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- Date: Sat, 30 Oct 93 04:30:05 PDT
- From: Info-Hams Mailing List and Newsgroup <info-hams@ucsd.edu>
- Errors-To: Info-Hams-Errors@UCSD.Edu
- Reply-To: Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu
- Precedence: Bulk
- Subject: Info-Hams Digest V93 #1288
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Sat, 30 Oct 93 Volume 93 : Issue 1288
-
- Today's Topics:
- Amateur Radio Newsline #845
- BAUD VS BAUDS
- CELLULAR SURVEILLANCE
- magazine article about antenna tuners
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu>
- Send subscription requests to: <Info-Hams-REQUEST@UCSD.Edu>
- Problems you can't solve otherwise to brian@ucsd.edu.
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-Hams Digest are available
- (by FTP only) from UCSD.Edu in directory "mailarchives/info-hams".
-
- 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: Wed, 27 Oct 1993 12:52:30 GMT
- From: agate!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!cyber2.cyberstore.ca!nntp.cs.ubc.ca!unixg.ubc.ca!kakwa.ucs.ualberta.ca!alberta!adec23!ve6mgs!usenet@dog.ee.lbl.gov
- Subject: Amateur Radio Newsline #845
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- The electronic edition of Amateur Radio Newsline is transcribed from source
- material by Dale Cary. Newsline is reprinted here courtesy of Bill
- Pasternak, WA6ITF, Editor of Newsline. Editorial comment should be
- E-mailed to newsline@mcimail.com or B.PASTERNAK@genie.geis.com. Voice or
- FAX to +1 805-296-7180.
-
- Personal Note: Bill is very happy with the additional feedback he's been
- getting since we began posting this transcribed version on the nets. He
- would personally like to thank all of you for your input.
-
-
- *****************************************************************
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- * * * ***** * * **** ***** ***** * * ***** *
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- * **** * **** ***** *** *
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- * **** ***** * * * * * *
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- * * * * * **** ***** *** *
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- *****************************************************************
-
- The following is late news about Amateur Radio for Radio
- Amateurs as prepared from NEWSLINE RADIO scripts by the staff of
- the AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE, INC. -- formerly the WESTLINK RADIO
- NETWORK. The electronic version of newsline is posted on this
- CBBS twice monthly. For current information updates, please call
- (213) 462-0008, (407) 259-4479, (708) 289-0423, (513) 275-9991,
- or (718) 353-2801. For the latest breaking info call the Instant
- Update Line at (805) 296-2407. To provide information please
- call (805) 296-7180. This line answers automatically and will
- accept up to 30 minutes of material.
-
- Check with your local amateur radio club to see if NEWSLINE
- can be heard weekly on the air in your area.
-
- Articles may be reproduced if printed in their entirety and
- credit is given to AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE as being the source.
-
- For further information about the AMATEUR RADIO NEWSLINE,
- please write to us with an SASE at P.O. Box 463, Pasadena, CA
- 91102.
-
- Thank You
- NEWSLINE
-
- *****************************************************************
-
- Some of the hams of NEWSLINE RADIO...
-
- WA6ITF WB6MQV WB6FDF K6DUE W6RCL N6AHU N6AWE N6TCQ K6PGX N6PNY
- KU8R N8DTN W9JUV KC9RP K9XI KB5KCH KC5UD KC0HF G8AUU WD0AKO DJ0QN
- and many others in the United States and around the globe!!!
