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- Date: Sat, 4 Dec 93 04:30:04 PST
- From: Info-Hams Mailing List and Newsgroup <info-hams@ucsd.edu>
- Errors-To: Info-Hams-Errors@UCSD.Edu
- Reply-To: Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu
- Precedence: Bulk
- Subject: Info-Hams Digest V93 #1423
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Sat, 4 Dec 93 Volume 93 : Issue 1423
-
- Today's Topics:
- 220 1280 rule changes
- IC2410/IC3230/FT5100 Comparison
- Looking for ARRL info ftp site
- new MODERATED discussion groups on Amateur Radio Policy
- The ARRL Letter November 29, 1993
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu>
- Send subscription requests to: <Info-Hams-REQUEST@UCSD.Edu>
- Problems you can't solve otherwise to brian@ucsd.edu.
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-Hams Digest are available
- (by FTP only) from UCSD.Edu in directory "mailarchives/info-hams".
-
- We trust that readers are intelligent enough to realize that all text
- herein consists of personal comments and does not represent the official
- policies or positions of any party. Your mileage may vary. So there.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 4 Dec 1993 08:56:27 GMT
- From: library.ucla.edu!agate!iat.holonet.net!bwilkins@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: 220 1280 rule changes
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- DC-2225 ACTION IN DOCKET CASE FCC AMENDS THE AMATEUR SERVICE RULES
- CONCERNING THE 222-225 MHZ FREQUENCY BAND
-
- (PR Docket 92-289)
-
- The Commission has amended the amateur service rules to create a
- small new subband at 222.00-222.15 MHz where repeaters are prohibited, and
- has authorized frequency privileges for Novice Class operators in the
- entire 1.25 m band.
-
- In November of 1992, the FCC proposed three changes in the
- operational rules for the amateur service: 1) the creation of a subband in
- the 222-225 MHz (1.25 m) band where repeaters would be Pos prohibited; 2)
- the authorization of frequency privileges for T To Spell Novice Class
- operators in the entire 1.25 m band; and 3) the eligibility of Novice
- Class operators to be licensees and control operators of repeaters in the
- 1.25 m band, as well as in the 1270-1295 MHz segment of the 1240-1300 MHz
- (23 cm) band.
-
- The Commission found that the establishment of a subband in the 1.25
- band for non-repeater operations would facilitate experimentation which is
- one of the fundamental purposes of the amateur service. The Commission
- further concluded that the authorization of Novice Class operators to use
- the entire 1.25 m band would provide them with the opportunity to become
- proficient in a wider variety of amateur service operations and give them
- greater flexibility in selecting the mode of transmission to use.
- However, the Commission determined that Novice Class operators should not
- be authorized as control operators and licensees of repeaters in the 1.25
- m and 23 cm bands because they lack knowledge about repeater operation.
- Further, it would diminish the distinction between the Novice and
- Technician Classes.
-
- Action by the Commission November 19, 1993, by Report and Order (FCC
- 93-507). Chairman Quello, Commissioners Barrett and Duggan.
- -FCC-
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- ********ice 440.250+ 100pl san francisco bay area
- bwilkins@cave.org packet n6fri @ n6eeg.#nocal.ca.usa.na
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 1 Dec 1993 19:22:11 GMT
- From: news.centerline.com!noc.near.net!jericho.mc.com!fugu!levine@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: IC2410/IC3230/FT5100 Comparison
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- I am currently looking to by a new mobile rig.
- I have done some feature comparisons that I
- thought I'd share. I ruled out the Alinco,
- the Standard, and the Kenwood current dual
- banders for my own personal reasons. I ended
- up narrowed down to the ICOM 2410, ICOM 3230,
- and Yeasu 5100. This isnt a complete market
- survey so no flames about rigs left out. Feel
- free to add your own
-
- ICOM2410 ICOM3230 Yeasu5100
- Inband dual rx YES NO YES
- Direct Freq entry YES NO No
- Memories 36 30 94
- CTCSS Decode YES optional optional
- Remote Control optional optional NO
- Autodial Memories YES YES NO
- Rptr Monitor YES YES YES
- 800mhz mod avail YES NO NO
- AM Aircraft mod YES dont know NO
- extended RX uhf/vhf YES dont know NO
- x-band Repeat YES YES YES
-
- Again, these were only the features of interest to me.
