Welcome to President Karami Radio Society ( PKRS ). Our
Headquarter is located in the Heart of the city of Tripoli-Lebanon.
Amateur radio allows millions worldwide to
communicate with each other. Radio amateurs even have their own
satellites and can transmit TV pictures from their own homes.
The PKRS is the Northen Lebanon internationally recognized.
Amateur Radio is high-tech hobby that's got something fun for
everyone! You can become an Amateur Radio operator--no matter what
age, gender or physical ability. People from all walks of life pass
their entry-level exam and earn their Amateur Radio license. They all
share the diverse world of activities you can explore with ham radio.
You never know who you'll run into when communicating with Amateur
Radio: Young people, retirees, teachers and students, engineers and
scientists, doctors, mechanics and technicians, homemakers...
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Who is President Rachid Karami ?
Born 30th of Dec 1920 in Tripoli, Lebanon to Abdul-Hamid
Karami leader of national resistance against French occupation from
1918 till Lebanon's Independence.
Graduated as a lawyer from Cairo University in 1942.
Entered Lebanese Parliament for the first time in 1951. Stayed on as
M.P of Tripoli uninterruptedly till his assassination June 1987.
Became Minister of Justice 1951 and held other
ministerial posts till 1955. Became Prime Minister 1955 and was
thus the youngest Prime Minister of Lebanon ever. Served again as
Prime Minister 1959, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1975 and 1984 was thus
the longest serving Lebanese Prime Minister ever.
Was assassinated June 1st 1987 while still serving as
Prime Minister of Lebanon, he was considered by all Lebanese as
symbol for martyrdom towards Lebanese National Unity and
Reconciliation
OD5RAK QSL card
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Guest Book
What Can Amateur Radio
Operators Do?
Ham radio operators use two-way radio stations from their homes, cars,
boats and outdoors to make hundreds of friends around town and around
the world. They communicate with each other using voice, computers,
and Morse code. Some hams bounce their signals off the upper regions
of the atmosphere, so they can talk with hams on the other side of the
world. Other hams use satellites. Many use hand-held radios that fit
in their pockets.
Hams exchange pictures of each other using television. Some also
like to work on electronic circuits, building their own radios and
antennas. A few pioneers in Amateur Radio have even contributed to
advances in technology that we all enjoy today. There are even
ham-astronauts who take radios with them on the International Space
Station and thrill thousands of hams on earth with a call from space!
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