Tuesday, November 30, 2004

US Job Opportunity for Native Journalists!


Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2004 14:53:26 -0700 (MST)
From: NAJA-Email Alerts <naja@naja.com>
Organization: NAJA-Email Alerts
List: naja
Subject: Job Opportunity for Native Journalists!

Lakota Journal Looking for Indian Reporters

Indian-owned weekly newspaper has several positions open for staff writers familiar with Indian Country. Two office locations in Rapid City, S.D. and Flandreau, S.D.

Full time, 40 hours per week, salary DOE. Experience preferred but will consider training applicants with strong writing skills. Must be familiar with newspaper style and adhere to deadlines. Must have a dependable vehicle. Must be able to build up contacts in tribal communities. Possibility of training as managing editor.

To apply, send resume and at least three writing samples to
Serenity J. Banks, Editor, PO Box 3080, Rapid City, SD 57709.
 
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Radio Insurgente Inaugura su pagina web

Radio Insurgente Inaugura su pagina web
Martes 23 de Noviembre 2004 / Tuesday November 23, 2004

 
La Radio Insurgente, Voz del EZLN via las ondas radiales ha inaugurado su pagina de internet con posibilidades de descargar producciones suyas en formato de mp3 para re-difusion y re-destribucion. La pagina marca otra avance en la comunicacion autonoma de l@s Zapatistas. Visita su pagina, ponse en contacto con ell@s directamente a traves de su pagina y su correo
electronico.


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Russia to head Arctic Council for two years

Itar-Tass, Tue, 23 Nov 2004 11:30 PM PST
Russia to head Arctic Council for two years http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=1489208&PageNum=0
OSLO, November 24 (Itar-Tass) - The Arctic Council, a high-level intergovernmental forum that provides a mechanism to address the common concerns and challenges faced by the Arctic governments and the people of the Arctic, is to hold a ministerial-level meeting in Reykjavik beginning on Wednesday.

Russian Information Agency Novosti, Tue, 23 Nov 2004 11:28 PM PST
REYKJAVIK, November 24, (RIA Novosti) - On Wednesday, November 24, in Reykjavik (Iceland), the Arctic Council will meet for a session at which the presidency of this organisation will pass from Iceland to Russia, Alexander Yakovenko, an official Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman, said in a RIA Novosti interview.

Monday, November 29, 2004

Call for essays on cultural labor


Details on the format of Social Semiotics submissions are at this link,
although you should in fact email them to Toby Miller at tobym@ucr.edu


From: Richard Maxwell rmaxwell@gc.cuny.edu

Toby Miller asked me to forward this request for submissions to a special issue of Social Semiotics on the subject of cultural labor.
This is about any dimension of cultural work--so the focus ranges from producer/distributor work to consumers' labor in all areas of culture (art, education, religion, sex, food, media, entertainment, domestic realm, music, policy, filmmaking, etc).  Obviously, this can be focused on individual or collective forms of creative/intellectual work, labor processes, labor movements within cultural industries, theorizations of the place of labor in cultural analysis, etc.  The idea is to foreground this routinely obscured area of cultural life.  Essays can be any length up to 8000 words.  Don't be distracted by the journal title--they actually publish non-semiotic oriented work.


I'm writing to see if you'd be interested in submitting an essay for a special issue of Social Semiotics that I'm editing. The issue is on cultural labor, as broadly defined. Maximum length is 8000 words and due date is beginning of February 2005. Let me know if this of interest.

Details on the format of Social Semiotics submissions are at
this link,
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/csosauth.asp
although you should in fact email them to Toby Miller at tobym@ucr.edu

Best

Toby
Toby Miller tobym@ucr.edu
Professor of English, Sociology, and Women's Studies
Director of Program in Film and Visual Culture
University of California, Riverside

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The Union for Democratic Communications is a group of communications researchers, theorists, educators, journalists, media producers, policy analysts, and activists. The UDC is dedicated to the critical study of communications establishments and its policies; the production and distribution of democratically controlled media; the fostering of alternative, oppositional, independent, and experimental production; and the development of democratic communications systems at local, regional, national and international levels.

The purpose of this listserv is to provide a forum for announcements relating to the organization's goals and objectives. There is no charge for posting announcements, but they will be posted one time only. Send submissions to UDC-L@lists.psu.edu.

New subscribers can join by sending mail to mailto:UDC-L-subscribe-request@lists.psu.edu.
No subject or message text is required.
To unsubscribe, send mail to mailto:UDC-L-unsubscribe-request@lists.psu.edu.
Again, no subject or message text is required.

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INDIA: Dharmendra supports community radio


Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2004 00:19:24 +0530
From: Arun Mehta arunlists@softhome.net
Subject: [cr-india] Dharmendra supports community radio
List-Help: mailto:cr-india-request@sarai.net?subject=help
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Four minutes an hour of advertising? Where does that number come from? Maybe we should try to approach these MPs too, if they are so interested in community radio, to help us get a sensible community radio policy.
Arun
_______

Community radio: MPs tune in to Dharmendra funds plea
ANURADHA RAMAN 

Posted online: Monday, November 29, 2004 at 0224 hours IST

NEW DELHI, NOVEMBER 28: With the Information and Broadcasting Ministry's track record on community radio plummetting, actor-MP Dharmendra's suggestion that MPs should part with their MPLADS money to give the necessary push is likely to come in handy if the dismal statistics is anything to go by.

After envisaging 1,000 community radio stations in the country three years ago, only one, in Tamil Nadu, is in operation-that too was a political decision taken by the previous NDA Government.

Perhaps it was only befitting that BJP MP and actor Dharmendra pointed out that if MPs could part with their MPLADS money-more specifically, if each MP could fund at least two Community Radio Stations-community radio would bloom. Each MP gets Rs 2 crore annually.

As per the admission of the ministry, a total of 60 applications had been received, of which 38 eligible applications had been sent to the other concerned ministries for clearance. Letters of intent had been signed in 26 cases and licence agreements in 10 cases.

....

Addressing the Parliamentary Consultative Committee attached to the Ministries of Information and Broadcasting, and Culture, I&B Minister Jaipal Reddy said community radio has socio-economic and cultural relevance, as it caters to the information and entertainment needs of small communities and the programmes have local flavour.

Other parliamentary members who attended the meeting, sources said, agreed on the usefulness of community radios, but expressed concern on the funding ability of the community/organisations in the remote rural areas since they are run on a no-profit basis. Also, the restriction of advertisement time-four minutes to an hour leaves little room for generating funds to run the station.



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Sunday, November 28, 2004

11th. ARTISTS RESIDENCIES and FILM FEST, BALATONFURED, HUNGARY 2005


Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 08:42:54 -0800 (PST)
From: Beata Szechy <bszechy@yahoo.com>

Subject: [syndicate] 11th. ARTISTS RESIDENCIES and FILM FEST, BALATONFURED, HUNGARY 2005

11th. ARTISTS RESIDENCIES and FILM FEST, BALATONFURED, HUNGARY 2005
Dates:  06/27 - 07/23, 2005  *  07/25 - 08/20, 2005

entry forms for film fest and residencies on web:


Hungarian Multicultural Center, Inc.Æ (HMC), non-profit organization, invites interested visual artists and writers to submit application for its residency programs in Balatonfured, Hungary.  Its principal focus is an international residency program to which artists from around the world are invited.  The goal is to provide a supportive community with uninterrupted time to work.  Exhibitions will be arranged at Balatonfured Gallery (exhibit opening on August 18th).  Also, every two years we are organizing an exhibition for the participants at Vizivarosi Gallery in Budapest.  For more info and application form please contact us.

