[HCDX] DX Listening Digest 5-152 September 1
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[HCDX] DX Listening Digest 5-152 September 1



        DX LISTENING DIGEST 5-152, September 1, 2005 
	Incorporating REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING
	edited by Glenn Hauser, http://www.worldofradio.com

Items from DXLD may be reproduced and re-reproduced only if full 
credit be maintained at all stages and we be provided exchange copies. 
DXLD may not be reposted in its entirety without permission. 

Materials taken from Arctic or originating from Olle Alm and not 
having a commercial copyright are exempt from all restrictions of 
noncommercial, noncopyrighted reusage except for full credits 

For restrixions and searchable 2005 contents archive see 
http://www.worldofradio.com/dxldmid.html 

NOTE: If you are a regular reader of DXLD, and a source of DX news but 
have not been sending it directly to us, please consider yourself 
obligated to do so. Thanks, Glenn 

NEXT AIRINGS OF WORLD OF RADIO 1285:
Fri 0200 WOR ACBRadio Mainstream [repeated 2-hourly thru 2400]
Fri 2000 WOR RFPI [repeated 4-hourly thru Sat 1600]
Fri 2105 WOR World FM, Tawa, Wellington, New Zealand 88.2 
Sat 0800 WOR WRN to Eu, Au, NZ, WorldSpace AfriStar, AsiaStar
Sat 0855 WOR WNQM Nashville TN 1300 
Sat 1000 WOR WPKN Bridgeport CT 89.5 & WPKM Montauk LINY 88.7
Sat 1600 WOR R. Veronica 106.5
Sat 1600 WOR CJOY INTERNET RADIO plug-in required
Sat 1730 WOR WRN to North America 
             (including Sirius Satellite Radio channel 115)
Sat 2100 WOR WRMI 7385
Sun 0230 WOR WWCR 5070 
Sun 0300 WOR WBCQ 9330-CLSB
Sun 0630 WOR WWCR 3210 
Sun 0730 WOR World FM, Tawa, Wellington, New Zealand 88.2 
Sun 0830 WOR WRN to North America, also WLIO-TV Lima OH SAP
             (including Sirius Satellite Radio channel 115) 
Sun 0830 WOR KSFC Spokane WA 91.9
Sun 0830 WOR WXPR Rhinelander WI 91.7 91.9 100.9
Sun 0830 WOR WDWN Auburn NY 89.1 [unconfirmed]
Sun 0830 WOR KTRU Houston TX 91.7 [occasional]
Sun 1300 WOR KRFP-LP Moscow ID 92.5
Sun 1400 WOR WRMI 7385
Sun 1730 WOR WRN1 to North America 
             (including Sirius Satellite Radio channel 115) 
Sun 1900 WOR RNI
Mon 0300 WOR WBCQ 9330-CLSB
Mon 0330 WOR WSUI Iowa City IA 910
Mon 0415 WOR WBCQ 7415 [usually closer to 0418-]
Mon 1800 WOR RFPI [repeated 4-hourly thru Tue 1400]
Tue 2330 WOR WBCQ 7415 [usually]
Wed 0930 WOR WWCR 9985

Latest edition of this schedule version, with hotlinks to station 
sites and audio, is at: http://www.worldofradio.com/radioskd.html 

WRN ON DEMAND:
http://new.wrn.org/listeners/stations/station.php?StationID=24

OUR ONDEMAND AUDIO [also CONTINENT OF MEDIA, MUNDO RADIAL]: 
http://www.worldofradio.com/audiomid.html
WORLD OF RADIO 1285 (high version):
(stream)   http://www.w4uvh.net/wor1285h.ram 
(download) http://www.w4uvh.net/wor1285h.rm 
WORLD OF RADIO 1285 (low version): 
(stream)   http://www.w4uvh.net/wor1285.ram
(download) http://www.w4uvh.net/wor1285.rm
(summary)  http://www.worldofradio.com/wor1285.html 

WORLD OF RADIO 1285 in true SW sound of Alex`s mp3
(stream)   http://www.dxprograms.net/worldofradio_08-31-05.m3u 
(download) http://www.dxprograms.net/worldofradio_08-31-05.mp3

** ANTARCTICA. 15476, R. Nac. Arcángel San Gabriel (Presumed). Aug 30 
1940-2103*, 15421-25421-23432-21421 Spanish?, Talk and music and 
chorus, 2103 c/off, 2028-2100 heavy QRM of VOA and Jamming on 15470 
(Kouji Hashimoto, Japan, Japan Prremium via DXLD) 

15476, 1950 31/08 R. N. San Gabriel, Antarctica, romantic songs, fair. 
RX utilizzati: Drake R-4C; RFT EKD315; TenTec-GW RX321. Ant: T2FD 15 
m. long (Giampiero Bernardini, Milano, Italy, shortwave yg via DXLD)

** ARGENTINA. 5400-LSB, R. La Red (Presumed), Aug 26 1037-1107, 34343-
33342, Spanish, Talk, ID at 1103.

8098-LSB, R. La Red (Presumed), Aug 22 0843-0912, 35443-33343, 
Spanish, Talk, ID at 0859 and 0900 and 0903 and 0806.

15820-LSB,  R. La Red (Presumed), Aug 30 1100-1107, 25332, Spanish, 
Talk, Theme music at 1100 and 1103 (Kouji Hashimoto, Japan, Japan 
Premium via DXLD)

** ARGENTINA. Radio Baluarte noted here on 6214.3 both on August 23rd 
and 24th from 2300 tune in, fair signal with little interference, 
programme religious talks in presumed Spanish but as reported last 
month audio is very muffled (Mike Barraclough, England, Sept WDXC 
Contact via DXLD

** AUSTRALIA. 6507-USB, VMC, 1030-1045, Agosto 28. Emisora del 
Servicio Nacional de Marina de Australia con reportes metereológicos 
para las zonas costeras de New South Wales, Victoria y Tasmania. 
Transmite por las frecuencias menciondas al aire de 4425, 16546, 2201, 
6507, 8176 y 12365 kHz para zona Este de Australia y una emisora 
"hermana", la VMW para zona oeste que emite por las frecuencias 4149, 
16528, 2056, 6236, 8113 y 12362. Capté parte de su QTH en Box 1289, 
Melbourne 3001 (RAFAEL RODRIGUEZ R., Bogotá, Colombia, Equipo: PC 
WINRADIO G-303i 30 metros antena hilo largo. Sony ICF 2010 15 metros 
de antena hilo largo, via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD)

** AUSTRIA. SPECIAL CVC DRM TRANSMISSIONS TO IFA ON 6065 KHZ

CVC (Christian Vision) has announced special DRM transmissions 
directed towards Berlin for the IFA between 2nd and 7th September. The 
broadcasts will be at 1000-1300 UTC on 6065kHz, DRM power 50kW, from 
Moosbrunn (Austria) using an 11.8dB log-periodic antenna at 335 
degrees. The programme content will be live, with English music and 
chat, originating in the CVC broadcast centre in Queensland, 
Australia. For these days the regular 1000-1100 transmission to the UK 
on 11815 kHz will be suspended (Andrew Flynn, Christian Vision in DRM 
Software Radio Forum Wed. August 31, 2005 via Roberto Scaglione, 
BCLNEWS.IT, shortwave yg via DXLD) 

** AUSTRIA. The new WRTH supplement lists new 1377 kHz from Austria. 
http://www.wrth.com/files/WRTHA05updateJuly2005.pdf 
TWR update 
http://www.twr.org/twreurope/downloads/MARSchedule_2005_update1.pdf 
makes no mention of 1377 kHz. I don`t think there is any such 
transmitter but can anyone in Central Europe confirm/deny this one. 
Thanks (Steve Whitt, UK, Aug 29, MWC via DXLD)

** BOTSWANA. Re VOA-BOTSWANA --- Can anybody suggest me the valid 
email address for Voice of America Botswana relay? 

Here is an address that worked for me on August 28: manager_Botswana @ 
bot.ibb.gov A few days ago I received a verification letter, along 
with several enclosures, from Thomas R. Powell, Transmitter Plant 
Supervisor, for reception of Voice of America Studio 7. The letterhead 
included this e-mail address, which might have been obsolete since the 
letter was dated and postmarked 1 month after I mailed my report and 
then took 3 more months to arrive. Despite the many nice Botswana 
stamps on the large envelope it obviously did not come via air. But 
yesterday I sent an e-mail to Mr. Powell thanking him for the 
verification, and so far my e-mail has not bounced (Wendel Craighead, 
Prairie Village, Kansas, USA, Signal Sept 1 via DXLD) 

And I feel that tpowell @ bot.ibb.gov may be valid, too - my recent 
message did not bounce either (Dmitry Mezin, Kazan, Russia, ibid.) 

** BRAZIL. I would like to announce that Radio 8 de Setembro (from 
Descalvado, State of São Paulo, southern Brazil) will return to its 
activities tomorrow, September 1st, at the frequency of 2490 kHz. 
Reception reports can be sent to: 

Rádio 8 de Setembro 
Rua José Bonifácio, 765 (Centro) 
Descalvado - SP 13690-000 
BRAZIL 
Or via email to: rscapin @ gmail.com 
(Rafael Scapin, Aug  31, via Mika Mäkeläinen, dxing.info via DXLD)

Hello everyone! I´d like to tell you some info about Radio 8 de 
Setembro, 2490, I got from a friend of mine who works there: 
Broadcasting time: 0900-0100 UT. Transmitter Power: 0.250 kW (brand 
"Fatel") -- the old transmitter will be replaced soon by a new one of 
1.6 kW. Tower: 60 meters high. Its director is Mr. Pedro Gaspar. 
Greetings from Brazil! (Rafael Scapin, from Descalvado, Sept 1, 
dxing.info via DXLD)

** BRAZIL. RADIO CULTURA MANAUS - 4845. Mix de canciones populares, 
Ide por OM, Himno Regional ``Amazônia``, cierre de programación a las 
0200 UT Agosto 27 (CESAR PEREZ DIOSES, CHIMBOTE ? PERU, RECEPTORES: 
GRUNDIG YB 400 PE, SONY YCF 7600G. ANTENAS: DIPOLO DE 25 METROS DE 
LARGO A 10 METROS DE ALTURA, ANTENA EWE - Dirección Este - Oeste, DX 
LISTENING DIGEST)

** CANADA. When in Tofino, BC, in early August, noted a TIS-type 
station operating on 1260 from the close-by Pacific Rim National Park. 

It identified as "CBPU"; had an announcement by a woman (in English, 
followed by the obligatory French repeat) about park conditions; after 
that was an announcement of weather conditioins by a man (in English, 
followed by one in French). The woman's announcement was very muddy 
and hard to understand, even tho we were quite close to the park 
Wickaninnish HQ (and probably the transmitter). The weather 
announcement was quite clear. At our house in Tofino, CBPU wasn't 
nearly as strong as the CBC relay in Ucluelet on 540, even tho it was 
considerably closer, so suspect that CPBU's power is in the 10 to 20 
watt range. Given proper conditions, I suspect that CBPU would be a 
possibility from a costal location in the NW USA. Patrick Martin: with 
your antennas, go after them! (John Sampson, Aug 30, NRC-AM via DXLD)

It's an all-day reception over the water from Grayland WA (south of 
Aberdeen and maybe 45-50 miles north of Patrick) and I hear it's 
supposed to be 10 Watts (Chuck Hutton, WA, ibid.)

