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Old July 16th 03, 02:22 AM
N8KDV
 
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Les & Claire wrote:

....... is there an up to date one to be had anywhere?

Les


Yes, I posted it here earlier.



"N8KDV" wrote in message
...
The schedule below may be a bit dated in certain respects. I havn't

checked it
all, but I do notice some errors.

Les & Claire wrote:

Got no response in here after asking for info on VoK. So here's what I

dug
up... i've had no luck yet here in UK so far. Hope others do

better........

Radio Pyongyang. Voice of Korea

0100-0200 6520, 7580, 11735 (CAm)
6195, 7140, 9345 (SEAs/China)

0200-0300 4405, 9325, 11335 (SEAs)

0300-0400 3560, 6195, 7140, 9345 (NEChina)

0300-0400 3560, 6195, 7140, 9345 (NEChina)

1000-1100 3560 (NEAs)
9335, 11710 (CAm)
9850, 11735 (SEAs)

1300-1400 4405 (EAs),
9335, 11710 (NAm)
7505, 11335 (Eu)

1500-1600 9335, 11710 (NAm)
11335, 7505 (Eu)

1600-1700 3560 (EAs),
9975, 11735 (ME/Af)

1900-2200 4405 (EAs)
7505, 11335 (Eu)

Af = Africa, Am = America, As = Asia, C = Central, Eu = Europe,
E = East, N = North, S = South, W = West, ME = Middle East

13/07/2003

--
http://tinyurl.com/g5z8

"Oh Bother!" said the Borg, "We've assimilated Pooh!"
_ _

"That's 10 times i've explained binary to you.! I won't tell you a 3rd
time!"
_ _

The return E-Mail address is obviously flawed.



  #12   Report Post  
Old July 16th 03, 03:37 AM
bankstonb
 
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Heard them this evening at 0120 UTC on 15180 ... decent signal strength and
readability (thank god for low static levels tonight !)

Barry N4IJN
Fredericksburg, VA



"Les & Claire" wrote in message
...
Got no response in here after asking for info on VoK. So here's what I dug
up... i've had no luck yet here in UK so far. Hope others do

better........

Radio Pyongyang. Voice of Korea


0100-0200 6520, 7580, 11735 (CAm)
6195, 7140, 9345 (SEAs/China)

0200-0300 4405, 9325, 11335 (SEAs)

0300-0400 3560, 6195, 7140, 9345 (NEChina)

0300-0400 3560, 6195, 7140, 9345 (NEChina)

1000-1100 3560 (NEAs)
9335, 11710 (CAm)
9850, 11735 (SEAs)

1300-1400 4405 (EAs),
9335, 11710 (NAm)
7505, 11335 (Eu)

1500-1600 9335, 11710 (NAm)
11335, 7505 (Eu)

1600-1700 3560 (EAs),
9975, 11735 (ME/Af)

1900-2200 4405 (EAs)
7505, 11335 (Eu)



Af = Africa, Am = America, As = Asia, C = Central, Eu = Europe,
E = East, N = North, S = South, W = West, ME = Middle East


13/07/2003



--
http://tinyurl.com/g5z8

"Oh Bother!" said the Borg, "We've assimilated Pooh!"
_ _

"That's 10 times i've explained binary to you.! I won't tell you a 3rd
time!"
_ _

The return E-Mail address is obviously flawed.




  #13   Report Post  
Old July 16th 03, 08:39 AM
Les & Claire
 
Posts: n/a
Default

is MI Minnesota or Missouri?

Les

"N8KDV" wrote in message
...


Les & Claire wrote:

Currently audible here in English at 2100 on 15245.


..... could you give the time in utc please?


I did... it was 2100

or what time zone were you
listening in?

Les

"N8KDV" wrote in message
...

Steve
Holland, MI

Drake R7, R8 and R8B

Dave wrote:

The only reception of VoK I can report was a couple nights ago

(around
1500/1600 UTC) on 13760 and in spanish. Good signal though. And

I'm in
Houston.

Dave


gs wrote in message
...

"I. P. Yurin" wrote in

message
...
Got no response in here after asking for info on VoK. So

here's
what
I
dug
up... i've had no luck yet here in UK so far. Hope others do
better........

I haven't much luck with their English transmissions over the last

few
years.
Even when the signal is audible, I can't understand 1/2 of what

the
commentators
say due to their *heavy* accents.