January 20/05:  Last day to receive entry form, slides, $35 entry fee and SASE.

January 29/05:  Accepted/Rejected notification cards mailed.

Eligibility:  Open to all professional artists, writers, painters, photographers, video...

Juried

Slides:  Work will be juried by 35mm slides in standard mounts (no glass).  Label slides with name, title of work, medium, dimensions, top and date of work.  Slides of accepted work will be retained for permanent file.

Request entry form on email:            bszechy@yahoo.com
Request entry form on mail (SASE):      HMC  P.O.Box 141374, DALLAS, TX 75214
Request entry form on web:              http://www.hungarian-multicultural-center.com




 

 

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Syndicate network for media culture and media art
information and archive: http://anart.no/~syndicate

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New Media: Advertising on the Homeless

[From Expatica, News and Information for Expats in The Netherlands]


Homeless in Amsterdam advertise ice cream

[Excerpt]

24 November 2004

AMSTERDAM - Dozens of homeless people have appeared on the streets of Amsterdam sporting warm jackets emblazoned with an advert for ice cream maker Ben & Jerry's.

The scheme is the brain child of the Augustinian nuns of Warmoesstraat to help pay for the food and shelter they provide for homeless people.

The nuns say they are offering businesses the opportunity  to advertise in a socially responsible way in exchange for a donation. Due to the advancing years of many of their members, the nuns now have to pay people to perform some of their services, including distributing free sandwiches to the homeless.

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http://www.cafecancun.com/portfolio

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National Science Foundation to help CIA spy on IRC chatrooms


CIA checks out chatrooms
November 25 2004
by Declan McCullagh

[Excerpts]

In April 2003, the CIA agreed to fund a series of research projects that the documents indicate were intended to create "new capabilities to combat terrorism through advanced technology". One of those projects is research at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., devoted to automated monitoring and profiling of the behaviour of chatroom users.

Even though the money ostensibly comes from the National Science Foundation, CIA officials were involved in selecting recipients for the research grants, according to a contract between the two agencies obtained by the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) and reviewed by silicon.com sister site CNET News.com.

EPIC director Marc Rotenberg, whose nonprofit group obtained the documents through the Freedom of Information Act, said the CIA's clandestine involvement was worrisome. "The intelligence community is changing the priorities of scientific research in the US," Rotenberg
said. "You have to be careful that the National Science Foundation
doesn't become the National Spy Foundation."

A CIA representative would not answer questions, saying the agency's policy is never to talk about funding. The two Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute researchers involved, Bulent Yener and Mukkai Krishnamoorthy, did not respond to interview requests.

Yener and Krishnamoorthy, both associate professors of computer science, wrote that their research would involve writing a program for "silently listening" to an Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel and "logging all the messages".

A June 2004 paper they published, also funded by the NSF, described a project that quietly monitored users of the popular Undernet network, which has about 144,000 users and 50,000 channels. In the paper, Yener and Krishnamoorthy predicted their work "could aid [the] intelligence
community to eavesdrop in chatrooms, profile chatters and identify hidden groups of chatters in a cost-effective way" and that their future research will focus on identifying "topic-based information".


 
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Saturday, November 27, 2004

Broadband Over Power Lines interference for shortwave radio


Date: Sat, 27 Nov 2004 21:30:31 -0500 (EST)
From: parallax@riseup.net

Subject: [IMC-Audio] Broadband interference for shortwave radio

Not sure if people have heard about this...



BPL is short for Broadband Over Power Lines. It is also known as Power Line Communications, or PLC in some places.

Essentially, BPL is high speed internet access/service delivered by way of existing electrical power lines. It is envisioned to provide consumers with a third option for broadband internet access, in addition to cable internet service and a phone company's high speed DSL (digital subscriber line) service.

BPL technology is based on using the 2-80 MHz (megahertz) range of the radio frequency spectrum to transmit data over large powerline arrays. In doing so, BPL will emit enormous amounts of radio frequency interference across lots of frequencies already in use, such as international shortwave and ham radio broadcasts. BPL will put out noise all across the international shortwave broadcasting bands (3-30 MHz), effectively obliterating shortwave radio reception to listeners within the USA.

Also affected will be airline pilots, ship to shore communications, emergency services, lower end TV channels, citizens band (CB) radio, military, police, fire, air traffic control, mobile and AM radio frequencies. Anything operating in the 2-80 MHz range will be affected.

Shortwave radio listeners within the USA will have the toughest time, since BPL will disrupt foreign broadcasts from all over the globe. BPL will ruin large parts of the shortwave radio spectrum within America if pushed ahead quickly and largely implemented across the country by 2007, as envisioned.

Truely, BPL is a clear and present danger to international shortwave broadcasters and listeners all across the world. It is obviously being used as an erected 'firewall' by domestic and international media interests to restrict and censor foreign news and information from reaching American listeners.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has been the prime public mover and supporter of BPL in the USA, with its chairman, Michael Powell, recently calling BPL "tremendously exciting" and a "broadband nirvana" for the telecommunications industry. The FCC has also recently voted to allow international media conglomerates the ability to increase their holdings in television stations and newspapers, another signal that fewer and fewer companies will end up controlling more and more of what people hear, see and read.

Internationally, BPL has been tested and halted because of massive radio frequency interference in Japan, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Finland, Austria, the Netherlands and other countries. The Austrian Red Cross reported that during an exercise in May 2003, communications were "massively disturbed" by BPL, with intereference levels exceeding the limit by a factor of 10,000. Dietland Hansen, the external chairman of the advisory group on BPL to RegTP, Germany's FCC equivalent, noted, "it suffers the enormous risk of uncontrolled interference to everyone". During test trials of BPL in Britain and Japan, Mr Hansen stated that interference was so strong that they pulled the plug on BPL.

BPL or Broadband Over Power Lines, though a brilliant idea, is too disruptive to broadcasts, transmissions and communications that already occupy and operate within the radio frequency range now in contention. As BPL is seen as a takeover of the entire High Frequency (HF) radio spectrum by a handful of electric utilities subservient to the Bush Administration's love of all things that pollute, so too must efforts be put forth to preserve and protect certain portions of the electromagnetic radio frequency spectrum from the reckless exploitation, damage and pollution of this most unique natural resource.