The 1260 runs 25-50 watts. I used to hear it all day with 2,000 feet
running North. Now it is barely under KCYX-McMinnville days with the
vertical. I got a QSL from Pacific Rim a few years back. 73, (Patrick 
Martin, Seaside OR, NRC-AM)

** CANADA. CFLZ [Niagara Fallz] has a unique ID.. "C-F-L-Zed or C-F-L-
Zee, either way it's 105.1, The River". I guess you could almost call 
that a bilingual ID (Canadian English/American English). hi (William 
Hepburn, WTFDA, Grimsby, Niagara, ON, CANADA, Aug 31, WTFDA via DXLD) 

** CANADA. WILLIAMS REPLIES TO RABINOVITCH ON CBC TROUBLES 
	[Finally got full Rabinovitch text posted after the reply.]
(Posted August 30, 2005 on CBCunplugged.com)

Kirk Williams responds to CBC president Robert Rabinovich's comments,
in this letter to the Globe and Mail. Kirk is the National Assignment
Producer of Canada Now (supper hour news programme).

Letter to the Editor

As a locked-out CBC employee in Vancouver, I was looking forward to
reading my boss's "clear vision for a better CBC". But while we share
many of the same sentiments, his vision -- shared by many of those
currently in management -- has one huge blind spot.

Mr. Rabinovitch writes "the only (emphasis mine) way to maintain and
improve service is to make the money CBC has go further: through
internal efficiencies, etc."

He's wrong.

No one can argue the CBC should consistently strive to be accountable
in the way it spends Canadians' hard-earned tax dollars. After all, I
am a taxpayer, too.

There IS another way.

The CBC is a public broadcaster. Mr. Rabinovitch should use his much-
touted contacts in Ottawa to lobby the federal government to fund the 
CBC adequately. Pure and simple. At no point does he even mention this 
as an option, aside from lamenting past reductions in the CBC's 
parliamentary appropriation.

CBC radio is successful in many Canadian markets because it is 
relevant, smart and commercial-free. There is no "efficiency" or
"business model" to offer a service for free. It is there because
Canadians have decided it pay for it through their tax dollars. That 
is one side of the CBC. The other is the mish-mash of CBC Television,
forced to rely on commercial revenue and compete in a Canadian TV
market filled with American sitcoms and reality shows.

The future of this Corporation is at a crossroads. It is now time for
the CBC's leadership to lobby hard to secure Ottawa's commitment to
increased funding so the broadcaster can operate free of commercial
restraints and do the kind of "public service" Mr. Rabinovitch writes
about. CBC employees should do the same. Not to protect their jobs
(most are hard-working and talented people who could find work 
elsewhere), but to protect and enhance the ideals of public
broadcasting. It's why we wanted to work at the CBC in the first
place.

Finally, and most importantly, it is up to Canadians. It we want a
public broadcaster, then we must speak up. This isn't about contract
jobs or efficiencies. Public broadcasting is bigger than that. Your
Member of Parliament should be reminded of that. This lock-out is
really about the current management not doing its job, that is,
running a public broadcaster and ensuring it will remain so.

The CBC ultimately answers to Parliament and the people of the this
country.  If Canadians no longer feel the CBC is important and
necessary, then I can respect that. Canadians may have other ideas on
how their surplus tax dollars are spent. If so, then let's shut it
down and move on while we can still remember some of the good the CBC
did. But please don't let it wither away until it drowns in
mediocrity, irrelevance and "efficiencies".

Kirk Williams, National Assignment Producer, CBC TV News "Canada Now"

-----============== The page you requested is only available to
INSIDER Edition subscribers

THE CBC'S BOSS SPEAKS: THE FIGHT'S OVER MEANS, NOT ENDS 
By ROBERT RABINOVITCH
Tuesday, August 30, 2005, Page A15  The Globe and Mail

Commentary --- The CBC's boss speaks: The fight's over means, not ends
The public broadcaster needs the right people to tell the right 
stories at the right time -- or it will lose its relevance, says
president ROBERT RABINOVITCH

Last week this newspaper called for a clear vision for a better CBC.
That is a welcome challenge. In fact, despite the current labour
dispute, management and employees at the CBC share a common vision of
the Corporation's mandate and mission -- hardly surprising, since
most of today's managers came up through the ranks as working
journalists and broadcasters.

We believe in a strong, distinctive CBC, one that provides an
essential and highly valued service: informing and entertaining
Canadians, connecting them with their communities and the rest of the
country, giving them unique programming they can't get anywhere else.
The CBC's radio services must host the Canadian conversation. CBC
Television must be the home of Canadian drama in prime time, the
deepest, most complete news service, and a place where our children
find fun, commercial-free education.

We believe in a relevant CBC, not one that is reduced to marginal
status doing only those things that commercial broadcasters choose
not to do. To attract eyes and ears, the CBC must appeal to a broad
cross-section of the population. A public broadcasting service must
make room for specialized programming that attracts dedicated but
smaller audiences. But there must also be space for those nation-
sharing moments that bring us together and remind us of who we are as 
Canadians -- be it a major news event, a prestigious documentary 
series, a big-ticket drama, or a must-watch hockey game.

And we believe in a CBC that is motivated primarily by a deep
commitment to the ideals of public service. Yet here is where
management and the union may differ: over means, rather than ends.

Some ask why the CBC is not more like the BBC. The answer is simply
that CBC/Radio-Canada is annually asked to do in two languages with
$950-million in public funding, what the BBC does in one language
with almost $7-billion. In the past decade, the real value of the
CBC's annual parliamentary appropriation has declined by almost
$400-million. Yet the CBC has actually expanded the quantity and
quality of the services it offers Canadians by generating $102-million 
in one-time funds, and an additional $65-million per year through 
efficiencies and new revenues.

The only way to maintain and improve service is to make the money CBC
has go further: through internal efficiencies, by generating income
from existing assets -- from program content to real estate -- and by
entering into new entrepreneurial partnerships. Otherwise, we'll have
no choice but to cut jobs and services at a rate of about $12-million
every year, just to keep up with inflation.

It's certainly not the CBC's intention to solve its financial
problems on the backs of employees. We value them too highly for
that. But the formats and platforms that brought public broadcasting
to an earlier generation are not enough to bring it to an
increasingly diverse, contemporary Canadian society. Today,
CBC/Radio-Canada offers its services on 18 platforms; a decade ago,
we had nine. New technologies -- personal video recorders, satellite
radio, podcasting -- require us to continually rethink how we do our
job and deliver our mandate.

For public broadcasting to thrive in this kind of world, we will
need, as ever, the highest quality programming. Over the past two
years, CBC Radio alone has developed and aired more than 30 new
program ideas, a level of activity unheard of a few years ago. Public
broadcasters, like all broadcasters, need to renew, refresh or
replace programming at a faster pace and over shorter program cycles
than ever before to remain relevant.

Some kinds of skills will always be needed at the CBC. An example
would be the news-gathering skills of a reporter, and so, in our
proposals, reporters will continue to be hired on a permanent basis.

Others will come and go as programs and formats change. Let's say
that CBC decided to pilot a new current-affairs show exploring health
issues and the health-care system. Some of the producers and the
hosts hired might well be very specialized in the subject matter.
Three years later, if the issue no longer had the same resonance with
Canadians, then the producer should benefit from appropriate
severance -- but not permanent status within CBC. That employee,
hired for his medical background, should not be able, because he has
seniority, to transfer into CBC.ca and displace a newly hired
producer who was brought in for her knowledge of the cultural scene
and her familiarity with the blogging universe.

This is the reality of the world in which we live. Taken together,
the proposals we have put forward to our unionized employees seek to
ensure that the CBC can employ the right people for the right jobs at
the right time. It seems obvious, but that is the core of our dispute
with our union. Without this ability, our programming will suffer and
the CBC will gradually become less relevant and attractive to
Canadians.

Because these issues are so important, the CBC took the grave step of
exercising its right to lock out its unionized employees. After 15
months of inconclusive negotiations, and the prospect of talks
continuing indefinitely -- or of a strike during the height of the
fall season, the Turin Olympics or a federal election -- it was time
to focus attention on the task at hand. That's why the CBC
negotiators remain in place, eager to resume talks, and willing to
discuss all issues with the union without preconditions.

We have guaranteed the permanent status of current permanent
employees. What is in dispute are the employment arrangements of
future CBC hires. "Jobs for life" could lead to the demise of the
institution. "The right people for the right jobs" could save it. The
future of public broadcasting in this country depends on the choice
we make.

Everyone who cares about public broadcasting in Canada agrees about
that. That's why we are resolved to do everything in our power to
reach a settlement as quickly as possible -- everything short of
mortgaging the future of a great institution.  
----- 
Robert Rabinovitch is president and CEO of the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation. (via Dan Say, BC, DXLD) 

** CANADA. CBC podcast tops --- By Robyn Stubbs, 24 hours
http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/News/2005/08/31/1194925-sun.html 
 
They may not be coming to us over the radio airwaves, but locked-out 
CBC broadcasters are still finding ways to keep in contact with 
devoted listeners. A podcast of local music and commentary is now 
ranked the second most popular national podcast on iTunes, beating out 
Fox Television, BBC World and Ebert and Roeper, said locked out CBC 
communications officer Joan Athey yesterday. Only CBC Radio 3's 
podcast ranks higher, despite the fact that Radio 3 broadcasters are 
locked out and the show isn't putting out any new material. The new 
website http://www.cbcunplugged.com was created by locked-out CBC 
technology columnist and producer Tod Maffin and started up two weeks 
ago when CBC employees across the country stopped work because of a 
dispute over contracting out jobs (via Bruce MacGibbon, Aug 31, DXLD)

SHELAGH ROGERS HITS THE ROAD  http://shelaghcaravan.blogspot.com/

"The Caravan Unlocked" --- Take a mini-van, include a well-known 
locked out CBC Radio host, add in a couple of stray radio producers 
and aim east. That?s the formula that Shelagh Rogers and friends are 
using for their new project, The Caravan Unlocked.

The Caravan Unlocked will see Shelagh and her two colleagues moving 
west to east, visiting as many Candian Media Guild (CMG) picket lines 
as they can, starting with the one at CBC Victoria.

The CMG is underwriting the cost of the project.

Shelagh and Co. vow to keep on driving east ? and keep on picketing 
with their colleagues ? until they reach CBC St. John?s in 
Newfoundland and Labrador, or until CBC management unlocks the doors -
-- whichever comes first.

Along the road, Shelagh will constantly update this blogsite. So, 
please bookmark it now. In addition to regular written dispatches from 
Shelagh, check this site daily for photos of the tour and for regular 
podcasts.

Shealgh and her colleagues also hope to make the podcasts available 
soon on iTunes.ca

``I was planning to be part of an exciting start to September on CBC 
Radio One beginning with an Alberta Centennial special from Edmonton, 
followed by a radio season launch in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, and then 
capping it off with a cross country tour going east to west," said 
Rogers.

``Due to circumstances beyond my control, however, I instead find 
myself in a very different role and traveling west to east. Who would 
have believed it?``

The mission of The Caravan Unlocked is to meet with her listeners and 
to reach out to the communities who are sorely missing the CBC, as 
well as connecting with colleagues on picket lines across the nation.