The non-English transmissions seem to be stronger.

DPRK rhetoric can be had here
http://www.kcna.co.jp/index-e.htm
if you don't mind using the 'net.

This was my favorite DPRK headline dated July 14, 2003. They are
reprocessing uranium but revel over the making of a "rotating

astronomical
chart".

http://www.kcna.co.jp/index-e.htm
Rotating astronomical chart made in DPRK
Pyongyang, July 14 (KCNA) -- Astronomers and archaeologists of

the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea have succeeded in making a

rotating
astronomical chart. It, made on the basis of the precession of the

earth
and
the principle of the movement of celestial bodies, can observe the

changed
constellations of any times.
Astronomical years of the ancient times measured by using the

chart
coincide with those measured by archaeological and nuclear

physical
means.
The standard astronomical chart makes it possible to measure

the
astronomical years according to the changed angles of

constellations
and
ascertain astronomical data reflected in historical relics.
It also makes it possible to correctly observe the past,

present
and
future constellations.






  #14   Report Post  
Old July 16th 03, 08:56 AM
Brenda Ann
 
Posts: n/a
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"Les & Claire" wrote in message
...
is MI Minnesota or Missouri?


Neither, it's Michigan.

Missouri is MO, Minnesota is MN


  #15   Report Post  
Old July 16th 03, 09:32 AM
I. P. Yurin
 
Posts: n/a
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On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 19:55:51 GMT, "gs" wrote:


DPRK rhetoric can be had here http://www.kcna.co.jp/index-e.htm
if you don't mind using the 'net.


Now that everyone can catch VOK on the net, there is no reason to not
play that famous drinking game: "Great Leader"

Every time one hears the phrase "Great Leader" one has to down a shot
or glass of beer. Of course, about halfway through the hour-long
broadcast most everbody is flat out on the floor with their tongues
hanging out and Xs over their eyes. Playing this game one never hears
the scheduled anti-American Imperialists rant in the last 15 minutes.

For a real Jonestown ecperience also include the phrases "Legendary
Great Man" and "Unrivaled Great Man" and "Peerless Leader."


An excellent idea, but as you point out, the frequency of "winning"
phrases will kill most people.

This can be done with other broadcasters, for money!

Take for example my favorite preacher, Pastor John Lewis.

You start with a list of stock words, phrases, and topics. Make the
number of items in the list evenly divisible by the number of players.

Accord each item a point value based on its likelihood of occurrence.
More likely to occur == fewer points; less likely == more points. For
example, we might use something like this:

A. "cock-eyed reprobate" (1 point)
B. "you're gowin' ta hell, boah!" (1 point)
C. "faggot maggot" (3 points)
D. "civil magistrate" (5 points)
E. "raghead" (3 points)
F. "sodomite" (1 point)
G. "muddered bebbies" (2 points)
H. "mother-in-law" (2 points)

and so on.

Now before the broadcast begins, each player chooses in turn a term
for their list. All the terms get distributed this way. The players
are "betting" their choices will occur often in the 1 hour diatribe.

While listening to the broadcast, players keep a running tally of the
points they get for each instance where Pastor John employs their
terms. At the end of the broadcast, winner pockets the stakes.

To keep it interesting, you should also list separately some odd and
unlikely topics or words. These count as "liabilities." If your
liability (or one of them) occurs, then you lose all points won so far
and restart from 0. This keeps it interesting until the end of the
broadcast: even if one guy has 3 times the points everyone else has,
he could see them all wiped out if Pastor John's ramble brings up one
of his liabilities. Some examples might be:

a. space aliens
b. Jean-Paul Sartre
c. cold fusion
d. loch ness monster.

The point, naturally, is that these topics are highly unlikely to turn
up. But you never know. Pastor John has an opinion on every topic. You
might be enjoying a 100 point lead with 2 minutes left in the
broadcast but then -- inexplicably -- Pastor John launches into a rant
about UFOs and your points evaporate.

Plenty of fun to be had by all! You can make it a drinking game too,
if you like (just don't use "reprobate" or "sodomite" or you'll all be
in the hospital after 30 minutes). You can also adapt the idea to
other shows: Alex Jones, Brother Stair, Harold Camping -- anyone with
a half-dozen obsessions they can't shake.


--
Col. I.P. Yurin
Commissariat of Internal Security

Stakhanovite
Order of Lenin (1937)
Hero of Socialist Labor (1939)
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