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Micro-Broadcasting: License-Free Campus Radio in This Issue: • Carey Junior High School ARC • WEFAX Reception on an Ipad • MT Reviews: MFJ Mini-Frequency Counter
www.monitoringtimes.com Scanning - Shortwave - Ham Radio - Equipment Internet Streaming - Computers - Antique Radio ® Volume 30, No. 9 September 2011 U.S. $6.95 Can. $6.95 Printed in the United States A Publication of Grove Enterprises Micro-Broadcasting: License-Free Campus Radio In this issue: • Carey Junior High School ARC • WEFAX Reception on an iPad • MT Reviews: MFJ Mini-Frequency Counter CONTENTS Vol. 30 No. 9 September 2011 CQ DX from KC7OEK .................................................... 12 www.monitoringtimes.com By Nick Casner K7CAS, Cole Smith KF7FXW and Rayann Brown KF7KEZ Scanning - Shortwave - Ham Radio - Equipment Internet Streaming - Computers - Antique Radio Eighteen years ago Paul Crips KI7TS and Bob Mathews K7FDL wrote a grant ® Volume 30, No. 9 September 2011 U.S. $6.95 through the Wyoming Department of Education that resulted in the establishment Can. $6.95 Printed in the United States A Publication of Grove Enterprises of an amateur radio club station at Carey Junior High School in Cheyenne, Wyoming, known on the air as KC7OEK. Since then some 5,000 students have been introduced to amateur radio; nearly 40 students have been licensed, and last year there were 24 students in the club, seven of whom were ready to test for their own amateur radio licenses. In this article, Carey Junior High School students Nick, Cole and Rayann, all three of whom have received their licenses, relate their experiences with amateur radio both on and off the air. While older hams many times their ages are discouraged Micro-Broadcasting: about the direction of the hobby, these students let us all know that the future of License-Free Campus Radio amateur radio is already in good hands. -
Jan Karski Papers
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf187001bd No online items Register of the Jan Karski papers Finding aid prepared by Irena Czernichowska and Zbigniew L. Stanczyk Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 2003 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Register of the Jan Karski papers 46033 1 Title: Jan Karski papers Date (inclusive): 1939-2007 Collection Number: 46033 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: Polish Physical Description: 20 manuscript boxes, 11 oversize boxes, 1 oversize folder, 6 card file boxes, 24 photo envelopes, and 26 microfilm reels(21.8 Linear Feet) Abstract: Correspondence, memoranda, government documents, bulletins, reports, studies, speeches and writings, printed matter, photographs, clippings, newspapers, periodicals, sound recordings, videotape cassettes, and microfilm, relating to events and conditions in Poland during World War II, the German and Soviet occupations of Poland, treatment of the Jews in Poland during the German occupation, and operations of the Polish underground movement during World War II. Includes microfilm copies of Polish underground publications. Boxes 1-34 also available on microfilm (24 reels). Video use copies of videotape available. Sound use copies of sound recordings available. Creator: Karski, Jan, 1914-2000 Hoover Institution Library & Archives Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Acquisition Information Materials were acquired by the Hoover Institution Library & Archives from 1946 to 2008. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Jan Karski papers, [Box no., Folder no. -
US-China Relations