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New Fund for African Community Radio

AMARC English
AMARC Français
AMARC Spanish

Date: Wed, 24 Nov 2004 01:57:37 -0000
   From: "Chifu" <chifu2222@msn.com>
Subject: New Fund for African Community Radio



New Fund for African Community Radio
Highway Africa News Agency
http://www.highwayafrica.org.za/hana/
Contact Information:
+27 46 636 1590

highwayafrica@ru.c.za

November 21, 2004
Posted to the web November 23, 2004

Guy Berger
Marrakech
African community radio may get a boost from the formation of an international task force to investigate setting up an international fund to underwrite resources for the sector, a meeting in Marrakesh, Morocco decided today (21 November, 2004).
The initiative parallels global initiatives to set up a "Digital Solidarity Fund" that flowed out of last year's United Nations World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS).
Community radio voices struggled for recognition at WSIS, and have now decided to go it alone to raise donor resources to support their activities, particularly for buying broadcast equipment.
The initiative to create a global fund will "need to find ways to articulate with the Digital Solidarity Fund which is focused on telecoms infrastructure", said Steve Buckley, president of world community radio network, AMARC which arranged the Morocco meeting.
AMARC operates in 110 countries, has 364 member stations in Africa and operates the Simbani news agency.
Buckley noted that opportunities existed for community radio to expand its scale in many countries. International development agencies were now ready to mainstream the funding of community radio. Ten years earlier, only Denmark and UNESCO had been interested in funding community radio. Now the G8 countries and other international groups were in on the act.
He said the fund would "focus on short term investments for long-term sustainability". It would be a catalyst for national policy changes to create the funding to dramatically increase the scale of community radio.
Social returns on community radio were enormous, said Nick Ishmael- Perkins, a London-based development consultant, who outlined how this grassroots form of media could advance the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. He explained that community radio: was a cost- effective way to reach particular audiences; had programme content and structure that promoted people's rights to participation in health, education and other areas of development and democracy; used local languages to increase people's understanding and access to information.
Ishmael-Perkins gave the example of a radio station in Cameroon which had been shown to raise community awareness about reforestation by two-thirds.
Speaking in support of a specialised fund, George Christensen, vice president of AMARC, and a radio journalist based in The Gambia, said community radio had won global recognition as an important sector of the media.
However, notes of caution were sounded by several speakers, warning that "selling" community radio as a delivery channel for development ideas could contradict the importance of the medium in giving voice to active community voices.
Jayaweera Wijayanandra, director of Unesco's Communications Development Division, spoke about the difficulties of getting donors to forego direct relations with projects and work instead through a global fund.
>From the World Bank, Krezentia Duer, said that her institution had tended to look at information for development in terms of linear information dissemination. This focused on examples like the media giving the public information about government spending.
She explained the difficulties of persuading her banking principals about seeing community radio in terms of giving communities voice, and about getting donors to accept that performance indicators were problematic in a genuinely participatory approach to development.

Another speaker, Beninese broadcaster, Souleye Issiaka emphasised the importance of going beyond support for broadcast infrastructure to encompass resources for training for community stations. He also underlined the need to build national associations of community radio stations that could lobby for support for public funds from their national governments.

A closing declaration called for both an Africa-wide fund as well as national level funds for supporting community radio.

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WHO Warns of Dire Flu Pandemic

MEDICAL: DISEASES: INFECTIOUS : NEWS: WHO Warns of Dire Flu Pandemic

CNN.com Health
WHO warns of dire flu pandemic
Thursday, November 25, 2004 Posted: 10:06 PM EST (0306 GMT)

BANGKOK, Thailand -- The World Health Organization has issued a dramatic warning that bird flu will trigger an international pandemic that could kill up to seven million people.

The influenza pandemic could occur anywhere from next week to the coming years, WHO said.

"There is no doubt there will be another pandemic," Klaus Stohr of the WHO Global Influenza Program said on the sidelines of a regional bird flu meeting in Bangkok, Thailand.

"Even with the best case scenario, the most optimistic scenario, the pandemic will cause a public health emergency with estimates which will put the number of deaths in the range of two and seven million," he said.

"The number of people affected will go beyond billions because between 25 percent and 30 percent will fall ill."

Pandemics occur when a completely new flu strain emerges for which humans have no immunity.

----------------------------------------

The complete article may be read at the URL above.

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Chinese journalist and dissident Liu Jingsheng to be released

---------
Chinese journalist and dissident Liu Jingsheng to be released
-------------------------------------------------------------
Chinese authorities are reportedly about to release dissident and founder of the underground magazine "Tansuo" ("Investigation") Liu Jingsheng, on 27 November. Liu has been imprisoned since 28 May 1992. The surprise commute in his sentence would appear to be a conciliatory gesture towards the international community, Human rights organisations in China, have said. RSF has called for Liu's full civil and political rights to be restored and repeated its appeal for the release of all China's jailed journalists, Internet users and cyber-dissidents. In the wake of the announcement of a 2005 release for journalist Wu Shishen, the planned release of Liu appears to be a fresh indication of the Wen Jiabao government's desire to ease international pressure on China over its imprisoned dissidents.

Source:
 - IFEX
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Venezuela media law undercuts freedom of expression

---------------------------------------------------
Venezuela media law undercuts freedom of expression
---------------------------------------------------
A draft law to increase state control of TV and radio broadcasting in Venezuela threatens to undermine the media's freedom of expression, Human Rights Watch(HRW) has said. Venezuela's National Assembly, which has been voting article by article on the law, known as the Law of Social Responsibility in Radio and Television, is expected to approve it today. "This legislation severely threatens press freedom in Venezuela," said Josè Miguel Vivanco, executive director of the Americas Division at HRW. "Its vaguely worded restrictions and heavy penalties are a recipe for self-censorship by the press and arbitrariness by government authorities."

Source:
 IFEX

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* Families row over home PC access *

 * Families row over home PC access *
Arguments over who gets to use the home computer are breaking out in families across the UK, says a survey.
Full story:

Friday, November 26, 2004

UNESCO's Community Radio Guide in Arabic


From: "Bruce Girard" <bgirard@comunica.org>
To: cr-afghan@comunica.org
Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 23:57:05 -0200
Priority: normal
Cc:
Subject: [CR in Afghanistan] Community Radio Guide in Arabic
List-Help: mailto:Cr-afghan-request@comunica.org?subject=help
        mailto:Cr-afghan-request@comunica.org?subject=subscribe

UNESCO's Community Radio Guide Now in Arabic
26-11-2004 (UNESCO)

UNESCO published its first Arabic language manual on "How to Do Community Radio". The new publication that is a translation of an earlier guide aims at expanding its outreach to the Arab region.
UNESCO considers community media as one of the most cost-efficient tools for sustainable development, social inclusion and access to information and knowledge.

“Several ways and means are possible to set up a community radio, organize it or compose its equipment. Often located in remote rural areas, these stations are “operated in the community, for the community, about the community and by the community”, states the manual.

Community Radio development has a special place in UNESCOÂ’s programmes. The aim of UNESCOÂ’s community radio programme is to address crucial social issues at a community level, such as poverty and social exclusion, empower marginalized rural groups and catalyze democratic processes and development efforts.

The manual will be distributed to the Arab media and other actors concerned through UNESCO field offices in the Arab States

The publication is available online at:


--
Bruce Girard  -  http://comunica.org/  -  +(598) 2 410.2979
Dr. Pablo de María 1036, Montevideo, Uruguay


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"The Potential for Community Radio in Afghanistan"

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Women Radio Broadcasters Have A Home On The Web

Resent-Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 12:42:01 -0800
From: "Melissa Kaestner" <melissa@ncra.ca>
Subject: [NCRA General List] Women Radio Broadcasters Have A Home On The Web
Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 15:26:08 -0500


For Immediate Release
November 24, 2004

WOMEN RADIO BROADCASTERS HAVE A HOME ON THE WEB
“Women’s Hands and Voices” Announces Website Launch

Montreal -- The National Campus and Community Radio Association/l’ Association nationale des radios étudiantes et communautaires (NCRA/ANREC) is pleased to announce the official launch of the “Women’s Hands and Voices”

“Women's Hands and Voices” is a project designed to support and enable diverse representation and increased participation of women at campus and community radio stations in Canada.  Its goal is to encourage women to be involved in various capacities at stations, with the understanding that more empowered women at individual stations can result in broader changes on an organizational level and within the radio broadcasting and regulatory industry as a whole.  As well, more gender-balanced news and music programming contributes to a radio environment free of stereotyping and misrepresentation.