- Top priority for me were the mods, the autodial mems,
- and direct freq entry. The 2410 has a very nice system
- of frequency entry.
-
- Accordingly, the radios with more features cost more.
- The Yeasu was the cheapest but the 2410 had the most
- features. Other useless things to me (like paging)
- aren't included. Most of them had the usual bells
- & whistles like CTCSS squelch, CTCSS encode, fans,
- built in duplexor.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- || // ||\\ //|| //\\ //\\
- || // || \\ // || // //
- ||// || \\ || // //
- ||\\ || || || \\ === \\ ===
- || \\ || // || \\ // \\ //
- || \\ || // || \\// \\//
- ---------------------------------------------------------FTAC
- Bob Levine KD1GG 7J1AIS VK2GYN formerly KA1JFP
- levine@mc.com <--Internet email Phone(508) 256-1300 x247
- kd1gg@wa1phy.ma <--Packet Mail FAX(508) 256-3599
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 2 Dec 1993 14:25:29 GMT
- From: newsflash.concordia.ca!hobbit.ireq.hydro.qc.ca!barde!vaillan@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: Looking for ARRL info ftp site
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article HMD@world.std.com, dts@world.std.com (Daniel T Senie) writes:
- >In article <2di9gf$5c6@gdls.com> turini@gdls.com (Bill Turini) writes:
- >>A while back someone posted the address of the ARRL information mirror ftp site.
- >>
- >>Could someone either post it again, or send me the address. I am in urgent need of
- >>some information.
- >>
- >>Thanks
- >>
- >>Bill
- >
- >The files are on world.std.com.
- >
- >--
- >---------------------------------------------------------------
- >Daniel Senie Internet: dts@world.std.com
- >Daniel Senie Consulting n1jeb@world.std.com
- >508-365-5352 Compuserve: 74176,1347
-
-
- They are in the directory: "/pub/hamradio/arrl/Server-files"
- 73
- ---
- Clement Vaillancourt, | Institut de Recherche d'Hydro-Quebec
- Analyste, | Varennes, P. Quebec, Canada, J3X 1S1
- Informatique scientifique | Tel:+1 514 652 8238 Fax:+1 514 652 8309
- vaillan@ireq.hydro.qc.ca | Radio-amateur: VE2HQJ@VE2CRL.PQ.CAN.NA
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 2 Dec 1993 00:01:52 GMT
- From: well!moon!pixar!pixar.com!bruce@uunet.uu.net
- Subject: new MODERATED discussion groups on Amateur Radio Policy
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Two new _moderated_ internet discussion lists on ham radio policy have been
- created.
-
- The lists are an attempt to hold a discussion on amateur radio policy with
- a higher signal/noise ratio than that in the rec.radio.amateur.policy newsgroup,
- or the packet ham-policy discussions. To prevent the the general policy
- discussion from being dominated by Morse-code-related topics, there are two
- lists: ham-radio-policy@pixar.com is for discussions of all policy topics
- _except_ for topics connected with the Morse code. morse-policy@pixar.com is
- for discussion of Morse-code-related policy topics _only_.
-
- The intent of these lists is to air all viewpoints, but without the jammers
- and abuse that appear in rec.radio.amateur.misc .
-
- To subscribe to either or both groups, send a message to LISTSERV@pixar.com .
