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- Date: Wed, 11 May 94 04:30:06 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 V94 #511
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Wed, 11 May 94 Volume 94 : Issue 511
-
- Today's Topics:
- 2 meter lingo publication
- Amateur Radio Newsline #873 6 May 94
- personal autopatch calls
- Still desperately seeking volunteers
-
- 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: 9 May 1994 16:45:39 +1000
- From: munnari.oz.au!news.uwa.edu.au!nodecg.ncc.telecomwa.oz.au!netbsd08.dn.itg.telecom.com.au!orca1.vic.design.telecom.com.au!picasso.cssc-syd.tansu.com.au!wabbit.cc.uow.edu@ihnp4.ucsd.edu
- Subject: 2 meter lingo publication
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I'm working on the companion volume: "What the OF's are saying."
-
- This would include such phrases as "Fine Business Old Man", "Have to
- go and drink an 807 hi hi", "I have to sign - there's a call on the
- landline" etc.
-
- Can anyone add to this list, and preferably translate them?
-
- --
- Dave Horsfall (VK2KFU) VK2KFU @ VK2AAB.NSW.AUS.OC PGP 2.3
- dave@esi.COM.AU ...munnari!esi.COM.AU!dave available
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 10 May 1994 06:17:52 MDT
- From: dog.ee.lbl.gov!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!news.umbc.edu!eff!news.kei.com!yeshua.marcam.com!zip.eecs.umich.edu!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!nntp.cs.@@ihnp4.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Amateur Radio Newsline #873 6 May 94
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- The electronic publication of the Amateur Radio Newsline is distributed
- with the permission of Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, President and Editor of
- Newsline. The text version is edited from the original scripts and
- transcribed from the audio reports by Dale Cary, WD0AKO, and is first
- published in The Radio & Electronics Round Table on the Genie Online
- System.
-
- If you have any comment, suggestion, or news item you would like to submit,
- send them via E-Mail to 3241437@mcimail.com or B.PASTERNAK@genie.geis.com.
- You can contact Newsline at +1 805-296-7180. It is a combination answering
- and FAX machine, if you have a FAX to send, wait for the voice prompt and
- press your fax-send button.
-
- All other information and disclaimers are in the text header below.
- - - - - -
- Sorry for the delay. Had some hardware problems over the weekend. Thanks
- for your patients...
-
- NEWSLINE RADIO - CBBS EDITION #123 - POSTED 05/09/94
-
- (***************************************************************)
- (* *)
- (* * * ***** * * **** * ***** * * ***** *)
- (* ** * * * * * * * ** * * *)
- (* * * * *** * ** * *** * * * * * *** *)
- (* * ** * * ** * * * * * ** * *)
- (* * * ***** * * **** ***** ***** * * ***** *)
- (* *)
- (* **** * **** ***** *** *)
- (* * * * * * * * * * *)
- (* **** ***** * * * * * *)
- (* * * * * * * * * * *)
- (* * * * * **** ***** *** *)
- (* *)
- (***************************************************************)
-
- 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. For current information updates, please call
-
- Audio Version of Newsline
- =========================
- Los Angeles............................ (213) 462-0008
- Los Angeles (Instant Update Line)...... (805) 296-2407
- Seattle................................ (206) 368-3969
- Seattle................................ (206) 281-8455
- Tacoma................................. (206) 927-7373
- Louisville............................. (502) 894-8559
- Dayton................................. (513) 275-9991
- Chicago................................ (708) 289-0423
- New York City.......................... (718) 353-2801
- Melbourne, FL.......................... (407) 259-4479
-
- Electronic Hardcopy Version of Newsline
- =======================================
- GEnie.................................. m345;1
- GEnie.................................. m345;3
- Dallas Remote Imaging BBS (DRIG)....... (214) 492-7573
- In bulletin number 36
- The Midwest Connection BBS............. (701) 239-2440
- In bulletin number 6 of the ham radio conference
- Delphi.................................
- In the ham radio conference
-
- For the latest breaking info call the Instant Update Line listed
- above. 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!!!