``This whole trip, really, is about optimism and the hope for a new 
and better CBC after this is all over. In my heart of hearts, though, 
what I really hope for is that this trip doesn?t last very long.``

For more information call Sue Campbell (cell) : 416-407-1447 (via 
Ricky Leong, AB, Sept 1, DXLD)

** ECUADOR. Escaneo DX Banda de 90 metros Agosto 26 2005 0100-0200 UT:
3450.0v L.V. de Riobamba (3 x 1150 kHz) con musica rockolera "La Voz 
de Riobamba 1150", 0100-0200 UT Aug 26 (RAFAEL RODRIGUEZ R., Bogotá, 
Colombia, Equipo: PC WINRADIO G-303i 30 metros antena hilo largo. Sony 
ICF 2010 15 metros de antena hilo largo, via Dario Monferini, playdx 
yg via DXLD) One item excerpted by gh

** FINLAND. After the fiasco on Sunday, with YLE cutting off its 5-
minute Latin broadcast after only 3 minutes, I checked the same 
transmission on a weekday, Aug 31, when in Finnish: again cut off at 
1358* apparently with audio still in progress. Pori needs to get 
coördinated with Helsinki (Glenn Hauser, OK, WORLD OF RADIO 1285, DX 
LISTENING DIGEST)

** FRANCE. R. France Int'l schedule has been updated for Sept. 4. 
0400-0430 9805 ex-7315 via Gabon; 0500-0530 11995 ex-9825 via Gabon 
and 13680 ex-15160 direct; 1400-1500 7180 ex-9580 via China. (RFI 
website via Jean-Nichel Aubier, France via dxldyg, 3/27 via PTSW via 
DXLD) 

** GEORGIA. GEORGIA (ABKHAZIA) --- Heard Radio Rossii on 25 Aug at 
1650-1700 UTC on 1350 kHz with O=4. But at 1700 a broadcast in unknown 
language started. Where did the signal come from? (open_dx - Andrey 
Burlaka, Simferopol, Ukraine)

My version: Apsua Radio (=R. Abkhazii), Sokhum, in Abkhazian. 
Frequency is usually shifted 30...40 Hz up from the nominal. // SW 
9494.8v. Operation time is rather erratic. You may try to listen 
between 0330-1730 (but a couple of years ago MW transmitter worked on 
distinct schedule, i.e. was on the air at *0200-2000*). (open_dx - 
Vladimir Titarev, Kremenchuk, Ukraine)

See an extract from EMWG below:

GEO --- R Respubliki Abkhazii/Radio Rossii, Sukhumi 50 kW
0200- (Tu-Sa), 0400-(Su/Mo); programmes in Abkhaz: 0200-0230(Tu-Sa),
0400-0500 (daily) and Russian; Radio Rossii: 0230-0400(Tu-Sa), 1600- ;
SW parallel: 9495v kHz (not always in parallel!); Same hour in Summer!
(open_dx - Vasily Gulyaev, Astrakhan, Russia)

You might want to listen to the following audio clip of the station:
http://victorcity.dxing.ru/Clips/1350_ApsuaRadio_Suxum_18.08.05_Izh_17.00utc.mp3
(open_dx - Victor Rutkovsky, Yekaterinburg, Russia)

Now, after listening to the clip, I'm sure that I really caught the
Abkhazian transmitter (open_dx - Andrey Burlaka, Simferopol, Ukraine, 
all Signal Sept 1 via DXLD)

** GERMANY. Note how little inband usage there is, especially on 19m, 
and no 13m at all now, tho DW is still on that band (gh, DXLD)

Schedule of German Telekom transmitting station Juelich
A05 period (27/03/2005 - 30/10/2005) A05akt_16 17.08.2005 Gesamtplan

  frq  startstop  ciraf          
                ant     azi  type day      from   to      loc  pow bc

 3955  1400 1559  27W,28S,36 
                403      ND  976  7        040605 301005  JUL   40 TDP
 3955  1700 1800  27,28  
                403      ND  976  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR

 5910  1807 1840  27,28  
                104     130  206  1234567  300505 310705  JUL  100 TWR
 5925  1300 1415  27,28  
                401      ND  926  1        070805 301005  JUL  100 RTR
 5945  0100 0300  39,40  
                105     100  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 5945  0630 0815  27,28N 
                406     290  805  7        060805 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0630 0845  27,28N 
                406     290  805  1        060805 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0700 0815  27,28N 
                406     290  805  7        270305 050805  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0700 0845  27,28N 
                406     290  805  1        190605 050805  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0715 0830  27,28N         
                406     290  805  6        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  1100 1115  27,28          
                314      ND  930  1        270305 301005  WER  250 MWA
 5945  1100 1129  27,28          
                314      ND  930  7        070505 301005  WER  500 FVM
 5965  0500 0600  28E            
                105     115  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 AWR
 5975  1000 1600  28,39N         
                211     110  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL   40 DRM
 5975  2000 2100  37NW           
                205     230  211  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 CBS
 5985  1900 2100  39,40          
                105     115  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 6015  1530 1600  28,29          
                205      70  211  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 BCA
 6015  1600 1700  27,28          
                401      ND  926  1234567  270305 301005  JUL   40 DRM
 6015  1700 1800  27W,28         
                401      ND  926  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HCJ
 6015  1800 1900  28,29          
                205      60  211  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 6015  1800 1930  28,29          
                205      60  211  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 6015  1815 1830  28,29          
                205      60  211  23456    270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 6045  0858 1000  27,28          
                402      ND  976  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 EVR
 6045  1200 1300  27,28          
                205      60  211  1        030705 311005  JUL  100 MVB
 6055  0900 0959  27,28          
                104     115  206  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 CHW
 6055  1030 1059  27,28          
                314      ND  930  17       270305 301005  WER  125 EMG
 6055  1100 1159  27,28          
                401      ND  926  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
 6055  1130 1159  27,28          
                402      ND  976  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
 6065  0100 1300  27             
                118     295  216  2346     120805 170805  JUL   40 DRM
 6105  0827 0845  28             
                111     105  216  34567    270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 6110  1100 1159  27,28W         
                402      ND  976  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 TOM
 6140  0600 0959  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL  100 DWL
 6140  1000 1259  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL   40 DWL
 6140  1300 1559  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL  100 DWL
 6140  1600 1900  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL   40 DWL
 6145  2200 2300  39,40          
                105     100  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR

 7145  1000 1559  27             
                406     290  805  1234567  010805 301005  JUL   40 BCE
 7210  0527 0545  28,29          
                104     100  206  23456    270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 7210  0827 0845  28             
                104     100  206  34567    270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 7225  1027 1100  28,29          
                111     105  216  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 7260  2000 2100  39,40          
                111     120  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 7315  0000 0059  41             
                222      90  216  1234567  130405 301005  WER  250 WRN

 9405  2000 2030  46             
                308     210  216  7        040605 301005  JUL  100 RMI
 9430  1615 1729  39,40          
                102     115  217  246      270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1700 1729  39,40          
                102     115  217  35       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1700 1759  39,40          
                102     115  217  17       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1730 1800  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  3        270305 301005  NAU  125 BVB
 9430  1800 1900  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  7        270305 301005  NAU  250 BVB
 9430  1800 1915  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  1        150505 301005  NAU  250 BVB
 9430  1815 1900  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  6        150505 301005  NAU  250 BVB
 9430  1900 1930  46,47          
                211     170  216  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1930 1959  46,47          
                211     170  216  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1930 2000  46             
                308     200  216  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9435  1800 1830  27,28          
                308     210  216  1        030705 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9435  2330 0030  41,49          
                208      80  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 DVB
 9470  0400 0700  55,59,60       
                202     230  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
 9485  0100 0129  41             
                208      90  218  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
 9485  1730 1845  47,48,52       
                105     145  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 IBR
 9490  1027 1100  28,29          
                104     100  206  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 9495  0030 0130  40,41          
                212      90  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
 9560  2330 0030  41,43,49       
                221      75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
 9605  2000 2100  39,40          
                102     115S 217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
 9610  0659 0757  28E,29         
                202      50  218  1234567  010605 310805  JUL  100 RNW
 9655  1800 1859  28,29          
                104      85  206  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 CHW
 9675  1900 2045  46NE,SE,NW     
                304     190  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 IBR
 9725  1500 1659  29             
                202      50  218  1234567  220505 301005  JUL  100 IBB
 9740  0030 0045  41             
                110      90  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
 9825  1900 2100  39,40          
                208     100  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 9840  2000 2100  37,38          
                405     175  850  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 IBR
 9845  1559 1759  27,28W         
                316      ND  926  1234567  270405 301005  WER  500 TOM
 9925  0100 0500  2-10           
                119     325  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
 9925  2200 0300  55,59,60       
                202     230  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
 9925  2300 0300  6-10           
                112     300  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT

11610  1500 1530  29,30          
                212      60  217  7        270305 301005  WER  250 EMG
11610  1530 1545  29,30          
                404      60  850  4        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
11655  0559 0657  18,27,28       
                308      20  216  1234567  010605 310805  JUL  100 RNW 
11775  0900 1000  28W            
                105     145  216  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 AWR
11785  1700 1800  39N,40W        
                107     115  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
11800  1600 1700  41             
                110     100  217  1234567  050605 301005  JUL  100 RMI
11840  1100 1130  19-26          
                101/00   20  216  7        270305 301005  NAU  250 EMG
11865  1630 1700  39,40          
                111/00  105  217  7        270305 301005  WER  250 FVM
11965  1800 1830  39,40          
                208     100  218  456      030805 301005  JUL  100 BVB
11965  1800 1830  39,40          
                208     100  218  6        010705 020805  JUL  100 BVB
11965  1800 1859  39,40          
                208     100  218  17       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
11975  0100 0300  42S,43W        
                208      75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 IBB

13590  1530 1759  39,40          
                103     115  217  1        240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1540 1615  39,40          
                103     115  217  246      270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1540 1645  39,40          
                103     115  217  5        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1540 1715  39,40          
                103     115  217  3        240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1545 1830  39,40          
                103     115  217  7        240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1700 1759  39,40          
                103     115  217  46       240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  2000 2100  37,38,46,47    
                305     190  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
13600  1330 1430  41NE           
                214      75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
13600  1630 1715  39,40          
                111/00  120  217  34       200505 301005  WER  250 BVB
13600  1630 1715  39,40          
                111/00  120  217  7        200805 200805  WER  250 BVB
13600  1630 1730  39,40          
                111/00  120  217  256      200505 301005  WER  250 BVB
13645  1430 1530  41,43,49       
                111/00   75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
13720  1700 1800  37,38          
                304     175  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
13750  1530 1630  40,41          
                120/00   90  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
13750  1700 1730  37,46          
                204     210  217  3        030505 301005  WER 125 CHW2
13750  1700 1730  47,52N,48E     
                302     160  216  5        270305 301005  JUL 100 CHW2
13810  1630 1730  38S;39S;47,48  
                106     130  217  2356     090705 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13810  1630 1759  38S;39S;47,48  
                106     130  217  147      090705 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13810  1800 1959  38E,39         
                111     120  216  1234567  220705 301005  JUL  100 TOM
13820  0600 1000  58,59,60       
                208     270  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
13820  1600 1630  39,40          
                208     100  218  5        110805 301005  JUL  100 PAB
13820  1600 1630  39,40          
                208     100  218  7        060805 100805  JUL  100 PAB
13820  1900 1929  39,40          
                103     115  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
13840  1530 1600  41             
                208      90  217  23456    180705 301005  WER  250 BVB
13840  1530 1600  41             
                208      90  217  7        200805 200805  WER  250 BVB
13840  1530 1600  41             
                208      90  217  7        300705 300705  WER  250 BVB