- Include this text in the message:
-
- SUBSCRIBE HAM-RADIO-POLICY YOUR-ENGLISH-NAME-HERE YOUR-CALLSIGN-HERE
- SUBSCRIBE MORSE-POLICY YOUR-ENGLISH-NAME-HERE YOUR-CALLSIGN-HERE
-
- You can leave out either group if you only want to subscribe to one.
- The server also responds to the commands "HELP" and "INDEX".
-
- This doesn't change the rec.radio.amateur.policy newsgroup, and it isn't
- related to the on-air ham-policy discussion or the internet reflector of
- that discussion called ham-policy@ucsd.edu that is run by brian@ucsd.edu .
-
- Discussion will start when/if 100 subscribers have joined the list.
-
- Bruce Perens AB6YM
-
- --
- Bruce@Pixar.com 510-215-3502
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 4 Dec 1993 06:59:06 GMT
- From: pacbell.com!amdahl!netcomsv!netcom.com!marcbg@ames.arpa
- Subject: The ARRL Letter November 29, 1993
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- The ARRL Letter
- Vol. 12, No. 22
- November 29, 1993
- 3 ARRL divisions
- get new board teams
- Three ARRL divisions will each have a new pair of
- representatives beginning in January as the result of
- elections concluded Nov. 19. New directors and vice
- directors were chosen in the Dakota, Midwest, and Pacific
- divisions.
- This was election year for seven ARRL divisions (the
- other eight divisions are up for election in even-numbered
- years); two years ago in elections in these same divisions
- all seven directors were returned to office (but four new
- vice directors were elected, including three who opposed
- incumbents).
- This year, in alphabetical order:
- In the Atlantic Division, Director Hugh Turnbull,
- W3ABC, and Vice Director Kay Craigie, WT3P, were unopposed.
- Two years ago both turned back challengers.
- In the Dakota Division, earlier in the year Vice
- Director Rick Whiting, W0TN, became director when Director
- Howard Mark, W0OZC, resigned due to moving outside the
- division. Whiting chose not to seek election to the office
- of director, and former director Tod Olson, K0TO, ran
- unopposed.
- Meanwhile, Whiting ran for a second term as vice
- director but was defeated by challenger Hans Brakob, K0HB,
- 726 to 585 votes.
- Brakob, 53, is currently a member of the Contest
- Advisory Committee.
- In the Delta Division, Director Joel Harrison,
- WB5IGF, withstood a challenge from Jack Hill, W4PPT, 1618 to
- 1244.
- Hill told voters You know what the incumbent has
- brought you for six years. Now, it s time for us to move
- forward.
- Harrison, who at age 35 is the youngest ARRL
- director, reminded voters that he has served as chairman of
- the Administration and Finance Committee and is now a member
- of the Executive Committee.
- In the Great Lakes Division Director Allan Severson,
- AB8P, and Vice Director George Race, WB8BGY, were unopposed.
- Well-known contest operator and DXer Lew Gordon,
- K4VX, was victorious in the Midwest Division over incumbent
- Bill McGrannahan, K0ORB, 1674 to 1609.
- Two years ago K0ORB joined the board family as
- Midwest Division vice director by beating incumbent Chuck
- Miller, WA0KUH, and in the summer of 1993 became director
- following the death of Director Paul Grauer, W0FIR,
- Gordon, who is 64, noted in his campaign statement
- that his wife Terry is an Extra Class licensee (NS0Z) and
- daughter Sharon is N0HVY.
- A bit of trivia: K4VX will be the first ARRL
- director to serve with a call sign issued in a call area
- that does not match his ARRL division. Others have run but
- Gordon is the first to be elected under this seeming
- handicap.
- When McGrannahan assumed the directorship of the
- Midwest Division, ARRL President Wilson named Larry Staples,
- W0AIB, to serve as vice director for the remainder of
- McGrannahan s term.
- Staples ran this year to retain the post to which he
- had been appointed, but was defeated by Bruce Frahm, K0BJ,
- 1813 to 1387 votes.
