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- The ARRL Letter
- Vol. 12, No. 11
- June 15, 1993
-
- ARRL supports HF data proposal
-
- The League on June 1 submitted reply comments supporting its
- petitiion to the Federal Communications Commission to change FCC
- rules for HF data communications (RM-8218; see *The ARRL Letter*,
- May 25, 1993, and July, 1993 *QST*, p 75).
- The League once again reiterated its original petition for
- rule making, made in February, 1993, and responded to comments in
- response to that petition, saying that those comments "aptly
- illustrate the difficulty in making provision for automatic
- control of HF communications in the heavily occupied high
- frequency bands."
- The League said that a number of comments opposed the
- creation of band segments within which automatically controlled
- data stations could operate, because such segments would include
- frequencies on which Baudot communications currently take place.
- Other commenters suggested that the proposed subbands would
- be ill-advised because they would intermix automatically
- controlled, incompatible digital communications modes, leading to
- interference.
- Still others suggested that certain "outdated"
- communications modes (such as Baudot), which do not include error
- correction or detection, should be prohibited, to make room for
- newer, more efficient digital modes.
- Finally, the League said, a number of commenters suggested
- that although the proposed subbands are acceptable, they do not
- sufficiently encourage development of digital message networks.
- Those commenters suggested that to permit significant
- expansion of data networks at HF, automatically controlled
- stations should be allowed throughout the HF bands where data
- communications are permitted.
- To minimize interference to other stations, they suggested
- that automatically controlled stations be permitted to
- communicate only with stations operated under local or remote
- control, and that two automatically controlled data stations
- should not communicate with each other in the HF bands.
-
- Merit to comments
-
- While there is some merit in each of these concerns, the
- League pointed out what it called "myths" regarding the proposal,
- saying that limiting automatic control to specific proposed
- subbands would *not* stifle the development of non-packet data
- modes, that its petition did *not* suggest that data networking
- should be segregated, and that nothing would be taken away from
- anyone by the League's proposal because currently automatic
- control is *not* permitted on HF (except for the stations
- operating under the ARRL's FCC Special Temporary Authorization).
- The petition also *does not*, the League said, propose that
- all data operation be located in the proposed subbands, but only
- that those stations operated under automatic control operate
- there. Nor is it "flawed" in not addressing "semi-automatic
- control" outside the proposed HF subbands, since that is a
- separate issue that has been studied by the League's Digital
- Committee and will be discussed by the ARRL Board of Directors in
- July.
-
- Called best solution
-
- The League said that the subband concept it proposes is the
- only plan to date which would accommodate automatically
- controlled operation while minimizing interference. It does not
- appear that sufficient safeguards against interference currently
- exist to permit automatically controlled data stations to operate
- outside limited subbands, the League said.
- The League also said that the recently-adopted IARU Region 2
- HF band plan, although not having the force of ITU regulations,
- still is adhered to by most countries, and therefore any plan
- adopted by the United States should take it into consideration.
- Amateurs using data modes can continue to do so anywhere in
- the HF bands that data operation is permitted, with only the
- automatically controlled stations limited to the proposed
- subbands by the League's proposal. Those subbands can be expanded
- or modified in the future after experience with them is gained,
- the League said.
-
- Longtime director W0FIR dies
-
- Paul Grauer, W0FIR, died June 5 at his home in Wilson
- Kansas. He was 81 years old and the husband of Helen Grauer,
- N0BCI.
- Paul was named an ARRL Honorary Vice President on June 4. He
- had resigned as Midwest Division Director on June 3, after nearly
- 20 years of service. He became a director on January 1, 1974, and
- at the time of his resignation was the longest-serving member of
- the board. He also was a vice director for one tern in 1972 and
- 1973 and had been president of the ARRL Foundation since 1985.
- "To say that Paul was an institution in the ARRL," Executive
- Vice President David Sumner, K1ZZ, said, "would be an
- understatement. In his more than two decades of service he played
- the role of sensible, conservative patriarch of the ARRL family."
- Vice Director Bill McGrannahan, K0ORB, has assumed the
- office of Midwest Division director, and Central Division
- Director Ed Metzger, W9PRN, is acting president of the
- Foundation.
- Paul Grauer was born August 13, 1911, in Winside, Nebraska.
- He had lived in Wilson for 50 years, an anniversary celebrated on
- the front page of *The Wilson World* in March of this year. He
- and his wife Helen had owned and operated the Wilson Telephone
- Company since 1948; they began the company in a partnership in
- 1943.
- The funeral and burial were June 8, in Wilson. Attending on
- behalf of the ARRL were EVP Sumner; Central Division Director Ed
- Metzger, W9PRN; new Midwest Division Director McGrannahan;
- Missouri Section Manager Roger Volk, K0GOB; Kansas SM Bob
- Summers, K0BXF; and several ARRL assistant directors and members.
- The funeral was attended by several hundred people, "an
- impressive turnout in a town of about 800 people," Sumner said.
- Grauer had been active in his church and community, serving as
- mayor of Wilson for six years.
- Paul Grauer was buried wearing his ARRL Director and Vice
- President pins.
- In addition to his wife, Grauer leaves three sons, two
- brothers, a sister, and eight grandchildren and six great-
- grandchildren.
- Director McGrannahan replaces Paul Grauer on the Membership
- Services Committee; Pacific Division Vice Director Brad Wyatt,
- K6WR, replaces McGrannahan as board liaison to the Contest
- Advisory Committee.
