Subj : Amateur Radio Newsline (A) To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri May 10 2019 06:10:46 Amateur Radio Newsline 2167, for Friday, May 10, 2019 Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2167, with a release date of Friday, May 10, 2019, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1. The following is a QST. Hams step up when a cyclone bears down on India. A beloved DXer in Greece becomes a Silent Key - and are you headed to Hamvention? All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Number 2167, comes your way right now. ** BILLBOARD CART ** HAMS ASSIST AS CYCLONE FANI BEARS DOWN ON INDIA PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week finds us in India, where hams showed their strengths amid a raging cyclone. Here's Jason Daniels, VK2LAW. JASON: Cyclone Fani, the deadly storm that swept into coastal India and Bangladesh on the third of May is history. Although at least 34 people in the Indian state of Odisha, and 15 more in Bangladesh were reported to have been killed, authorities say the high level of emergency preparedness in the region kept the death toll from going higher, as winds reached up to 127 miles (or more than 200 kilometres) per hour. That preparedness included the amateur radio operators of southeast Asia. One ham, Nilkantha Chatterjee, VU3ZHA, was credited with crafting a website in cooperation with the Climate Resilient Observing Systems Promotion Council, enabling storm victims to help track persons who had gone missing during the cyclone. The lost-and-found portal of the Amateur Radio Development Society included two toll-free numbers linking people to disaster control operators. Meanwhile, Arunava Dey, VU3XRY, Debdutta Mukherjee, and Avrajit Das, VU3YDA, of the West Bengal Radio Club, traveled to help the Odisha State Disaster Management Authority establish communication links, using VHF and HF radios, braving wind speeds of as much as 118 miles (or 190 kilometres) per hour. In Kolkata, Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, and others assisted in relaying messages to Delhi. With the storm now gone, those remaining in its wake have been wrestling with power outages, and shortages of water. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jason Daniels, VK2LAW. (THE INDIAN EXPRESS, NDTV, FACEBOOK) ** SILENT KEY: MONK APOLLO SV2ASP/A PAUL/ANCHOR: The DXing community has lost a beloved friend, who called QR Zed from a Greek monastery. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, has the details. JEREMY: The noted DXer, Monk Apollo SV2ASP/A, known to hams around the world for operating from Mount Athos in northern Greece, has become a Silent Key. One of the earliest reports of his death was made by Masa, JE1LET, on his page on QRZed dot com. Masa said in an email to Newsline that he learned of Apollo's death on the 5th of May, from a Greek friend visiting Mount Athos. An Orthodox Christian monk since 1973, and a resident of the Holy Monastery of Dochiariou (DOH HEE AR EE YOU) since 1980, Apollo received his amateur licence in 1988, becoming the first active ham radio operator on Athos. On his QRZed page, Apollo said he was inspired to become a ham, after one of the brothers became seriously injured in a gardening accident in 1986. One of the physicians at the hospital in Thessalonica, who also happened to be chairman of the Radio Amateur Union of Northern Greece, recommended that the monastery have a resident ham radio operator for reasons of safety, as well as security. Masa told Newsline Apollo had most likely not been on the air since last December, and that his condition had deteriorated since his first surgery on his head. Masa said he'd been unable to speak, see, or walk. Masa said that following Apollo's death in the monastery, a funeral was held at noon local time, on the 6th of May. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH. ** COUNTDOWN TO HAMVENTION - AND AN APP TO PACK PAUL/ANCHOR: Are you packed for Dayton Hamvention yet? Well don't forget your app. Organizers have rolled out the first Dayton Hamvention event mobile app, compatible with both Apple and Android platforms. Use it to track activities, events, and exhibits, and even winners of all those coveted prizes. The free app was developed by TripBuilder Media, in a collaboration between Dayton Hamvention, and the ARRL. The Hamvention App is called "ARRL Hamvention 2019", but if you search for "Hamvention", you'll find it. If you are going to Hamvention, be sure to look for the Newsline booth between the Heil Sound, and ICOM, and say hello. We love to meet our listeners. (ARRL) --- SBBSecho 3.07-Win32 * Origin: ILinkNet: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (454:1/33) .