J73GJ, were on hand for the exercise. ARRL
Emergency Preparedness Manager Mike Corey, KI1U, observed "Haminica
2016" at W1AW using the HamSphere 3.0 platform. Well-known DXer Martti
Laine, OH2BH -- an enthusiastic HamSphere supporter -- and Brian
Machesney, K1LI/J75Y, organized "Haminica 2016" and helped to conduct
the Dominica exercise. While in Dominica, Laine celebrated his 70th
birthday on the air as J70BH.

The exercise scenario was a hurricane about to make landfall on the
island. Laine said that, at one point, the group conducting the
exercise had to evacuate the station on short notice.

Laine said the NRTC is producing a video about the training exercise,
and the event caught the attention of the national TV station, which
reported the story in prime time.

Contribute to ARRL through Your IRA

Time is running short to contribute to ARRL from your Individual
Retirement Account (IRA). The federal government has now made
permanent the ability for those age 70-1/2 or older to contribute up
to $100,000 per year from an IRA directly to qualifying charities
without having first to declare the donation as income. This means you
can, for example, donate your annual required minimum distribution
(RMD) to ARRL without increasing your income for tax purposes.
Depending on your personal tax situation, donating directly from your
IRA to ARRL could have more tax advantages for you than a direct
personal donation. Most custodians need a week or two to complete the
transaction, so contact your IRA custodian as soon as possible!

Here's how it works: Contact the custodian of your IRA plan and
instruct the custodian to make a donation from your IRA directly to
ARRL. Provide the plan custodian with ARRL's federal tax ID number
06-6000004 and legal name and address -- American Radio Relay League
Inc., 225 Main St., Newington, CT 06111-1494.

It is important that the check from the custodian is made payable
directly to ARRL. ARRL appreciates contributions of any size from your
IRA.

The custodian of your IRA then will send you an IRS Form 1099 showing
that you, as the owner of the IRA, did not receive the plan
distribution for your personal use. Most fund custodians will ask you
to complete a direct donation form and will mail the plan distribution
check directly to ARRL.

For more information, contact the ARRL Development Office, (860)
594-0348. The Development Office is happy to help.

ARRL strongly encourages individuals interested in supporting the
League through an IRA distribution to consult with their attorney,
tax/financial advisor, or accountant to determine the tax, or other,
consequences of making such a gift.

American Radio Relay League Inc. is an IRS-designated 501(c)(3)
organization.



ARRL Foundation Board Approves Two New Scholarships for Young Radio
Amateurs

The ARRL Foundation Board of Directors recently approved two new
scholarships.

The Helen Laughlin AM Mode Memorial Scholarship

The Helen Laughlin AM Mode Memorial Scholarship -- a scholarship
intended for women Amateur Radio operators -- is funded through the
generosity of the Laughlin-Beers Foundation and is intended
exclusively for educational use -- to provide assistance with the
costs of tuition, room, board, books, and/or other fees essential to
the advanced education of the recipient.

Applicants must be enrolled in an accredited 4-year college or
university, and hold a General or higher Amateur Radio license. It is
suggested that the applicant have made a contact in AM mode, but this
is not a requirement.

Preference is given to Texas residents, but if no qualified applicant
is identified, preference will be given to residents of Arkansas. If
no qualified applicant is identified there, preference will be given
to applicants residing in the ARRL West Gulf or Delta Divisions -- the
states of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and
Tennessee. If no women qualify, then the award will go to a qualifying
male applicant.

The scholarship award will be $1,000 annually, with the first
scholarship granted in 2017.

The Atlanta Radio Club Scholarship

The Atlanta Radio Club Scholarship is funded through the generosity of
the Atlanta Radio Club, and is intended exclusively for educational
use -- to provide assistance with the costs of tuition, room, board,
books, and/or other fees essential to the advanced education of the
recipient. Applicants must reside in Georgia, be between 17 and 25
years old at the time of the award, attend an accredited 4-year
college or university, or graduate program, and hold a Technician or
higher Amateur Radio license.

The scholarship award will be $500 annually, with the first
scholarship awarded in 2017. One scholarship is to be awarded per
year.

In the case of all ARRL Foundation-administered scholarships, the
Foundation shall determine the recipients of the award to be
academically superior and the best among the scholarship applicants.
Applicants for both scholarships must be US citizens.

The ARRL Foundation is currently accepting applications from eligible
radio amateurs for more than 80 scholarships ranging from $500 to
$5,000, which will be awarded in 2017. More information is on the ARRL
Foundation web page.

Applications for the 2017 scholarship process must be received by
11:59 PM Eastern Standard Time on January 31, 2017.