-
- *****************************************************************
-
- [845]
-
- * * * * C L O S E D C I R C U I T A D V I S O R A Y * * * *
- * *
- * The following is a closed circuit advisory and is NOT for *
- * transmission over ham radio. According to Dr. Norm Chalfin, *
- * K6PGX, Newsline is once again very broke. Dr. Chalfin is *
- * the administrator of the Newsline Support Fund. He says *
- * that there is still less than three hundred dollars *
- * available in the account and that at least seven hundred *
- * dollars is needed to make the monthly expenses. *
- * As you probably know, the vast majority of the donations *
- * goes directly toward paying our monthly phone bills and *
- * electronic mail services. This is how we get the news, and *
- * it is how we deliver it to you. If we loose the telephone, *
- * the E-Mail or both, we will have no way to get the news and *
- * no way to disseminate it to you. *
- * Simply said, we need the assistance of every listener who *
- * appreciates Newsline to help to keep it on the air. The *
- * Newsline Support Fund is separate from the service itself *
- * and exists for the purpose of channeling donations directly *
- * to the those providing services to the Newsline *
- * organization. *
- * The address for the Newsline Support Fund is Post Office *
- * Box number 463, Pasadena, California 91102. As always, we *
- * thank you for your support. *
- * *
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
- NEW FINE SCHEDULE
-
- The FCC has released its updated schedule of fines that it can
- charge you for violating its rules. When you hear the new numbers
- you are defiantly going to think twice before willfully breaking
- any Part 97 regulation.
- We will start from the bottom of the monetary forfeiture list
- and work our way up to the big money. On the low end of its fine
- schedule, the FCC has added a new category called assorted minor
- violations. Breaking any of these carry a $625 price tag.
- Failure to identify your station is now a $1,250 offense and
- using unauthorized equipment can cost you five thousand
- green-backs.
- But that's nothing in comparison to the next three. Running
- excessive power, failing to respond to an FCC communication or
- operating on an unauthorized frequency now carries a ten thousand
- dollar price tag. Transmitting material or words that are deemed
- to be legally indecent will cost $12,500, being the source of
- malicious interference to another ham is now a $17,500 monetary
- forfeiture and failing to permit the FCC to inspect your station
- now has a hefty $18,500 price tag.
- And if you really want to help reduce the national debt, just
- get caught sending out a false SOS. Misusing a distress or
- safety frequency or issuing a false distress communication is now
- the kind of an activity that brings with it a twenty thousand
- dollar fine for each transmission. That's right. Twenty
- thousand dollars per violation.
- And we should also remind you that these dollar amounts are
- what the FCC calls base fines. The recommended amount for a
- first offense. And while the commission does reserve the right
- to make downward adjustments if a violator cooperates and shows
- good faith, it can also raise the amount by up to 90 percent.
- This, if it can prove that the violation was intentional or that
- it caused substantial harm. Or, in simpler terms, you could be
- dinged as much as 33,250 dollars for something as simple as
- jamming an emergency call on a local repeater.
- This is only part of a very long list of violations for which
- the commission can issue monetary forfeitures. Most are aimed at
- commercial users of the radio spectrum, but the FCC notes that
- any can apply to personal radio users as well.
-
- *****
- HAM NEWS PHOTOG QUESTIONED IN INTERFERENCE TO BIG MAC
-
- Customers who suffered insults at the take-out window of a
- Dallas, Texas Mc Donald's restaurant have now been told that a
- local television news photographer has been questioned in the
- case. The September 30th issue of he Dallas Observer newspaper
- reported that Federal Bureau of Investigation agents detained
- thirty-four year old Terry Van Sickle after noticing him driving
- in the same area as the McDonalds restaurant in what the agency
- describes as an antenna-laden vehicle.
- Van Sickle holds the Amateur Radio call sign WB5WXI. He is
- described as a self-employed television news photographer under
- exclusive contract to Dallas television station WFAA. He told
- the Observer that he was detained by FBI agents after driving
- his car into the area of the restaurant that was having its radio
- relayed take out order window harassed.
- Although no charges have been filed against him, Van Sickle
- says that he is under what amounts to suspension by WFAA
- television until the matter is resolved. And, on the advice of
- his lawyer he would not comment further on the investigation. He
- did however tell the Observer that it is a common practice for
- electronic enthusiasts to talk to fast food restaurants in this
- way. He says that radio buffs regularly post the frequencies of
- fast-food restaurant radio systems on computer bulletin boards
- and that the frequencies used by the Mc Donald's was readily
- accessible to almost anyone.
