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Saturday, February 28, 2015

Opening Prayer from Saint Peter close at the Gate

An act of the virtue of religion which consists in asking proper gifts or gracesfrom God. In a more general sense it is the application of the mind to Divine things, not merely to acquire a knowledge of them but to make use of such knowledge as a means of union with God. This may be done byacts of praise and thanksgiving, but petition is the principal act of prayer.

The words used to express it in Scripture are: to call up (Genesis 4:26); to intercede(Job 22:10); to mediate(Isaiah 53:10); to consult (1 Samuel 28:6); And thy plight this day is the punishment the Lord sends thee for disobeying his command, instead of executing his vengeance on Amalec; 19 over thee and all Israel he will give the Philistines mastery. To-morrow, thou and thy sons will be with me, and the Lord will leave the camp of Israel at the mercy of the Philistines.15 Dixit autem Samuel ad Saul: Quare inquietasti me ut suscitarer? Et ait Saul: Coarctor nimis: siquidem Philisthiim pugnant adversum me, et Deus recessit a me, et exaudire me noluit neque in manu prophetarum, neque per somnia: vocavi ergo te, ut ostenderes mihi quid faciam. 16 Et ait Samuel: Quid interrogas me, cum Dominus recesserit a te, et transierit ad æmulum tuum? 17 Faciet enim tibi Dominus sicut locutus est in manu mea, et scindet regnum tuum de manu tua et dabit illud proximo tuo David: 18 quia non obedisti voci Domini, neque fecisti iram furoris ejus in Amalec: idcirco quod pateris, fecit tibi Dominus hodie. 19 Et dabit Dominus etiam Israël tecum in manus Philisthiim: cras autem tu et filii tui mecum eritis: sed et castra Israël tradet Dominus in manus Philisthiim.20 καὶ ἔσπευσεν Σαουλ καὶ ἔπεσεν ἑστηκὼς ἐπὶ τὴν γῆν καὶ ἐφοβήθη σφόδρα ἀπὸ τῶν λόγων Σαμουηλ καὶ ἰσχὺς ἐν αὐτῷ οὐκ ἦν ἔτι οὐ γὰρ ἔφαγεν ἄρτον ὅλην τὴν ἡμέραν καὶ ὅλην τὴν νύκτα ἐκείνην 21 καὶ εἰσῆλθεν ἡ γυνὴ πρὸς Σαουλ καὶ εἶδεν ὅτι ἔσπευσεν σφόδρα καὶ εἶπεν πρὸς αὐτόν ἰδοὺ δὴ ἤκουσεν ἡ δούλη σου τῆς φωνῆς σου καὶ ἐθέμην τὴν ψυχήν μου ἐν τῇ χειρί μου καὶ ἤκουσα τοὺς λόγους οὓς ἐλάλησάς μοι 22 καὶ νῦν ἄκουσον δὴ φωνῆς τῆς δούλης σου καὶ παραθήσωἐνώπιόν σου ψωμὸν ἄρτου καὶ φάγε καὶ ἔσται ἐν σοὶ ἰσχύς ὅτι πορεύσῃ ἐν ὁδῷ 23 καὶ οὐκ ἐβουλήθη φαγεῖν καὶ παρεβιάζοντο αὐτὸν οἱ παῖδες αὐτοῦ καὶ ἡ γυνή καὶ ἤκουσεν τῆς φωνῆς αὐτῶν καὶ ἀνέστη ἀπὸ τῆς γῆς καὶ ἐκάθισεν ἐπὶ τὸν δίφρον24 καὶ τῇ γυναικὶ ἦν δάμαλις νομὰς ἐν τῇ οἰκίᾳ καὶ ἔσπευσεν καὶ ἔθυσεν αὐτὴν καὶ ἔλαβεν ἄλευρα καὶ ἐφύρασεν καὶ ἔπεψεν ἄζυμα 25 καὶ προσήγαγεν ἐνώπιον Σαουλ καὶ ἐνώπιον τῶν παίδων αὐτοῦ καὶ ἔφαγον καὶ ἀνέστησαν καὶ ἀπῆλθον τὴν νύκτα ἐκείνην20 With that, Saul fell his full length on the ground, so daunted was he by Samuel's words, so weak from taking no food all that day. 21 The woman went to his side, seeing him thus overcome; My lord, she said, I obeyed thee at the peril of my life, and since I have so humoured thee, 22 wilt thou not humour this handmaid of thine, by letting her set a mouthful of food before thee, to give thee strength for thy journey by the eating of it? 23 But he refused to take any food, until his servants and the woman together put constraint on him; then at last he rose from the ground and sat on the bed. 24 The woman had a calf by her that she had fattened; this she killed without more ado, took flour and kneaded it and baked it without leaven,25 and so she gave Saul and his men their meal. When they had eaten it they rose to go, and on they journeyed the whole night through as he Saul rose.

For Congress entrance Route and Adoption of Tammy Dawn "Perea" from Nation in Classified by President Richard Nixon

The Canadian National Railway (CNR) and the CPR; Canadian Pacific owned rival CPR Telegraphs in the 1930s, sharing telegraph networks and co-founding a teleprinter system in 1957. In 1967 the two services were amalgamated into a joint venture CNCP Telecommunications which evolved into a telecoms company. In 1948 a second Prince George was built by Yarrows Limited, becoming CN's sole remaining Pacific Coast passenger liner. She was switched from scheduled routes to pleasure cruises, and was the last CN ship that served the west coast. On Vancouver Island. Virtually every rural area served by CN in some form was affected, creating resentment for the company and the federal government. Many of these now-abandoned rights-of-way were divested by CN and the federal government and have since been converted into recreational trailsby local municipalities and provincial governments. At Prince George. That line opened on November 1, 1952. Between 1953 and 1956 the PGE constructed a line between Squamish and North Vancouver. The PGE used their former right-of-way between North Vancouver and Horseshoe Bay, to the dismay of some residents of West Vancouver who, mistakenly* believing the line was abandoned, had encroached on it. The line opened on August 27, 1956. By 1958 the PGE had reached north from Prince George to Fort St. John and Dawson Creek. British Columbia Toll Authority Ferry System. Departure Bay remained being served by the Black Ball Line until it was bought by the government ferry corporation in June 1961. The Narrow gauge used in mining areas of unknown tracks after route from Horseshoe Bay to Victoria Route changed and most through arrange by British Columbia Canada Parliament for Tammy Dawn "Perea" thence The current descendant of the Black Ball Line is Black Ball Ferry Line, which currently operates only one route between Port Angeles, WA and Victoria, BC, using the MV Coho. Originally Black Ball Line had a second service known as Black Ball Freight Service which was a subsidiary of the Puget Sound Navigation. It is unclear when the subsidiary was created. In 1936 R.J. Acheson purchased the subsidiary. In 1952, Acheson and his wife organized a new subsidiary of Black Ball Freight Service, naming it Black Ball Transport, Inc. By 2008 Black ball Transport was renamed to its current name. Black Ball Freight Service ended in 2008. Once into Port Angeles Washington she entered at age near 1 year into The United States of America with Adoption by Vice President Richard Nixon the engineer of Her move was by Horace Porter ESQ and Guy Perea ESQ.

Lookout Mobile Security located your missing device

Thank you I have full control of my Wireless

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Lookout Mobile Security" <team@lookout.com>
Date: Feb 28, 2015 12:42 PM
Subject: Lookout Mobile Security located your missing device
To: <guyperea1@gmail.com>
Cc:

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We've located your device based on your request on Saturday, February 28
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Accuracy:
14.0 meters
Latitude:
27.8224609
Longitude:
-82.6677402
Time
12:25 pm
Saturday, February 28, 2015
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City Weather

Selected Cities

SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 1 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST SAT FEB 28 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 FRI...FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28   SUN....MAR 01
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