U.S.-China Relations: An Overview of Policy Issues Susan V. Lawrence Specialist in Asian Affairs August 1, 2013 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R41108 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress U.S.-China Relations: An Overview of Policy Issues Summary The United States relationship with China touches on an exceptionally broad range of issues, from security, trade, and broader economic issues, to the environment and human rights. Congress faces important questions about what sort of relationship the United States should have with China and how the United States should respond to China’s “rise.” After more than 30 years of fast-paced economic growth, China’s economy is now the second-largest in the world after that of the United States. With economic success, China has developed significant global strategic clout. It is also engaged in an ambitious military modernization drive, including development of extended-range power projection capabilities. At home, it continues to suppress all perceived challenges to the Communist Party’s monopoly on power. In previous eras, the rise of new powers has often produced conflict. China’s new leader Xi Jinping has pressed hard for a U.S. commitment to a “new model of major country relationship” with the United States that seeks to avoid such an outcome. The Obama Administration has repeatedly assured Beijing that the United States “welcomes a strong, prosperous and successful China that plays a greater role in world affairs,” and that the United States does not seek to prevent China’s re-emergence as a great power. -
Shortwave Radio Stations Targeting North America Start End Country Station Frequencies (Khz) 0000 0030 Egypt R
Shortwave Radio Stations targeting North America Start End Country Station Frequencies (kHz) 0000 0030 Egypt R. Cairo 11590 0000 0030 Thailand R. Thailand 13745 0000 0045 U. S. A. WYFR 6085 0000 0100 Bulgaria R. Bulgaria 5900, 7400 0000 0100 Canada CBCNQ 9625 0000 0100 Cuba R. Havana Cuba 5040 0000 0100 U. S. A. Wld Univ Network 13845 0000 0100 U. S. A. WWCR1 7465 0000 0100 U. S. A. WYFR 5950 0000 0100 U. S. A. WTWW 9479 0000 0157 China China R. Int'l 6020al, 9570al 0000 0200 U. S. A. Overcomer Minsitry 9980 0000 0200 U. S. A. WWRB 3215 0000 0200 U. S. A. WYFR 15440 0000 0445 U. S. A. WYFR 9505 0000 0500 U. S. A. WWRB 6890 0000 2400 Canada CFRX 6070 0000 2400 Canada CFVP 6030 0000 2400 Canada CKZN 6160 0000 2400 Canada CKZU 6160 0000 2400 U. S. A. AFRTS 5446.5 USB, 7811 USB, 12133.5 USB 0000 2400 U. S. A. WTJC 9370 0030 0100 Thailand R. Thailand 13745 0100 0127 Czech Republic R. Prague 7410 0100 0128 Vietnam V. of Vietnam 6175ca 0100 0130 Slovakia R. Slovakia Int'l 6040, 9440 0100 0157 China China R. Int'l 6005ca, 6080ca drm, 9580cu 0100 0200 Canada CBCNQ 9625 0100 0200 Romania R. Romania Int'l 6145, 7325 0100 0200 U. S. A. WWCR1 7490 0100 0200 Ukraine R. Ukraine Int'l 7440 0100 0445 U. S. A. WYFR 7455 0100 0500 Cuba R. Havana Cuba 6000, 6050 0100 0500 U. S. A. WWRB 3185 0100 0605 Canada CBCNQ 9625 0100 1200 U. -
Uyghur Experiences of Detention in Post-2015 Xinjiang 1
TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .........................................................................................................2 INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................................................9 METHODOLOGY ..................................................................................................................10 MAIN FINDINGS Surveillance and arrests in the XUAR ................................................................................13 Surveillance .......................................................................................................................13 Arrests ...............................................................................................................................15 Detention in the XUAR ........................................................................................................18 The detention environment in the XUAR ............................................................................18 Pre-trial detention facilities versus re-education camps ......................................................20 Treatment in detention facilities ..........................................................................................22 Detention as a site of political indoctrination and cultural cleansing....................................25 Violence in detention facilities ............................................................................................26 Possibilities for information -