15245  1900 2030  37,38W         
                307     200  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 AWR
15430  1400 1500  39,40          
                107     115  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
15450  1730 1759  39S,47E,48     
                120/00  135  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  125 IBR
15565  1830 1930  39S,48         
                305     130  217  14       270305 301005  JUL  100 EFD
15640  1600 1629  37,38          
                304     175  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
15650  1430 1445  39,40          
                208     100  218  7        140505 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1430 1445  41             
                208      90  218  1        030505 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1445 1500  39,40          
                208     100  218  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1545 1600  39,40          
                208     100  218  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1600 1630  39,40          
                208     100  218  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15670  1600 1659  39S,48         
                305     130  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 ÄUV
15670  1630 1659  39S,48         
                305     130  217  36       270305 301005  JUL  100 RHU
15670  1700 1759  39S,48         
                305     130  217  1346     240605 301005  JUL  100 SBO
15670  1700 1759  39S,48         
                305     130  217  5        300605 301005  JUL  100 ELF
15675  1800 1829  46,47,48       
                302     160  216  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
15675  1830 1859  52,53          
                302     160  216  5        270305 301005  JUL  100 RRP
15690  1500 1559  39S,48         
                304     130  217  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 ELF 

17510  1500 1600  40,41          
                109      90  218  37       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
17510  1530 1600  40,41          
                109      90  218  12456    270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
17545  0957 1116  47,48,52,53    
                301     160  216  1234567  110705 280805  JUL  100 RTB
17550  1330 1400  47,48          
                305     130  217  6        220705 301005  JUL  100 RMI
17570  1457 1700  47,48,52,53    
                301     160  216  2        110405 301005  JUL  100 RTB
17570  1457 1800  47,48,52,53    
                301     160  216  134567   110405 301005  JUL  100 RTB
17580  0457 0716  47,48,52,53    
                303     160  216  23456    110405 301005  JUL  100 RTB
17580  0457 1000  47,48,52,53    
                303     160  216  17       270305 301005  JUL  100 RTB
17595  0845 1015  38,39          
                308     135  217  6        270305 301005  WER  125 BVB
17870  1500 1530  47,48          
                305     145  217  46       010705 301005  JUL  100 AWH

SORTED BY STATION/PROGRAM, and then by TIME:

frq  startstop  ciraf          
                ant     azi  type day      from   to      loc  pow bc

 5975  1000 1600  28,39N         
                211     110  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL   40 DRM
 6015  1600 1700  27,28          
                401      ND  926  1234567  270305 301005  JUL   40 DRM
 6065  0100 1300  27             
                118     295  216  2346     120805 170805  JUL   40 DRM

 9740  0030 0045  41             
                110      90  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
11610  1530 1545  29,30          
                404      60  850  4        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1430 1445  41             
                208      90  218  1        030505 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1430 1445  39,40          
                208     100  218  7        140505 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1445 1500  39,40          
                208     100  218  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1545 1600  39,40          
                208     100  218  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
15650  1600 1630  39,40          
                208     100  218  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 PAB
13820  1600 1630  39,40          
                208     100  218  7        060805 100805  JUL  100 PAB
13820  1600 1630  39,40          
                208     100  218  5        110805 301005  JUL  100 PAB

 9435  2330 0030  41,49          
                208      80  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 DVB

 5975  2000 2100  37NW           
                205     230  211  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 CBS

11800  1600 1700  41             
                110     100  217  1234567  050605 301005  JUL  100 RMI
 9405  2000 2030  46             
                308     210  216  7        040605 301005  JUL  100 RMI
17550  1330 1400  47,48          
                305     130  217  6        220705 301005  JUL  100 RMI

 5925  1300 1415  27,28          
                401      ND  926  1        070805 301005  JUL  100 RTR

 6015  1530 1600  28,29          
                205      70  211  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 BCA

 5945  1100 1115  27,28          
                314      ND  930  1        270305 301005  WER  250 MWA

11865  1630 1700  39,40          
                111/00  105  217  7        270305 301005  WER  250 FVM
 5945  1100 1129  27,28          
                314      ND  930  7        070505 301005  WER  500 FVM

 7145  1000 1559  27             
                406     290  805  1234567  010805 301005  JUL   40 BCE

 7315  0000 0059  41             
                222      90  216  1234567  130405 301005  WER  250 WRN

 6015  1700 1800  27W,28         
                401      ND  926  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HCJ

17870  1500 1530  47,48          
                305     145  217  46       010705 301005  JUL  100 AWH

 6045  1200 1300  27,28          
                205      60  211  1        030705 311005  JUL  100 MVB

 6045  0858 1000  27,28          
                402      ND  976  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 EVR

 6055  0900 0959  27,28          
                104     115  206  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 CHW
 9655  1800 1859  28,29          
                104      85  206  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 CHW

13750  1700 1730  37,46          
                204     210  217  3        030505 301005  WER 125 CHW2
13750  1700 1730  47,52N,48E     
                302     160  216  5        270305 301005  JUL 100 CHW2

 6055  1030 1059  27,28          
                314      ND  930  17       270305 301005  WER  125 EMG
11840  1100 1130  19-26          
                101/00   20  216  7        270305 301005  NAU  250 EMG
11610  1500 1530  29,30          
                212      60  217  7        270305 301005  WER  250 EMG

15675  1830 1859  52,53          
                302     160  216  5        270305 301005  JUL  100 RRP

15670  1700 1759  39S,48         
                305     130  217  1346     240605 301005  JUL  100 SBO

15670  1630 1659  39S,48         
                305     130  217  36       270305 301005  JUL  100 RHU

15670  1600 1659  39S,48         
                305     130  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 ÄUV

15565  1830 1930  39S,48         
                305     130  217  14       270305 301005  JUL  100 EFD

15670  1700 1759  39S,48         
                305     130  217  5        300605 301005  JUL  100 ELF
15690  1500 1559  39S,48         
                304     130  217  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 ELF 

 9840  2000 2100  37,38          
                405     175  850  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 IBR
15450  1730 1759  39S,47E,48     
                120/00  135  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  125 IBR
 9675  1900 2045  46NE,SE,NW     
                304     190  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 IBR
 9485  1730 1845  47,48,52       
                105     145  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 IBR

15640  1600 1629  37,38          
                304     175  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
 9485  0100 0129  41             
                208      90  218  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
 6055  1100 1159  27,28          
                401      ND  926  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
 6055  1130 1159  27,28          
                402      ND  976  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
15675  1800 1829  46,47,48       
                302     160  216  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL
13820  1900 1929  39,40          
                103     115  217  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 UNL

 6110  1100 1159  27,28W         
                402      ND  976  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 TOM
 9845  1559 1759  27,28W         
                316      ND  926  1234567  270405 301005  WER  500 TOM
13810  1800 1959  38E,39         
                111     120  216  1234567  220705 301005  JUL  100 TOM

17580  0457 0716  47,48,52,53    
                303     160  216  23456    110405 301005  JUL  100 RTB
17580  0457 1000  47,48,52,53    
                303     160  216  17       270305 301005  JUL  100 RTB
17545  0957 1116  47,48,52,53    
                301     160  216  1234567  110705 280805  JUL  100 RTB
17570  1457 1700  47,48,52,53    
                301     160  216  2        110405 301005  JUL  100 RTB
17570  1457 1800  47,48,52,53    
                301     160  216  134567   110405 301005  JUL  100 RTB

 5945  0700 0845  27,28N         
                406     290  805  1        190605 050805  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0700 0815  27,28N         
                406     290  805  7        270305 050805  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0630 0845  27,28N         
                406     290  805  1        060805 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0630 0815  27,28N         
                406     290  805  7        060805 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 5945  0715 0830  27,28N         
                406     290  805  6        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 6015  1815 1830  28,29          
                205      60  211  23456    270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 6015  1800 1930  28,29          
                205      60  211  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 6015  1800 1900  28,29          
                205      60  211  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1800 1915  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  1        150505 301005  NAU  250 BVB
 9430  1815 1900  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  6        150505 301005  NAU  250 BVB
 9430  1800 1900  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  7        270305 301005  NAU  250 BVB
 9430  1730 1800  39,40          
                401/00  125  216  3        270305 301005  NAU  125 BVB
 9430  1930 1959  46,47          
                211     170  216  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1900 1930  46,47          
                211     170  216  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1930 2000  46             
                308     200  216  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13810  1630 1730  38S;39S;47,48  
                106     130  217  2356     090705 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13810  1630 1759  38S;39S;47,48  
                106     130  217  147      090705 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1700 1759  39,40          
                102     115  217  17       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1700 1729  39,40          
                102     115  217  35       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
 9430  1615 1729  39,40          
                102     115  217  246      270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
17595  0845 1015  38,39          
                308     135  217  6        270305 301005  WER  125 BVB
11965  1800 1859  39,40          
                208     100  218  17       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
11965  1800 1830  39,40          
                208     100  218  6        010705 020805  JUL  100 BVB
11965  1800 1830  39,40          
                208     100  218  456      030805 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1530 1759  39,40          
                103     115  217  1        240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1540 1615  39,40          
                103     115  217  246      270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1540 1715  39,40          
                103     115  217  3        240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1545 1830  39,40          
                103     115  217  7        240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1540 1645  39,40          
                103     115  217  5        270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13590  1700 1759  39,40          
                103     115  217  46       240605 301005  JUL  100 BVB
17510  1500 1600  40,41          
                109      90  218  37       270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
17510  1530 1600  40,41          
                109      90  218  12456    270305 301005  JUL  100 BVB
13600  1630 1715  39,40          
                111/00  120  217  34       200505 301005  WER  250 BVB
13600  1630 1730  39,40          
                111/00  120  217  256      200505 301005  WER  250 BVB
13600  1630 1715  39,40          
                111/00  120  217  7        200805 200805  WER  250 BVB
13840  1530 1600  41             
                208      90  217  23456    180705 301005  WER  250 BVB
13840  1530 1600  41             
                208      90  217  7        300705 300705  WER  250 BVB
13840  1530 1600  41             
                208      90  217  7        200805 200805  WER  250 BVB
 9435  1800 1830  27,28          
                308     210  216  1        030705 301005  JUL  100 BVB

13600  1330 1430  41NE           
                214      75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
13645  1430 1530  41,43,49       
                111/00   75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
13750  1530 1630  40,41          
                120/00   90  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
 9495  0030 0130  40,41          
                212      90  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA
 9560  2330 0030  41,43,49       
                221      75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 GFA

13720  1700 1800  37,38          
                304     175  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
11785  1700 1800  39N,40W        
                107     115  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
 9605  2000 2100  39,40          
                102     115S 217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
13590  2000 2100  37,38,46,47    
                305     190  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR
 3955  1700 1800  27,28          
                403      ND  976  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 YFR

 9925  2200 0300  55,59,60       
                202     230  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
 9925  2300 0300  6-10           
                112     300  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
 9925  0100 0500  2-10           
                119     325  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
 9470  0400 0700  55,59,60       
                202     230  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT
13820  0600 1000  58,59,60       
                208     270  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 HRT

FMO's (Frequency Managing Organizations)

 6140  0600 0959  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL  100 DWL
 6140  1000 1259  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL   40 DWL
 6140  1300 1559  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL  100 DWL
 6140  1600 1900  27,28          
                405     175  850  1234567  010705 301005  JUL   40 DWL

 3955  1400 1559  27W,28S,36     
                403      ND  976  7        040605 301005  JUL   40 TDP

11655  0559 0657  18,27,28       
                308      20  216  1234567  010605 310805  JUL  100 RNW 
 9610  0659 0757  28E,29         
                202      50  218  1234567  010605 310805  JUL  100 RNW

 5965  0500 0600  28E            
                105     115  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 AWR
11775  0900 1000  28W            
                105     145  216  1        270305 301005  JUL  100 AWR
15245  1900 2030  37,38W         
                307     200  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 AWR

 7210  0527 0545  28,29          
                104     100  206  23456    270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 7210  0827 0845  28             
                104     100  206  34567    270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 6105  0827 0845  28             
                111     105  216  34567    270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 7225  1027 1100  28,29          
                111     105  216  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 9490  1027 1100  28,29          
                104     100  206  7        270305 301005  JUL  100 TWR
 5910  1807 1840  27,28          
                104     130  206  1234567  300505 310705  JUL  100 TWR