-
- (****************************************************************
-
- [873]
- (* * * * C L O S E D C I R C U I T A D V I S O R Y * * * *
- (* *
- (* The following is a closed circuit advisory and is NOT for *
- (* transmission over amateur radio. According to Newsline *
- (* Support Fund administrator Norm Chalfin K6PGX, the funds *
- (* needed to keep Newsline in operation are still low. *
- (* According to Norm, it now costs a bit over $850 a month to *
- (* pay the telecommunications and equipment supply bills. That *
- (* is up over $150 from the same time last year. *
- (* For those of you unaware, Newsline pays the cost of three *
- (* telephones including the one used for news gathering. We *
- (* also pay for several electronic news and information *
- (* services, we pay for electronic mail, for raw tape stock and *
- (* the cost of repairing and updating our production facilities. *
- (* When Newsline staffers attend a convention or hamfest like *
- (* here in Dayton, each is on his or her own. Newsline does not *
- (* reimburse the cost of sending its reporters to these events *
- (* nor does it compensate them for any expenses that they may *
- (* incur. All funds donated to Newsline go directly to keeping *
- (* these news bulletins on the air and nothing else. *
- (* Many Newsline reporters and engineers not only volunteer *
- (* their time and talent to making these weekly newscasts *
- (* possible. They reach into their own pockets as well. *
- (* Therefore we are once again appealing to all of our listeners *
- (* to assist in any way that you can so that Newsline can *
- (* continue to bring you these weekly ham radio news bulletins. *
- (* Our address is the Newsline Support Fund, Post Office Box 463 *
- (* Pasadena, CA 91102. *
- (* Again, and as always, we thank you for your ongoing *
- (* interest and support. That ends the closed circuit advisory *
- (* with Newsline report number 873 for release on Friday, May 6, *
- (* 1994 to follow. *
- (* *
- (* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
- The following is a QST
-
- From ham radios greatest show on earth, the 1994 Dayton
- Hamvention, this is Newsline. This weeks top story is the
- Hamvention itself. Newsline has several reporters here on the
- scene.
-
- (*****
- 10 WPM CW PROPOSED
-
- The biggest news out of Dayton involves a plan being hatched by
- amateur radio equipment manufacturers and magazine publishers.
- They want easier licensing requirements for access to HF spectrum.
- Amateur Radio Industry Group members say the 13 word per minute
- Morse Code requirement for HF access should be lowered to 10 words
- a minute and they plan to work toward that goal. At their April
- 28th meeting, group members discussed the plan, including
- petitioning the Federal Communications Commission. Giving advice
- to the group is former FCC official Ray Kowalski. He tells group
- members the timing for such a move is excellent, since
- Washington's political climate is so heavily geared toward
- emerging technologies.
-
- "What's good for amateur radio is good for America. This is
- where the technicians and the bright young minds get their start.
- This is the fertile ground where they are planted. And if we
- don't nurture that and keep it growing and going, comes the next
- time we need engineers maybe we will rent them from Taiwan or some
- place, we will not have them home grown." Ray Kowalski, former
- FCC official.
-
- The hottest selling ham gear lately has been VHF and UHF
- equipment. That reflects the strong growth in codeless technician
- class hams.
- But equipment manufacturers are frustrated by marginal profits
- from sales of big ticket HF items. Some manufacturers say current
- code requirements act as a barrier to hams who would otherwise
- populate the HF bands. Ray Kowalski, currently a Washington
- lawyer dealing in communications issues, tells group members they
- should act on their wishes before the year is out.
-
- "There is a window of opportunity that is now open. In
- Washington, when a new administration comes in, it takes them a
- year to get their act together, and by the fourth year they are
- hunkering down for the election. They don't want to do anything
- that will make anybody mad. So there is that two year window of
- opportunity in any administration where everything gets done. We
- are in that window now. So this is a great time to be thinking
- about what changes are necessary and natural for this service,
- this hobby, what ever you want to call it." Ray Kowalski, former
- FCC official.
-
- One of those attending the amateur group meeting is Yaesu USA's
- Kevin Karamanos, WD6DIH.
-
- "I think in the long term the industry is going to try to get
- together and promote the technician to move up to general class
- and hopefully populate the HF bands. We need to do what ever we
- can to get more folks up there and move up." Kevin Karamanos,
- WD6DIH, Yaesu USA.