A Selection of Music Programmes on Shortwave A-21 Broadcast Period
A Selection of Music Programmes on Shortwave A-21 broadcast period Compiled by Alan Roe alan-roe-swl [-at-] randa33.co.uk Versions of this list may also appear in BDXC Communication and NASWA Journal All dates/times are UTC. Transmitter abbreviations used are the same as in WRTH 2021. ‡ = Frequency currently inactive § = Not weekly Alan Roe 9 April 2021 (v 1) This list may be freely copied/reproduced provided that source credit is maintained. I would appreciate a note to my email address confirming where this list has been copied/reproduced. Start - Stop Days Station Lang Programme Title Frequencies Su-W-Sa 0000 -- -- -- 0000 - 0055 tu-sa V of Hope - KVOH SP Música y Ministerio 9975 0000 - 0100 su Mighty KBC EN Radio, But Not As We Know It 5960-nau (-18 Apr and 5 Sep-) 9925-nau (25 Apr- 29 Aug) 0000 - 0100 su R Romania Int RO As We Like! (hour 2) (Club/party) 7420 9730 0000 - 0100 su WBCQ EN Grits Radio 6160-bcq 0000 - 0100 su WRMI EN All Tribes R 7730-rmi 0000 - 0100 daily R Farda FS ME mx (some West mx & talk) 5860-kwt 0000 - 0100 daily R Rebelde SP Often has Cuban music, incl: 5025 su: Música Viva 0000 - 0100 daily Radio 4KZ EN Varied oldies/hits 5055 (low power) 0000 - 0100 daily V of Turkey (TSR) TU Often has Turkish music 7360 0000 - 0100 tu-su ERT V of Greece GK Often varied Greek mx 9420 0000 - 0100 mo (§) Channel 292 EN WMRI Europe (Hour 2) (mo after 1st su) 9670-roh (§ 3May, 7Jun?) 0000 - 0100 mo R Romania Int RO Zi-le D-Alead-Ale Noastre (Folk mx) 7420 9730 0000 - 0100 mo (§) WBCQ EN R New York Int 6160-bcq (every other week) -
Daniel Southerland
China's Changing Strategic Concerns: The Impact on Human Rights in Xinjiang Wednesday, November 16, from 10:00 - 11:30 PM Room 480 of the Ford House Office Building Statement of Daniel Southerland "The [RFA] programs speak to my heart… The world must hear what is going on here."—RFA Uyghur service listener. The Chinese government has for many years tightly controlled information reaching the Uyghur people in Xinjiang. But the government’s controls over the media and freedom of expression in Xinjiang appear to have grown even stricter since the 9/11 attacks in the United States in 2001. The Chinese government currently controls the media in Xinjiang even more tightly than in other parts of China, except perhaps for Tibet. As a result, broadcasting to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) has constituted one of the most challenging tasks undertaken by Radio Free Asia (RFA). RFA broadcasts in 12 languages and dialects to listeners in Asia who primarily have access only to state-run media. RFA’s purpose is to deliver accurate news, information, and commentary, and to provide a forum for a variety of voices from within Asian countries that do not tolerate free media. RFA, by broadcasting objective news, seeks to promote freedom of opinion and expression, including the freedom to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas through any medium regardless of frontiers. This principle is enshrined in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. When it comes to Uyghur language broadcasting, RFA is the only broadcaster that attempts to provide accurate and objective news. -
Mr. Dan Southerland, Former Executive Editor, Radio Free Asia