Elves at OF9X Bring the Spirit of Christmas to Ham Radio

As in past years, Santa Claus will be spreading the spirit of
Christmas via Amateur Radio, but this year the elves are taking over
the show. Twelve elves are operating OF9X
("Old-Father-Nine-Christmas") for the entire month of December, each
with a 3-letter identification. Radio amateurs can work OF9X on all
bands and modes, from 630 meters (where authorized) to 70 centimeters.
Each contact is worth 1 point for stations in Europe and 2 points for
stations outside Europe. The elves provide the multiplier -- up to 12
-- to determine your final score. Only contacts made in 2016 are
valid. Logs are available on ClubLog, and the log will indicate which
elf was worked, in case you miss the ID.

Certified reindeer driver and Laplander Pertti "Pete" Koivula,
OH2BEE/OH9U, is giving Santa a face and voice this year. Koivula is a
well-known Finnish actor.

The elves on the air and their 3-letter IDs are Arto, OH2KW (ART);
Arttu, OH2FB (ATU); Jyri, OH2KM (JYR); Martti, OH2BH (MAR); Niko,
OH2GEK (NIK); Pauli, OH5BQ (PAU); Pekka, OH2TA (PEK); Pertti, OH2BEE
(PER); Raimo, OH2BCI (RAI); Tom, OH6VDA (TOM); Pertti, OH2PM (SIM),
and Erik, OH2LAK (LAK).

Three awards are available: SKC Award (Santa is King of Christmas) --
at least 50 points; WMC Award (Warm and Memorable Christmas) -- at
least 35 points, and RNS Award (Remember those Red Nose Elves) -- at
least 20 points.

E-mail your log and your point calculation by January 5, 2017.
Full-color award certificates will be sent via return mail. Include
the name to be printed on the award and your e-mail address.

High-scoring operators and their children on each continent will be
offered an opportunity to speak with Santa during Christmas week.
Details will be available on the OF9X QRZ.com profile page. Read more.

In Brief...

China Plans Lunar-Orbiting Amateur Radio Satellites: China's Harbin
Institute of Technology is developing a pair of lunar-orbiting
satellites -- DSLWP-A1 and A2. According to Mingchuan Wei, BG2BHC,
DSLWP is "a lunar formation-flying mission for low-frequency radio
astronomy, Amateur Radio, and education," consisting of two
microsatellites. Launch is planned in June 2018, to place the pair
into a 200 × 9,000 kilometer (approximately 124 × 5,580 mile) lunar
orbit. The Amateur Radio payload on DSLWP-A1 will provide telecommand
uplink and telemetry and a digital image downlink. Open telecommand is
also designed to allow radio amateurs to send commands to take and
download images. The satellites are 50 × 50 × 40 centimeters, with a
mass of about 45 kilograms and are three-axis stabilized, with two
linear polarization antennas. The team has proposed downlinks for
DSLWP-A1 on 435.425 MHz and 436.425 MHz, and downlinks for DSLWP-A2 on
435.400 MHz and 436.400 MHz, using GMSK with concatenated codes or
JT65B. Harbin Institute of Technology also developed the Lilac series
of CubeSats.

Radio Australia Shortwave Broadcasts to End on January 31: Another
prominent shortwave broadcaster is going dark, "The SWLing Post" blog
reports. Radio Australia has announced that it will cease its
shortwave transmissions on January 31. The station, popular with SWLs,
broadcasts in the 31-, 25-, 19-, and 16-meter bands. "The move is in
line with the national broadcaster's commitment to dispense with
outdated technology and to expand its digital content offerings,
including DAB+ digital radio, online and mobile services, together
with FM services for international audiences," the Australian
Broadcast Corporation (ABC) said in a news release. The ABC said it
would put the money saved from ending shortwave broadcasting into
other program distribution technology.

Ofcom Declines to Act in Nightmare Neighbour Ham Radio Episode: UK
telecommunications regulator Ofcom has declined to act on formal
complaints about an October 27 episode of the Channel 5 television
program Nightmare Neighbour Next Door. That episode focused on
75-year-old Armando Martins, M0PAM, of Kent, whose neighbors had made
unsubstantiated claims that RF radiating from his 30-foot vertical
antenna was detrimental to their health. The Radio Society of Great
Britain (RSGB) weighed in following the airing of the show. Radio
amateurs across the UK also complained that the program episode was
replete with false claims and pointed out that Ofcom had never found
any problems with Martins' station. A radio amateur for more than 60
years, Martins was first licensed as CR6IL in Portuguese West Africa
(Angola). Complainants contended that the show was "materially
misleading," and thus a breach of the Ofcom Broadcast Code.