- WB5WXI says that he was not arrested but only questioned and
- released by the FBI investigators. He says that the only reason
- that he became a suspect is because he drives a vehicle that
- carries a lot of radio gear.
-
- *****
- NEW PHONE SCAM
-
- The Federal Communications Commission is warning of a new
- telephone scam in which consumers are tricked into accepting
- long-distance charges for calls placed by con artists. The con
- works when a unwitting consumer tells an operator "yes" when
- asked to accept charges for a call being made from another phone
- to another number elsewhere in the country or the world.
- The commission says the caller claims to be an FCC inspector
- or representative of a long-distance company investigating calls
- or trouble on the line. The caller tells the consumer that a
- supervisor will soon be calling, and that the consumer should
- just say "yes" when asked to accept the charges.
- The FCC says it doesn't do business that way, and neither do
- phone companies.
-
- *****
- MODULATION MONITORS
-
- The FCC has launched an inquiry to explore rules and policies
- that relate to the definition of measurement of FM broadcast
- station aural modulation limits. The Maximum aural modulation
- limits are specified in the broadcast rules. For FM stations
- the total modulation must not exceed 100% on peaks of frequent
- reoccurrence to 75 KHz deviation.
- Until 1983, the FCC required FM broadcasters to use type
- accepted modulation monitors to determine if they were operating
- within the rules. But that year saw a regulatory change that
- permitted stations to use other devices to monitor with. Some of
- these says the commission respond differently than those built
- under the pre 1983 FCC specification. This the FCC says has
- lead to some cases of over modulation being noted on the air.
- Recognizing that the cost of the equipment needed to determine
- compliance with emission standards may be more expensive than
- those used to make traditional measurements, the commission says
- that it wants to get information on what equipment is needed by a
- station to comply. It also wants to know if it should continue
- to permit stations to use the older conventional modulation
- monitors as an alternative if new emission limits are adopted for
- the service.
-
- *****
- STS-58 SAREX MISSION LIFTS OFF
-
- After two frustrating delays, the STS-58 SAREX space shuttle
- mission began on Monday, October 18th with a spectacular launch
- amid sunny skies at the Kennedy Space Center. Liftoff of the
- Space Shuttle Columbia was ten seconds late due to an intruding
- aircraft in the shuttle's projected flight path. As a result,
- liftoff occurred at 14:53 UTC.
- The primary objective of this fourteen day, high inclination
- flight is to perform human and animal life science experiments as
- part of the Spacelab Life Sciences Two payload. The crew is
- taking part in a series of experiments to gain more knowledge on
- how the human body adapts to the weightless environment of space.
- In addition to the astronaut crew thirty-nine rats flying on
- Columbia as part of the weightless environment experiment.
- Also on board is SAREX -- the Shuttle Amateur Radio
- Experiment. Pilot Richard Searfoss, KC5CKM, joins Mission
- Specialist William McArthur Jr., KC5ACR and Payload Specialist
- Martin Fettman, KC5AXA as the crews most recent licensee. FM
- voice and packet are being operated throughout the flight.
- Student groups in Arkansas, Texas, Ohio, Missouri, Arizona,
- Tennessee, New Hampshire, Kentucky, Colorado, North Carolina,
- Indiana and France have been selected for scheduled contacts with
- the crew.
- At airtime, its not known if the high flying hams will have
- time for any non-scheduled open contacts on FM voice but there
- will be plenty of automated packet radio operation during the
- flight with the regular SAREX frequencies being used. There is
- also a SAREX information desk set up at The Johnson Space Center
- in Houston. Those manning it will keep the amateur radio
- community posted on developments as STS-58 writes another chapter
- in mans conquest of the unknown and sets new records for ham
- radio operations from space.
