[Dx-qsl] An all-time first!

Nelson Moyer ku0a at mchsi.com
Fri Jan 19 10:41:19 EST 2007


I used this approach in an effort to get a QSL from Russia. I looked up the
call in the Russian callbook on Pathfinder, copied the address written in
Cyrillic, pasted it into Word, typed RUSSIA and the bottom of the address,
printed it, cut it out, and taped it to the envelope, and mailed it. That
was in October 2006 and no reply yet.

Nelson, KU0A

-----Original Message-----
From: dx-qsl-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:dx-qsl-bounces at mailman.qth.net]
On Behalf Of Htorr at aol.com
Sent: Friday, January 19, 2007 9:22 AM
To: zl1tm at hotmail.com; dx-qsl at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Dx-qsl] An all-time first!

 
In a message dated 1/18/2007 9:34:05 P.M. Pacific Standard Time,  
zl1tm at hotmail.com writes:

> Not  surprisingly, the address on the SAE was written entirely in
> Japanese  except for JAPAN at the bottom. I've never seen one like that
> before  either.

He did absolutely right thing - he made JA postmen live  easier.

Regards & 73!
Andrei, de  ZL1TM



I worked  with a bunch of the Japanese Self-Defense Air Force  people years 
ago.  That is the way they addressed their mail.  I guess  they figured that

once it got to Japan there would be no problem.
 
Tom, W6HT
 

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