-
- (*****
- THE RAINS CAME
-
- The hottest selling product at this year's Hamvention '94 just
- may have been the 2 dollar poncho. The skies opened up over Hara
- Arena, dumping nearly an inch and a half of rain on tens of
- thousands of hams. The plastic sheets covering acres of flea
- market spaces soon carried small rivers of water.
- Some flea market vendors say the torrents of water killed their
- business.
-
- "It's wet and it's cold today. Yesterday it was at least
- warmish rain. This one is not nearly as much fun."
-
- "If it'd quit rainin', it'd be nice."
- "Has the rain hurt you?"
- "Yes it has."
-
- A flea market vendor from St. Joseph Missouri knows that lousy
- weather is a Hamvention tradition.
-
- "It's bad weather. We have had bad weather for the fourth year
- in a row now. It's defiantly the biggest and the best ham
- convention that there is in the United States or in the world but
- the weather has not cooperated. The gods are not favoring us
- right now."
-
- But enthusiasm still manages to run high. The Hamvention is,
- after all, one of the world's ultimate trips down the electronic
- information superhighway. As Tracy Douglas from Akron, Ohio,
- learns, the Hamvention means money.
-
- "I'm a retired computer scientist that did fifteen years of
- computer work. And I became a ham radio operator last year. this
- is my first time selling at the Dayton Hamvention. I do repairs
- on all types of computers and peripherals. I had five dealers
- come in here and wipe out a hundred and six hard drives. I
- grossed over five thousand dollars in an hour."
-
- Money changes hands inside Hara Arena, too. With thousands of
- flea market shoppers forced inside by the rain -- and the
- thousands of people already there crowds are 15 deep at some
- booths. Huge masses of people move along at a snail's pace.
- "There are so many people and so little space!" Yaesu USA's
- Kevin Karamanos.
-
- Despite the weather, Hamvention '94 draws widespread praise.
- It's an opportunity to learn, spend and socialize. Hamvention '94
- is quickly drawing to a close. Regardless of the weather,
- everyone we have spoken with says that this years Dayton
- Hamvention will be a show that will be very hard to beat. More on
- Hamvention '94 in future reports.
-
- (*****
- UNLICENSED BROADCASTER LOOSES COURT CHALLENGE TO FCC BAN
-
- In other news, a protest to the Federal Communications
- Commission's ban on so called low power micro broadcasters has
- been dismissed by a San Francisco federal appeals court. That
- court says the case belongs in a lower court first.
- The FCC's refusal to license radio stations less than 100 watts
- is being challenged by William Dougan of Phoenix, Arizona.
- Dougan's half-watt transmitter was shut down by the commission
- back in 1992.
- Dougan's lawyer said his client broadcast for about a month to
- the 600 residents of his mobile home park before the FCC ordered
- him to stop. Dougan was also fined $17,500.
- In his filing to the court, Dougan argued that the ban on
- low power radio stations is unneeded for orderly regulation of
- broadcasting. He also claimed that it violates his freedom of
- expression and reserves the airwaves for the wealthy. But the
- FCC responded by saying it was acting within its legal authority
- to apportion the limited number of frequencies available.
- Without discussing those arguments, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
- of Appeals on Wednesday April 20th said suits challenging FCC
- forfeitures, such as Dougan's fine, can be filed only in a U.S.
- District Court. The District Court ruling can then be appealed
- back to the 9th Circuit.
- Dougan filed his suit in the appeals court, which directly
- reviews rulings by a number of federal agencies. But the court,
- in a 3 to 0 ruling by Judge Cecil Poole, said it had no
- jurisdiction in the case.
-
- (*****
- FCC URGED TO RAISE FINES ON INDECENT BROADCASTS
-
- In the nations capitol members od Congress are telling the
- Federal Communications Commission that it should impose higher
- fines on broadcasters who use indecent language on the air.
- The FCC has already fined shock jock Howard Stern and the
- company that broadcasts his programs over $1 million for using
- indecent language in his programs. Stern and the company are
- appealing the fines, saying they violate free speech protection.