Mr. Dan Southerland, Former Executive Editor, Radio Free Asia Dan Southerland retired on December 1, 2016 as the executive editor of congressionally funded Radio Free Asia (RFA), which broadcasts news and analysis via radio, television, and multiple other platforms to Asian countries whose governments restrict the media. From 1996 to 1998, Mr. Southerland oversaw the launch of RFA’s nine language services and eight overseas offices. Prior to joining RFA, he spent 18 years as a correspondent in Asia. From 1985 to 1990, he was The Washington Post’s bureau chief in Beijing. He was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the Tiananmen uprising in 1989. Mr. Southerland worked for 13 years for The Christian Science Monitor, based in Saigon, Hong Kong, and Washington, D.C. He covered the Vietnam War, the India-Pakistan War of 1971, the U.S. invasion of Cambodia, and the fall of Saigon. From 1976 until 1985 he served as a diplomatic correspondent for The Monitor, traveling to more than 40 countries with five U.S. secretaries of state. In 1995, he was awarded the Edward Weintal Prize for distinguished diplomatic reporting. Mr. Southerland holds a BA degree from the University of North Carolina, an MS degree in journalism from Columbia University, and an MS degree in East Asian Studies from Harvard, where he studied Chinese and Japanese history and languages. In 2012, Mr. Southerland wrote the text for an RFA e-book titled Remembering Tiananmen. In 2016, he was executive editor of an RFA investigative web series on the Mekong River titled “A River in Peril.” He currently works as a freelance writer and commentator on Asian affairs, with a major focus on environmental issues in Southeast Asia. -
BC-DX 280 31 Dec 1996 ANGUILLA New 6090 Khz Carib
BC-DX 280 31 Dec 1996 ________________________________________________________________________ ANGUILLA New 6090 kHz Caribbean Beacon 0610 //5935 (non Aguilla, via WWCR) Cr. Gene Scott talking about first night. Broadcasting only at nights with 80 kW while testing tx. They will announce day freq on Sun, Dec 29. Asking for reception reports. Recheck 0735 UTC and they were gone. (Hans Johnson-USA, Dec 28) Thanks to a tip from Hans Johnson and Cumbre DX, 6090 kHz Caribbean Beacon noted with an open carrier at 0340 UTC, audio started 0400 UTC sharp //WWCR-5035, and the first 10 minutes Scott was asking for telephone reports on the signal. Here on the NRD-535D, on the high 300-ft inverted-L it is +50dB/s9, the low 50-ft doublet (with the high skywave angle) it is +60dB/s9. Telephone reports started up coast to coast by 0413 UTC. Hardly difficult. (Tom Sundstrom-NJ, 29 Dec) 6090 kHz - 0410 UTC, rock mx, Dr. Scott talking about the new txer, saying at one point it was "just shy of" 75 kw, at another 80 kw, "100% modulation." Invited calls to their usual phone numbers, and ran down the calls they had been getting from listeners, mostly west coasters, TX, KS, etc, all of whom seemed to be having better reception than I was. Good strength, though I would have expected better; a hum on the signal; and a bad fqy in my area, with splatter in both directions from DW powerhouses on 6085 and 6100 until DW closes at 0600. Better, and dominant, thereafter, but nowhere near as good as the //WWCR-5935 signal. -
Monitoring Times 2007 Index
Monitoring Times 2007 Index FEATURES (in monthly order by topic) IBOC/HD/Other Digital Radio Select-A-Tenna models; using News; Digital TV News; New TV splitter w/two scanners Broadcast Brunswick DX; Maine DX & new APR Length of dipole for AM/SW; Domestic SW BC in Russia JAN stations reason for coil-wrapped center DXing from Bermuda FEB JUN March 23rd: The Day the DX pole in sat dishes; using cellular 193rd Strategic Ops Wing MAR Died? HD DX; FM translators of antenna for scanner; effect of Radio Tourist in Guyana AUG AM Stations; New SanFran rain on LF signals; 10 amp WRNO Worldwide SW Radio AUG station; New FM&TV stations battery charger as power supply; MW DXpedition to Easter Island SEP AUG HD Radio Rules Released. Weird legality of reading voice mail on Shortwave Roundup: Progs on HF SEP Frequencies (Guam); Canadian opponent's cellular phone; Bizarre World of Pirate Radio OCT AM News; Retro Radio; Radio multiband radio fluttering noise Clandestine Radio NOV Station Starts Forest Fire; DX while tuning Radio Voice of the People NOV from Easter Island; Stations MAY Using discone without top Changes element? Reception distance on Nostalgia/Human Interest OCT Cheaters, or not? (High-power "Close Call"; name for flexible pin A Visit w/Larry Van Horn JAN BCing outside hours); Breaking plug?; unknown RFI spaced Radioslayton & Radio Slang JAN News (IBOC rules published); every 30 kHz; using RR trestle as Aviation Radio in Labrador FEB Mysterious test tones; Bits & SW antenna support?; comparing A Life in Radio - Clem Small MAR Pieces; AM -