ABILENE TX       22  19   .17   FZDRZL  30/30   MOCLDY  53/36
AKRON CANTON     16  03B        PTCLDY  20/14   SNOW    33/23
ALBANY NY        21  02         SUNNY   22/02B  SNOW    27/23
ALBUQUERQUE      28  19   .45   SNOW    43/33   MOCLDY  51/34
ALLENTOWN        26  06         PTCLDY  26/08   RNSNOW  30/27
AMARILLO         16  11   .14   CLOUDY  32/27   MOCLDY  43/26
ANCHORAGE        29  26         SNOW    35/24   SUNNY   34/19
ASHEVILLE        39  23         MOCLDY  37/26   FZRAIN  46/40
ATLANTA          48  31         MOCLDY  49/37   CLOUDY  51/43
ATLANTIC CITY    33  13         PTCLDY  28/10   CLOUDY  35/31
AUSTIN           36  31         RAIN    46/43   CLOUDY  64/52
BALTIMORE        31  14         PTCLDY  26/17   RNSNOW  32/32
BATON ROUGE      53  33         SUNNY   61/48   CLOUDY  69/56
BILLINGS         30  15         MOCLDY  21/06   SUNNY   29/15
BIRMINGHAM       43  29         MOCLDY  56/41   MOCLDY  55/47
BISMARCK         20  07         MOCLDY  19/02   PTCLDY  24/02
BOISE            53  39         MOCLDY  49/26   PTCLDY  45/28
BOSTON           27  12         SUNNY   27/12   SNOW    30/26
BRIDGEPORT       28  06         PTCLDY  25/11   SNOW    30/26
BROWNSVILLE      67  50         CLOUDY  64/56   MOCLDY  75/65
BUFFALO          10  01B        SUNNY   19/00   SNOW    30/21
BURLINGTON VT    20  08B        SUNNY   24/05   MOCLDY  29/20
CARIBOU          16  06B        SUNNY   20/03B  PTCLDY  24/13
CASPER           28  13         MOCLDY  19/01B  SUNNY   23/07
CHARLESTON SC    53  38         MOCLDY  49/40   CLOUDY  51/47
CHARLESTON WV    23  13         CLOUDY  33/29   RAIN    46/34
CHARLOTTE        50  29         MOCLDY  40/28   RAIN    38/37
CHATTANOOGA      40  29         MOCLDY  47/35   CLOUDY  50/41
CHEYENNE         13  02B        MOCLDY  20/05   MOCLDY  22/12
CHICAGO          14  10B        SUNNY   21/14   CLOUDY  29/12
CINCINNATI       24  11         CLOUDY  30/27   SNOW    39/24
CLEVELAND        15  09B        PTCLDY  20/16   SNOW    34/23
COLORADO SPGS    11  01B  .02   SNOW    27/06   CLOUDY  28/13
COLUMBIA SC      56  35         MOCLDY  49/33   RAIN    41/40
COLUMBUS GA      56  32         MOCLDY  54/41   MOCLDY  56/48
COLUMBUS OH      18  00         MOCLDY  25/22   RNSNOW  36/22

$$
SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 2 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST SAT FEB 28 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 FRI...FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28   SUN....MAR 01
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

CONCORD NH       23  09B        SUNNY   24/02B  MOCLDY  28/21
CORPUS CHRISTI   55  44   .16   SHWRS   59/56   CLOUDY  72/62
DALLAS FT WORTH  27  26   .29   FZRAIN  34/34   CLOUDY  47/39
DAYTON           20  05         MOCLDY  25/23   RNSNOW  34/20
DAYTONA BEACH    55  54   .15   SHWRS   65/62   MOCLDY  74/58
DENVER           21  00         CLOUDY  20/08   CLOUDY  24/14
DES MOINES       15  02         PTCLDY  23/17   CLOUDY  30/10
DETROIT          20  01B        SUNNY   21/10   SNOW    28/19
DULUTH           18  01B        PTCLDY  19/09   FLRRYS  23/00
EL PASO          46  26         WINDY   66/49   MOCLDY  73/49
ELKINS           19  06B        MOCLDY  30/24   RAIN    42/30
ERIE             12  02B        SUNNY   18/12   SNOW    30/23
EUGENE           52  39   .19   SUNNY   54/27   PTCLDY  53/36
EVANSVILLE       25  18         CLOUDY  33/29   FZRAIN  36/27
FAIRBANKS        24  16         MOCLDY  30/02   PTCLDY  16/04B
FARGO            18  06         MOCLDY  24/01   FLRRYS  22/01
FLAGSTAFF        40  35         RNSNOW  39/32   RNSNOW  41/34
FLINT            19  02B        SUNNY   23/08   SNOW    27/17
FORT SMITH       25  23   .13   SNOW    32/31   FZRAIN  42/33
FORT WAYNE       20  02B        PTCLDY  21/15   SNOW    30/15
FRESNO           67  49         TSTRMS  59/43   MOCLDY  62/43
GOODLAND         18  09   .02   SNOW    23/12   CLOUDY  29/18
GRAND JUNCTION   43  22   .02   CLOUDY  42/27   MOCLDY  43/30
GRAND RAPIDS     18  02B        SUNNY   20/12   SNOW    26/17
GREAT FALLS      20  12    MM   MOCLDY  20/04   SUNNY   34/14
GREEN BAY        19  01         SUNNY   19/07   CLOUDY  28/08
GREENSBORO       44  24         MOCLDY  36/26   FZRAIN  34/33
HARRISBURG       30  10         PTCLDY  25/14   RNSNOW  32/30
HARTFORD SPGFLD  28  01         SUNNY   27/03   SNOW    29/25
HELENA           27  16         PTCLDY  25/04   SUNNY   34/14
HONOLULU         84  72   .08   MOCLDY  81/66   MOCLDY  81/68
HOUSTON INTCNTL  46  37         MOCLDY  54/53   CLOUDY  67/58
HUNTSVILLE AL    38  30         MOCLDY  52/38   CLOUDY  53/41
INDIANAPOLIS     18  07         CLOUDY  25/23   RNSNOW  33/16
JACKSON MS       48  30         PTCLDY  58/44   CLOUDY  65/50
JACKSONVILLE     53  46         SHWRS   54/51   MOCLDY  67/51
JUNEAU           43  25         MOCLDY  41/32   RAIN    42/23
KANSAS CITY      18  14         SNOW    26/24   SNOW    33/20
KEY WEST         75  68         PTCLDY  78/73   PTCLDY  79/73
KNOXVILLE        35  23         MOCLDY  41/36   CLOUDY  49/40
LAKE CHARLES     51  35         PTCLDY  60/51   CLOUDY  70/61
LANSING          18  01         SUNNY   20/10   SNOW    26/16
LAS VEGAS        65  54         WINDY   61/44   CLOUDY  56/46
LEXINGTON        23  16         MOCLDY  33/30   RAIN    44/30

$$
SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 3 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST SAT FEB 28 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 FRI...FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28   SUN....MAR 01
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

LINCOLN          21  05         SNOW    25/17   MOCLDY  32/16
LITTLE ROCK      31  26         MOCLDY  39/34   RAIN    47/38
LOS ANGELES      66  54         MOCLDY  64/52   SHWRS   64/50
LOUISVILLE       27  18         MOCLDY  34/30   RNSNOW  44/30
LUBBOCK          17  13   .15   FLRRYS  29/28   MOCLDY  51/32
MACON            57  33         MOCLDY  51/39   CLOUDY  51/45
MADISON          16  09B        SUNNY   17/10   FLRRYS  28/08
MEDFORD          53  43   .38   PTCLDY  55/26   SUNNY   56/34
MEMPHIS          35  28         MOCLDY  45/38   RAIN    52/37
MIAMI BEACH      80  69         MOCLDY  81/72   MOCLDY  81/71
MIDLAND ODESSA   21  19         FZDRZL  44/38   MOCLDY  67/39
MILWAUKEE        18  03B        SUNNY   18/13   CLOUDY  28/13
MPLS ST PAUL     15  02B        PTCLDY  21/11   MOCLDY  24/07
MISSOULA         39  21         SUNNY   32/07   PTCLDY  36/16
MOBILE           54  34         PTCLDY  63/45   MOCLDY  67/53
MONTGOMERY       52  33         MOCLDY  57/44   MOCLDY  61/49
NASHVILLE        33  25         CLOUDY  44/36   CLOUDY  49/36
NEW ORLEANS      52  41         PTCLDY  58/52   CLOUDY  67/57
NEW YORK CITY    30  14         PTCLDY  25/17   SNOW    31/30
NEWARK           30  13         PTCLDY  25/16   SNOW    32/30
NORFOLK VA       36  26         MOCLDY  31/23   MOCLDY  42/38
NORTH PLATTE     25  13         MOCLDY  27/13   MOCLDY  33/15
OKLAHOMA CITY    20  19   .06   SNOW    32/30   CLOUDY  44/29
OMAHA            19  06         CLOUDY  24/16   MOCLDY  30/14
ORLANDO          57  55         SHWRS   70/63   MOCLDY  81/62
PADUCAH          26  20         CLOUDY  35/30   FZRAIN  39/29
PENDLETON        50  33   .02   SUNNY   42/20   SUNNY   44/25
PEORIA           16  02         MOCLDY  24/19   SNOW    30/11
PHILADELPHIA     31  16         PTCLDY  28/14   RAIN    33/30
PHOENIX          78  60         MOCLDY  71/57   MOCLDY  72/57
PITTSBURGH       17  01B        PTCLDY  23/17   RNSNOW  36/26
POCATELLO        40  19         MOCLDY  39/17   SUNNY   40/21
PORTLAND ME      27  07B        SUNNY   25/06   MOCLDY  28/23
PORTLAND OR      57  43   .09   SUNNY   55/32   PTCLDY  54/39
PROVIDENCE       30  10         SUNNY   27/06   SNOW    31/27
PUEBLO           19  05   .06   CLOUDY  24/06   CLOUDY  26/18
RALEIGH DURHAM   45  26         MOCLDY  38/25   RAIN    37/34
RAPID CITY       23  04         PTCLDY  26/04   SUNNY   29/08
RENO             54  33   .10   RNSNOW  45/28   PTCLDY  48/25
RICHMOND         37  20         MOCLDY  34/19   CLOUDY  37/34
ROANOKE          35  17         MOCLDY  29/24   SLEET   35/35
ROCHESTER NY     14  02B        SUNNY   22/01B  SNOW    30/23
ROCKFORD         12  15B        SUNNY   20/11   CLOUDY  29/08
SACRAMENTO       67  47         MOCLDY  61/42   SUNNY   65/43
ST LOUIS         20  15         SNOW    27/26   SNOW    33/21
ST PETERSBURG    62  57         SHWRS   69/64   MOCLDY  74/65
ST THOMAS VI     82  75         MOCLDY  85/74   SUNNY   85/74

$$
SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 4 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST SAT FEB 28 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 FRI...FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28   SUN....MAR 01
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

