Subj : Newsline Part 4 To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Thu Mar 02 2017 10:18 pm THE WORLD OF DX In the world of DX, listen for Makoto, JI5RPT, from Ogasawara Island, operating as JD1BLY, from March 7th to 10th. He'll be on 160m to 10m CW, SSB and digital. QSLs go to the home call. In Ghana, a group of 6 operators from the UK will be using the callsign 9G5X, between the 7th and 21st of March. They will operate on all bands from 160m to 10m. Send QSL cards via M0OXO OQRS. Peter, HA3AUI, will be using the call sign J5UAP, in West Africa, in early March for a few days. Listen for him on CW, running 100w to a Spiderbeam. QSL via the on-line log on cqafrica.net. Between March 3rd and March 5th, members of the Kuala Lumpur DX Team will sign 9M4IOTA, from Tioman Island, on all bands from 80 meters to 10 meters, using CW, SSB and digital modes. This will count as AS-046 for the Islands on the Air Award. QSL manager is 9M2OOO. ** KICKER: HEARING DUBAI'S VICE PRESIDENT LOUD AND CLEAR NEIL/ANCHOR: In our final story this week, we hear how the leader of Dubai is sharing a message with the world via satellite -- relying on more than just a little help from ham radio. Amateur Radio Newsline's Graham Kemp, VK4BB, has those details. GRAHAM: Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, may not have his ham radio license, but his message is traveling far and wide on the HF bands, the first message to be transmitted from a newly launched satellite of the United Arab Emirates. The satellite is a Nayif-1, launched in late February, from the Satish Dhawan Space Center in India, and it is Dubai's first nanosatellite. The sheikh's message, being sent out in Arabic, translates to say [QUOTE] "The renaissance of peoples, nations and civilizations starts with education, and the future of nations starts at their schools." [ENDQUOTE] At one school in particular, the American University of Sharjah, engineer students worked with the space center in India, to design, build, test, and operate the nanosatellite. Now, the school is monitoring it. Its main objective is to send and receive messages on amateur radio frequencies, transferring messages mainly among speakers of Arabic. So far, the sheikh's message has been heard loud and clear by hams in Haiti, the U.S., Sweden and Spain, as the satellite flies high over the earth at an altitude of 600 kilometers, or not quite 375 miles high. Its telemetry and transponder data are available online at the AMSAT-UK website. Now, if the sheikh happens to hear his own message endorsing the power of education, perhaps he will undertake some study himself, and get on the air in a more conventional manner - as a brand new ticket. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB. (AMSAT-UK, THE UAE NATIONAL NEWSPAPER) ** NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Alan Labs; Amateur News Weekly; AMSAT-UK; the ARRL; Hap Holly and the Rain Report; Irish Radio Transmitters Society; Ohio-Penn DX Bulletin; QRZ.COM; Southgate Amateur Radio News; Ted Randall's QSO Radio Show; The UAE National Newspaper; WTWW Shortwave; and you, our listeners, that's all from the Amateur Radio Newsline. Please send emails to our address at newsline@arnewsline.org. More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline's only official website located at www.arnewsline.org. For now, with Caryn Eve Murray, KD2GUT, at the news desk in New York, and our news team worldwide, I'm Neil Rapp, WB9VPG, in Bloomington, Indiana, saying 73, and, as always, we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2017. All rights reserved. Posted by VPost v1.7.081019 .