Subj : Newsline Part 2 To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Dec 09 2016 07:53 am HOLIDAY SPIRIT IS IN -- AND ON -- THE AIR STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Because the holiday season itself is a special event, it inspires hams to get extra creative with events of their own. Here are two stations you'll want to be listening for. We hear first from Amateur Radio Newsline's Graham Kemp, VK4BB. GRAHAM'S REPORT: The annual OF9X Special Event Station - an amateur radio world tour that has featured Santa for more than three decades - has begun making its rounds from the Arctic Circle. Station operations will continue through the 31st of December - this time featuring Santa and his dozen elves, who not only assist Santa, but double as multipliers for contacts. All 12 will operate as Old-Father-9-Christmas, OF9X, and will identify themselves further as elves with an additional three-letter designation, such as ART for "Arto" or NIK for "Niko." So if you've contacted an elf, you'll hear OF9X/ART, or something similar. There are a number of prizes available for different point scores, but no doubt the biggest prize of all for childen of the participating amateurs will be the opportunity they have to win a QSO during Christmas week with the person the website is calling "the true and live Santa." Be listening on the bands - and BELIEVE! For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB. (OHIO PENN DX BULLETIN, RADIO ARCALA) ** A CHRISTMAS GIFT FROM BETHLEHEM STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Jim Damron, N8TMW, tells us next about some amateurs in Georgia, who are bringing the Bethlehem experience a little closer to home. JIM'S REPORT: How about a Christmas QSO with Bethlehem.........Georgia? The Barrow Amateur Radio Club in Winder, Georgia, is heading back to nearby Bethlehem, where from 2010 to 2014, the club activated the Bethlehem City Park pavilion each Christmas. After a brief hiatus, the special event station is back! Be listening for WR4BC on the afternoon of December 10th and 11th, starting on 20 meters, and then moving later in the day to 40 meters. The club will also operate a second station on 10 meters. All operation will be SSB, and there'll be a special QSL card for all successful contacts. This time, however, instead of operating in the pavilion, the club will be in Bethlehem itself, going mobile and portable from a hilltop parking lot in town. Sorry, there won't be any overnight operation. QSOs stop at about 5 p.m.. It may not be too cold for Santa, but these hams need to be roasting by an open fire. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Damron, N8TMW. (BILL WILSON KJ4EX, BARROW AMATEUR RADIO CLUB) ** BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the SPARC club repeater for the Sportsman's Paradise Amateur Radio Club, K4WAK, in Wakulla County, Florida, in time for the Friday afternoon commute. ** AMATEURS TEAM UP TO ENCOURAGE DISABLED HAMS IN SWITZERLAND STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Hams in some parts of the world set aside December 3 to showcase what radio can do for the disabled. Here's Amateur Radio Newsline's Ed Durrant, DD5LP. ED'S REPORT: When members of the Union of Swiss Shortwave Amateurs, the USKA, operated a special event station recently at the Swiss Paraplegic Centre, an emergency and rehabilitation facility in Nottwil, they were grateful for the possibilities. Operators weren't just looking to score some good contacts while working with the patients there; they were eager to show those patients, most of whom have spinal cord injuries, the possibilities radio holds for quadriplegics and paraplegics. On Saturday, the 3rd of December, the Swiss radio amateurs were among a handful of radio groups, including those in Egypt and the UK, who were marking the International Day of Persons with Disabilities. Using the special call sign HB9IPHA, the Swiss amateurs worked on 20 meters at 100 watts with a FlexRadio3000, but were also on VHF and UHF, with a Yaesu FT-857D. Thomas Huber, HB9FXU, the Switzerland coordinator for the IARU's Information Programme for Handicapped Radio Amateurs, said in an email that the feedback from patients, visitors, and hospital employees, was extremely positive. He told Amateur Radio Newsline that the response was especially encouraging, as some participants got on the air for the first time. Thomas said the opportunity for outreach was also gratifying - and next year, the hams plan to do more outreach to disabled men and women throughout Switzerland, and get them involved and on the air -- and not just on one day every year. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP. (THOMAS HUBER, HB9FXU) Posted by VPost v1.7.081019 .