The website is a cornerstone of the project and will contribute continuity and stability to the efforts of the nation-wide steering committee and researchers. Included are the research reports and other resources prepared for the project, including anti-oppression training materials, links, background information, photos and a question-and-answer form. Also featured is a discussion board, which will not only facilitate discussion amongst women but will also help with the important work of planning the 2005 annual “Women In Radio Conference” as hosted by the NCRA/ANREC and its members.

“The Women’s Hands and Voices website addresses the needs of women working and volunteering in the campus and community radio sector in Canada”, says Elleni Centime Zeleke, “Women’s Hands and Voices” Researcher. “Not only will these women find such things as a listing of internet resources for news items and women’s music, they will also find links that discuss what gender is, how sexism works, and how broadcasters can address these issues. Women programmers can begin to network with other programmers across the country through the Women’s Hands and Voices project website."

Women's Hands and Voices thanks website developer Lisa Lunn for her work. Funding for this project was provided by the Women's Program, Status of Women Canada. For more information, visit htto://www.WomensHandsAndVoices.ca

- 30 -

Media contact: Melissa Kaestner, NCRA/ANREC National Coordinator,
melissa@ncra.ca, (514) 529-9910.

The National Campus and Community Radio Association/l’Association nationale des radios étudiantes et communautaires (NCRA/ANREC) is a not-for-profit organization that represents the campus and community radio sector – the third sector – in Canada. Its members include: campus-based community stations, community-based English, French and Native stations, community-oriented stations affiliated with broadcasting schools, and supportive businesses and individuals. As a collective, the NCRA/ANREC works to maintain and cultivate the role that the third sector plays. Whether this means helping one station that is in trouble, providing resources and
networking opportunities to its members, or lobbying on behalf of all third sector stations, the NCRA/ANREC is dedicated to increasing the effectiveness of campus and community radio in Canada. Since 1987, the association has affected changes to radio policy, has helped to lower tariffs affecting radio stations, and has helped stations open their doors and keep them open.


Melissa Kaestner, NCRA/ANREC National Coordinator
melissa@ncra.ca
National Campus and Community Radio Association
l’Association nationale des radios étudiantes et communautaires
2053, rue Jeanne-d'Arc, Bureau 220
Montréal (Québec) H1W 3V3
Dig Your Roots. Discover Your Culture. Grow A Consciousness.

Femnet - The African Women's Development and Communication Network

Femnet
The African Women's Development and Communication Network
Réseau de Développement et de Communications pour les Femmes
Africaines (FEMNET)
http://www.femnet.or.ke/

Background Information, Programmes and Projects

The African Women's Development and Communication Network (FEMNET)
was set up in 1988 to share information, experiences, ideas and
strategies among African women's non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) through communications, networking, training and advocacy so
as to advance women's development, equality and other women's human
rights in Africa.

FEMNET's aims to strengthen the role and contribution of African NGOs
focusing on women's development, equality and other human rights. It
also aims to provide an infrastructure for and a channel through
which these NGOs can reach one another and share information,
experiences and strategies to as to improve their input into women's
development, equality and other women's human rights in Africa.
FEMNET is governed by a Constitution and the following governance and
administrative structure:-

National focal points in African countries whose representatives
attend a tri-annual programming conference and General Assembly
An elected 11 member Executive Board which includes two Board members
per sub-region and a Chairperson. In addition, there are two
Ex-Officio Board members (immediate past Chairperson and the
Executive Director)
An elected seven member Board of Trustees to oversee FEMNET's assets
Secretariat which implements FEMNET's programmes and is headed by an
Executive Director.

You can reach us at:-

African Women's Development & Communication Network
FEMNET

Off Westlands Road
P. O. Box 54562, 00200 Nairobi, Kenya
Tel: +254 20 3741301/20
Fax: +254 20 3742927
E-mail: admin@femnet.or.ke
Website: www.femnet.or.ke

Français

Toile de Fond, Programmes et Projets de l'Organisation

Informations d'ordre générale, Programmes et Projets de l'Organisation

Le Réseau de Développement et de Communications de la Femme Africaine
(FEMNET) a été créé en 1988.Cette organisation se proposait au départ
de partager, entre les organisations non gouvernementales axées sur
la promotion de la femme, les informations, les expériences, les
idées et les stratégies dans le cadre des communications, de la
gestion des réseaux, de la formation et de la sensibilisation, dans
le but de promouvoir l'émancipation de la femme, l'égalité entre les
sexes et d'autres droits humains reconnus aux femmes en Afrique.

L'objectif primordial de FEMNET est également de renforcer le rôle et
la contribution des ONG africaines essentiellement orientées sur
l'émancipation de la femme, l'égalité entre les sexes et sur d'autres
droits humains dont les femmes sont censées jouir en Afrique. Parmi
les visées du Réseau figurent aussi bien la création d'une instance
de concertation et d'une structure formelle à travers lesquelles ces
organisations non gouvernementales peuvent se retrouver et partager
les éléments d'information, les données d'expérience et les
différentes stratégies permettant de renforcer leurs contributions à
l'émancipation de la femme, à l'égalité entre les hommes et les
femmes et à la reconnaissance aux femmes africaines le droit à la
jouissance d'autres droits humains.

FEMNET est régi par des statuts, des organes directeurs et une
structure de gestion administrative qui se présentent comme suit :
Des organes de coordination nationale (points focaux) au niveau des
pays africains dont les représentants participent aux conférences de
programmation, ainsi qu'à l'Assemblée Générale qui siègent tous les
trois ans;
Un Conseil Exécutif élu, composé de 11 membres parmi lesquels deux
membres élus par sous - région, et une Présidente. Le Conseil
Exécutif compte également deux membres de droit, cooptés sur la base
de leurs attributions au sein de l'Organisation, la Présidente
sortante et la Directrice Exécutive ;
Un Conseil de gestion composé de sept membres chargés de la
surveillance du patrimoine de FEMNET; et
Un secrétariat dirigé par la Directrice Exécutive et chargé de
l'application des programmes de FEMNET.

Réseau de Développement et de Communications pour les Femmes
Africaines (FEMNET)


Westlands Road
P.O. Box 54562, 00200, Nairobi, Kenya
Tel: +254 20 3741301/20
Fax: +254 20 3742927
E-mail: admin@femnet.or.ke
Website: www.femnet.or.ke





Feminist International Radio Endeavour (FIRE)

Feminist International Radio Endeavour (FIRE)
The first women's internet radio
Pagina en Espanol
English pages

Women's Radio Programs on FIRE
http://www.fire.or.cr/womenradios.htm

Feminist International Radio Endeavour
English Program Archives

Objetivos de  Radio Internacional Feminista

la primera emisora de mujeres en Internet

Promover la presencia de las mujeres en los medios de comunicación.

Promover la transmisión de imágenes no estereotipadas de las mujeres en los medios de comunicación, así como reconocer y respetar la diversidad de las mujeres. 

Promover las comunicaciones no sexistas y el lenguaje inclusivo en los medios de comunicación.

Contribuir al reforzamiento local, nacional, regional y global de las redes de comunicación feministas, participando en sus actividades y organizaciones.

Promover los derechos humanos de las mujeres.
Promover la democratización de las comunicaciones y el acceso y capacitación de las mujeres en las nuevas tecnologías.

Favorecer el flujo de información desde el sur

International Association of Women in Radio & TV (IAWRT)

International Association of Women in Radio & TV (IAWRT)

The International Association of Women in Radio and Television is a forum for personal contact and professional development among women broadcasters worldwide. The organisation was founded in 1951.