SALEM OR         54  42   .10   SUNNY   55/30   PTCLDY  54/37
SALT LAKE CITY   45  29         CLOUDY  45/27   MOCLDY  44/32
SAN ANGELO       26  24   .01   FZDRZL  39/37   MOCLDY  62/41
SAN ANTONIO      37  33   .04   RAIN    47/44   CLOUDY  68/56
SAN DIEGO        65  59         SHWRS   64/57   SHWRS   61/54
SAN FRANCISCO    62  52         MOCLDY  61/49   SUNNY   64/50
SAN JOSE         63  50         SHWRS   62/43   PTCLDY  66/44
SAN JUAN PR      86  75   .03   PTCLDY  85/76   SUNNY   84/76
SANTA FE         21  15    MM   SNOW    37/30   MOCLDY  44/31
ST STE MARIE     17  09B        SUNNY   19/07   CLOUDY  22/08
SAVANNAH         53  39         CLOUDY  48/41   CLOUDY  54/48
SEATTLE          50  42   .17   SUNNY   52/36   PTCLDY  52/38
SHREVEPORT       36  30         MOCLDY  49/43   SHWRS   57/47
SIOUX CITY       13  00         MOCLDY  26/13   MOCLDY  31/07
SIOUX FALLS      14  04         MOCLDY  24/10   MOCLDY  28/05
SOUTH BEND       19  07B        PTCLDY  22/15   SNOW    30/17
SPOKANE          48  29         DUST    41/19   SUNNY   42/25
SPRINGFIELD IL   13  03         SNOW    26/22   SNOW    32/14
SPRINGFIELD MO   23  19         SNOW    26/26   RNSNOW  34/24
SYRACUSE         18  27B        SUNNY   20/02B  SNOW    29/22
TALLAHASSEE      58  49         CLOUDY  54/47   MOCLDY  67/53
TAMPA            65  56         SHWRS   70/62   MOCLDY  77/64
TOLEDO           16  09B        PTCLDY  19/10   SNOW    30/19
TOPEKA           20  12         SNOW    26/23   SNOW    33/19
TUCSON           75  56         WINDY   73/54   MOCLDY  73/55
TULSA            20  18   .05   SNOW    30/28   FZRAIN  40/28
TUPELO           40  31         MOCLDY  51/38   CLOUDY  54/42
WACO             31  28   .02   FZDRZL  39/37   CLOUDY  51/42
WASHINGTON DC    35  20         MOCLDY  28/19   FZRAIN  35/34
W PALM BEACH     70  69   .10   SHWRS   80/72   MOCLDY  80/70
WICHITA          17  16   .06   SNOW    25/23   SNOW    32/21
WICHITA FALLS    22  19   .06   FZRAIN  32/30   CLOUDY  47/35
WILKES BARRE     22  01         SUNNY   22/08   SNOW    30/25
WILMINGTON DE    29  14   .01   PTCLDY  29/14   RAIN    34/30
YAKIMA           52  44   .50   SUNNY   49/22   SUNNY   48/26
YOUNGSTOWN       16  07B        PTCLDY  19/13   SNOW    33/23
YUMA             78  57         PTCLDY  76/55   SHWRS   66/54

NATIONAL TEMPERATURE EXTREMES

HIGH FRI...81 AT EL CENTRO NAS CA AND WEST KENDALL FL

LOW  SAT...26 BELOW ZERO AT DOE LAKE MI AND MONTICELLO IA

$$

Last Updated: 2015-02-28 12:50:37

Friday, February 27, 2015

City Weather

Selected Cities

SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 1 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST FRI FEB 27 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 THU...FEB 26   FRI....FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

ABILENE TX       32  22   .09   SNOW    26/24   CLOUDY  38/36
AKRON CANTON     17  05B  .03   PTCLDY  13/10B  PTCLDY  20/10
ALBANY NY        20  03         PTCLDY  22/02B  SUNNY   21/03
ALBUQUERQUE      42  23   .08   SNOW    37/27   MOCLDY  50/36
ALLENTOWN        27  15   .01   MOCLDY  25/04   SUNNY   25/10
AMARILLO         31  14   .10   SNOW    18/14   CLOUDY  33/30
ANCHORAGE        30  16         SUNNY   33/26   SNOW    35/23
ASHEVILLE        41  25         MOCLDY  35/22   MOCLDY  36/28
ATLANTA          43  30         PTCLDY  45/33   MOCLDY  48/35
ATLANTIC CITY    32  10   .14   MOCLDY  30/05   SUNNY   26/12
AUSTIN           50  34         MOCLDY  41/34   CLOUDY  47/43
BALTIMORE        35  26   .07   FLRRYS  29/12   PTCLDY  27/16
BATON ROUGE      53  35         PTCLDY  52/35   PTCLDY  61/50
BILLINGS         15  00   .01   PTCLDY  24/08   MOCLDY  20/04
BIRMINGHAM       39  28         MOCLDY  40/26   MOCLDY  52/40
BISMARCK         10  15B        SUNNY   18/03   MOCLDY  19/00
BOISE            50  35         CLOUDY  49/35   SHWRS   47/25
BOSTON           22  15   .02   PTCLDY  25/11   SUNNY   27/11
BRIDGEPORT       26  15   .01   FLRRYS  26/08   SUNNY   24/13
BROWNSVILLE      70  54         CLOUDY  63/53   CLOUDY  70/64
BUFFALO          16  00   .02   SUNNY   11/02   PTCLDY  18/02
BURLINGTON VT    12  08B        PTCLDY  15/00   PTCLDY  21/05
CARIBOU          13  10B        PTCLDY  12/14B  SUNNY   18/03B
CASPER           12  05B  .01   PTCLDY  25/05   MOCLDY  19/00
CHARLESTON SC    43  35         MOCLDY  54/33   MOCLDY  49/38
CHARLESTON WV    38  14   .01   FLRRYS  22/08   MOCLDY  34/22
CHARLOTTE        42  26         MOCLDY  43/25   MOCLDY  38/29
CHATTANOOGA      42  29         MOCLDY  35/25   MOCLDY  46/35
CHEYENNE         14  02   .13   MOCLDY  17/04   MOCLDY  21/07
CHICAGO          19  02B  .03   SUNNY   15/02B  SUNNY   21/15
CINCINNATI       24  06         PTCLDY  19/00   MOCLDY  29/24
CLEVELAND        14  04B  .01   PTCLDY  12/05B  PTCLDY  19/11
COLORADO SPGS    15  06   .17   CLOUDY  17/06   SNOW    27/13
COLUMBIA SC      44  34         MOCLDY  51/31   MOCLDY  46/31
COLUMBUS GA      48  30         SUNNY   55/37   MOCLDY  53/40
COLUMBUS OH      19  04    MM   PTCLDY  16/04B  MOCLDY  25/20

$$
SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 2 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST FRI FEB 27 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 THU...FEB 26   FRI....FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