-
- *****
- ANNOUNCING HAM SAT
-
- LW2DTZ is asking all hams to listen for a special message on
- AMSAT OSCAR 21 ham radio satellite. This, from October 15th
- through the 31st. Gustavo is not saying what the message
- contains, but he has said that it will be broadcast in several
- languages over the 2 meter downlink frequency of 145.985 MHz.
- That's 145.895 plus or minus the normal satellite Doppler shift.
- LW2DTZ says that this operating event is jointly sponsored by
- AMSAT-DL and Technischer Jugendfreizeit-Und Bildungsverein for
- the purpose of interesting young people in amateur radio and
- satellite techniques. All those who send a letter or postcard
- with a reception report and location will receive a special QSL.
-
- *****
- MIR GEAR
-
- Plans are afoot to change the amateur radio equipment on board
- the Russian Mir Space Station. In the future not only 2 Meters
- but also 70 cm and even 23cm operation can be expected. ATV
- equipment for use aboard the space station is presently being
- developed.
-
- *****
- PETER I ISLAND UPDATE
-
- In DX, word that the long awaited Peter I Island expedition
- is still a ''GO'' for early next year. This, according to
- DXpedition planner Tony De Prato, WA4JQS who says that everything
- is still on schedule for the operation.
- Tony says that he has equipment to operate five high frequency
- stations including a pair of tri-band beams and several monoband
- beams including one for 40 meters. He has also secured a Gap and
- a Battle Creek Special, four Alpha amps and a number of four
- kilowatt generators for power. He says that there will be one
- rig dedicated to RTTY, and they plan to be on RTTY on all bands.
- They also have satellite and EME gear in the works. The
- operation is planned for 16 days. QSL's will go via AA6BB and
- KA6V. Tony adds that you should stay tuned for more details as
- they become available.
-
- *****
- HALLOWEEN
-
- And on what we believe should be called a scarier note, word
- that the Transylvania County ARC of Brevard North Carolina will
- operate as W4ZCB to celebrate Halloween. And, as you might
- expect, the club has chosen an apropos location for the
- expedition. It will operate from the Devil's Courthouse in
- Transylvania County.
- Operation hours will be from 20:00 hours UTC on October the
- 31st to 02:00 hours UTC on November 1st. Frequencies are 7.234,
- 14.295, 21.365, 28.335 SSB, and locally on 146.52 FM simplex.
-
- *****
- HAM NAMED WINNER OF NOBEL PRIZE
-
- The winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physics, Princeton
- University Professor Joseph H. Taylor, K1JT, says that he
- attributes his success in the sciences to his early involvement
- in Amateur Radio.
- According to news reports Taylor, who shared this years award
- with Princeton colleague Russell A. Hulse says that he developed
- his scientific skills through ham radio while he was a student at
- the Morristown Friends Academy in New Jersey. He went on to earn
- a Bachelors Degree from Harvard in 1963 and later received a
- Doctorate in Astronomy from the same university.
- The Nobel Committee awarded this years Physics prize to
- Professors Taylor and Hulse for their work in the field of study
- of the gigantic gravitational forces exerted by pulsars. Hulse
- is a former student of Dr. Taylor and their work has been lauded
- by the scientific community because it appears to confirm many of
- the predictions made by the late Professor Albert Einstein in his
- "General Theory of Relativity."
-
- *****
-
- For this week, that's all from the Amateur Radio Newsline.
- You can write to us at Post Office Box 463 in Pasadena, CA
- 91102.
-
- * * * Newsline Copyright 1993 all rights are reserved. * * *
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 29 Oct 1993 08:03:14 -0400
- From: sdd.hp.com!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!news.cac.psu.edu!psuvm!cunyvm!rohvm1!rohvm1.mah48d@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: BAUD VS BAUDS
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <CFJGAM.BB5@freenet.carleton.ca>, aj467@Freenet.carleton.ca
- (Bill Macpherson) wrote, in part:
- >
- > I believe the term to be baud as in "baud rate"
-
- Bill, do you refer to the Hertz rate of your transmitter, or the knot rate
- of your sailboat? Baud is a rate unit itself.