WHAT DO WE DO?
- Network
- Conferences
- Awards
- Scholarships
- Training
- Newsletters
- Lobby/Support Group

GOALS
To share professional input among members through networking, workshops, conferences, programme productions and management skills.
To contribute towards the enhancement of broadcasting by assuring that women's views and values are an integral part of programming.
To utilise the professional skills of members to support women in developing countries.

ACTIVITIES
IAWRT arranges international conferences with workshops, screenings, lectures, training sessions and professional networking.
IAWRT holds regional meetings in different geographical areas.
IAWRT presents Awards of Excellence to publicly recognise programmes that demonstrate the ability and creativity of women producers.
IAWRT publishes a Newsletter to provide information and to update members, individuals and institutions.
IAWRT has a study scholarship programme for deserving members.
IAWRT maintains a website for information sharing, membership news, links to relevant sites, and a chance to see and hear clips of members' programmes http://www.iawrt.org

The International Association of Women in Radio and Television (IAWRT) is an international organisation with world wide membership of professional women actively engaged in the production and management of programmes in the electronic media or in fields closely allied to broadcasting.          The organisation was founded in 1951.

Because we are an international organization, the site is proving to be a really useful tool for sharing information, resources, links and news with each other in between the times we see one another.

If you are involved in any organization or work that you think would be of interest to our members and to people visiting the site, please let us know and we can provide links to those sites.

I urge our members and other women working in radio and television to submit stories, articles, updates, information, rants and raves to the site and we will consider all input for publication. Please use the site to tell us about the interesting projects you are working on or know about.

All submissions to be sent to nik@netactive.co.za in a WORD document and photos should be sent in jpeg format.

If you would          like to become a member of IAWRT, please fill in the forms found on the          ABOUT IAWRT page



The 'blog' revolution sweeps across China with half-a-million bloggers.

The 'blog' revolution sweeps across China

19:00 24 November 04
 
 [excerpt]
It took a chance online encounter between a software engineer from Shanghai and a teacher in a remote province of China to start shaking up the power balance between the people and the government of the world's most populous nation.

In August 2002, Isaac Mao, who worked at the Shanghai office of the chip maker Intel, was one of only a handful of people in China who had heard the word "blog". A regular web surfer, he was fascinated by the freedom these online journals gave to ordinary people to publish both their own and their readers' views online.

Surfing the US website blogger.com, Mao was thrilled to find Zheng Yunsheng, a teacher at a technical school in Fujian province. He left a message on Zheng's blog, and two weeks later Mao and Zheng started CNBlog.org, China's first online discussion forum about blogging technology and culture.
They soon gathered a small but devoted group of participants, many of whom went on to develop the technology that makes blogging possible for China's half-a-million bloggers.


Dozens of arrests

Ever since the Communist party took power in 1949, the Chinese media has been tightly controlled by the government. Online publishing is a real threat to that control, and the government is clearly worried. A crackdown in 2003 closed websites and internet cafes and saw the arrest of dozens of online commentators.

Yet this is not proving enough to stifle the pluck and ingenuity of China's bloggers. The rise of the blog phenomenon was made possible by blog-hosting services. Just as companies like Yahoo host email accounts, sites like blogger.com, based in the United States, host blogs.

Blogs usually allow room for readers' comments, and because they often contain numerous links to other blogs and websites, they each act as a unit in a dynamic community. Together they form an interconnected whole - the "blogosphere".
When Mao and Zheng started CNBlog.org, China had 67 million internet users. Today, it has more than 90 million, and most are hungry for information. The official China Internet Network Information Center in Beijing says 62% of internet users go online primarily to read news. Internet cafes are spreading rapidly throughout China, even in rural areas, largely thanks to official efforts to promote technology and improve the country's economic competitiveness.  ...

... Blog services are now sprouting all over China. By the end of October 2004, China had more than 45 large blog-hosting services. A Google search for bo ke will return more than two million results, from blogs for football fans to blogs for Christians. ...

... There are simply too many blogs for authorities to block them all.

The potential of blogs to act as news sources is relished by some Chinese bloggers. One site, Chinanewsman.net, founded by journalist and programmer Li Zhaohui, is a haven for news that is banned from the official media. Within its first five months of operation, Chinanewsman was closed repeatedly, forcing Li to switch internet service provider six times.

But it survived, and now hosts around 5000 blogs kept by journalists. Some of the information is available only to registered users who join by invitation. This mechanism has protected the site, probably because the censors are, in general, more tolerant of these semi-private spaces.

ISIS Manila International

ISIS Manila International
A feminist NGO dedicated to women's information and communication needs. Focuses on those advancing women's rights, leadership and empowerment in Asia and the Pacific.

About Isis
 
We are a feminist NGO dedicated to women's information and communication needs. Documenting ideas and visions. Creating channels to communicate. Collecting and moving information. Networking and building links. We focus on those advancing women's rights, leadership and empowerment in Asia and the Pacific. With connections in over 150 countries, we also keep up with changing trends and analyses concerning women worldwide.

Our past . Isis International was formed in 1974 to: create opportunities for women's voices to be heard, strengthen feminist analyses through information exchange, promote solidarity and support feminist movements across the globe. Starting in Rome, Italy, and Geneva, Switzerland, today Isis International has three independent offices in Asia (Manila, Philippines), Africa (Kampala, Uganda) and Latin America (Santiago, Chile), reflecting a commitment towards South-South cooperation and South-North linkages. The office in Rome moved to Manila in 1991.

The organisation is named after the ancient Egyptian goddess Isis who symbolises wisdom, creativity and knowledge.

Links to Our Sister-Organizations

Isis Internacional-Chile: http://www.isis.cl
Isis-WICCE:  http://www.isis.or.ug

Canadian Society of Independent Radio Producers

Canadian Society of Independent Radio Producers
This site contains a lot of resources on radio art production and radio documentary production.
http://www.radiosite.ca/

Training Resources site!

Producing radio is often a solitary occupation. We spend much of our time in the studio, in the music library, in the editing suite or in the car driving to our next interview.
  When we're in school or at a conference, there is no shortage of new ideas and new ways to inspire us to do radio in different ways. But where do those new ideas come from after we graduate or after the conference is over?

  Those of us with full time radio jobs have the benefit of a circle of peers from whom they can learn -- but how often does that happen? In the daily grind of producing a radio show, there's not much room to discuss ideas that don't immediately fill air time.  The radio world is full of people who can't go to conferences or workshops because a) there's no money in the training budget at their station or b) there's no extra bodies at the station to put the show on their air when the regular staff is gone.

  And then there are the thousands of talented radio producers working in community and campus radio. But in the understaffed, overworked and underbudgeted world of the community airwaves, there is precious little time and resources for training in house.  So most programmers end up figuring it out by themselves.

  Bottom line -- radio is about ideas. It's about skills.  It's about learning -- and a big part of it is about teaching ourselves. We all need to take charge of our own learning curve.  That's what this website is all about.

  It's also a place for producers to share the things they've learned with each other.  We welcome your articles, your feedback and your ideas. Read, enjoy, listen and tell us what YOU want to learn.

Wavelength is CSIRP's newsletter. Funding ideas, professional leads, equipment reviews, and more. Wavelength is in Adobe PDF format

A listing of Canadian community and non-profit radio web sites and related resources. Clicking on a link will open the site in a new browser window. Sites with the audio icon next to their names contain live broadcasts .