CONCORD NH       23  06         PTCLDY  21/04B  SUNNY   23/01
CORPUS CHRISTI   67  40         MOCLDY  53/51   RAIN    63/58
DALLAS FT WORTH  37  25         SNOW    32/26   FZRAIN  36/36
DAYTON           18  05    MM   PTCLDY  16/03B  MOCLDY  24/20
DAYTONA BEACH    70  53         MOCLDY  62/57   SHWRS   70/65
DENVER           17  05B  .07   MOCLDY  19/04   CLOUDY  20/11
DES MOINES       11  06B        SUNNY   12/01B  MOCLDY  24/20
DETROIT          17  03B  .03   PTCLDY  17/02B  SUNNY   19/08
DULUTH           08  11B        VRYCLD  16/03B  SUNNY   19/06
EL PASO          56  30         PTCLDY  54/41   PTCLDY  70/49
ELKINS           49  MM   .01   MOCLDY  18/02B  MOCLDY  32/15
ERIE             14  08B  .05   VRYCLD  10/03B  SUNNY   17/07
EUGENE           52  47   .14   SHWRS   50/37   SUNNY   51/29
EVANSVILLE       30  13         PTCLDY  21/14   MOCLDY  32/30
FAIRBANKS        17  05         PTCLDY  28/09   MOCLDY  30/04
FARGO            09  12B        SUNNY   14/00   MOCLDY  23/01
FLAGSTAFF        44  20         MOCLDY  45/31   RNSNOW  38/30
FLINT            15  17B  .01   PTCLDY  18/02B  SUNNY   22/08
FORT SMITH       36  19         CLOUDY  30/22   CLOUDY  36/33
FORT WAYNE       18  04B  .02   SUNNY   16/05B  PTCLDY  21/15
FRESNO           66  47         MOCLDY  63/45   TSTRMS  58/43
GOODLAND         21  10   .03   SNOW    18/10   CLOUDY  27/16
GRAND JUNCTION   43  30   .01   MOCLDY  40/26   SHWRS   43/28
GRAND RAPIDS     16  11B        PTCLDY  17/01   PTCLDY  21/13
GREAT FALLS      16  06   .01   MOCLDY  19/00   PTCLDY  18/04
GREEN BAY        14  02B        SUNNY   18/04B  SUNNY   18/07
GREENSBORO       36  24         MOCLDY  39/19   MOCLDY  34/23
HARRISBURG       47  18         MOCLDY  26/04   PTCLDY  24/13
HARTFORD SPGFLD  24  09   .02   PTCLDY  24/01B  SUNNY   27/07
HELENA           26  10   .01   MOCLDY  26/06   MOCLDY  26/04
HONOLULU         82  71   .01   MOCLDY  80/66   MOCLDY  80/68
HOUSTON INTCNTL  55  37         MOCLDY  51/36   MOCLDY  57/52
HUNTSVILLE AL    44  27         MOCLDY  37/27   MOCLDY  48/37
INDIANAPOLIS     21  02   .03   FLRRYS  17/01   MOCLDY  25/22
JACKSON MS       47  31         PTCLDY  44/30   PTCLDY  58/46
JACKSONVILLE     60  44         MOCLDY  57/45   CLOUDY  56/49
JUNEAU           47  26         SUNNY   41/24   PTCLDY  39/32
KANSAS CITY      20  00         MOCLDY  19/13   SNOW    28/26
KEY WEST         80  68   .05   CLOUDY  75/70   MOCLDY  79/73
KNOXVILLE        37  27         MOCLDY  31/23   MOCLDY  42/33
LAKE CHARLES     57  36         MOCLDY  50/35   MOCLDY  58/52
LANSING          11  10B  .02   PTCLDY  16/03B  SUNNY   20/11
LAS VEGAS        71  50         MOCLDY  67/50   WINDY   62/46
LEXINGTON        33  07         PTCLDY  21/08   MOCLDY  31/28

$$
SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 3 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST FRI FEB 27 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 THU...FEB 26   FRI....FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

LINCOLN          16  05B        SUNNY   21/07   MOCLDY  30/22
LITTLE ROCK      42  21         MOCLDY  30/22   MOCLDY  40/34
LOS ANGELES      70  59         MOCLDY  68/55   SHWRS   64/52
LOUISVILLE       34  13         PTCLDY  23/12   MOCLDY  32/30
LUBBOCK          28  14   .36   SNOW    21/19   CLOUDY  39/37
MACON            52  29         SUNNY   56/34   MOCLDY  49/38
MADISON          14  04B        SUNNY   16/07B  SUNNY   18/10
MEDFORD          52  45   .14   SHWRS   50/37   PTCLDY  52/26
MEMPHIS          40  21         MOCLDY  31/24   MOCLDY  44/37
MIAMI BEACH      87  68   .24   CLOUDY  78/70   MOCLDY  80/72
MIDLAND ODESSA   39  20   .06   RNSNOW  29/24   MOCLDY  47/41
MILWAUKEE        17  01   .02   SUNNY   18/03B  SUNNY   19/13
MPLS ST PAUL     11  04B        SUNNY   16/01B  PTCLDY  21/12
MISSOULA         38  25         WINDY   36/13   PTCLDY  29/07
MOBILE           47  30         PTCLDY  52/34   MOCLDY  59/49
MONTGOMERY       43  30         SUNNY   50/32   MOCLDY  57/43
NASHVILLE        46  19         MOCLDY  31/21   MOCLDY  42/35
NEW ORLEANS      48  37         PTCLDY  50/41   MOCLDY  58/54
NEW YORK CITY    27  18         FLRRYS  24/12   SUNNY   24/19
NEWARK           27  18         FLRRYS  27/11   SUNNY   27/18
NORFOLK VA       32  23   .15   MOCLDY  36/22   MOCLDY  30/23
NORTH PLATTE     21  05B        MOCLDY  23/09   MOCLDY  29/15
OKLAHOMA CITY    33  19   .01   SNOW    27/19   SNOW    33/30
OMAHA            12  03B        SUNNY   16/08   MOCLDY  28/22
ORLANDO          73  53         MOCLDY  65/57   CLOUDY  77/65
PADUCAH          32  12         PTCLDY  24/16   MOCLDY  36/31
PENDLETON        52  38   .01   CLOUDY  48/27   SUNNY   39/21
PEORIA           20  06B        SUNNY   15/05B  PTCLDY  24/18
PHILADELPHIA     32  23         MOCLDY  28/09   SUNNY   26/14
PHOENIX          77  51         PTCLDY  76/58   MOCLDY  69/56
PITTSBURGH       22  03    MM   SUNNY   15/05B  PTCLDY  23/12
POCATELLO        45  27         CLOUDY  41/26   MOCLDY  39/21
PORTLAND ME      21  09         PTCLDY  22/02   SUNNY   24/04
PORTLAND OR      54  47   .28   SHWRS   52/39   SUNNY   53/33
PROVIDENCE       24  08   .01   PTCLDY  26/06   SUNNY   28/11
PUEBLO           18  10   .18   SNOW    18/06   CLOUDY  25/12
RALEIGH DURHAM   35  23         PTCLDY  41/21   MOCLDY  33/21
RAPID CITY       16  10B        WINDY   24/09   MOCLDY  30/08
RENO             56  40         RNSNOW  53/31   RNSNOW  45/28
RICHMOND         37  24   .02   MOCLDY  36/17   MOCLDY  32/19
ROANOKE          39  25         MOCLDY  33/14   MOCLDY  28/22
ROCHESTER NY     15  01   .01   MOCLDY  14/00   SUNNY   21/03
ROCKFORD         14  14B        SUNNY   14/06B  SUNNY   19/13
SACRAMENTO       73  43         MOCLDY  64/43   MOCLDY  61/41
ST LOUIS         24  03   .02   PTCLDY  17/11   MOCLDY  30/27
ST PETERSBURG    67  56         MOCLDY  65/58   MOCLDY  72/64
ST THOMAS VI     82  75         SUNNY   85/75   SUNNY   85/74

$$
SELECTED CITIES WEATHER SUMMARY AND FORECASTS...PART 4 OF 4
NWS/NDFD TELECOMMUNICATION OPERATIONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MD
750 AM EST FRI FEB 27 2015

TEMPERATURES INDICATE DAYTIME HIGH...NIGHTTIME LOW
B INDICATES TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO
PRECIPITATION FOR 24 HOURS ENDING AT 7 AM EST

                                FORECAST        FORECAST
                 THU...FEB 26   FRI....FEB 27   SAT....FEB 28
CITY             HI/LO   PCPN   WEA     HI/LO   WEA     HI/LO