- But FCC Chairman Reed Hundt is saying that even if higher
- monetary forfeitures are mandated, the commission lacks the
- resources to handle all its responsibilities. Hundt told a House
- of Representatives Appropriations subcommittee hearing on Monday
- April 18 that a staff shortage was hindering efforts to handle
- license and merger applications and to increase competition in
- telecommunications and cable TV. Hunt added that FCC resources
- are not sufficient to achieve the agency's goals. He would like
- another 200 full time staff to join the 2,050 now on staff. The
- Office of Management and Budget must approve any such staffing
- request.
-
- (*****
- KY1T FIRED BY ARRL
-
- Another story making news here at Hamvention '94 is the firing
- two weeks ago of Luck Hurder, KY1T, Deputy Manager for the ARRL's
- Field Services Department. No specific details of the
- circumstances leading up to Hurder's dismissal been made public by
- the American Radio Relay League. The unofficial word on the
- convention floor is that his firing was over a directive by his
- superiors at headquarters for Hurder to first consult with them
- before posting information or responses on various public bulletin
- board and Electronic Mail systems he was assigned to operate for
- the League.
- In his last year of service in Newington, Hurder devoted a
- considerable amount of time answering questions on various
- commercial e-mail systems like Genie, Prodigy and America Online.
- He even serves as the assistant SySop on the America Online ham
- radio board in addition to having been the operations director of
- the ARRL's own public access board.
- No successor has yet been named to replace KY1T.
-
- (*****
- 900 MHz PAGING
-
- The FCC has released the text of a rule making order that
- grants channel exclusivity to several classifications of 930 MHz
- paging systems. Under the new rules, paging system licensees may
- qualify for channel exclusivity by constructing systems consisting
- of a specified minimum number of channels. There are three sub
- categories that fall under the new rules. These are local,
- regional and national.
- The commission says that it intends to protect qualified local
- and regional applicants from interference by applying minimum
- separation standards of co-channel national systems. It will also
- act to prevent the hoarding of frequencies by limiting applicants
- to one exclusive frequency assignment at a time.
-
- (*****
- DL HACKER
-
- On the international scene, word that German police have
- cracked down on a nationwide ring of computer hackers who found a
- way to telephone around the world without being billed. The
- regional criminal office in Munich said U.S. telephone companies
- alone had suffered millions of dollars in lost revenue because the
- ring had used computers to tap into networks illegally and make
- phone calls.
- In a coordinated search, police raided the homes of about 60
- suspected hackers all over Germany. Some were identified as being
- ham radio enthusiasts, though no call signs were given.
-
- (*****
- HUNGARIAN TV
-
- Commercial TV may be just around the corner in Hungary -- if
- the political and legislative embargo that has kept the broadcast
- sector hamstrung since 1989 finally comes to an end. Executives
- at the long suffering TV Channel 3, a Budapest regional station
- with a license but no frequency to broadcast, has yet to receive
- word as to when a frequency will be allocated. Up until now,
- Hungary's private TV and radio industry has been stymied by a ban,
- imposed by parliament in 1989, on the issuance of broadcast
- licenses. Parliament has vowed not to lift this nationwide ban
- until the government formulates acceptable post communist
- legislation regulating the nation's electronic media sector --
- something Hungary's ruling coalition has yet to do after four
- years in power. Parliament did agree last year to partially lift
- this moratorium and permit the establishment of private radio and
- TV stations in local and regional markets. It was during this
- period that Channel 3 received official sanction to begin
- broadcasting in Budapest.
-
- (*****
- DX
-
- In DX, look for Saint Marten on the air from May 24th to 30th.
- VP2ML, and AH0W will be signing PJ7/WB2CHO and PJ7/OH2LVG
- respectively. They will also team up to operate in the CQ WPX CW
- Contest as PJ8X. QSL PJ7 via K1RH.
-
- (*****
- RAFFERTY MEMORIAL
-
- Closer to home, word that the memorial fund raising by the
- Northern California DX Foundation for Jim Rafferty, N6RJ, who died
- in June of 1993 raised nearly $8,000 from 125 individuals and
- organizations. The donors' call signs or organizational names
- were inscribed on a plaque presented to Jim's widow, Shirley
- Rafferty. The plaque will eventually be displayed at the Anaheim,
- California Ham Radio Outlet store where the Jim worked.