- In a somewhat unusual turn both Staples and Frahm
- noted their ages in their campaign statements (Frahm is 41,
- Staples 62). Frahm told Midwest Division voters he has been
- involved with the family farm all my life.
- Two years ago Charles P. McConnell, W6DPD, retained
- his seat as Pacific Division Director by defeating his
- opponent, Glenn G. Zumwalt, KJ6EN, by a two-to-one margin.
- In 1993 McConnell faced a challenge from his vice director,
- Brad Wyatt, K6WR, elected two years ago. Wyatt more than
- doubled McConnell s vote total, 2714 to 1354.
- Wyatt told voters he had taken early retirement from
- IBM and that his experience and demonstrated willingness
- and ability to travel year-round to meet with you are YOURS
- when you vote K6WR.
- With Wyatt s vice-director slot up for grabs in the
- Pacific Division, a three-way race developed between three
- long-time amateurs and ARRL life members. Former vice
- director Jettie Hill, W6RFF, sought the position once again,
- running against Jim Maxwell, W6CF, and Jerry Boyd, KG6LF.
- All three cited extensive experience and qualifications in
- their campaign statements; Maxwell ran away with the
- election, with 2372 votes to 849 for Hill and 844 for Boyd.
- A former Santa Clara Valley ARRL section manager,
- Maxwell holds a Ph.D. in aeronautical
- engineering/biomechanics.
- In the Southeastern Division, long-time Director
- Frank Butler, W4RH, overcame opposition by three opponents;
- his vote total of 2807 was greater than that of the three
- other candidates combined. Butler in his campaign statement
- cited his Executive Committee membership and his role in
- international (IARU) affairs.
- Running against Butler were South Florida Section
- Manager Rudy Hubbard, WA4PUP, also a former Section
- Emergency Coordinator; Alan Page, KE4WO, the only candidate
- to appear on ballots this year *without* a photo; and David
- Shiplett, AC4MU, who said New Blood Needed the incumbent
- has been a League official since 1957..How many years is
- that?
- (Frank Butler was a Florida Section Manager from
- 1957 to 1980 but an ARRL director only since 1980).
- Southeastern Division voters also returned Vice
- Director Evelyn Gauzens, W4WYR, to office. Her opponent,
- Mitch Mitchell, WA4OSR, ran a strong campaign, however,
- earning 44 per cent of the votes cast. Mitchell introduced
- his campaign statement saying I am excited about the
- opportunities and challenges facing ham radio and the ARRL.
- *I am NOT running because I am upset or mad at anyone or
- anything* (his emphasis).
- The terms of office are for two years, beginning at
- noon January 1, 1994.
- Here are the official results for the contested
- offices:
- *Delta division for director,*
- Joel Harrison, WB5IGF, 1618.
- Jack Hill, W4PPT, 1244.
- *Midwest division for director,*
- Lew Gordon, K4VX, 1674.
- Bill McGrannahan, K0ORB, 1609.
- *Pacific division for director,*
- Brad Wyatt, K6WR, 2714.
- Charles McConnell, W6DPD, 1354.
- *Southeastern division for director,*
- Frank Butler, W4RH, 2807.
- David Shiplett, AC4MU, 1837.
- Rudy Hubbard, WA4PUP, 731.
- Alan Page, KE4WO, 186.
- *Dakota division for vice director,*
- Hans Brakob, K0HB, 726.
- Rick Whiting, W0TN, 585.
- *Midwest division for vice director,*
- Bruce Frahm, K0BJ, 1813.
- Larry Staples, W0AIB, 1387.
- *Pacific division for vice director,*
- Jim Maxwell, W6CF, 2372.
- Jettie Hill, W6RFF, 849.
- Jerry Boyd, KG6LF, 844.
- *Southeastern division for vice director,*
- Evelyn Gauzens, W4WYR, 3094.
- S. Felton Mitchell, WA4OSR, 2436.