Re.: CANADA WELCOMES PROGRESS FOR THE NORTH ACHIEVED (Arctic countries concede threat to climate)


Date: Thu, 25 Nov 2004 11:25:53 -0600
From: Paul Nielson <p.nielson@shaw.ca>
Subject: [CPI-UA] CANADA WELCOMES PROGRESS FOR THE NORTH ACHIEVED (Arctic countries  concede threat to climate)

Who ya gonna believe?

Below you will find a pollyannish government news release followed by a media report on the same event, followed by my web search for the underlying substance.

Perhaps in a couple of days the missing substance will appear and the action will begin?


Government of Canada News Release

AT THE ARCTIC COUNCIL MEETING OF MINISTERS

------------------------------------------------------------
"CANADA WELCOMES PROGRESS FOR THE NORTH ACHIEVED
AT THE ARCTIC COUNCIL MEETING OF MINISTERS"

REYKJAVIK, ICELAND, November 24th, 2004 - The Honourable Stéphane Dion,
Minister of the Environment, today reaffirmed Canada's commitment to work
with circumpolar governments and Arctic peoples by signing the Ministerial
Declaration at the fourth biennial meeting of the Arctic Council where
Minister Dion represented Canada on behalf of the Honourable Pierre
Pettigrew, Minister of Foreign Affairs.

The Declaration refers to issues of importance to the eight member states
and six indigenous peoples groups of the Arctic Council. These issues are
discussed in a series of comprehensive studies presented at the meeting.
Among them are the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, the Arctic Human
Development Report, and the Arctic Marine Strategic Plan which are
particularly important to Canada.

"The great stresses put on the unique and fragile Arctic ecosystems have
been fully brought to the world's attention for the first time today," said
Minister Dion. "The reports tabled at the conference will support key
environmental commitments made by the Government of Canada in the most
recent Speech from the Throne. Most notably, these reports will help inform
our Northern Strategy and will complement our Oceans Action Plan."

"Canada's commitment to partnership with Northern peoples and our
circumpolar neighbours to address issues of common concern and
responsibility remains an important part of our foreign policy as
highlighted in The Northern Dimension of Canada's Foreign Policy," said Mr.
Pettigrew. "Our participation in the Arctic Council, a priority in that
policy, underscores our desire to engage in cooperative efforts to make a
positive difference in the lives of Northerners in the Circumpolar North."

The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA), a four year project of the
Arctic Council and the International Arctic Science Committee, is an expert
scientific assessment of the current and projected consequences of climate
change and the effects of increased UV radiation in the Arctic. The ACIA is
the most comprehensive peer-reviewed assessment of Arctic climate change
ever undertaken, and involved over 250 international scientists and
traditional knowledge experts, including 77 Canadians. The ACIA sets out the
following policy actions:

· Mitigation

· Adaptation

· Research, observations, monitoring and modelling

· Outreach

The Arctic Human Development Report is a comprehensive assessment of human
conditions in the entire circumpolar region. The report will help identify
critical gaps in knowledge that require the attention of the scientific
community and will help set the agenda and establish priorities for the work
of the Arctic Council.  This report both identifies problems encountered in
the North today and highlights success stories.

Co-led by Canada and Iceland, the Arctic Marine Strategic Plan is a
coordinating framework intended to improve how the Arctic coastal and marine
environment is managed, particularly given the accelerated changes occurring
in the north from climate change and the possibility of increased economic
activity. The Plan includes four overarching goals:

· reduce and prevent marine pollution;

· conserve biodiversity and ecosystem functions;

· promote the health and prosperity of communities;  and

· advance sustainable resource use.

The Arctic Council is a high-level forum that brings together participants
from the eight circumpolar countries (Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland,
Norway, Russia, Sweden, and the United States) and six International
Indigenous Peoples organizations (Aleut International Association, Arctic
Athabaskan Council, Gwich'in Council International, Inuit Circumpolar
Conference, Saami Council, and the Russian Association of Indigenous Peoples
of the North).

Today marked its fourth biennial meeting following its 1996 founding in
Ottawa.

**********************

Arctic countries concede threat to climate
By BOB WEBER

Canadian Press
November 25, 2004

In a move environmentalists call a modest victory, the world's eight Arctic
nations, including the United States, have agreed that climate change is
threatening northern ecosystems and that greenhouse gases must be limited.

In its policy response to a comprehensive report on Arctic climate change,
the Arctic Council has also agreed that governments must work with northern
peoples to mitigate the effects of a warming climate and approach any new
opportunities it creates with caution.

However, no specific policy recommendations were made.

"It's not the role of the Arctic Council to direct governments and say to
them what to do," federal Environment Minister Stéphane Dion said from
Reykjavik, where the council was meeting.

In a communiqué, all eight members of the council endorsed the policy
recommendations of the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment report.

The report, released earlier this month, was the result of four years of
work by more than 300 scientists. It found that the Arctic is warming at
twice the rate of the rest of the planet, that such warming is likely to
affect southern regions, and that it would have significant effects on
everything from northern lifestyles to infrastructure.

Yesterday, the ministers agreed that strategies to mitigate climate change
are required.

"These strategies should address net greenhouse gas emissions and limit them
in the long term," say documents supporting the communiqué issued by the
council.

Sheila Watt-Cloutier, head of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, welcomed even that careful statement as a "modest breakthrough."

"This acknowledgment is important," she said in a release.

"The ACIA policy report is more than we expected but less than we hoped."

Samantha Smith, director of the World Wildlife Fund's Arctic program, took a similar stand.

"The Arctic nations had an opportunity to show real leadership," she said in a release.

"They missed this opportunity.

"But through the policy document, even the Bush administration in the U.S. has acknowledged what the scientists and the people in the Arctic have been telling us."

Officials in Reykjavik put the best face on the lack of specific action proposals, calling it "the best possible declaration that could be adopted today."

Previous reports suggested the U.S. delegation opposed stronger language in the policy response.

*********************************************************************
Web search for substance:

Copies of and links to the grand ministerial declaration on "issues of importance" and the "comprehensive" studies on those issues presented to the meeeting except for the previously released ACIA, are nowhere to be found.

1) Arctic Council 4th Biennial Meeting

"policy response to a comprehensive report on Arctic climate change"?

"no specific policy recommendations"

2) Arctic Climate Impact Assessment http://www.acia.uaf.edu/  (previously posted)

3) Arctic Human Development Report

http://www.arctic-council.org/arctic_development.html   (404, link not found)
http://www.arctic-council.org/files/afdr241001/afdr241001.pdf (ditto)

Oct 27, 2004 | General News

The Arctic Human Development Report (ADHR) will be launched at a half-day seminar taking place in the afternoon (13.00-17.30) of Sunday, November 21st at Nordica Hotel, Reykjavik, Iceland. The purpose of the event is to present the main findings of the AHDR and initiate discussion of the next steps.

For further information please contact AHDR project manager Joan Nymand Larsen (jnl@svs.is) or co-chairs Niels Einarsson (ne@svs.is) and Oran Young (young@bren.ucsb.edu). Oran Young represents UArctic in the AHDR process.

Copies of the AHDR report can be ordered from the Stefansson Arctic Institute by emailing: stef@svs.is



4) Arctic Marine Strategic Plan

http://www.arctic-council.org/files/Item521/FinalAMSPforlayout.pdf  (404, file not found)




The programme for the Protection of the Arctic Marine Environment is one of the five programmes of the Arctic Council.
PAME was established by the Arctic Council Ministers in Nuuk, Greenland, September 1993 with the mandate to address policy and non-emergency pollution prevention and control measures related to the protection of the Arctic marine environment from both land and sea-based activities. These includes coordinated action programmes and guidelines complementing existing legal arrangements.