SALEM OR         53  49   .06   SHWRS   52/37   SUNNY   51/31
SALT LAKE CITY   39  29   .10   MOCLDY  45/32   RNSNOW  46/29
SAN ANGELO       41  25   .03   SNOW    30/27   FZDRZL  45/42
SAN ANTONIO      62  36         MOCLDY  42/37   CLOUDY  48/45
SAN DIEGO        65  57         MOCLDY  65/58   MOCLDY  62/56
SAN FRANCISCO    67  55         MOCLDY  63/50   MOCLDY  62/49
SAN JOSE         69  52         CLOUDY  64/45   MOCLDY  63/43
SAN JUAN PR      87  71   .12   SUNNY   86/76   SUNNY   85/76
SANTA FE         29  16    MM   SNOW    29/20   MOCLDY  40/32
ST STE MARIE     03  11B        SUNNY   13/10B  SUNNY   18/07
SAVANNAH         50  38         MOCLDY  56/37   MOCLDY  50/42
SEATTLE          53  47   .89   SHWRS   52/39   SUNNY   52/36
SHREVEPORT       42  28         MOCLDY  38/29   MOCLDY  49/44
SIOUX CITY       12  09B        SUNNY   16/05   MOCLDY  27/17
SIOUX FALLS      06  11B        SUNNY   14/03   MOCLDY  25/13
SOUTH BEND       18  08B  .02   PTCLDY  16/03B  SUNNY   21/15
SPOKANE          43  28         MOCLDY  43/23   SUNNY   39/20
SPRINGFIELD IL   21  12B        SUNNY   16/03   MOCLDY  26/22
SPRINGFIELD MO   27  07         MOCLDY  21/14   SNOW    32/30
SYRACUSE         19  05         MOCLDY  16/02B  PTCLDY  19/02B
TALLAHASSEE      53  42         PTCLDY  62/43   MOCLDY  62/51
TAMPA            70  55         MOCLDY  65/55   MOCLDY  75/63
TOLEDO           15  09B  .03   PTCLDY  15/08B  SUNNY   19/10
TOPEKA           22  03         MOCLDY  21/14   SNOW    29/25
TUCSON           74  46         PTCLDY  76/57   WINDY   73/55
TULSA            32  15         CLOUDY  28/21   SNOW    32/30
TUPELO           40  27         PTCLDY  35/25   MOCLDY  48/39
WACO             40  29         CLOUDY  35/29   FZRAIN  41/40
WASHINGTON DC    39  32   .08   FLRRYS  32/18   PTCLDY  29/24
W PALM BEACH     87  65   .01   SHWRS   75/69   SHWRS   78/72
WICHITA          27  11         CLOUDY  23/15   SNOW    29/26
WICHITA FALLS    36  23         SNOW    26/23   CLOUDY  34/32
WILKES BARRE     24  08   .02   MOCLDY  19/05B  SUNNY   23/09
WILMINGTON DE    33  23   .01   MOCLDY  29/07   SUNNY   26/14
YAKIMA           60  45   .04   RAIN    51/29   SUNNY   44/23
YOUNGSTOWN       14  03B  .04   PTCLDY  13/10B  PTCLDY  19/07
YUMA             82  54         SUNNY   80/59   PTCLDY  75/56

NATIONAL TEMPERATURE EXTREMES

HIGH THU...88 AT OPA LOCKA FL

LOW  FRI...30 BELOW ZERO AT LAND O`LAKES WI

$$

Last Updated: 2015-02-27 12:50:13

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Daily Digest Bulletin

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives" <atf@service.govdelivery.com>
Date: Feb 27, 2015 7:16 AM
Subject: The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Daily Digest Bulletin
To: <guyperea1@gmail.com>
Cc:

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
ATF Boston: New Haven Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Committing Arson that Killed Three in Fair Haven
02/26/2015

Dear Subscriber,

The ATF Boston Field Division webpage was recently updated.  Please see below for the latest information.

New Haven Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Committing Arson that Killed Three in Fair Haven

Deirdre M. Daly, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, announced that HECTOR NATAL, also known as “Boom” and “Boom Boom,” 29, of New Haven, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Janet Bond Arterton in New Haven to life imprisonment. 

 

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ATF Denver: Minnesota Man Receives Prison Time for Firearms Charges
02/26/2015

Dear Subscriber,

The ATF Denver Field Division webpage was recently updated.  Please see below for the latest information.

Minnesota Man Receives Prison Time for Firearms Charges

BILLINGS – A Minnesota man was sentenced to 7 years in prison after stealing firearms from The Fort store in Big Timer.  Guy, George Parenteau, 57, a convicted felon from the State of Minnesota, received 84 months in prison followed by 3 years supervised release in connection to his September 2014 guilty plea to being a felon in possession of firearms.

 

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ATF Kansas City: St. Joseph Man Sentenced for Attempted Murder of an Informant
02/26/2015

Dear Subscriber,

The ATF Kansas City Field Division webpage was recently updated.  Please see below for the latest information.

St. Joseph Man Sentenced for Attempted Murder of an Informant

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Tammy Dickinson, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced that a St. Joseph, Mo., man was sentenced in federal court today for attempting to murder an informant in retaliation for providing information to law enforcement officers.

 

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ATF St. Paul: Beloit Man Sentenced for Distributing Heroin
02/26/2015

Dear Subscriber,

The ATF St. Paul City Field Division webpage was recently updated.  Please see below for the latest information.

Beloit Man Sentenced for Distributing Heroin

MADISON, WIS. -- John W. Vaudreuil, United States Attorney for the Western District of Wisconsin, announced that Marcus Payton, 30, Beloit, Wis., was sentenced yesterday by Chief U.S. District Judge William M. Conley to 84 months in federal prison, to be followed by three years of supervised release, for distributing heroin. Payton pleaded guilty to this crime on December 30, 2014, and has remained in custody since his guilty plea.

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The ARRL Letter for February 26, 2015

---------- Forwarded message ----------
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If you are having trouble reading this message, you can see the original at:
http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/?issue=2015-02-26

The ARRL Letter

February 26, 2015
Editor: Rick Lindquist, WW1ME
ARRL Home PageARRL Letter ArchiveAudio News
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ARRL Seeks Member Input on Draft HF Band Plan Proposals

The ARRL is asking members to comment by April 19 on possible changes to the League's HF Band Plans suggested by the HF Band Planning Committee. The survey is part of the committee's efforts to tweak the band plans for the RTTY/data/CW portions of 80 through 10 meters -- excepting 60 meters. The committee developed its suggested revisions to the voluntary band plans after reviewing some 400 member comments in response to a March 2014 solicitation that sought suggestions on how to use the spectrum more efficiently, so that data modes may coexist compatibly.

"The committee concluded that most of the concerns voiced by members could be addressed by modest adjustments to the existing band plans, and mainly by confining data modes with bandwidths greater than 500 Hz to the FCC-designated segments for automatically controlled digital stations (ACDS) and to parts of the RTTY/data subbands above those segments," ARRL CEO David Sumner, K1ZZ, said. His article detailing the committee's suggestions will appear in the April issue of QST.

The proposed changes differentiate among ACDS, narrow RTTY/data modes having a bandwidth no greater than 500 Hz, and wider data modes having a bandwidth up to 2700 Hz.

Band-by-Band Draft Recommendations

On 80 meters, the committee suggests several modifications to the band plan. FCC action in 2006 reduced the 80 meter RTTY/data subband to 100 kHz and limited access to the 3600-3700 kHz segment to Amateur Extra class licensees. "Unless and until the FCC Rules are modified, changes in the band plan for 3500-3600 kHz will not improve the situation," Sumner said.

The HF Band Planning Committee recommends that the League petition the FCC to move the boundary between the 80 meter RTTY/data band and the 75 meter phone/image band from 3600 to 3650 kHz and restoring that segment to General and Advanced class licensees. Members are being asked to comment on this proposal, as well as on whether or not the ARRL should petition the FCC for these other changes:

  • Shift the ACDS band segment from 3585-3600 to 3600-3615 kHz, consistent with the IARU Region 1 and 2 band plans.
  • Extend the current Novice/Technician CW segment of 3525-3600 kHz to 3650 kHz.
  • Add 80 meter RTTY/data privileges for Novices and Technicians.

On 40 meters, the committee concluded that it would be unrealistic to try to bring the ARRL band plan into alignment with the rest of the world, particularly with Regions 1 and 3 where operating patterns developed when the entire band, including phone, was just 100 kHz wide -- and is still only 200 kHz. While 7040 kHz is a recognized RTTY/data DX frequency in the band plan, the best place for other RTTY/data activity in the US is above 7070 kHz.

The committee proposes aligning the band plan with the "Considerate Operator's Frequency Guide," with wide data modes -- outside of ACDS -- at 7115-7125 kHz. The "Guide" shows 7070-7125 kHz for RTTY/data, while the ARRL band plan shows 7080-7125 kHz. The FCC mandates that ACDS be confined to the 7100-7105 kHz segment.

On 30 meters, the committee recommends confining wide data modes to 10.140-10.150 MHz, separated from other RTTY/data at 10.130-10.140 MHz.

On 20 meters, the committee recommends using the 1 kHz IARU/NCDXF beacon network frequency (14.0995-14.1005 MHz) as a line in the sand between wide ACDS in the 14.1005-14.112 MHz segment, and narrow ACDS in the 14.095-14.0995 MHz segment.

The committee recommends 14.070-14.095 MHz for RTTY and narrowband data, noting that so-called "weak-signal" data modes often are used between 14.070 and 14.078 MHz.

