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#1
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Yosemite Sam-An Update!
HAM VS. SPY (RADIO)
...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) dxAce Michigan USA |
#2
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dxAce wrote:
HAM VS. SPY (RADIO) ...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) dxAce Michigan USA Looks like Sam WAS a government operation after all. But I don't know why the government put it in the middle of a ham band. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#3
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dxAce wrote: HAM VS. SPY (RADIO) ...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) As an aside to this there was also another group looking for the transmitter site at the same time. I believe they came upon the site after these two left, which may have some bearing on the matter. I think the two different groups have compared notes after the incident was over. dxAce Michigan USA |
#4
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running dogg wrote: dxAce wrote: HAM VS. SPY (RADIO) ...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) dxAce Michigan USA Looks like Sam WAS a government operation after all. But I don't know why the government put it in the middle of a ham band. Well maybe not... read it again! It may have indeed come from a government site, however, it may not have been run by the government itself. dxAce Michigan USA |
#5
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dxAce wrote:
HAM VS. SPY (RADIO) ...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) dxAce Michigan USA Looks like Sam WAS a government operation after all. But I don't know why the government put it in the middle of a ham band. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#6
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running dogg wrote: dxAce wrote: HAM VS. SPY (RADIO) ...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) dxAce Michigan USA Looks like Sam WAS a government operation after all. But I don't know why the government put it in the middle of a ham band. You said that already! I think you got a runaway server there! dxAce Michigan USA |
#7
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Eat your heart out, Ace-Hole!
dxAce wrote: HAM VS. SPY (RADIO) ...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) dxAce Michigan USA |
#8
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dxAce wrote:
running dogg wrote: dxAce wrote: HAM VS. SPY (RADIO) ...When a pair of New Mexico hams decided to trace down some interference on the 75 meter band, they had no idea that they may have been entering a world of spy versus spy. Or should we say hams versus spy. Here`s mo On Wednesday, February 16th, Mike Stark, WA5OIP and Mike Langner K5MGR set out to locate some annoying interference on 3.700 MHz, a signal that had been on the band since last December. The interference manifested itself as a digital data burst followed by an audio clip from a Yosemite Sam cartoon. Nope. I am not kidding you. Each transmission ended with the famous line where Sam says: Actual interfereing audio: (data buss followed by) ``Varmint, I`m agonna blow you to smithereenes...`` The interference came on for just a few seconds at intervals of just under 2 minutes. The fact that Yosemite Sam was loud and clear told the Stark and Langer that the interference was intentional and not simply a transmitter gone bizzerk. Using Stark`s mobile installation the pair quickly found that the signal grew stronger as they headed West. They then shifted to a Potomac Field Intensity Meter with a shielded loop antenna. Using this gear they located the offending transmitter at the MATIC facility on the Laguna Indian Reservation. MATIC is an acronym for the Mobility Assessment Test and Integration Center. This is a military facility used to develop advanced battlefield communications systems and not generally known to the public. The two hams dove up to the building. At no time did they leave the public highway. Langer began taking pictures of the towers, antennas, and building. Immediately a not-very-friendly guy started walking towards their truck. He was yelling and gesturing for the hams to stop taking pictures and go away. Langer and Stark beat a hasty retreat. Now here`s the real kicker. The ham radio T-hunters found the interfering transmitter at about 2:30 in the afternoon. The signal went off the air around 5:30 that evening and has not been heard since. Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I`m Evi Simons, reporting. A few other notes. Langer says that about 5 minutes before he and Stark located the exact source of the interference, a pickup truck had passed them as they were parked and taking a bearing. He thinks that the driver must have told someone at the facility that they were being hunted. He also expresses his belief that the signal was from some kind of automatic link radio. Also that the data burst was information, and that someone had recorded the Yosemite Sam clip where call letters would normally go. You can take a look at what the two hams saw on the web site for the project. It`s at http://www.laguna- industries.com/Lines_of_Business/MATIC_Center/matic_center.html or at http://www.rdecom.army.mil/rdemagazi...tl_mosaic.html (K5FSB via Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1438 - March 4, 2005 via John Norfolk, dxldyg) dxAce Michigan USA Looks like Sam WAS a government operation after all. But I don't know why the government put it in the middle of a ham band. You said that already! I think you got a runaway server there! dxAce Michigan USA Same problem was happening yesterday - every post was showing up *twice*. Disappeared after an hour or so (?) Tony ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#9
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Well,that stuff about Yosemite Sam makes for interesting reading anyway.
cuhulin |
#10
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-=jd=- wrote:
On Fri 04 Mar 2005 04:45:29p, running dogg wrote in message : (snip) Looks like Sam WAS a government operation after all. But I don't know why the government put it in the middle of a ham band. Possibly, but the hams tracking the signal thought differently: "...Langer suggests that the origin was a contractor`s employee having having a little fun on the radio. Obviously his or her superiors got the message that ham radio operators do not consider interference to their spectrum to be something to enjoy..." If so, the employee may have committed the ultimate sin: Having fun on company time. Some organizations can't bear the thought of anyone having a good time on the clock. It's like the sound of running water to a beaver. It gets on his nerves and he has to put a stop to it. Having a good time in the middle of a ham band is not advised. That said, we ARE talking about the US government, which can't stand independent thought of any kind by anybody. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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