-
- Sorry, I'm sure you'll get all kinds of similar responses, but I had to
- speak in defense of the language :-)
-
- 73 de John, W3ZID
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 30 Oct 93 02:05:07 GMT
- From: news-mail-gateway@ucsd.edu
- Subject: CELLULAR SURVEILLANCE
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In a previous issue, we mentioned that we would provide a e-mail copy of our
- Cellular Surveillance Interface (CSI) product brochure to those readers that
- were scanner enthusiasts. Unfortunately, our Internet e-mail address was
- transcribed incorrectly. The correct address is noted below. Our apologies to
- those readers that had e-mail returned, and to those of you who telephoned to
- advise us of the problem.
-
- E-mail via Internet: bill.fischer@t8000.cuc.ab.ca
-
- Regards,
-
- Bill Fischer
- Electronic Countermeasures Inc.
- 65 - 31 Avenue South West
- Calgary, AB, CANADA T2S 2Y7
- +1-403-233-0644
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 29 Oct 93 16:33:06 EDT
- From: world!ksr!jfw@decwrl.dec.com
- Subject: magazine article about antenna tuners
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Cecil_A_Moore@ccm.hf.INTel.COM (Cecil A Moore) writes:
- >Here is a quote from a recent magazine article about antenna tuners:
- >"... it (the antenna tuner) also tunes out all mismatches in the system,
- >including transmission line to antenna mismatch, and also any non-
- >resonance in the antenna itself."
- >Question: Is the meaning clear and if so, what is the meaning?
-
- The meaning is clear. The meaning is that the author hasn't got a clue as
- to what he or she is talking about.
-
- _Reflections: Transmission Lines and Antennas_, by Walt Maxwell ($20 from the
- ARRL). Buy this book. Live it.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 29 Oct 1993 14:17:33 GMT
- From: mustang.mst6.lanl.gov!nntp-server.caltech.edu!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!sdd.hp.com!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!spool.mu.edu!sgiblab!news.kpc.com!amd!amdahl!netcomsv@nntp.ucsb.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <CFJ304.Bp5@fc.hp.com>, <jfhCFKJK1.C53@netcom.com>, <CFMqx6.Cvt@fc.hp.com>cso.u
- Subject : Re: GAY INTERNATIONAL HAM RADIO CLUB
-
- perry@fc.hp.com (Perry Scott) wrote:
- >Jack Hamilton (jfh@netcom.com) wrote:
- >: perry@fc.hp.com (Perry Scott) wrote:
-
- >Sorry to beat this to death.
-
- Don't worry about it. The road to USENET is littered with dead horses.
-
- >: >As I understand the 1st amendment, the ARRL can print whatever they
- >: >want. Do the civil rights of LARC exceed those of the ARRL?
- >
- >: The ARRL is not an ordinary private citizen. It receives government
- >: support (non-profit status) and has some governmental privileges
- >: (administering tests, for example).
- >
- >A technical nit - I thought the LARC complaint was lodged against the
- >ARRL on the basis of CT law, not Federal law.
-
- I suspect that Connecticut also recognizes the concept of non-profits.
-
- >Another technical nit -
- >state law is superceded by the US Constitution. Freedom of press is
- >ACTUALLY MENTIONED there.
-
- Freedom of press may be mentioned there, but it's not defined there.
- Freedom of press usually means "no prior restraint", not "you can publish
- whatever you want with impunity".
-
- In any case, commercial speech, which is what we're talking about here, is
- often treated differently (I'm not sure that it should be, but that's the
- way it is).
-
- >The "sexual minority" patchwork of case law
- >is a recent machination of the Judicial Branch.
-
- That's using language in a devious way. "Machination" implies some kind of
- perversion or evil intent. That may be *your* opinion, but it's not
- universally shared. Was Marbury v. Madison a machination?
-
- >I think what bothers me about the LARC complaint is that it seeks to
- >make LARC more equal than everyone else.