-
- (*****
- RCA TO THOMPSON
-
- Finally, do any of you know the name of the dog listening to
- the phonograph in the old RCA Logo? We will have that piece of
- information in a moment. But first this related story about a
- well known midwest radio club has decided to change its name to
- reflect the corporate image of the company that it is allied to.
- The RCA Radio Club of Indianapolis, Indiana has been re-named
- the Thompson Amateur Radio Club for two reasons. First, it is the
- French owned Thompson that actually manufactures RCA brand label
- consumer products in North America. Even more important is the
- fact that the General Electric Company owns the rights to both the
- RCA name and the well known RCA dog and phonograph logo which for
- a long time have adorned the masthead of the club newsletter.
- Some club members were reportedly concerned over the possibility
- of legal action by General Electric. As far as we can determine
- GE never said a word but rather that take a chance the RCA name
- was dropped and replaced by Thompson.
- And oh yes. The name of the dog in the old RCA logo was
- Nipper.
-
- (*****
-
- For this week, that is all from the Amateur Radio Newsline.
- You can write to us at Post Office Box 463 in Pasadena, CA
- 91102.
-
- (* * * Newsline Copyright 1994 all rights are reserved. * * *
- --
- < ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
- < "Big Steve" Coletti >
- < Shortwave Listener, Broadcaster, Computer Consultant >
- < and all around nice guy >
- < Internet: bigsteve@dorsai.dorsai.org ==== S.COLETTI2@genie.geis.com >
- < UUCP: steve.cole@islenet.com ==== steveny@lopez.marquette.mi.us >
- < Fidonet: 1:278/307 US Mail: P.O. Box 396, New York, NY 10002 >
- < Voice: +1 212 995-2637 >
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 9 May 1994 16:47:35 +0000
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!demon!g8sjp.demon.co.uk!ip@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: personal autopatch calls
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <19940509.030732.972799.NETNEWS@UICVM.UIC.EDU>
- Dave@harvard.edu "ham this." writes:
-
- Lemmeseenow ...
-
- > In article <768151942.AA01667@rochgte.fidonet.org>
- > Brad.Ward@f2711.n206.z1.fidonet.org (Brad Ward) writes:
- >
- > > >I read recently that the FCC ruled that it is now permissable to make
- > > personal
- > > >calls via autopatch to conduct personal tasks such as making a doctors or
- > > >dentists appointment. Can anyone out there answer the following:
- > >
- > > It's nice to have, but I wonder why anyone would use the autopatch
- > > to make doctors or dentists appointments.
- > >
- > > ... Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
- >
-
- > Your advice SUCKS. What in the world is the autopatch for? WRONG.
-
- Hmmm ... maybe you disagree with the Brad's advice. Fine. Just disregard it.
-
- > Whatever YOU answered, its WRONG. Thats because whatever I DECIDE to
- > use it for I CAN use it for (within the law). Why should the law limit
- > it to, essentially, anything but running a business on ham radio, and
- > then an idiot like you come along and LIMIT IT FURTHER, to WHATEVER YOU
- > FEEL is 'inappropriate'????????
-
- Actually, whilst this might be what you feel would be appropriate guidelines
- for autopatch use, it's you that's wrong - VERY WRONG. In fact, aside from
- Part 97 regulations, autopatch use is (by definition) limited by what the
- repeater trustee regards as 'appropriate'. Not me. Not you. Not Brad. See?
-
- > We dont need bully channel-cops like you around. Go beat your kids
- > into submission again and get the hell off this newsgroup. We already
- > have part 97 and its QUITE CLEAR on what it allows and doesnt allow,
- > and the intent of the latest change was CLEARLY to ALLOW amateurs to do
- > things like order pizzas and make dentist appointments on the patch.