- MORE CHANGES IN JAPAN S
- LICENSING OF FOREIGNERS
- A few months ago Japan liberalized licensing
- requirements to allow foreigners to establish their own
- station (that is, obtain a station license which grants a
- call sign) after passing a Japanese Amateur Radio license
- examination. This enabled amateurs from countries not having
- a reciprocal operating agreement with Japan to operate
- there, if they had a good command of the Japanese language
- and the time to sit for an exam.
- On October 5, Japan further liberalized licensing of
- amateur stations, by now disregarding the nationality of
- applicants, including its own citizens. Now anyone holding a
- valid amateur license from a country with which Japan has a
- reciprocal agreement may apply for a *station* license in
- Japan -- these countries are the U.S., Germany, Canada,
- Australia, France, Republic of Korea, Finland, and Ireland.
- The result is that a Japanese citizen holding, say,
- a U.S. Amateur Extra class license, could then operate with
- full (First Class) Japanese privileges. Or the holder of a
- U.S. Novice class license could obtain Third Class
- privileges in Japan.
- The hitch? U.S. exams are said to be much easier
- than their Japanese counterpart examinations, at least
- according to one experienced person who has taken both.
- LICENSES WITHDRAWN IN PROBE
- OF VE EXAM IRREGULARITIES
- The FCC has invalidated the licenses and license
- upgrades of 21 people after an investigation of
- irregularities at four volunteer examiner test sessions in
- southern California in June and August, 1993. The sessions
- involved both the ARRL and W5YI VECs and a number of
- volunteer examiners have had their accreditations suspended
- as a result.
- The ARRL-VEC has suspended the accreditation of four
- volunteer examiners at the FCC s request, and that of three
- additional VEs involved in one of the test sessions after
- finding irregularities in the records from one of the
- suspect test sessions.
- The FCC thanked the ARRL-VECs for their help in the
- investigation and lauded volunteer examiners for their hard
- work and dedication.
- John B. Johnston, chief of the FCC s Personal Radio
- Branch, said:
- I d like to commend ARRL-VEC for working together
- with W5YI-VEC to uncover irregularities at several recent
- sessions in the Los Angeles area and suspend the VEs
- involved. Your action will prevent future occurrences and
- assure that amateur licenses are granted only to those who
- are truly qualified. You ve also sent a strong signal that
- ARRL-VEC is vigilant in its oversight to keep the volunteer
- testing system at the highest level of integrity.
- I know, Johnston said, it takes time and effort
- to scrutinize test materials and contact applicants and VEs
- concerning a suspect session, but it s occasionally
- necessary for the good of amateur radio. The volunteer
- testing system is a great success. Your oversight validates
- and supports the hard work of the many dedicated VEs who
- participate in testing -- as well as the hams who passed
- their tests and are now making the contributions to society
- for which amateur radio is so justly renowned.
- SECTION ELECTION RESULTS
- Ballots were counted November 23 in ARRL Section
- Manager elections for Alabama, Delaware, Kansas, Tennessee
- and Western Massachusetts. Terms of office begin January 1,
- 1994. The results are as follows:
- *Alabama*:
- Ken McGlaughn, KM4JD, 428 (elected)
- Joe Smith, WA4RNP, 228
- *Delaware*:
- Randall Carlson, WB0JJX, 172 (elected)
- Carl Dennis, NX3A, 64
- *Kansas*:
- John Seals, WR0R, 358
- Robert Summers, K0BXF, 386 (elected)
- *Tennessee*:
- O.D. Keaton, WA4GLS, 696 (elected)
- Dana Stine WI3B, 382
- *Western Massachusetts*:
- Dan Senie, N1JEB, 196 (elected)
- Bill Voedisch, W1UD, 181
- Four other sections were not contested and the
- following were declared elected: East Bay, Bob Vallio,
- W6RGG; Michigan, Dale Williams, WA8EFK; New Mexico, Joe
- Knight, W5PDY; Santa Barbara, Marc Holzer, N6UNX.