-
- No, it seeks to allow LARC to operate under the same rules as other
- organizations.
-
- >Under the envisioned scenario,
- >the ARRL must justify their decision to conduct or not conduct business
- >when minority organizations are involved.
-
- When different rules seem to be applied to minorities and non-minorities.
-
- >By virtue of the ad, LARC
- >identifies its self-described "minority" status
-
- Not just self-described. The state of Connecticut, at least in the
- preliminary hearings, has agreed that LARC has minority status.
-
- >and exacts an extra
- >quantum of deliberation over and above any other individual or
- >organization.
-
- The deliberation is intended to make sure that a historical pattern of
- discrimination is not continued.
-
- >What was a "can we use this?" decision (apropos to
- >an Editor) becomes a "how do we refuse this and still be Politically
- >Correct?"
-
- "How do we refuse this without breaking the law" is the question.
-
- >exercise in semantic gymnastics.
-
- Semantics is the study of meaning and how it is conveyed. An important
- concept, I think.
-
- >: If the ARRL said "We won't print your article because you're gay/black/
- >: jewish", then yes, you should sue.
- >
- >Gee. The ARRL was nonspecific - the old "don't need it right now" line
- >as I recall. How silly of me not to have pressed them for the REAL
- >reason. It's hard to work a homosexual thread into a construction
- >project.
-
- You forget - we're talking about a paid advertisement, not a feature. It's
- a lot more difficult to refuse an ad than a story.
-
- --
-
- ----------------------------------------------------
- Jack Hamilton POB 281107 SF CA 94128 USA
- jfh@netcom.com kd6ttl@w6pw.#nocal.ca.us.na
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 28 Oct 1993 18:15:45 GMT
- From: spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!news.ecn.bgu.edu!anaxagoras.ils.nwu.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!casbah.acns.nwu.edu!rdewan@decwrl.dec.com
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <1993Oct17.233220.19586@ssc.com>, <CF2wpI.vx@news.Hawaii.Edu>, <jlrCFL2rF.4uo@netcom.com>an
- Subject : Re: Homonauseated (Was: Newsline #842)
-
- In article <jlrCFL2rF.4uo@netcom.com>, Joe L. Reda <jlr@netcom.com> wrote:
-
- Gosh! Am I going to add to this thread? ;( Well, the following
- statement piqued my evolution theory instinct:
-
- ... a few lines have been mercifully deleted for brevity ...
-
- >empty arguments . . I've heard that one before: "We love the sinner but
- >we hate the sin!". Here's a consciousness-raiser for you: with the
- >exception of homosexuality, all of the above behaviors are learned or
- >chosen. No one *chooses* to be gay. Ever heard of genetics?
-
- Curious. Based on my rudimentary understanding of theory of evolution,
- I would have thought that if being gay was genetic there would not be
- any one around left to talk about it. The fact that there are gay people
- would seem to imply the opposite.
-
- *Disclaimer: the above is purely a left-brained statement. Any implied
- value judgements are purely coincidental.
-
- I think that this is the first time I have had to add a disclaimer
- to a posting in this group.
-
- :)
-
- Rajiv
- aa9ch
- r-dewan@nwu.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 29 Oct 1993 15:49:12 GMT
- From: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!usc!cs.utexas.edu!convex!horak@ames.arpa
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <jlrCFL2rF.4uo@netcom.com>, <2ap28h$pj5@news.acns.nwu.edu>, <timi-281093153936@kos4mac20.berkeley.edu>
- Subject : Re: Homonauseated (Was: Newsline #842)
-
- In <timi-281093153936@kos4mac20.berkeley.edu> timi@mendel.berkeley.edu (Tim Ikeda) writes:
-
- >Besides, being homosexual doesn't eliminate the ability to reproduce
-
- Sure! Haven't you ever heard of butt babies? :')
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-Hams Digest V93 #1288
- ******************************
- ******************************
-