-
- Maybe Brad was beaten up by his local repeater trustee for fixing a dentist
- appointment via autopatch, and that's why he offered such advice? Maybe Brad's
- local repeater trustee is a propellor-head like yourself, who cannot accept
- that people are allowed views and opinions, and who tried to deny Brad his
- right to voice his opinions? Who are *you* to tell someone to leave the
- newsgroup? I'd humbly suggest that, on the basis you don't like some or all
- of what you see here, you either drop the newsgroup yourself, or learn to use
- a 'kill' file. Either way, *MY* suggestion to *YOU* is - simmer down ...
-
- > The economics of patches in areas where each call costs money dictates
- > the use of the patch only when necessary... in areas where all local
- > calls are free, IT DOESNT. So, USE THE PATCH WHENEVER YOU FEEL LIKE IT,
- > HAMS.. Just stay within the LAW, not the holier-than-thou ideals of
- > no-brain OLD FARTS like THIS GUY!!!!
-
- Wrong. Very wrong. But I've said all that. What was in Brad's post that
- indicated to you that he was devoid of mental capacity and/or scenile? Oh.
- Maybe that was just another of your irrational assumptions ...
-
- Hmm ...
-
- --
- Iain Philipps
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 07 May 94 20:27:09 PDT
- From: pacbell.com!amdahl!birdsong!shakala!yesanext!seawolf@ames.arpa
- Subject: Still desperately seeking volunteers
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- catz@wattres.SJ.CA.US (Catherine Watt -- KD6LSP) writes:
-
- > This will be the second posting of this note. I do still need help!
- >
- > I am seeking volunteers to provide radio support for a bicycle tour in the
- > Aptos vicinity on the 15th of May. I will be arriving at the start of the
- > ride at 6.30am, and will need other volunteers to be there by 6.45am. The
- > ride is called Strawberry Fields Forever and benefits the Global Cyclists
- > Exchange, whose aim is to promote peace among the various peoples on our
- > planet through cycling.
-
- Ahh, maybe thats your problem meeting at 6:45am. The only way anyone is
- going to get me up and out of the house at that time is if the house
- is on fire, and even then don't wake me up till my bedroom door is on
- fire. <G>
-
- Then again I live in San Jose, and getting to Aptos would take a good
- hour, which means I'd have to leave the house by atleast by 5:30am.
-
- Try hitting up the locals instead..Seeing the number of posts that you've
- made I doubt you've had much success here. Time to hit 10 meter and get
- the radio addicts. Or if your really desparate get a bunch of cbers
- instead.
-
- >
- > Volunteers get a free lunch, a free ride t-shirt,and various goodies
- > (chocolate dipped strawberries!).
-
- hmmmm, strawberries...naaaa I like homer simpson's "hmmmm donuts....dooo"
- much better.
-
-
- ---------------- Sameer Manek::SysOp of the BigBrother BBS -----------------
- monitoring people's lives since George Orwell's 1984
- SeaWolf@YesaNeXT.sbay.org "Starlight, starbright, wish I may, wish I
- SeaWolf@YesaNeXT.TheTech.COM might, turn this PC into a NexT"
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 9 May 1994 17:25:04 +1000
- From: munnari.oz.au!news.uwa.edu.au!nodecg.ncc.telecomwa.oz.au!netbsd08.dn.itg.telecom.com.au!orca1.vic.design.telecom.com.au!picasso.cssc-syd.tansu.com.au!wabbit.cc.uow.edu@ihnp4.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <2qbtnh$fus@cascade.ens.tek.com>, <5aytMxQ.ndfriedman@delphi.com>, <1994May8.163657.564@newsgate.sps.mot.com>lec
- Subject : Re: Ham jargon
-
- In article <1994May8.163657.564@newsgate.sps.mot.com>,
- kinzer@dtsdev0.sps.mot.com (Dave Kinzer) writes:
-
- | >>I still like "destinated" meaning you have arrived at your destination.
- | >CB lingo from the 70's.
- | So what? It's short, it's concise, and I like it too.
-
- There's something wrong with "arrived"?
-
- --
- Dave Horsfall (VK2KFU) VK2KFU @ VK2AAB.NSW.AUS.OC PGP 2.3
- dave@esi.COM.AU ...munnari!esi.COM.AU!dave available
-
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-
- End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #511
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-