- {next story gets Winkler headshot}
- LOCAL AMATEUR RADIO PROGRAM
- OFFERED TO NATIONAL AUDIENCE
- A local radio program on Amateur Radio went
- nationwide on November 28. Ham Radio and More, hosted by
- Len Winkler, KB7LPW, from KFNN in Phoenix, is being offered
- to the 82 member stations on the Talk America Network (TAN)
- on Sunday evenings at 6 p.m. EST.
- The show, now in its third year on KFNN, is non
- technical and intended to appeal to licensed amateurs as
- well as the general public. Well-known amateurs are guests
- on the show, which runs two hours locally but which will
- last one hour in the network version.
- Winkler says a grass-roots effort by hams is needed
- to make the national broadcasts a success. Amateurs are
- asked to call their local talk radio station (TAN affiliate
- or not) and encourage them to air Ham Radio and More.
- Winkler s first national guest on November 28 was
- Frank Moore, WA1URA, a television executive in Fort Wayne,
- Indiana, and producer of an award-winning documentary video
- about Amateur Radio s role in communications from Kuwait
- during the Iraqi occupation in 1990 and early 1991.
- Amateurs can find out the call signs of stations in
- their area affiliated with TAN by calling KFNN at 602-241
- 1510. The show also can be heard via Satcom C-5, Transponder
- 19, 6.0 audio, and Galaxy 2, Transponder 3, Channel 55.4.
- *10 years ago in *The ARRL Letter*
- *The ARRL Letter* for November 22, 1983, continued
- to lead with the upcoming space shuttle flight of Dr. Owen
- Garriott, W5LFL. The launch had been rescheduled for Nov.
- 28, with W5LFL hoping to operate on 2 meter FM during what
- little free time he expected to have.
- The big news on the regulatory front was still the
- volunteer examiner program (PR Docket 83-27); Congress had
- just included in its FCC authorization bill an item enabling
- volunteer examiner coordinators to recoup expenses.
- Two petitions for reconsideration of the VE proposal
- had been filed. One, by David Siddall, K3ZJ, had not yet
- been made available. The other, by David Popkin, W2CC,
- questioned how identifier codes for testing sessions would
- be assigned.
- Ballots had been counted in elections for the ARRL
- Board of Directors and *every* incumbent running was
- reelected to the board (Including seats for which there was
- no competition that year). 10 years later the following are
- still on the board (some in different capacities or back
- after an absence): Frank Butler, W4RH; Evelyn Gauzens,
- W4WYR; Hugh Turnbull, W3ABC; Tod Olson, K0TO (who takes
- office in January, 1994); and George Wilson, W4OYI.
- Two incumbents who won reelection in 1983, Clyde
- Hurlbert, W5CH, and Paul Grauer, W0FIR, are Silent Keys.
-
- BRIEFS
- * Joe Lynch, N6CL, is the new editor of the Quarter
- Century Wireless Association s *Journal*, beginning with the
- Winter, 1993 edition. Joe will continue as VHF editor for
- *CQ* magazine, and he s also ARRL Oklahoma Section Manager.
- * Troy Fehring, N5VIN, worked the space shuttle from
- his tractor late last month, the *Lawton (Okla)
- Constitution* reported. Fehring, of Sterling, Okla., was
- baling hay at the time the shuttle, *Columbia*, came overhead,
- but admitted he d been listening for them.
- Fehring told the paper I didn t have anything to
- write on, so I jumped out of my tractor, took my screwdriver
- and scratched it on my toolbox so I wouldn t forget the
- time and frequency.
- The contact was on FM, with astronaut Bill McArthur,
- KC5ACR. The story was written by *Constitution* writer Mitch
- Meador.
