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"Bob Haberkost" wrote in message ... Although....it was Castro who abrogated Cuba's commitment to NARBA. Before then, Cuba and the US got along famously, and there was no problems in Cubans getting U-S radio, or Floridians Cuban radio. And, Rich is right. When we make nice with Cuba, Castro throttles back the blowtorches, since the whole island does perfectly well with 5kW on most channels (which shoots down your point that Cuba is entitled to 1As or Bs). Conductivity in Cuba is like much of Puerto Rico... horrible. The only net in pre-castro years that covered all of Cuba was Circuito CMQ, with about a dozen staitons, ranging from 50 kw to 10 kw. Today, the major networks have 5 or 6 staitons, but use 10 to 120 kw to fully cover the Island. There are a half dozen national nets, many regional nets and a lot of local stations. It's only when the U-S government starts up with some provocative propaganda intiative that Castro smokes Florida (and points north...I remember how hard it was to listen to Jean Shepherd on WOR when the fight was on between the two antagonists, as there was an operation on 710 which ran 250kW or some such in Cuba). Nope. It was a set of 50 kw stations in each "third" of Cuba, running regular programming. Now, there is a single 50 and two or three 10 kw stations. |
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