ISS Packet Digipeater is Now on 70 Centimeters: The Amateur Radio on
the International Space Station (ARISS) packet digipeater aboard the
ISS now is active on 437.550 MHz. The UHF frequency means users will
have to make adjustments for Doppler on both uplink and downlink. The
change to 70 centimeters comes in the wake of a problem that has
sidelined the Ericsson VHF transceiver, so the UHF model has been put
into service. The digipeater operates just as it did when it was on
its former 145.825 MHz frequency. AMSAT suggests that users program a
group of five memory pairs to permit an operating range that will
compensate for Doppler, with transmit frequencies from 437.560 to
437.540 MHz, and receive frequencies from 437.540 to 437.560 MHz, in 5
kHz increments (i.e., the transceiver would be in simplex for 437.555
MHz). More information is available from the AMSAT website. Scheduled
ARISS contacts and APRS operations will also utilize the Ericsson UHF
transceiver in the Columbia module. -- Thanks to AMSAT News Service

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: The average daily sunspot number for
December 1-7 was 40.9, up 10 points from the previous 7 days. Solar
flux has hardly changed, moving from 82.6 to 82.2. The average daily
planetary A index dropped from 13.6 to 4.9, and the average
mid-latitude A index dipped from 10.3 to 3.4.

The latest prediction from NOAA and the US Air Force shows solar flux
at 75 on December 8-10; 70 on December 11-13; 75 on December 14-15; 78
on December 16-18; 82 on December 19-20; 86 on December 21-27; 84 on
December 28-31; 82 on January 1; 80 on January 2-3; 78 on January 4-8;
80 on January 9, and 82 on January 10-15.

Their latest projection for Planetary A Index is 20 on December 8-9;
18, 12, and 8 on December 10-12; 5 on December 13-17; 8, 12, 16, and
22 on December 18-21; 30, 12, 10, and 8 on December 22-25; 5 on
December 26-31; 8, 5, 12, and 15 on January 1-4; 20, 18, and 12 on
January 5-7, and 5 on January 8-13.

A summary of the 3-month moving average of observed daily sunspot
numbers, from January through November 2016: 55.4, 53.5, 49, 45.3,
43.1, 35.4, 33, 33.5, 40, 39, and 29.6. Monthly average daily sunspot
numbers for November were 22.4. This is down from 50.4, 37.4, and 29.1
for August through October. The downward trend in activity is obvious
and undeniable.

Sunspot numbers for December 1 through 7 were 49, 59, 62, 37, 37, 24,
and 18, with a mean of 40.9. 10.7 cm flux was 84.5, 84.4, 84.7, 82.4,
82.7, 79.8, and 77.2, with a mean of 82.2. Estimated planetary A
indices were 3, 4, 3, 2, 4, 7, and 11, with a mean of 4.9. Estimated
mid-latitude A indices were 3, 2, 1, 1, 2, 6, and 9, with a mean of
3.4.

Send me your reports or observations.

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Just Ahead in Radiosport

December 10-11 -- ARRL 10 Meter Contest (CW, phone)

December 10-11 -- SKCC Weekend Sprintathon (CW)

December 10-11 -- International Naval Contest (CW, phone)

December 10-18 -- AWA Bruce Kelley 1929 QSO Party (CW)

December 11-14 -- CQC Great Colorado Snowshoe Run (CW)

December 14 -- NAQCC CW Sprint

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

December 9-10 -- West Central Florida Section Convention, Plant City,
Florida

January 8 -- New York City/Long Island Section Convention, Bethpage,
New York

January 14 -- TechFest 2017 Convention, Lawrenceville, Georgia

January 20-21 -- North Texas Section Convention, Forest Hill, Texas

January 21 -- Georgia ARES Convention, Forsyth, Georgia

January 22-28 -- QuartzFest Convention, Quartzsite, Arizona

January 27-28 -- Mississippi State Convention, Jackson, Mississippi

January 27-29 -- Puerto Rico State Convention, Hatillo, Puerto Rico

February 3-4 -- Southern Florida Section Convention, Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida

February 4 - South Carolina State Convention, North Charleston, South
Carolina

February 4 -- Virginia State Convention, Richmond, Virginia

February 10-12 -- Southeastern Division Convention (HamCation),
Orlando, Florida

February 17-18 -- Arizona Section Convention, Yuma, Arizona

February 18 -- Arkansas Section Convention, Hoxie, Arkansas

February 25 -- West Central Florida Section Technical Conference,
Sarasota, Florida

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for 

Amateur Radio News and Information.

.

.

Join or Renew Today! ARRL membership includes QST, Amateur Radio's
most popular and informative journal, delivered to your mailbox each
month.

Listen to ARRL Audio News, available every Friday.

Subscribe to...

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Sprint, and QSO Parties.

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features technical articles, construction projects, columns, and other
items of interest to radio amateurs and communications professionals.

Free of charge to ARRL members...

Subscribe to the ARES E-Letter (monthly public service and emergency
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