- * The next shuttle SAREX flight, STS-60, is scheduled
- for January 27, 1994. Several members of the 6-man crew are
- studying for amateur licenses. Mission Specialist Sergei
- Krikalev, is a veteran of the Russian MIR space station and
- has swapped his UZ3AK call sign for U5MIR. Whether or not he
- will be able to operate from space has still not been
- settled.
- Four U.S. and one Russian school have set schedules
- with STS-60. SAREX Configuration C is planned, allowing
- robot packet mode for most of the flight with voice
- operation by the crew as time permits.
- * Curious about the Motorola ad in December *QST*
- (and which also appeared in October, the one that says
- ATTENTION, Public Safety Announcement)? According to
- Motorola the ad is aimed at lawbreakers known in the
- industry as cellular phone hackers who can bill calls to
- other numbers by breaking cellular codes.
- Books are actually available on how to do this and
- are advertised in some magazines (but *not QST*).
- An article in the Nov. 23 *New York Times* described
- the so-called clone phones as available on the street for
- as little as a few hundred dollars and popular among drug
- dealers, according to the Manhattan U.S. district attorney.
- The *Times* also said that devices capable of intercepting
- cellular phone codes can be bought by mail-order or for
- even less money can be fashioned out of more commonly
- available gadgetry.
-
- * Once again this year ARRL Hudson Division Director
- Steve Mendelsohn, WA2DHF, was in charge of Amateur Radio
- communications at the New York Marathon. This year he was
- joined by the FCC s Private Radio Bureau Chief Ralph Haller
- and some 400 other amateurs.
- Hams were involved in every stage of the race s
- planning, and provided logistical and emergency
- communications, according to ARRL Public Information Manager
- Steve Mansfield, N1MZA.
- Mansfield, who ran (and finished) the race, said he
- was surprised to see an ARRL flag displayed at the finish
- line.
- * Readers who saw an item in the Nov. 9 issue of the
- *San Jose Mercury News* will be interested in a correction.
- One Thomas Lee Larsen, a convicted child molester now
- charged with an arson threat and about whom the newspaper
- said whose hobbies include amateur radio and photography
- is not, in fact, to be found in the FCC Amateur Radio
- database.
- K3KMO, N6BV join *QST*, technical staff
- Two recent additions to the HQ staff are Senior
- Assistant Technical Editor Dean Straw, N6BV, and Al Brogdon,
- K3KMO, who has become managing editor of *QST*.
- Al Brogdon, 57, was previously a technical editor at
- the Applied Physics Laboratory of the Johns Hopkins
- University in Laurel, Maryland. He is originally from
- Cookeville, Tennessee, where he began ham life as WN4UWA,
- and is a graduate of Tennessee Tech University in Cookeville
- with a degree in Electrical Engineering. He served in the
- U.S. Army in the late 1950s in Germany, where he was
- licensed as DL4WA; he also held M1M (in San Marino), LX3TA,
- and DJ0HZ.
- Al and his wife Maggie have a son, Pat, at home.
- Maggie is a first grade teacher. Al moonlights in a German
- Oompah band and in a Dixieland jazz band.
- Dean Straw has been on the East Coast for about five
- years, most recently working for Raytheon Marine in Hudson,
- NH. He s well known among contest operators as a highly
- competitive (and successful) HF operator. Dean s forte is
- antennas, and he has among other assignments taken over as
- editor of *The ARRL Antenna Book* (the biggest ARRL
- publication after the *Handbook*).
- Dean, 47, admits to being licensed more than 30
- years. He has a bachelor s degree in engineering and
- applied science from Yale. He and his wife Rayma live in
- Windham, New Hampshire. Rayma teaches bi-lingual English
- Chinese classes for immigrant children.
-
- --
- | Marc Grant | |
- |Amateur Radio Station N5MEI | marcbg@netcom.com |
- | 214-231-3998 (voice) | marcbg@esy.com |
- | 214-231-0025 (fax) | |
-
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- End of Info-Hams Digest V93 #1423
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