 5945  0100 0300  39,40          
                105     100  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
15430  1400 1500  39,40          
                107     115  217  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 9825  1900 2100  39,40          
                208     100  218  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 5985  1900 2100  39,40          
                105     115  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 7260  2000 2100  39,40          
                111     120  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR
 6145  2200 2300  39,40          
                105     100  216  1234567  270305 301005  JUL  100 VOR

 9725  1500 1659  29             
                202      50  218  1234567  220505 301005  JUL  100 IBB
11975  0100 0300  42S,43W        
                208      75  217  1234567  270305 301005  WER  250 IBB

* changes   + active on demand   # momentary not active [none showing]

FMO's (Frequency Managing Organizations)

AWH Allerweltshaus Köln e.V.
AWR Adventist World Radio
BVB Bible Voice Broadcasting
BCA Bible Christian Association
BCE Broadcasting Center Europe S.A.
CBS Radio Taiwan international
CHW Christliche Wissenschaft
DTK Deutsche Telekom
DVB Democratic Voice of Burma
DWL Deutsche Welle
EMG Evangelische Missions Gemeinden in Deutschland
EVR Evangeliums Radio Hamburg
FVM Freie Volksmission Krefeld
GFA Gospel For Asia
HCJ Voice of the Andes
HLR Hamburger Lokal Radio
HRT Hrvatska Radio Televizija
IBB International Broadcast Bureau
IBR IBRA Radio Sweden
MWA Missionswerk Arche
MVB Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Baltic Radio
PAB Pan Am Broadcasting
RMI Radio Miami International
RNW Radio Netherlands World Service
RRP Radio Réveil Paroles de Vie
RTB Radio Télévision Belge de la Communauté Française
RTR Radio Traumland (Belgien)
SBO Sagalee Bilisummaa Oromoo
TDP Transmitter Documentation Project
TOM The Overcomer Broadcast
TWR Trans World Radio
UNL Universelles Leben
VOR Voice of Russia
WRN World Radio Network
YFR WYFR Family Radio

Walter Brodowsky
Account Manager für Kurzwellenrundfunk
T-Systems
Regional MediaBroadcast Cologne
MediaBroadcast
Bastionstr. 11 - 19
52428 Jülich
          
E-Mail   Walter.Brodowsky @ t-systems.com
Internet http://www.t-systems.com

If you would like to visit our Internet page with regard to shortwave
business please use the following link-address:
http://www.t-systems-mediabroadcast.de/coremedia/generator/www.t-systems-mediabroadcast.com/en/Home/Solutions/DistributionNetworks/id=47400.html
(via Michael Bethge, WWDXC via Wolfgang Büschel, DXLD) Re-format by gh

** GREECE. Last night, there was nothing on 9420 from Avlis 3 at 0000-
0400. So far today, nothing yet either (John Babbis, MD, Aug 31, ditto 
Sept 1, WORLD OF RADIO 1285, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

Re John`s notes about 9420 missing. Frequency 9420 is not heard during 
the scheduled time of 0600-1000 and I have not heard it sign on at 
scheduled 1300 either. The HFCC registrations appear to show use of a 
250 kW transmitter at Avlis [below] but if it really does exist it is 
not used on any other frequency. I also note the three registrations 
for THE [Thessaloniki] which includes a 250 kW unit plus the old (and 
scrapped??) 35 kW units. Maybe John can find out for us exactly what 
they are actually operating and from where these days.

 9420 0000-0400 4,7-9,18,27,28      AVL  250 323
 9420 0400-0800 28,29,39-41         AVL  100 105
 9420 0800-1400 18,27,28,39         AVL  100 323
 9420 1400-1700 2-9,18,28,29,36     AVL  250 323
 9420 1400-1500 18,27,28,36         AVL  100 323
 9420 1700-1800 4,5,7-9,27,28       AVL  250 323
 9420 1800-2100 18,27,28            AVL  250 323
 9420 2100-2400 38-41,54-56,58-60   AVL  100 105
 9935 0700-2300 8,27,28             AVL  250 285

 7430 1400-2300 18,27,28            THE   35 315
 9375 1100-1500 18,27,28            THE  250 315
11595 0900-1600 28SE,38,39          THE   35 115

I don't think 9935 is correct, and the frequency is not in use for all 
of that time span. 73s (Noel R. Green, UK, Sept 1, dxldyg via DX 
LISTENING DIGEST)

** INDIA. PRASAR BHARATI ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF PROTEST 

Chennai: The administrative staff of Prasar Bharati, under the aegis 
of Akashvani and Doordarshan Administrative Staff Association, staged 
a protest here on Tuesday to condemn the disparity in wages between 
them and the engineering and programming staff. The workers assembled 
in front of the Government Guest House and raised slogans throughout 
the day. The protesters said the Prasar Bharati Board had awarded a 
pay rise for its engineering and programming staff immediately after 
it was formed by combining Akashvani and Doordarshan in 1997. 
Administrative staff demanded that they too should be considered for 
the hike and the scale must be uniform (The Hindu 30/08/2005 via 
Sakhti Vel, DXLD) 

** INTERNATIONAL WATERS. 9133, 1820 31/08, Coalition Maritime Forces, 
Manama, Bahrain, USB, Arabic, long talks, poor. RX utilizzati: Drake 
R-4C; RFT EKD315; TenTec-GW RX321. Ant: T2FD 15 m. long (Giampiero 
Bernardini, Milano, Italy, shortwave yg via DXLD)

** INTERNATIONAL WATERS [and non]. "The PIRATES FOR PEACE are still 
alive and kicking! We are now based in Kilkeel, Northern Ireland. Our 
website is currently being redesigned, However here are just a few 
[uncaptioned!] photos. Also read the story of the voyage from 
Southampton tow Kilkeel." http://www.piratesforpeace.com/ 
(via Mike Terry, BDXC-UK via DXLD)

** ITALY. Radio Maria heard with good signal on 26000 around 0800 
August 28th with religious programme (Chris Gibbs, Surrey, Sept WDXC 
Contact via DXLD) 

Subsequently heard here 0815 following Chris` tip, two or three 
minutes of strong clear audio then faded right down with occasional 
further periods of good audio. Same pattern occurred 0700 on August 
30th (Mike Barraclough, England, Sept WDXC Contact via DXLD) 

** ITALY [non]. I am pleased to announce that on-demand audio for 
MediaLine Radio is available once again at http://medialineradio.com 
(Henry Brice, MediaLine, Sept 1, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** JORDAN. 11690 kHz, Radio Jordan. Aug. 30 at 1445-1500. SINPO34433, 
but BBC via Meyerton sign-on at 1500 and caused severe interference. 
Music program with pops. Sometimes mentioned "Afternoon show" (Iwao 
Nagatani, Japan Premium via DXLD)

** KOREA NORTH. 6399v, P`yongyang BCS, 1048-1102, Korean, Continuous 
ballads with announcer at 1052. Pips/ID at 1100 into alternating OM 
and YL. Fair as was // 6250-Kanggye (Scott Barbour, NH, Aug 29 or 30, 
dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST) 

** LATVIA. This weekend relays on 9290: 
Sat September 3 
Radio Six        6.00 - 07.00 UTC 
Radio Joystick   9.00 - 10.00 UTC 
Radio Marabu    13.00 - 19.00 UTC 

Sun September 4 
Radio City       9.00 - 10.00 UTC 
Radio Six       11.00 - 12.00 UTC 
Q103            12.00 - 14.00 UTC 
Good Listening (Tom Taylor, Sept 1, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** LIBERIA [non]. 11965, Star Radio via Ascension. SIO 454 most days 
at 2100 sign on, holds up for 20 minutes or so most days, but by 2140 
is usually showing a trace but not readable. English program (was 
surprised to hear it so well). Rx Sony ICF6800W, LW 40m North-South. 
Regards (Ron Killick, New Zealand, HCDX via DXLD) 

** MEXICO. 1630, XEUT, Tijuana, BCN, playing down-beat 
electronica/trip-hop, 1830, 8/28

1700, XEPE, Tecate, BCN, business talk, 2220, 8/29 (Mark Stalcup, 
Chandler, AZ, Sony SW55 w/Terk Loop, Q-Stick+, ABDX via DXLD) Times 
MST = UT -7 

1700, XEPE, BCN Tijuana, 8/30 2113 [zone?]. Very good signal - running 
a Padres baseball game (Michael n WYO Richard, ABDX via DXLD)

** NETHERLANDS. REVISED RNW SHORTWAVE SCHEDULE STARTS TOMORROW

There are a few changes to the shortwave schedule of Radio Netherlands 
effective tomorrow until the end of the summer transmission period on 
30 October. These changes do not affect any of our English broadcasts. 
The complete revised engineering schedule from 1 September - 30 
October is now on our website. 
http://www2.rnw.nl/rnw/en/features/media/schedule050327.html?view=Standard
# posted by Andy @ 13:46 UT Aug 31 (Media Network blog via DXLD)

** NEW ZEALAND [and non]. 6679 USB, AUCKLAND VOLMET (ZKAK), Nueva 
Zelandia. 0950-0955, luego 1020 y 1050 Agosto 28. Con los reportes 
típicos para la aviación mencionando dirección del viento, 
visibilidad, etc. Para Wellington, Auckland y Tahiti entre otros. ID 
como: "This is Auckland Volmet" al iniciar y al finalizar: "Auckland 
Volmet, out". 

Esta emisora hace parte de las estaciones volmet para el área del 
pacífico que tiene sus transmisiones en la misma frecuencia así:
En el minuto:
00, 55 KVM70 HONOLULU
10, 40 JIA JAPON
15, 45 VRK22 HONG KONG
20, 50 ZKAK AUCKLAND
En esta misma frecuencia luego de ZKAK logré escuchar aunque con muy 
baja señal lo que considero es la KVM70 pero sin lograr identificarla 
por completo (RAFAEL RODRIGUEZ R., Bogotá, Colombia, Equipo: PC 
WINRADIO G-303i 30 metros antena hilo largo. Sony ICF 2010 15 metros 
de antena hilo largo, via Dario Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD)   
 
** NORWAY. According to a newspaper article in "Stavanger Aftenblad"
Aug. 29th, the shortwave station at Kvitsøy, Norway should resume 
broadcasting, in DRM. For a test-period of nine months, DRM signals 
from the BBC will target Central-Europe from Norkring Kvitsøy. No 
information given on dates or frequencies.