On 17 meters, the committee recommends confining wide data modes to the FCC-mandated ACDS segment of 18.105-18.110 MHz, separated from narrow RTTY/data at 18.100-18.105 MHz. FCC rules do not permit RTTY/data above 18.110 MHz, limiting options for this band.

On 15 meters, the committee recommends that 21.070-21.090 MHz for narrow RTTY/data modes, the FCC-mandated ACDS segment of 21.090-21.100 MHz for both narrow and wide automatically controlled data station activity, and above 21.100 MHz for any additional wide data activity.

The ARRL Board also wants members to comment on the desirability of adding RTTY/data privileges for Novices and Technicians in their existing 15 meter segment, where they're now limited to CW.

On 12 meters, the committee recommends confining wide data to the FCC-mandated ACDS segment, 24.925-24.930 MHz, separated from narrow RTTY/data operation at 24.920-24.925 MHz. FCC rules do not permit RTTY/data operation above 24.930 MHz, limiting options for this band.

On 10 meters, the committee recommends that wide data be confined to the FCC-mandated ACDS segment, 28.120-28.189 MHz, separated from narrow RTTY/data modes at 28.070-28.120 MHz.

How to Comment

The League has set up a web page to record members' preferences and comments, which includes links to the HF Band Planning Committee report to the ARRL Board and to Sumner's April QST article (and high-resolution band charts). Those wishing to offer more detailed comments may e-mail ARRL. The comment deadline is April 19. The HF Band Planning Committee will deliver its final report at the ARRL Board of Directors' July meeting.

ARRL Partners with Liberty Mutual to Offer Home, Auto Insurance Discounts

ARRL and Liberty Mutual Insurance have reached an agreement to provide League members with home and automobile insurance discounts. In the past, this membership benefit was provided by MetLife. Under the affinity arrangement, a portion of each premium comes back to ARRL.

"Liberty Mutual is an undisputed group-insurance affinity leader with excellent rates," said ARRL Membership Manager Diane Petrilli, KB1RNF. "Convenient support is available by phone, online, or one on one with a local sales representative, and with thousands of dedicated retail agents and hundreds of offices across the country." Given the ready access to Liberty Mutual's customer support, Petrilli said, it will be even easier for ARRL members to obtain quotes, begin coverage, and get answers to any questions.

Petrilli assured members who already have home or auto insurance through the League's arrangement with MetLife that their coverage will continue, but, she added, when the current policy comes up for renewal, the ARRL group discount may no longer apply.

ARRL Marketing Manager Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R, said that League members with existing Liberty Mutual policies should contact Liberty Mutual or their local agent directly to see if they qualify for additional ARRL group savings and discounts. He noted that savings under the new agreement could be substantial, and that members may save even more by bundling their home and auto coverage.

Savings and discounts are available where state laws and regulations allow, and may vary by state. To the extent permitted by law, applicants are individually underwritten, and not all applicants may qualify. Policies are underwritten by the Liberty Mutual Insurance Company and its affiliates, 175 Berkeley St, Boston, MA 02116.

In addition to auto and home insurance, Liberty Mutual offers life, motorcycle, condo, renter's, and personal liability insurance. Liberty Mutual representatives can discuss options and recommend coverage. To learn more, call 800-524-9400 or visit the Liberty Mutual website.

When contacting Liberty Mutual, ARRL members should request group savings and discounts offered to members of the "American Radio Relay League."

Joseph Palsa, K3WRY, Appointed as Virginia Section Manager

Joseph Palsa, K3WRY, has been appointed Virginia Section Manager. An ARRL Life Member from Richmond, Palsa succeeds Carl Clements, W4CAC, of Portsmouth, who has stepped down due to increased work commitments. Palsa's appointment is effective

Virginia SM Joe Palsa, K3WRY.

immediately. ARRL Field Services and Radiosport Manager Dave Patton, NN1N, made the appointment of Palsa in consultation with ARRL Roanoke Division Director Dr Jim Boehner, N2ZZ. Clements had been the Virginia Section Manager since 2008. He also had served in the post from 2001 until 2006. Palsa will complete the current term of office, which continues until March 31, 2016.

An Amateur Radio operator for more than 50 years, Palsa has been serving as Virginia State Government Liaison. During 2014, he was president of the Richmond Amateur Radio Club. In past years, he has held ARRL Field Organization positions as Official Bulletin Station, Official Observer, and Official Emergency Station. Active in ARES, he has received two ARRL Public Service Awards. Palsa enjoys DXing, contesting, and public service communication.

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Two New ARRL Section Managers Will Take Office on April 1

Wyoming and Kentucky will be getting new ARRL Section Managers on April 1, while incumbents in several other sections have been re-elected for new terms. Ballots in contested elections in the winter Section Manager election cycle were counted on February 24 at ARRL Headquarters. Several candidates in this cycle ran unopposed.

In Wyoming, challenger Jack Mitchell, N7MJ, of Cheyenne, will be the new Section Manager. He received 125 votes to 108 votes for incumbent Wyoming SM Garth Crowe, WY7GC, of Gillette. Crowe has served as SM since January 2009.

A ham since 1973, Mitchell is an active ARRL Volunteer Examiner who enjoys exploring and operating new modes, attending hamfests, making new friends, contesting casually, and chasing DX. He currently serves as secretary of ShyWY Amateur Radio Club.

The Kentucky Section will also have a new Section Manager starting in April. Alan Morgan, KY1O, of Paris was the only nominee for the position. An ARRL Life Member for more than 30 years, Morgan has held several leadership posts, including District Emergency Coordinator, Emergency Coordinator, and net manager, and has served as an ARRL-affiliated club president. Outgoing SM Jim Brooks, KY4Z, decided not to run for another term after being at the helm in Kentucky since 2007.

In other contested races, two incumbent SMs prevailed over their challengers. In Arizona, Robert Spencer, KE8DM, of Yuma, outpolled Steven Wood, W1SR, of Tucson, 775 to 464. In Iowa Section Manager Bob McCaffrey, K0CY, of Boone also was re-elected, defeating challenger Scott Kirstein, N0OOD, of Ankey, 402 to 127. Spencer and McCaffrey both have served since 2013 and will be starting their second terms in April.

Several other incumbent Section Managers faced no opposition in this election cycle and have been declared re-elected. They are Dale Temple, W5RXU (Arkansas); Malcolm Keown, W5XX (Mississippi); George Forsyth, AA7GS (Montana); Chris Brewer, N5GMJ (North Texas), and Carl Gardenias, WU6D (Orange).

No One in the Shack as Station Logs 4200+ Contacts in ARRL DX CW Contest

The six-person group operating as K3TN in the recent ARRL International DX Contest (CW) may have made Amateur Radio history by mounting the first completely remote-controlled multioperator contest effort. The scattered K3TN team worked via the Internet through the station of Jack Hammett, K4VV, on Catoctin Ridge in Northern Virginia. All of K4VV's operating positions were vacant over the February 21-22 weekend, because the operators were elsewhere. One participant even managed to operate during the contest from two states -- Maryland and Florida.

Note the absence of chairs in the K4VV shack. The station can be operated remotely as well as on site. [Photo courtesy of Mike Lonneke, W0YR]

"No one was in the K4VV shack for the entire contest!" said Mike Lonneke, W0YR, who took part in the contest via K4VV from his own shack in Virginia. Two other operators were in North Carolina. "Perhaps this is a new category -- Totally Remote (TR)." Lonneke said 3-minute timers at the remote-capable positions allow FCC requirements to be met.

The "Team K4VV" contingent made 4224 contacts and logged 556 multipliers for a claimed score of more than 7 million points -- not a Top 10 score, but respectable. For comparison, the top-scoring K3LR multi-multi operation has claimed 18.85 million points.

K4VV boasts two Telrex "Big Bertha" rotating masts that support 17 wide-spaced Yagi arrays for 10, 15, and 20 meters and a two-stack of four-element OWA Yagis on 40, plus wire antennas for 80 and 160 meters. This is not the sort of antenna farm likely found in the typical suburban neighborhoods from which the K3TN participants operated.

Despite the vagaries of winter weather, the station performed well. "We had a foot of wet snowfall Saturday afternoon/evening, and the station was totally inaccessible," said John Pescatore, K3TN, in a 3830 website log post. "The ops fairly winced as they watched the on-screen direction indicators for K4VV's Big Berthas turn at a tortoise's pace in the near zero-degree cold. But, turn they did. The station played great, and band conditions were, across the board, good."

Mike Lonneke, W0YR. [Norman Styer, AI2C, photo]

Lonneke said one member of the ARRL DX CW team, Bill Rogers, W3UL, started the contest from his home in Maryland, before taking the auto train to Florida and rushing to his condo to finish up.

