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dxAce wrote in message ...
They shut down amateur radio transmitting at the time, however I do not think that receiving was curtailed. dxAce Michigan USA I have two issues of that Jan 42 QST. In the center of it, it had a 4 page yellow paper announcement to that effect. I activated the scanning device here in studio X, and ran off copies of all 4 pages. These are reduced quality to quicken d/l speeds, but should still be quite readable. They are really yellow, but I scanned in b/w to also reduce the file size. This will give an idea of the amateur mindset at that time. BTW, in some countries, I believe even receiving was frowned upon. Mainly because the osc stages in the radios could be used to track the location of the receiver, and theoretically could be used by the enemy for tracking purposes. But I think that was more in Europe, than in the U.S. IE: England was pretty strict, and have been for years. They used to use that osc tracking method to hunt down receivers that hadn't paid the radio tax, or whatever they required...Same for TV's I think. The QST images are in my ISP "briefcase" at : http://briefcase.wt.net/cgi-perl/Lis...26b32620cf18ea They are the four files named WW2-??.jpg....MK |
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