Ordinary SW-transmissions from the transmitters at Kvitsøy and Sveio, 
ended on Dec. 31st 2003, when Radio Norway and Radio Denmark closed 
down. More information (in Norwegian) at:  http://www.dxlc.com/  
http://web3.aftenbladet.no/lokalt/article216091.ece
73's (Svein Olav Pedersen, Norway, HCDX via DXLD) more: see UK 

** PALESTINE [non]. CLANDESTINE, 9935, V. of Palestine, Aug 30 *1930-
1939 35332-35333 Arabic, 1930 sign on with ID, Opening music, Opening 
announce, Talk (Kouji Hashimoto, Japan, Japan Premium via DXLD) I 
believe this is the service openly via Iran (Glenn Hauser, DXLD)

** PAPUA NEW GUINEA. 7120, Wantok Radio Light, 1020-1035, Aug. 30, 
English, Contemporary religiouos ballads. YL at 1023 with program 
intro "Wantok Radio Light presents..", then event schedule with 
numerous times and dates for September, "for more info contact concert 
organizers at (phone number)". Music at 1029 with mention of e-mail 
address. OM at 1030 with ID and talks re Australia and plea for 
donations mentioning account and telephone numbers. YL returns with 
music at 1033. Fair. I'm sending a report for this one! (Scott 
Barbour, NH, WORLD OF RADIO 1285, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** PERU. 5019.96, Radio Horizonte, 1014-1100 Aug 31. I really enjoy 
listening to this particular station when it's fading in well. This 
morning was no exception. The signal was good and the Huaynos music 
was good. After each tune which usually was over ten minutes in 
duration, a man commented and gave TC. Signal was still pretty audible 
at 1100 (Chuck Bolland, Clewiston, Florida, USA NRD545, Dipole, DX 
LISTENING DIGEST) 

** RUSSIA. V. of Russia schedule updated for Sept. 4. 
1400-1500 6205 ex-12055 to SE Asia; 
1500-1600 9810, 11980 ex-12040, ex-15455 to Europe; 
1700-1800 7390, 9820, ex-9480 to Europe; 
1800-1900 drop 9820 and 11630 to Europe; 
1900-2000 drop 7310 and 12070 to Europe; 
2000-2100 7310, 7330, ex-12070, ex-15455 to Europe; 
0100-0300 7180 ex-9665 to N. America; 
0300-0500 5900, 7180, ex-9665, ex-9880 to N. America 
(VOR website via primetime shortwave via DXLD) 

** SCOTLAND [non]. RADIO SIX INTERNATIONAL - TRANSMISSION SCHEDULE FOR 
SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER 2005 
    
Our new transmission schedule kicks in on Saturday 3rd September and 
continues through to November 4th. The station's programming can be 
heard 24 hours a day on our website - http://www.radiosix.com and is 
transmitted as follows:

Saturdays: 
0000 - 0300      88.2 MHz Stereo - Tawa, New Zealand (LPFM) 
0600 - 0700      9290 kHz - Ulbroka, Latvia (100 kW) and  
                 88.2 MHz Stereo - Tawa, New Zealand (LPFM) 
0830 - 0930     13840 kHz - Milan, Italy (50 kW)(Sep 10 & Oct 8 only) 

Sundays: 
0000 - 0300      88.2 MHz Stereo - Tawa, New Zealand (LPFM) 
0700 - 0800     13840 kHz - Milan, Italy (50 kW)(Sep 11 & Oct 9 only) 
1100 - 1200      9290 kHz - Ulbroka, Latvia (100 kW) 

Thursdays: 
1900 - 2000      5775 kHz - Milan, Italy (50 kW) (Sep 15, Oct 13 only) 

We're still considering how best to reach US/Canada and it's unlikely 
that we'll resume transmissions to that continent during this 
schedule.

Reception Reports are always welcomed, and will be verified by a QSL 
Card and a copy of our printed schedule. Send reports to Radio Six 
International, PO Box 600, Glasgow G41 5SH, Scotland  or by email to 
letters @ radiosix.com

Note the additional Sunday transmission on 9290 kHz. 

(TONY CURRIE, Programme Director, Radio Six International, Scotland, 
Sept 1, DX LISTENING DIGEST) Note the ``Milan, Italy`` 50 kW 
frequencies are believed to be elsewhere, Bulgaria or Romania (gh)

** SERBIA & MONTENEGRO [non]. Re: [dxld] Inability to Hear Radio 
Serbia Montenegro --- ``have not found a trace of it on 9580 at either 
0000 or 0430 UT.``

I tried it, too, but only with negative results:
6100 kHz in the evening is covered by DRM noise from Luxembourg on 
6095.
2230 UT on 7230: clear frequency. No station using it
0000 UT on 9580: no station using it, but R. Medi 1 from Morocco was 
very strong on 9575.
0430 UT on 9580: clear frequency. No station using it. 9575/Medi was 
off, although WRTH says 24 hours.
If the transmitter had been on I am sure that I'd have heard it!
On the other hand, their Internet audio news does work - announcing 
these frequencies: 600 (should be 6000? [surely 6100]), 7200 and 9580 
kHz! http://www.radioyu.org/index.php3?language=English
73, (Erik Køie in Copenhagen, Sept 1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)

Also 6100 is quiet now at 1530, only weak KCBS Pyongyang audible. 73, 
(Mauno Ritola, Joensuu, Finland, ibid.)

New schedule cutting, supposedly due of another power budget 
limitation in Belgrad/Bijeljina? Nothing heard on European service 
7200, 11800, 11870, 6100, 9620 kHz at 1300-1615 UT on Sept 1st. When 
looked in around on 6100 kHz at 1747 UT, heard Arabic program still in 
progress. Followed by Russian and English still on 6100; also Spanish 
on 7200 kHz then at 1900 UT. And the 6100 kHz 1930-2130 UT block also 
like official schedule on air today. 

[Later:] Sorry, And the 6100 kHz 1930-2130[sic] UT block also like 
official schedule on air today. 6100 cut off at 2100 UT, so YUG is on 
limited schedule 1745-2100 UT on 6100 or 7200; English 1830 on 6100. 
73 wb (Wolfgang Büschel, Germany, Sept 1, dxldyg via DX LISTENING 
DIGEST)

A 1745-2200 schedule we had in Aug 26 issue, which I assumed must have 
been only partial (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

Looking at website, something I had not noticed before: in the Serbian 
name of the station (or should I say Croatian, since it is Romanized?) 
they use a crossed-d, not cursive like Icelandic, but straight, to 
represent what in Russian would be the ``zh`` sound in International, 
but here it may represent ``zhd`` if strictly cognate: 

Meðunarodni radio Srbija i Crna Gora

Now if the point is to convey Serbian in Roman letters, why in the 
world introduce special characters like that??? (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX 
LISTENING DIGEST)

Not quite, there is no "zh" or "zhd" in this word. You may like to 
have a look at
http://www.pcgn.org.uk/Serbian%20Cyrillic%20tabulation.pdf 
to get an idea of the two scripts. There is an alternative spelling 
(rarely used) which is "Medjunarodni", which makes the pronunciation 
more clear: that would be something like "medyunarodni". 

The language on the website is Serbian, not Croatian (there are almost 
no native Croatian speakers in Serbia-Montenegro). The Serbian 
language has traditionally two parallel scripts, Latin and Cyrillic; 
both are taught in school and are used in public life (press, TV, 
etc). Google provides loads of links on this matter, but here is a 
quick and simple background about the "why":
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Serbian-language
73s, (Bernd Trutenau, Lithuania, dxldyg via DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** SUDAN [non]. Sudan Radio Service, 17660 via UK, was coming in 
better than usual, 1400-1410 Aug 31 with ID, contact info, and news in 
English about Sudan, clearly enunciated by womannouncer, who however, 
kept pronouncing ``Southern`` as ``Sowthern``, i.e. the same diphthong 
as in ``South``. Then the mannouncer did the same. They could not have 
learned such pronunciation from an American or a Briton, so is it 
rampant among Africans? BTW, Solh to Afghanistan on 17700 had an even 
better signal, nice music until 1400 (Glenn Hauser, OK, DX LISTENING 
DIGEST)

Solar-terrestrial indices for 30 August follow. Solar flux 86 and mid-
latitude A-index 3. The mid-latitude K-index at 1500 UTC on 31 August 
was 4 (62 nT). No space weather storms were observed for the past 24 
hours (SEC via DXLD) 

** U K. Orfordness 1296 is reported to run in DRM mode only as of 
tomorrow, cf. http://www.drm-dx.de So far 1296 carried BBC WS in AM 
1830-2000. Today at 1955, when checking for what could be the very 
last minutes in AM, the transmitter already run DRM instead (Kai 
Ludwig, Germany, Aug 31, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** UNITED KINGDOM. In an interview on Polish Radio`s Multimedia 
programme, Tim Ayris of World Radio Network said that they would be 
starting a test service for London in DRM this month. It was not said 
whether the licence was for a medium wave or 26 MHz outlet; he did say 
that they wanted to see how well DRM coped with London`s topography. 
They will also this month be launching a DRM service for Western 
Europe, presumably on shortwave.

Updating the printed edition which I posted this afternoon David 
Duckworth tells me this evening that he spoke with World Radio Network 
today and the London DRM service will be on a 26 MHz frequency from 
Croydon using a directional aerial (Mike Barraclough, England, Sept 
WDXC Contact via DXLD) 

** U K. NORWAY/UK: TELENOR/BBC WORLD SERVICE ENTER DIGITAL 
BROADCASTING AGREEMENT | Text of press release by Oslo-based Telenor 
on 31 August; subheading as published 

Telenor-owned Norkring has entered into an agreement with the BBC 
World Service for digital broadcasting over shortwave, DRM [Digital 
Radio Mondial]. As part of the agreement, the BBC will be among the 
first in the world to broadcast over DRM. 

>From Norkring's transmitting station at Kvitsoy, signals will be 
broadcast to Central Europe. This new agreement with the BBC is an 
important step in the digitalisation of shortwave, which actually has 
the capacity to achieve global reach. The agreement involves broadcast 
of the radio channel BBC World Service "English for Europe" for an 
initial period of 18 months. The BBC is also using UK-based 
transmitters owned and operated by VT Communications (VTC) to provide 
a multi-frequency network aimed at Benelux and neighbouring countries. 
"For us this as an exciting partnership with one of the world's 
leading broadcasters. The BBC is a driving force within DRM, and 
contributes to set the standard for the future role of shortwave," 
said sales and marketing director at Norkring, Per Maltun. 

The first major test will be the launch of receivers for DRM at the 
world's largest exhibition for consumer electronics, the IFA in Berlin 
2-7 September 2005. [Passage omitted] 

About Norkring 

Norkring is Norway's largest distributor of broadcast programmes. The 
company owns and operates most large transmitter stations for 
terrestrial broadcasting in Norway. Norkring has a nationwide 
infrastructure that consists of 6,500 transmitting units, installed at 
47 main stations and 2,700 smaller stations. Norkring is wholly owned 
by Telenor, and is part of the Business Segment Telenor Broadcast. 
For more information, please contact: Director of Information at 
Telenor Broadcast, Ingrid Schiefloe: Tel: +47 951 56 977 Source: 
Norkring press release, Oslo, in English 31 Aug 05 (via BBCM via DXLD)

This is BS: ``among the first in the world to broadcast over DRM`` --- 
As anyone who has been paying attention will know, BBCWS has already 
been broadcasting in [not over] DRM via other sites, along with 
several other stations, for a few years now. So what`s the schedule 
via Norway? Not until B-05: See 5-145: (Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING 
DIGEST)

NORWAY   Kvitsoy planned DRM winter frequency schedule:
7465 kHz  1600-1900 UTC, 190deg, 50 kW.
9470 kHz  0700-1600 UTC, 190deg, 50 kW.
Program BBC World Service 
(Klaus Schneider-D, A-DX Aug 19, DXLD 5-145, via DXLD 5-151)

** U K. Monday September 5th BBC Radio 4 1930-2000 UT 

The Fisheries Broadcast --- Every afternoon since March 1951, the 
Fisheries Broadcast has beamed across Newfoundland and Labrador. As 
well as being a vital lifeline, reporting on the weather and fishing 
news, it has created a cultural identity. Sean Street traces the 
history and importance of North America's longest running daily radio 
programme --- and goes squid jigging. Online streaming at 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/ and programmes are also archived for 7 
days (Mike Barraclough, DX LISTENING DIGEST) So it`s on CBN? (gh)

** U S A. Join me 2 September on VOA's Talk to America. We will 
interview an official of the American Radio Relay League about the 
role of amateur radio in the Hurricane Katrina recovery (Kim Elliott, 
Sept 1, kimandrewelliott.com via DXLD)

That is 1605-1655 UT Friday. Frequencies: 
http://www.kimandrewelliott.com/kim_on_tta.html

Better catch it live, as the TTA archives are still stalled at July 
15! http://www.voanews.com/english/NewsAnalysis/TTA-Archive-Page.cfm
(Glenn Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** U S A [non]. Re WYFR relays: 11510 1400-1500 is in Urdu as 
mentioned in WRTH July update. 7510 kHz 1400-1500 was in Urdu in the 
original schedule, but I asked WYFR and they say it was an error, it 
is actually Bengali as in the website (Mauno Ritola, Joensuu, Finland, 
Signal Sept 1 via DXLD) 

** U S A. Off Topic Question --- Is anyone near Pagosa Springs, 
Colorado? Anyone ever heard of it or been through there? Anyone know 
anything about it? (Bert New, Watkinsville, Georgia Proudly Serving 
You Since 1964!, Aug 30, ABDX via DXLD)

Bert, Pagosa Springs is a small town of less than 2000 in the middle 
of nowhere in far SW Colorado, in the foothills of the San Juan 
Mountains, in the San Juan National Forest, on the San Juan River. 
It's a beautiful, cold, snowy area with skiing and Anasazi ruins. 73 & 
GUD DX, (Thomas F. Giella, KN4LF Plant City, FL, USA, ibid.) 
 