6) Guess what is readily available:

ARCTIC OIL AND GAS GUIDELINES


LETTERS REVEAL DEH CHO, FEDS AT LOGGERHEADS OVER PIPELINE

LETTERS REVEAL DEH CHO, FEDS AT LOGGERHEADS OVER PIPELINE
  Correspondence obtained by CBC News indicates legal action by the Deh Cho First Nations to stop the work of the panel reviewing the Mackenzie Gas Project now seems inevitable.
FULL STORY

FENTIE SLAMS CBC REPORTER IN LEGISLATURE

FENTIE SLAMS CBC REPORTER IN LEGISLATURE
Yukon's premier lashed out at CBC Radio in the legislature Thursday, saying a Whitehorse reporter had abused a community, and "preyed on vicitms who have succumbed to the demons of addiction."
FULL STORY

CANADA HAILS ARCTIC COUNCIL'S CLIMATE CHANGE DOCUMENT

CANADA HAILS ARCTIC COUNCIL'S CLIMATE CHANGE DOCUMENT
     Canada's environment minister says people shouldn't underestimate the policy recommendations on climate change announced in Iceland Wednesday.

FULL STORY

11/26: Fourth Critical Mass Radio Network broadcast


From: mark burdett <mark@indymedia.org>
Date: Thu, 25 Nov 2004 15:22:10 -0800
To: microradio@lists.riseup.net
List-Help: mailto:sympa@lists.riseup.net?subject=help
List-Subscribe: mailto:sympa@lists.riseup.net?subject=subscribe%20microradio
List-Owner: mailto:microradio-request@lists.riseup.net
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Subject: [MRN] 11/26: Fourth Critical Mass Radio Network broadcast

Announcing the fourth monthly Critical Mass Radio Network (CMRN) broadcast on Friday, Nov. 26, 2004.  This month's broadcast topic is COLONIAL HOLIDAY (in Cambodia), regurgitation, and how to avoid buying anything ever again, ever.


CMRN is a decentralized radio network composed of a constellation of independent community radio stations.  The CMRN site provides the means for community radio stations to rebroadcast the CMRN signal over the FM band.  The signal itself is composed of the radio stations that make up the network.  We've organized according to Principles of Unity, and intend to further the growth of independent community based radio internationally, regardless of the broadcast medium.

Initially, we're producing a coordinated, scheduled broadcast on the last Friday of every month, and we'll be expanding as necessary.  Each broadcast will be thematic and determined by network participants.  To participate, check out our website and join the mailing list and the fray!

Our initial coordinated broadcast took place on August 27, 2004 in anticipation of the Republican National Convention in New York.  In matters of war and peace, poverty and hunger, homelessness, health care, justice and your mama's pumpkin pie, we can have a voice that circumvents the sound bites of the powerful; such direct participation in our future is clearly necessary for survival.  We're radio that ghosts the present by speaking the future.  Check us out.

Tip: we hear you get the best reception from the seat of your bike.

Critical Mass Radio Network broadcast #4

Friday, November 26th, noon to midnight, Pacific time

12 hours of carefully coordinated mayhem


Broadcast schedule:
2004-11-26 20:00 UTC from Portland (IMC Web Radio)
2004-11-26 22:00 UTC from Santa Cruz (FRSC)
2004-11-27 00:00 UTC from San Francisco (ECR)
2004-11-27 02:00 UTC from New York City (ASC)
2004-11-27 04:00 UTC from San Diego (RadioActive)
2004-11-27 06:00 UTC from Los Angeles (Kill Radio)

 


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NORTHERN HUNTERS CONCERNED BY NEW ANIMAL CRUELTY ACT

NORTHERN HUNTERS CONCERNED BY NEW ANIMAL CRUELTY ACT
     The federal justice minister announced this week that new legislation on animal cruelty will be modified to ensure the needs of aboriginal hunters are met.
FULL STORY

Wednesday, November 24, 2004

AUDIO FILE: Prof. Noam Chomsky of MIT about the 2004 US elections

DJ Lotus and DJette Aporetics interview Prof. Noam Chomsky of MIT about the 2004 US elections, strategies for radicals and the independent media movement.

from

Chomsky
by eShay Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2004 at 8:00 PM
Chomsky is on point when he discusses problems in the media, he's wonderful on giving timeline summaries of foreign policy disasters, BUT, when he says things like "voter fraud is a distraction, a side issue" and goes on to say the "elections never took place," he becomes shady.

Chomsky wanted people to vote for Kerry, as if that would make a difference.  If he's an anarchist, why would he encourage voting?  If he really wants systemic change, why not want fraudulent episodes (voter fraud, 9/11, jim crow laws in Florida) exposed to the fullest.

WHOLE COUNTRY WOULD BENEFIT FROM PIPLINE: REPORT

WHOLE COUNTRY WOULD BENEFIT FROM PIPLINE: REPORT
     A report released by the N.W.T. government says a pipeline down the Mackenzie Valley may generate millions for the territorial government and the rest of the country, but the price of natural
gas has to stay above $3 U.S. if the line is going to be built at all.
FULL STORY

LINK: Read the report (.pdf file)

Reginald Fessenden, the Canadian inventor of radio telephony


An Unsung hero:
Reginald Fessenden, the Canadian inventor of radio telephony

A Canadian, Reginald Aubrey Fessenden was the first person to prove that voices and music could be heard over the air without wires. Yet some books ignore him, others mistakenly call him an American, and one Canadian encyclopedia cites his mother as the principal founder of Empire Day but overlooks her eldest sons accomplishments. Marconi, on the other hand, is given credit for radio even though his theory on sound waves was wrong and even though he was still sending only Morse code signals when Fessenden made his first broadcast.

The reasons for the oversight are many. Although born in the Eastern Townships of Quebec in 1866, Fessenden left Canada at 18. He later worked for Edison, was a professor at two American universities, and was working with an American company when he proved his theories for broadcasting. In addition, lacking the showmanship of Marconi and Edison, Fessenden had
difficulty marketing himself or his inventions. A brilliant student at Trinity College School, Port Hope, at 14 he was granted a mathematics mastership to Bishops College in Lennoxville, Quebec. This gave him a small income and a credit for a college year if he passed the exams. He did, but a growing interest in science caused him to tire of study of the classics, and thus at 18 he accepted a teaching position in Bermuda.

The Forgotten Canadian
Reginald Aubrey Fessenden (1866-1932) Physicist Inventor

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Reginald Aubrey Fessenden (1866-1932)
Some biographical notes by Dave Riley

Reginald A. Fessenden - ARS
 'W1FRV' ( first radio voice )
 Marshfield, Massachusetts
Where the world's first radio voice broadcast took place...


A D V E N T U R E S   in   C Y B E R S O U N D
Reginald A. (Aubrey) Fessenden : 1866 - 1932


Reginald Aubrey Fessenden (1866-1932)


REGINALD AUBREY FESSENDEN AND THE BIRTH OF WIRELESS TELEPHONY*


Reginald Aubrey Fessenden (1866  1932) By Brian Smith


The Forgotten Canadian
Reginald Aubrey Fessenden (1866-1932) Physicist Inventor


Fessenden's Christmas Eve Broadcast

A shorter URL for the above link:



Title:  Outline of an electrical theory of comets' tails.
Authors:  Fessenden, Reginald Aubrey
Journal:  Chicago, The University of Chicago press, 1896.