Federal Register/Vol. 85, No. 238/Thursday, December 10, 2020
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 238 / Thursday, December 10, 2020 / Rules and Regulations 79427 * * * * * of International Broadcasting Act and with United States treaty Issued in Washington, DC, on December 3, (‘‘IBA’’) (22 U.S.C. 6204(b)). obligations); id. section 6202(b)(1), (3) 2020. The Regulation was promulgated only (mandating that United States George Gonzalez, when it became apparent that the international broadcasting include leadership of USAGM was about to Acting Manager, Rules and Regulations ‘‘news which is consistently reliable Group. change via Senate confirmation of a and authoritative, accurate, objective, USAGM Chief Executive Officer [FR Doc. 2020–26920 Filed 12–9–20; 8:45 am] and comprehensive’’ and constitutes a (‘‘CEO’’). See Firewall and Highest ‘‘clear and effective presentation of the BILLING CODE 4910–13–P Standards of Professional Journalism, policies of the United States 85 FR at 36150 (expressly identifying Government and responsible discussion the pending end of the Board’s tenure as and opinion on those policies’’); id. UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR the motivating factor for the timing and section 6202(b)(4) (requiring United GLOBAL MEDIA issuance of the Regulation). Senate States international broadcasting to confirmation of a CEO caused the BBG 22 CFR Chapter V include ‘‘the capability to provide a to dissolve, and transferred all of its surge capacity to support United States RIN 3112–AA03 powers to the CEO. See 22 U.S.C. foreign policy objectives during crises 6203(b)(1). abroad’’). Repeal of Regulation Entitled Firewall At its core, the Regulation asserts that Upon taking office, the CEO directed and Highest Standards of Professional ‘‘a firewall exists between anybody a review of the Regulation and sought Journalism involved with any aspect of journalism external legal counsel. -
The Americas on Shortwave
British DX Club The Americas on Shortwave Guide to shortwave broadcasts in the Americas (and Antarctica) September 2021 featuring schedules for the A21 season The Americas on Shortwave This guide covers shortwave broadcasting in the Americas (and Antarctica). Contents 2-17 North America 18-20 Central America and the Caribbean 21-29 South America 29 Antarctica Descriptions used in this guide have been taken from radio station websites and Wikipedia. This guide was revised on 27 September 2021 Please check www.dxguides.info for the very latest edition of this guide. Compiled and edited by Tony Rogers Please send any corrections and updates to: [email protected] or [email protected]. Thank you! North America Alaska KNLS International KNLS International is an international shortwave radio station near Anchor Point, Alaska. The station is operated by World Christian Broadcasting, a non-profit company based in the United States. KNLS broadcasts in English, Chinese and Russian to East Asia and the Russian Far East. Transmitter site: Anchor Point - 2 x 100 kW. Time/UTC Days Language Target kHz 0800-0900 Daily English East Asia 9695 0800-0900 Daily Chinese East Asia 11875 0900-1000 Daily Russian Russian Far East 9695 0900-1000 Daily Chinese East Asia 11875 1000-1100 Daily English East Asia 9580 1000-1100 Daily Chinese East Asia 9685 1100-1200 Daily Russian Russian Far East 9580 1100-1200 Daily Chinese East Asia 9730 1200-1300 Daily English East Asia 7355 9795 1300-1400 Daily Chinese East Asia 7395 9740 1400-1500 Daily Chinese East Asia 7355 1400-1500 Daily English East Asia 9580 1500-1600 Daily Russian Russian Far East 9800 1500-1600 Daily Chinese East Asia 9760 2 Canada CFVP Calgary AB CFVP is the full-time shortwave rebroadcaster of CKMX (Funny 1060 AM) in Calgary, Alberta.