I gotta relative who lives there. I have never been to her place but 
I've been through there. Seems like a incredibly good place to DX from 
(Kevin Redding, AZ, ibid.)

There would be lots of low angle incoming signal blockage by 10,000 to 
13,000+ high mountains. So MF DXing in Pagosa Springs for TA & TP 
signals would be pretty lousy unless you got up on a high peak. BTW I 
used to live in Colorado on a 7000 foot foothill on the Front Range 
overlooking Denver and the location was terrific for all kinds of 
state side signals and TA's but TP's just could not make it over the 
mountain ranges. But I would go up to Mt. Evans at 14,200+ feet SW of 
Denver and the TP's would make it into there, snow showers with 
lightning too in summer. 73 & GUD DX, (Thomas F. Giella, KN4LF Plant 
City, FL, USA, ibid.)

You are correct, but I was thinking of FM and TV as it would be real 
easy to get up on a high point and get incredible reception. I know 
that when I get up on a mountain here in AZ , I can easily get Texas 
FM from El Paso every time I go up there. That¹s over 400 miles away. 
Altitude is everything when it comes to FM and TV DX (Kevin Redding, 
ibid.)

Bert: You mean you have NEVER heard C.W. McCall's version of 'Chicken 
Truck' or something similar where they lost their brakes coming down 
Wolfcreek Pass and crashed in downtown Pagosa Springs? Tsk Tsk! Here 
we are at the end of the Universe and you haven't even lived yet. Did 
you miss out (stolen from Zaphod). Try rural southwest central 
Colorado... :-) der kashketfeller (Don Kaskey, CA< ibid.)

I`ve been thru there a number of times. A neat place. First of all 
they have (hot) springs and public baths with a rather sulphury smell, 
along with a stalagmite monument of the stuff. Heavily forested. Wolf 
Creek Pass is a terrific drive up the road, and I do mean up (tho I 
usually approach from the other direction down into PS). As for DXing 
there, MW and SW may be great, but I seem to recall that there are 
loads of FM and TV translators for a place that small. [and because of 
the topography, FM and TV comes from as far away as Albuquerque NM 
rather than CO stations] 73, (Glenn Hauser, OK, longing for the West, 
ibid.) 

Me an' Earl was haulin' chickens on a flatbed out of Wiggins, and we'd 
spent all night on the uphill side of thirty-seven miles of hell 
called Wolf Creek Pass. Which is up on the Great Divide.

We was settin' there suckin' toothpicks, drinkin' Nehi and onion soup 
mix, and I said, Earl, let's mail a card to Mother then send them 
chickens on down the other side. Yeah, let's give 'em a ride.

Wolf Creek Pass, way up on the Great Divide
Truckin' on down the other side

Well, Earl put down his bottle, mashed his foot down on the throttle, 
and then a couple'a boobs with a thousand cubes in a nineteen-forty-
eight Peterbilt screamed to life. We woke up the chickens.

Well, we roared up offa that shoulder sprayin' pine cones, rocks, and 
boulders, and put four hundred head of them Rhode Island reds and a 
couple a' burnt-out roosters on the line. Look out below; 'cause here 
we go!

Well, we commenced to truckin' and them hens commenced to cluckin' and 
then Earl took out a match and scratched his pants and lit up the 
unused half of a dollar cigar and took a puff. Says My, ain't this 
purdy up here.

I says, Earl, this hill can spill us. You better slow down or you 
gonna kill us. Just make one mistake and it's the Pearly Gates for 
them eight-five crates a' USDA-approved cluckers. You wanna hit 
second?

Wolf Creek Pass, way up on the Great Divide
Truckin' on down the other side

Well, Earl grabbed on the shifter and he stabbed her into fifth gear 
and then the chromium-plated, fully-illuminated genuine accessory 
shift knob come right off in his hand. I says, You wanna screw that 
thing back on, Earl?

He was tryin' to thread it on there when the fire fell off a' his 
cigar and dropped on down, sorta rolled around, and then lit in the 
cuff of Earl's pants and burned a hole in his sock. Yeah, sorta set 
him right on fire.

I looked on outta the window and I started countin' phone poles, goin' 
by at the rate of four to the seventh power. Well I put two and two 
together, and added twelve and carried five; come up with twenty-two 
thousand telephone poles an hour.

I looked at Earl and his eyes was wide, his lip was curled, and his 
leg was fried. And his hand was froze to the wheel like a tongue to a 
sled in the middle of a blizzard. I says, Earl, I'm not the type to 
complain; but the time has come for me to explain that if you don't 
apply some brake real soon, they're gonna have to pick us up with a 
stick and a spoon.

Well, Earl rared back, and cocked his leg, stepped as down as hard as 
he could on the brake, and the pedal went clear to the floor and 
stayed there, right there on the floor. He said it was sorta like 
steppin' on a plum.

Well, from there on down it just wasn't real purdy: it was hairpin 
county and switchback city. One of 'em looked like a can full'a worms; 
another one looked like malaria germs. Right in the middle of the 
whole damn show was a real nice tunnel, now wouldn't you know?

Sign says clearance to the twelve-foot line, but the chickens was 
stacked to thirteen-nine. Well we shot that tunnel at a hundred-and-
ten, like gas through a funnel and eggs through a hen, and we took 
that top row of chickens off slicker than scum off a Lousiana swamp. 
Went down and around and around and down 'til we run outta ground at 
the edge of town. Bashed into the side of the feed store... in 
downtown Pagosa Springs.

Wolf Creek Pass, way up on the Great Divide
Truckin' on down the other side    (via Mike Westfall, N6KUY, WDX6O, 
Los Alamos, NM (DM65uv), ABDX, via DXLD)

I am familiar with the song and C. W. McCall, I don't know the lyrics 
that well. Thanks for the reply. I was just curious as Highway 84 ends 
there. It goes past the house where I used to live in Valdosta, GA and 
the other end is on the GA coast. One day I want to travel the entire 
length one day and I thought I would ask if anyone knew anything about 
it (Bert New, Watkinsville, Georgia, ibid.) 

That certainly would be an interesting trip, almost all thru rural 
areas of GA, AL, MS, LA, TX, NM (gh)

** UZBEKISTAN. RFE/RL CONDEMNS JAILING OF REPORTER BY "KANGAROO COURT" 
| Text of report by UN regional information network IRIN on 30 August 

The US-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), on Tuesday [30 
August] condemned a six-month jail sentence imposed on its Uzbekistan 
reporter for allegedly insulting a security service official. The 
sentence is being seen as part of increasing government pressure on 
both journalists and human rights groups in this Central Asian nation. 
Washington and Prague-based RFE/RL promotes democratic values by 
disseminating factual information and ideas. 

The correspondent, Nosir Zokirov, is an Uzbek national employed by the 
station's Uzbek language service. He was summoned to court in the 
eastern city of Namangan on 26 August, denied access to a defence 
lawyer or permission to call defence witnesses, found guilty and send 
directly to prison, according to a statement issued by RFE/RL. 
"It was a kangaroo court, bearing no resemblance to international 
accepted legal norms," Thomas Dine, RFE/RL president, said in a 
statement. "The sentencing of Nosir Zokirov on such an absurd charge 
marks a new low in an intensifying campaign waged against him and 
other RFE/RL correspondents, evident even before the Andijan 
massacre," Dine was quoted as saying. Up to 1,000 civilians were shot 
dead by Uzbek security forces in the eastern city of Andijan during an 
anti-government demonstration in May. 

Zokirov was sentenced under Article 140 of the Uzbek criminal code, 
which makes it a criminal offence to insult a member of the security 
forces. According to RFE/RL, the charges relate to an angry telephone 
call Zokirov made to a national security service office in Namangan in 
early August, in which he protested against attempts to put pressure 
on a local poet. Earlier Zokirov had broadcast a poem by Haydarali 
Komilov about the Andijan crackdown. 

"The poetry angered the authorities and the pressure on my father 
intensified. He was summoned to the security services for questioning 
but refused to go. Later he was taken for questioning by a security 
service official," Zokirov's son said. 

At least three other local Uzbek nationals working as correspondents 
for Radio Liberty's Uzbek language service have been subjected to 
similar pressure by the Uzbek authorities. "It is incumbent on us, 
living in a free society with free media, to let the world know what 
is happening to Uzbek journalists inside Uzbekistan," Dine added. 
Source: UN Integrated Regional Information Network, Nairobi, in 
English 30 Aug 05 (via BBCM via WORLD OF RADIO 1285, DXLD)

** VENEZUELA. ROBO EN AEROPUERTO INTERNACIONAL SIMÓN BOLIVAR 
(Maiquetía) --- Esta es verdaderamente una noticia curiosa y 
preocupante a la vez, tiene que ver con la aviación venezolana y el 
hampa que azota a nuestra querida Venezuela. Atte: José Elías
 
Martes 30 de agosto de 2005.- Maiquetía ? Venezuela.- En la noche del 
dia viernes 26 de agosto de 2005, delincuentes aún no detectados 
robaron 400 metros de cable en la pista principal del aeropuerto
internacional de Maiquetía, y así quedó impedida la comunicación entre 
los técnicos de la Torre de Control y los pilotos que buscaban pista 
para aterrizar. 

La información conocida en fuentes allegadas al Terminal aéreo, indica 
que el viernes en la noche las autoridades precisaron movilizarse con 
prontitud, porque el Sistema de Radio Ayuda, mejor conocido como VOR, 
dejó de funcionar en forma imprevista. 

El equipo está diseñado como radio-ayuda, para indicarle a la 
tripulación la distancia que le falta para arribar a la pista 
señalada, lo cual es de imperiosa necesidad para los pilotos que 
después de volar varias horas llegan cansados a su destino, y también 
para quien tenga ligeros conocimientos de este aeropuerto 
internacional. 

El VOR también activa el sistema de luces que funcionan en círculo, 
cuando el avión se acerca más al sitio donde debe ser aterrizado. 

El cable robado tenía la instalación necesaria para comunicar desde 
tierra hacia la nave en aproximación, a través del sistema VHF que 
todos los aparatos tienen instalados en el tablero observado por el 
piloto. Es el sistema conocido como "Instrumental Landing Sistem"
(ILS) es el que brinda mayor precisión al momento del aterrizaje y 
garantiza la estabilidad del avión. 