Fessenden, builder of tomorrows
By: Helen May Trott Fessenden
Type: English : Book : Non-fiction
Publisher: New York, Coward-McCann, 1940.
Subjects: Fessenden, Reginald Aubrey, -- 1866-1932.


A Determination of the Nature of the Electric and Magnetic Quantities and of the Density and Elasticity of the Ether, II
Reginald Aubrey Fessenden
1900 The American Physical Society
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevSeriesI.10.83


The Cosmic Inventor:
Reginald Aubrey Fessenden (18661932). Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, vol.
89, pt. 6. Philadelphia, PA: American Philosophical Society, 1999.


REGINALD AUBREY FESSENDEN AND THE BIRTH OF WIRELESS TELEPHONY


Fessenden and Marconi: Their Differing Technologies and Transatlantic Experiments During the First Decade of this Century
by John S. Belrose
International Conference on 100 Years of Radio -- 5-7 September 1995
<http://www.ieee.ca/millennium/radio/radio_differences.html>



RADIO: HISTORY : BIOGRAPHY:
Fessenden, Reginald Aubrey (1866-1932) Physicist, Inventor

Here are some sources of information about this physicist and radio
pioneer whose life span straddled the two last centuries.

Fessenden, Reginald Aubrey (1866-1932) Physicist, Inventor
"The Father of Radio Broadcasting"

"Reginald Aubrey Fessenden was the Father of Radio Broadcasting.

His voice was the first-ever to be broadcast by radio waves and heard by another person. To accomplish this feat, he had to prove to his detractors by his own invention that his was the correct theory for wireless transmission.

On December 23rd, 1900, from a site on Cobb Island in the middle of the Potamac River near Washington, Fessenden spoke these words - "one - two - three - four, is it snowing where you are Mr. Thiessen? If it is, would you telegraph back to me?" Mr. Thiessen, one mile distant, confirmed.
Radio broadcasting was born.

However, it was not until another six years, after much fine-tuning, that radio's potential was demonstrated. Fessenden presented radio's first program on Christmas Eve 1906, from Boston with the assistance of his wife Helen, her friend and his helper. Wireless operators on ships in the
harbour heard the inventor play O Holy Night on his violin and Helen and her friend sing Christmas carols. Further experimentation followed, but it was not until after World War One that governments of Canada and the USA would issue broadcasting licences that would permit development of the new medium.

Meanwhile, Reginald Fessenden, inventor and physicist, put his mind to other tasks - one of the most impressive being his Fathometer - a detector to be used to combat the U-boat menace during the War. In his lifetime, he conceived over 500 inventions which benefited and enriched mankind, if not Fessenden himself. In her book, Fessenden, Builder of Tomorrow, Helen Fessenden, in referring to her husband's accomplishments, wrote of his fertile mind that it had "failed to defend itself against
commercial assault, whether financial or scientific".  "

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Fessenden and the Early History of Radio Science
by John S. Belrose
The Radioscientist -- volume 5 number 3 September 1994

Marconi was the first to describe and the first to achieve the transmission of definite intelligible signals by means of Hertzian waves. History has accredited him with the invention of an early form of radio telegraphy. His contributions to the history of radio communications are well known and celebrated but other experimenters took a hand, very early.

Do you know:

Who first used the word and the method of continuous waves?
Who was first to transmit voice over radio?
Who devised a detector for continuous waves?
Who first used the method, and the word heterodyne?
Who was first to send two-way wireless telegraphy messages across the
Atlantic ocean?
Who was first to send wireless telephony (voice) across the Atlantic
Ocean?
Who made the world's first wireless broadcast (voice and music)?
The answer to all seven questions is Reginald Aubrey Fessenden, a Canadian-born radio pioneer, working in the United States. Fessenden must clearly be the pioneer of radio communications as we know it today. I wonder how many of you have heard of him?

It is perhaps appropriate that an Alexander Graham Bell Lecture should remember the contributions of Prof. Fessenden to the early history of radio science, since the work of Bell had a profound influence on his life. Bell developed a method of sending words over wires (the telephone). The idea of transmitting the human voice by wireless dominated the early radio experiments of Fessenden.

Reggie, during his boyhood in Fergus, Ontario, followed the work of Alex Bell in nearby Brantford with great fascination. But his inquisitive mind was well ahead of Bell's experiments.

The year was 1876, Reggie was 10 years old. His Uncle Cortez Fessenden, who played an important role in the development of Reggie's inquiring mind, had been invited to see a demonstration of the telephone at the Bell homestead on 4th August. Bell's first long distance call, between Brantford and Paris, via Toronto, a distance of 113 kilometres, was made a few days later on the 10 August 1876.1

-------------------------------------------

Reginald Aubrey Fessenden
b. October 6, 1866, Knowlton, Quebec, Canada
d. July 22, 1932, Bermuda
<http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/~eugeniik/history/fessenden.html>

Some of the Fessenden's patents are listed below:
Silicon Alloys 452,494 (1891)
Design and Construction of X Ray Equipment 648,660 (1900)
Heterodyne Principle 706,738 (1902), 706,739 (1902), 706,740 (1902),
1,050,441 (1913), 1,050,728 (1914)
Rectification 706,736 (1902)
F. Alternator 706,737 (1902)
Arc Oscillator (Mention) 706,742 (1902)
Radio Telephone 706,747 (1902)
Multiplexing 715,203 (1902), 727,326 (1903), 981,406 (1911)
Point Contact Rectifier, 727,327 (1903)
Electrolytic Detector 727,331 (1903)
Vertical Antenna 793,651 (1905)
Anti Static Device 918,306 (1909), 918,307 (1909)
Directive Antenna Array 1,020,032 (1912)
Storage of Wheeled Vehicles 1,114,975 (1914)
Internal Combustion Engine 1,132,465 (1915)
Sound Production and Signaling 1,207,387 (1916), 1,207,388 (1916),
1,311,157 (1916), 1,108,895 (1914), 1,277,562
    (1918), 1,384,855 (1920)
Submarine Signaling and Detect 1,348,556 (1920), 1,348,828 (1920),
1,348,855 (1920), 1,429,497 (1922)
Subsurface Directive Signaling 1,348,856 (1920), 1,355,598 (1920)
Ship Location 1,319,145 (1919)
Fathometer 1,217,585 (1917)
Geophysical Prospecting With Sound 1,240,328 (1917)
Water Storage and Power Generation 1,214,531 (1910), 1,247,520 (1917)
Gun Location by Sound 1,341,795 (1920)
Microphotographic Books 1,616,848 (1927), 1,732,302 (1929)

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via / thanks to

*Canadian Colonialism continues* Mohawk women take on the Canadian government- again.

*Canadian Colonialism continues*
Mohawk women take on the Canadian government- again.  After their former
Band Council Chief entered into agreements with the Canadian
government that infringed upon the sovereignty of their community,
the Mohawk community had him removed from power in a vote of
non-confidence. The Canadian courts overruled the community's vote to
kept him in power. Io-nikonhratsha':ni, a citizen of the Mohawk Nation,
tells of their resistance.
To read more, visit: http://www.whrnet.org

Canada Ignores Crimes Against Native Women
Canadian officials and police are ignoring a spate of brutal attacks against aboriginal women, at least 500 of whom have vanished or been murdered over the last 30 years, Amnesty International said