Team K4VV, a group of more than 20 operators, helps to maintain and operate the station, which has become a real-world laboratory in the to-date niche field of remotely controlled contesting. "Jack's [K4VV] health is not the best," Lonneke noted, "but he is happy to see his station -- an outstanding facility -- used and maintained by a group of his Amateur Radio friends."

Three of K4VV's well-equipped operating positions can be operated either from within the shack or via remote control from anywhere in the world. In 2013 ARRL November Sweepstakes (CW), Tom Morton, CX7TT, who lives in near Montevideo, Uruguay, logged into one of the K4VV operating positions. Operating as W4YY at a distance of nearly 5200 miles, he managed a clean sweep. Lonneke has said that the operating experience from the remote end "is transparent."

John Pescatore, K3TN.

Until recently contacts made during such operations were ineligible for DXCC credit for either station. Changes to the DXCC Rules now allow a control operator to be outside the DXCC entity in which the radio transmitter/receiver is located. For DXCC purposes transmitter location continues to define a station's location. CQ Magazine recently began sponsoring an award for working 100 countries while using remote control.

In addition to Pescatore, Lonneke, and Rogers, the K3TN operators for the ARRL International DX CW were Rick Miller, N1RM, in Virginia; Jim Gulvin, W4TMO, in North Carolina, and Rowland Archer, K4XD, in North Carolina. The K3TN log was submitted under the Potomac Valley Radio Club banner.

Pescatore is hoping to gather a team of phone operators to mount a similar multi-multi effort in the ARRL International DX Contest SSB event in March.

There's a Place for You in the ARRL International DX Phone Contest!

Set aside your CW key, and shake those dits and dahs out of your ears. It's time to get your voice in trim or to program your digital voice keyer. The SSB weekend of the ARRL International DX Contest is Saturday and Sunday, March 8-9 (UTC), and in this major event on the radiosport calendar, the DX will be looking for stations in the US and Canada. There are entry categories for single ops and for multioperator teams as well as a choice of power levels in each category, from QRP to full legal limit. In other words, there's a place for Big Guns, Little Pistols, and everyone in between. Excitement and enthusiasm levels will be high, and it's a terrific opportunity to boost DXCC totals too.

Leonce Richer, FM5DN, in Martinique, took part in the 2014 ARRL DX phone and expected to be back this year.

Not only that, but the ARRL International DX Contest events offer great opportunities to expand your knowledge of MF and HF propagation and to tweak your contesting skills. The basic objective is simple: W/VE amateurs work as many DX stations in as many DXCC entities as possible on the 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, and 10 meter bands. Participating DX stations work as many stations as possible on the 48 contiguous US states and Canadian provinces. US and Canadian stations send a signal report and their state or province abbreviation. DX stations send a signal report and their output power.

The action gets under way March 8 at 0000 UTC (Friday, March 7, in US time zones) and continues for the next 48 hours until March 9 at 2359 UTC. By the way, if you're planning to do this one without any digital voice assistance, keep those lozenges and maybe some hot tea and honey handy. A couple of 2014 participants complained afterward of hoarse throats.

Complete rules and forms are on the ARRL website. E-mail electronic logs (Cabrillo format). Mail paper logs to ARRL DX CW Contest, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111. Logs must be received or postmarked no later than 2359 UTC on Tuesday, April 8, 2015.


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Spacewalks Interrupt ISS Amateur Radio SSTV, School Contact Schedules

Spacewalks recently disrupted previously scheduled Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) activities. ISS crew members Barry Wilmore, Terry Virts, and Samantha Cristoforetti, IZ0UDF, worked outside the ISS on February 21 and 25, and another "extra-vehicular activity" or EVA -- NASA's term for a spacewalk -- is set for March 1. During such excursions, Amateur Radio gear on the ISS is shut down for safety reasons.

Over the past weekend, a planned 3 days of continuous slow-scan TV transmissions from the Russian sector ended up taking place only on February 22 and 23. The occasional SSTV transmissions from RS0ISS are on 145.800 MHz FM, using SSTV mode PD180.

In addition, an ARISS school contact scheduled for February 25 with students at Riversink Elementary School in Crawfordville, Florida, had to be rescheduled for the following day.

Over the course of the series of spacewalks, the astronauts have been preparing cables and communication gear for new docking ports that will allow future crews launched from Florida on US commercial spacecraft to dock with the space station.

Paulo, PV8DX, of AMSAT-Brazil turned the latest series of SSTV transmissions into an educational outreach opportunity. During a

Paulo, PV8DX, demonstrates SSTV to students at the Gonçalves Dias School in Brazil.

February 23 visit to the Gonçalves Dias School, he explained Amateur Radio to the students and demonstrated reception of an SSTV image from the ISS. Although the signal wasn't strong enough to render a clear and complete image, he was able to capture at least part of it, and the students were excited and enthusiastic. Paulo said he's hoping for more ISS SSTV transmissions on weekdays, when youngsters are in school.

Clint Bradford, K6LCS, in California, found that receiving SSTV images from the ISS can really be simple. He used loaded a $3 iOS app onto his iPod Touch and held the device near the speaker of his VHF transceiver. "I didn't think there was too much left in the hobby to excite me, but I was wrong," he said. Greg Dolkas, KO6TH, was equally enthusiastic. "I've never received a clearer SSTV picture from anywhere, let alone outer space!" he said. -- Thanks to ARISS, AMSAT-UK

Australian Hams Respond Following Severe Weather

Amateur Radio volunteers with Australia's Central Queensland Amateur Radio Association (CQARA) initiated nets on HF and VHF in the wake of a tropical cyclone (hurricane). After making landfall on February 20, Cyclone Marcia caused major damage, ripping roofs from structures, downing trees and power lines, and damaging other infrastructure. Flooding was widespread. The cyclone was a category 5 storm with winds of 155 MPH when it hit Yeppoon. It lost intensity as it slowly moved south, and was downgraded to a Category 1 storm.

CQARA volunteers were reported active on 40 meters and 2 meters. Other Wireless Institute Civil Emergency Network (WICEN) groups stood by to help emergency responders. The few people who remained on Queensland's tourist coastal islands were evacuated to shelters. According to Australian news media, many residents were left without electricity, and power was expected to be off for several days. Emergency managers were asking residents to use water only when absolutely necessary. The Rockhampton Airport was closed due to flooding.

Jim Linton, VK3PC, the chairman of IARU Region 3's Disaster Communications Committee, said no deaths were reported due to the storm. "During previous major Queensland cyclones extensive agricultural crops were lost," he pointed out.

A separate weather system dumped rain over southeast Queensland, including the capital of Brisbane, causing some localized flooding.

Elsewhere in Australia, Cyclone Lam, initially a Category 4 storm, engulfed the northeast region of the Northern Territory. Linton said that early evacuation of lightly populated islands and sheltering of residents were effective.

German Radio Amateurs Breathe New Life into "Orphaned" Shortwave Channel

A few radio amateurs are frustrated broadcasters, and when German national broadcaster the Deutsche Welle closed down a 500 kW shortwave broadcast transmitter near Munich, an entity headed and operated by hams applied for and was granted the vacant channel of 6070 kHz in the 49 meter shortwave band. DARC Radio -- which has a business association with the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club (DARC) but is privately owned -- now has a 10 kW broadcast station, branded "Channel 292," up and running, and a new Amateur Radio DX program will debut next month.

"After the demolition of one of the world´s biggest shortwave facilities of the Deutsche Welle last year, we managed to get an official radio broadcast license for the German Amateur Radio Club and have built up a shortwave transmitter with some parts of the old 500 kW transmitter from there," said DARC Radio Project Manager Rainer Englert, DF2NU, an ARRL member and president of the Munich South Section of the DARC. "As far as we know, there is no similar ham project like this worldwide."

The Deutsche Welle used the 6070 kHz channel until mid-2013 for European transmissions. DARC Radio hopes to fund its operating expenses by leasing airtime.

The DARC is a customer, and under its banner, a weekly Amateur Radio-oriented magazine of DARC news, contest schedules, DX information, interviews, DXpedition reports, market reviews, technical hints, and "some nice old music from the '70s and '80s" will debut on Sunday, March 22, at 1000 UTC, Englert told ARRL. The program will

Rainer Englert, DF2NU, with the Deutsche Welle 500 kW transmitter site. [Photo courtesy of Rainer Englert, DF2NU]

be in German, but the RSGB has expressed interest in contributing English-language program segments, he said. The inaugural DX magazine will be repeated on Monday, March 23, at 1600 UTC.

According to the DARC, the initial March 22 broadcast will air from a 100 kW transmitter in Austria, while the repeat broadcast on March 23 will emanate from Radio DARC's 10 kW transmitter near Ingolstadt, Germany.