Cuando estos sistemas quedaron fuera de servicio, desde la Torre de 
Control fue preciso utilizar un sistema de comunicación distinto al 
que se utiliza en forma habitual. Durante el fin de semana y hasta 
ayer, las autoridades del aeropuerto de Maiquetía se ocupaban de 
colocar un nuevo cableado, el cual deberá ser mejor protegido que el 
anterior. 

El ingeniero Rolando Alcalá, jefe de mantenimiento del Iaaim, se negó 
a conversar del tema con los representantes de los medios de 
comunicación social, y hasta el mediodía de ayer, no había denunciado 
en la Policía Científica el robo del cable, cuyo valor tangible se 
desconoce, pero de paso, generó emergencia al momento de quedar sin 
comunicación la torre de control con los aviones que llegaron a 
Maiquetía durante el fin de semana y hasta avanzada la mañana de ayer. 
Sin embargo, el tránsito no fue paralizado. 

Las empresas atendieron a sus clientes en forma habitual, y los 
pasajeros inocentes de cualquier situación irregular, compraron 
pasajes, abordaron las naves y viajaron muy tranquilos (Fuente: Diario 
``2001``, 30 AGO 05 via José Elías Díaz Gómez, Venezuela, DXLD)

** VENEZUELA. RADIO AMAZONAS DISTORSIONADA EN 5032v... Hola Glenn, 
Saludos desde Catia La Mar, VENEZUELA. Radio Amazonas se vuelto bien 
irregular en 4939.66 kHz; sin embargo este 29/08 pudo escucharse a las 
2239 UT, completamente distorsionada, en 5032v. Transmitía merengue 
dominicano e identificaciones como "Radio Amazonas". SINPO 35433. 
Aunque su canal fundamental estaba fuera del aire para el momento. 73s 
y buen DX (Adán González, Catia La Mar, Estado Vargas, VENEZUELA, Sept 
1, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** VIETNAM. VOV`s external service (a.k.a. Overseas Service Channel 
VOV-6) is now streaming live on an embedded WM player which launches 
auto at http://www.vovnews.com.vn/online/new/vov6_e.htm
It was in English when I brought it up at 1805 UT Sept 1; page also 
has links to language/SW frequency schedules, music (Glenn Hauser, OK,
DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** ZIMBABWE. 6612, Zimbabwe B.C. Aug 25 2022-2044, 35333, English, 
Talk and African pop music, Jingle at 2035 (Kouji Hashimoto, Japan 
Premium via DXLD) 2 x 3306

** ZIMBABWE [and non]. Hi Glenn, Voice of the People [to Zimbabwe], 
7120, 1700-1800, 31 Aug is severely jammed from within Zimbabwe, 
unheard. Another update of this station, which is getting a severe 
workout from the Zimbabwean jamming facility. Monitored again that a 
80 kHz wide-band jammer is back now in use which wipes out 7160-7080 
kHz; this a recycling jammer very severe when the jamming transmitter 
is tuned up. This is the latest Chinese provided jamming equipment 
still in use in Zimbabwe (David Pringle-Wood, Harare, Zimbabwe, WORLD 
OF RADIO 1285, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

UNIDENTIFIED. How many reading this saw the movie War of the Worlds 
that was released earlier this year? Remember the noise that the alien 
machines made, the horn they sounded? Well, I'm hearing a very similar 
noise on 1098 kc. Anyone else hearing this noise? (Willis, WB5KHD, 
Monk, Old Fort, TN, 0624 UT Sept 1, amfmtvdx at qth.net via DXLD) 

UNIDENTIFIED. 4982 LSB, Tentativo, Rusia? 0335-0410 Agosto 26. Capté 
una señal que parecía ser la retransmisión de una emisora en FM, con 
programación en lo que considero es ruso, con música en inglés y ruso, 
charlas entre locutores. Difícil obtener una ID (RAFAEL RODRIGUEZ R., 
Bogotá, Colombia, Equipo: PC WINRADIO G-303i 30 metros antena hilo 
largo. Sony ICF 2010 15 metros de antena hilo largo, via Dario 
Monferini, playdx yg via DXLD) Belarus? (gh)

UNIDENTIFIED. Dear Glenn --- I thought you might like to know about a 
station I heard tonight. 8/30/05 I monitored it from 8:54 to 9:33 PM 
(MDT) [0054-0133 UT Aug 31]. Frequency: 9550 Language: Spanish 

It rings the NBC Chimes every few minutes. Then after that a person 
starts talking in a format that almost sounds like a story. They also 
talk a lot about America. Makes many references to Venezuela. It also 
had a lot of music that sounds like you are in a parade. It also makes 
what sounds like bubbling noises. It was weird. I thought you should 
know about it (Paul Armani, Denver CO, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

Presumably R. Habana Cuba on 9550, but I would not expect NBC chimes 
from them; maybe relaying a Cuban domestic net with similar sounder? 
Bubbling could be Cuban jammer bleedover/mix from 9565 (Glenn Hauser, 
OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST) 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CONVENTIONS & CONFERENCES
+++++++++++++++++++++++++

HFCC B-05 VALENCIA

Re: list of participants lacking many from Latin America:

! y america! invitados --- Hola, amigos diexistas, Estoy viendo la 
lista de los invitados HFCC reunión en Valencia y no veo 
representantes de Mexico, América Central, Suramérica. Algún colega me 
puede ayudar por favor, abarcar el ¿por qué? Me parece que los 
europeos le dan mas importancia a la onda corta. Saludos amigos, 
Gracias (Román de Costa Rica, Mora, Noticias DX via DXLD)
    
Bueno, hay Doug Weber de HCJB, dos represantes de Christian Vision, 
que incluye a Voz Cristiana, Chile, y George McClintock por parte de 
Caribbean Beacon, aunque no muy latino. 

La razón, claro está, que la RAE de Argentina y la LRA36 de Antártida
encontraron choques con los participantes, resueltos después por 
quejas diexistas. Y además las pocas ondas cortas mexicanas en choques 
con Brasil, Colombia, Vaticano, China, etc.

No hay ningún servicio internacional desde América Central, excepto la
repetidora de España en Costa Rica, que sí como no, toma parte.

La gran presencia cubana (y por su vía, venezolana) en OC no figura, 
para mantenerse la isla tan aislada como posible. 73, (Glenn Hauser, 
ibid.)

Campamento DX S.I.R., PEROTE, VERACRUZ, Oct/Nov
    
La AER ha colocado una nueva página web 
http://www.aer-dx.org/sitio/perote.htm en su sitio dedicada al nuevo 
campamento dx que convoca la SOCIEDAD DE INGENIEROS RADIOESCUCHAS y 
que tendrá lugar en la ciudad mejicana de Perote, Veracruz, para el 
último fin de semana del mes de Octubre o el primer fin de semana del 
mes de Noviembre (el que resulte más conveniente para los asistentes).
En nuestra página se irán recogiendo los datos que nos lleguen de este 
interesnate evento. Un saludo cordial (Pedro Sedano, Madrid, España
COORDINADOR GENERAL, AER, Noticias DX via DXLD)

RADIO EQUIPMENT FORUM
+++++++++++++++++++++

Re: Electric fences for horses and DXing 

Sounds like a very nice setup, Harry. I don't know how it stacks up 
against the Home Depot speaker wire, but the 18AWG copper-clad steel 
wire here, http://thewireman.com/antennap.html, looks like a pretty 
good deal if you're buying 1000' or more. Might want to check it out 
(Jay Heyl, Aug 30, ABDX via DXLD)

I use 3000' spool of #24 braided alarm wire. Costed just 29.00 at 
Fry's. I stuck a crank handle on the side and a big wooden dowel 
through the middle so I can just sit in my car and crank the whole 
thing back in across the sand [Carrizo Plain] when I am through using 
it (but takes 20 minutes to do, a workout for your wrist and arm, 
too!) -(Darwin Long, Thousand Oaks, CA, ibid.) 

POWERLINE COMMUNICATIONS
++++++++++++++++++++++++

PLC-ELLENDE WEER TERUG?

Dachten we net dat voorlopig het gevaar geweken is van internet-via-
lichtnet, en nou zijn ze in België weer aan het testen met een "High-
Speed Home Plug". Zie op dit adres 
http://www.uba.be/dossiers/bpl/bpl_1.htm 
voor de consequenties van de tests.

Het kan positief zijn dat DRM-uitzendingen er erg door gestoord 
worden, want ik denk dat de DRM-lobby misschien machtig genoeg is om 
ofwel de boel tegen te houden ofwel ingrijpende ontstoringsmaatregelen 
te eisen...

73 de ? (Frank van Gerwen, Castricum / Netherlands, weblog  : 
http://dwarslezing.blogspot.com
homepage: http://www.xs4all.nl/~cisquet ICQ # 2231692 BDXC via DXLD)

It`s actually a large illustrated page in English --- starting thus:

TEST RESULTS ON WIDE BAND IN-HOUSE PLC SYSTEM 
By John Devoldere (ON4UN) and Gaston Bertels (ON4WF) --- SUMMARY

A wide band (100 Mbps spec) in-house PLC system using a pair of modems 
of a European manufacturer, was tested and evaluated in various real 
life environments at 3 different locations (both semi-rural as well as 
urban). 

The level of the differential mode signal, injected in the AC 
receptacles in the house exceeds the CISPR 22B spec with not less than 
40 dB. Spurious signals are transmitted into the mains at frequencies 
up to approximately 130 MHz. 

The radiation exceeds the NB30 limit with 30 dB inside the house, with 
10 db outside the house at approximately 3 meter from the house, and 
with up to 7 dB at 100 m from the house where the PLC system is 
installed. 

The PLC system creates signals from 3.5 through 30 MHz ranging from 35 
to 60 dB over the residual band noise, even in situations where 
antennas are used that are more than 50 m away from the house where 
the PLC system is operational. 

The modem tested provides (switchable) notches in the amateur bands. 
These are somewhat effective (especially near the centre of the 
bands), but what appear to be intermodulation products from the PLC 
signals near the band edges spill into the bands (notches are 
typically 20 dB deep near band edges --- largely insufficient --- and 
approximately 40 dB at the band centre). We made a suggestion to widen 
the notches to enhance the effectiveness near the band edges. 

The PLC system tested is extremely sensitive to interference from 
legitimate transmitter signals inside the amateur bands. Power levels 
as low as 5 Watt have shown to disrupt the link. Tests were done by 
pinging the network and by transmitting a film over the network.

Reception of broadcast signals in the short wave BC bands is greatly 
impaired, and DRM (Digital Radio Mondiale) signals dropped out 
completely during the test. The tested prototype models were not (yet) 
CE-approved. 

You read enough already? You want to skip all the details? OK, but 
before you do, may we suggest you listen to what it all sounds like... 
(via Glenn Hauser, DXLD)

DIGITAL BROADCASTING
++++++++++++++++++++

DRM: see AUSTRIA, GERMANY, NETHERLANDS, NORWAY, UK

RADIO EQUIPMENT FORUM, or ** INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM
+++++++++++++++++++++

AL QA`EDA CONNECTION PROMPTS COMPANY TO TIGHTEN PROTOCOLS
By David Weber for AM

Australian communications supplier Codan says it has tightened its 
customer protocols after it unwittingly supplied equipment to Al 
Qa`eda. The ABC's AM program has documents showing an Al Qa`eda 
operative, by the name of Mohamedou Slahi, ordered radio 
communications equipment from the Adelaide-based company in 2001...
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200508/s1448892.htm 
(via John Smith, Brisbane, ARDXC via DXLD)

Wouldn`t this be a great time for a terrorist attack on US? (gh) ###


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