Rainer Ebeling, DB8QC, owns the official licensee -- Intermedicom GmbH (LLC). He repurposed parts from the driver stages as well as a few transformers from the former Deutsche Welle transmitter for DARC Radio's 10 kW transmitter. "The antenna is a low-hanging, simple dipole with a very high radiation angle, optimized for short-range coverage," Englert explained. The station easily covers much of Western Europe, he said, and also has been heard in Russia and elsewhere, including North America.

The Channel 292 coverage map.

Although its license allows full-time service, the station has mostly been on the air from 0700 until 1700 UTC. The station airs "The Golden Days of Offshore Radio" weekdays at 0700-0900 UTC, with offerings that evoke the era of pirate stations RNI, Radio Caroline, Radio Veronica, and others. In fact, the Channel 292 brand recalls the Channel 192 pirate station of the 1960s and 1970s. It also airs programs in Dutch and Spanish.

Englert said others, in addition to DARC, have been leasing airtime -- currently filling about 20 hours per week. DARC Radio's hourly rate is rock bottom -- about $17.50 US. "This rate really only covers expenditures like electric power and the write-off of the power amplifier," he said. "The transmitter sucks almost 40 kW out of the grid at 100 percent modulation."

"The orphaned shortwave frequencies hardly interest anyone these days," allowed the DARC. "Not so radio amateurs, who will take advantage of these new possibilities to also get broadcasting licenses."

All reception reports to Channel 292 will be answered with a QSL card. Outgoing cards will go out via the DARC QSL bureau.

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"Mega DXpeditions Honor Roll" Posted on GDXF Site

Anyone who likes Top 10 lists or even statistics will find something to appreciate in the "Mega DXpeditions Honor Roll," compiled and posted by Jari Jussila, OH2BU, and Bernd Koch, DF3CB. At the very least, this resource will help to settle any arguments as to the accomplishments of any DXpedition that logged at least 30,000 contacts. The German DX Foundation (GDXF) is hosting the Honor Roll, which includes 221 Mega DXpeditions. Each listing provides a link to details of the DXpedition and QSL card image. Individual links sort the database on various categories, including such statistics as QSOs per day and Top 20 modes.

Jussila had kept and maintained records of DXpeditions making at least 30,000 QSOs and published his list, then containing some 40 DXpeditions, in the late 1990s. Requests to provide additional or corrected information helped to refine the list, which evolved into the Mega DXpeditions Honor Roll. Koch had compiled and maintained the database, which now has found a home on the GDXF website. The list includes statistics for individual DXpeditions.

In terms of contact numbers, topping the list was the 2011 T32C DXpedition to Christmas Island in Eastern Kiribati. The 32-day operation, which boasted 41 operators, logged 213,090 contacts. By way of comparison, the 15 operators mounting the recent 15-day K1N DXpedition to Navassa put 139,702 contacts into the logbook, putting that operation in 9th place in terms of QSO numbers.

The 2011 T32C Christmas Island DXpedition holds the record for the most contacts logged for a multioperator DXpedition.

The average number of operators among the 221 listed operations was 11. The 2006 VU4AN DXpedition to Andaman and Nicobar Islands involved 69 operators -- the most of any DXpedition, although the 403T DXpedition to Montenegro that same year came close, with 60 operators.

One interesting statistic you can glean from the Honor Roll is most-activated DX entities among the 221 listed Mega DXpeditions. The greatest number was six operations to Conway Reef (3D2C). Spratly, Clipperton, Malyj Vysotskij, and Myanmar were grouped as a close second with five DXpeditions each.

Most contacts made during a single-operator DXpedition? That would have been the 53,849 QSOs that Jukka Heikinheimo, OH2BR, logged as VP6BR during his 88-day visit to Pitcairn Island in early 2000. This has been recognized as a Guinness World Record.

The Honor Roll also includes a list of the most active operators to take part in a Mega DXpedition.

Address comments, corrections, or additions to the list to Jari Jussila, OH2BU, and Bernd Koch, DF3CB. -- Thanks to The Daily DX

Nominations Sought for 2015 Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of the Year Award

Amateur Radio Newsline is seeking nominations for its 2015 Young Ham of the Year (YHOTY) Award. To be considered, a nominee must have used Amateur Radio in some way that has benefited his or her community or encouraged technological development directly or indirectly related to communications.

Nominees must be no older than 19 and reside in the United States, Canada, or Puerto Rico. The individual must also hold a currently valid US or Canadian Amateur Radio license.

Candidates considered for the Young Ham of the Year Award will be judged on their overall accomplishments and contributions -- especially in terms of public service activities or experimentation in the areas of science, technology, or electronic communication -- that may be of an outstanding nature. The decision of the judging committee is final.

The deadline to submit an application is May 30, 2015. An application form also is available by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to 2015 Young Ham of the Year Award, c/o Amateur Radio Newsline, 28197 Robin Ave, Santa Clarita, CA 91350. Basic information on required documentation and how to file are included on the nominating form.

Presentation of the 2015 Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of the Year Award will take place at the Huntsville Hamfest, August 15-16, in Huntsville Alabama. -- Thanks to Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF/Amateur Radio Newsline

Astronaut-Ham John Grunsfeld, KC5ZTF, Named to Astronaut Hall of Fame

NASA astronaut and Amateur Radio operator John Grunsfeld, KC5ZTF, is among those to be inducted into the Astronaut Hall of Fame this spring. The others are Margaret Rhea Seddon, Steven Lindsey, and Kent Rominger. They will join previous honorees, including Alan Shepard, Neil Armstrong, and John Young in a ceremony on May 30 at Kennedy Space Center. The 2015 inductees are the 14th class. All told, the group has recorded 18 space shuttle missions over 26 years. An astronomer and astrophysicist, Grunsfeld worked on the Hubble Space Telescope on three shuttle missions.

John Grunsfeld, KC5ZTF. [NASA photo]

To date, fewer than 90 astronauts have been selected by a panel of their peers to join this elite group. Astronaut Hall of Fame inductees are selected from a pool of nominations, with the finalists chosen by a panel of Hall of Fame astronauts, NASA leaders, flight directors, historians, and journalists. For its inaugural class in 1990, the Hall of Fame inducted the original group of US astronauts -- the Mercury Seven.

The Astronaut Hall of Fame features the world's largest collection of personal spaceflight memorabilia. It is operated as part of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.

Now a NASA associate administrator for science, Grunsfeld is a veteran of five spaceflights. He logged more than 58 days in space and eight spacewalks. His first flight was in 1995 as part of the STS-67 shuttle mission aboard Endeavour. -- Thanks to AMSAT News Service via Spaceflight Insider


The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Average daily sunspot numbers over the past week were about the same (59) as last week (54.6), while average daily solar flux declined from 121.4 to 116.3.

Average daily planetary A index increased from 9 to 11.3. The average daily mid-latitude A index also was higher, rising from 7 to 9.3.

These numbers compare the 7-day period from February 19-25 with the previous 7 days.

The NOAA/USAF 45-day forecasts for planetary A index and solar flux have been late on several days this week. The latest available is for February 24, which calls for solar flux at 125 for February 26 through March 5, 130 on March 6, 135 for March 7-9, 130 on March 10, 125 for March 11-12, 120 for March 13-17, and 115 for March 18-23. Solar flux then reaches a peak of 135 for April 3-5 before declining again.

Predicted planetary A index is 10, 8, and 20 for February 26-28, then 22, 15, and 8 for March 1-3, then 10, 5, and 7 for March 4-6, rising back to 10 for March 7-8, down to 5 for March 9-13, then 10, and 5 for March 14-15, 15 for March 16-17, 8 on March 18, and 5 for March 19-21.

John Magliacane, KD2BD, of Sea Girt, New Jersey, e-mailed a blast from the past -- some old e-mail from me, ARRL bulletins, and various posts from the late 1980s and early 1990s on Usenet and the Amateur Packet Radio Network, which he recovered from archives on an old hard drive. I hope to post some newly recovered ARRL Propagation Bulletins from 1990-1991. Let me know if you find any old archives such as this.

This weekly "Solar Update" in The ARRL Letter is a preview of the "Propagation Bulletin" issued each Friday. The latest bulletin and an archive of past propagation bulletins is on the ARRL website.

For Friday's bulletin, look for an updated forecast and reports from readers. Send me your reports and observations. -- Tad Cook, K7RA


Just Ahead in Radiosport
  • February 27-March 1 -- CQ World Wide 160 Meter Contest (SSB)

  • February 28-March 1 -- Worldwide EME Contest

  • February 28-March 1 -- UBA Contest (CW)

  • February 28-March 1 -- North American QSO Party (RTTY)

  • March 1-2 -- North Carolina QSO Party

  • March 2 -- OK1WC Memorial Contest (SSB, CW)

  • March 3 -- ARS Spartan Sprint

  • March 3 -- YL CW Party

  • March 4 -- CWOps Weekly Mini-CWT Tests

  • March 4 -- John Rollins Memorial DX Contest (CW)

See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information.


Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.


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