-
- Jim Rafferty, N6RJ, dies at 43; was v.p. of Ham Radio Outlet
-
- Jim Rafferty, N6RJ, the vice president of Ham Radio Outlet,
- died June 13, 1993, in Yorba Linda, Calif., after a long battle
- with cancer. He was 43 years old, born June 19, 1949, in
- Rockford, Ill., and was the husband of Shirley Rafferty.
- An active operator, Rafferty is remembered for his
- participation in the first operation from Kingman Reef, KP6KR, in
- 1974. He was one of the team to gather around the microphone and
- put out the first CQ from the new country.
- In recent years he operated from the Cayman Islands as ZF2FL
- and later as ZF2JR, specializing in 40 meters. He held the
- world record for single-band 40 meters in the CQ Worldwide Phone
- Contest.
- One of his labors of love was, every fall, to update the
- DXCC countries file for the "CT" software used by many active
- contest operators. He mailed copies of the new file to friends
- around the country who passed it along to others.
- Rafferty also teamed with KL7GRF to translate the famous
- "W9IOP Second Op" into software and then marketed it as the N6RJ
- Second Op.
- Although an executive at HRO, Rafferty manned the "800" line
- in Anaheim side-by-side with other store employees, over the
- years answering questions for thousands of ham callers. He was
- friendly and knowledgeable, always knowing where the best deal
- was, even if it wasn't at HRO.
- Rafferty was first licensed in the early 1960s in Illinois,
- as WA9UCE. In the early 1970s he moved to California, becoming
- K6AAR and then N6RJ.
- A final honor for N6RJ was appearing on the cover of the
- July, 1993 issue of *CQ* magazine. He saw a copy of the magazine,
- just off the press, only hours before his death.
- Jim Rafferty died at Placentia Linda Hospital in Yorba
- Linda. With him at the time of his death were his wife, along
- with other family members. Also there were his friends Chip
- Margelli, K7JA; Janet Margelli, WA7WMB; Joe Clement, KF6OG; and
- Lois Clement, N6NAS.
- "I could communicate with Jim by squeezing CW on his foot,"
- Chip Margelli said. "His code speed was down a little but he
- could still copy it."
- In addition to his wife, Jim Rafferty leaves two sons, Jim
- and Mark; and a daughter, Whitney, all at home.
- The funeral was scheduled for Friday, June 18, at St.
- Martin's Catholic Church in Yorba Linda. In lieu of flowers,
- donations may be made to the ARRL Foundation or to the Northern
- California DX Foundation.
- The last weekend in October will never be quite the same
- without that big 40-meter signal from ZF2JR. R.I.P., Jim. --
- K1TN.
-
- JUNE 20 NEW DATE FOR 3RD SAREX SHUTTLE OF '93
-
- The next Space Shuttle launch carrying the Shuttle Amateur
- Radio EXperiment is scheduled for June 20 at 1338 UTC. The ham
- radio-licensed crew includes Pilot Brian Duffy, N5WQW, and
- Mission Specialist Janice Voss, whose license is pending. The
- flight was rescheduled from June 3.
- As part of its primary mission, the Shuttle *Endeavour* will
- carry the SPACEHAB payload, a laboratory which is leased by
- various industry to expand research in commercial microgravity
- development opportunities. The crew also will retrieve the
- European Retrievable Carrier (EURECA) satellite, which was
- deployed from Shuttle *Atlantis* on the STS-46 mission in August
- 1992.
- During the 7 day flight, Duffy and Voss will use 2-meter FM
- voice and packet. The astronauts will use their own call signs
- for voice contacts. The primary packet call sign will be W5RRR-1.
- The astronauts have pre-scheduled numerous contacts with schools
- and their assisting radio clubs in the United States and Mexico.
- The attitude and elevation of the spacecraft are expected to
- change significantly during the EURECA rendezvous and retrieval
- on flight day 4. As a result, amateurs attempting to make a
- random contact or eavesdrop should update their Keplerian
- elements regularly throughout the mission.
- For more information on this and other upcoming SAREX
- opportunities, please contact the ARRL Educational Activities
- Department, SAREX office. Listen to W1AW for more details as the
- launch time near.
-
- GOVERNMENT AIRS NEW HF BEACON STATION
- A new beacon began operation May 13 from Cape Prince of
- Wales, Alaska (67N, 168W). Its call sign is NAF and it runs 100
- watts to a 3-band fan dipole on the following schedule:
- 00 and 01 minutes after the hour on 5604 kHz; 20 and 21
- minutes after the hour on 11004 kHz; and 40 and 41 minutes after
- the hour on 16804 kHz. Transmissions are narrowband CW and FSK.
- The beacon will be monitored by government facilities in
- Fairbanks, Alaska; Seattle, Washington; State College,
- Pennsylvania; and San Diego, California. The project's sponsor is
- the Naval Security Group Command in Washington, D.C.
- A government spokesman said the project is "purely
- scientific." The purpose of the project is described as to
- provide a "rigorous verification" of field strength models done
- by HF propagation prediction programs like IONCAP which are used,
- for example, to generate the predictions published each month in
- QST.
- Reception reports are encouraged and will be acknowledged
- with a colorful QSL card. Send them to Bob Rose, K6GKU, Code 54,
- NRaD Division, NCCOSC, 271 Catalina Blvd., San Diego CA 92152; or
- to Dr. Gus Lott, KR4K, Code GX, COMNAVSECGRU, 3801 Nebraska Ave
- NW, Washington DC 20393.
- Another beacon, from Rarotonga in the South Cook Islands, is
- scheduled to go on the air in the fall, on low VHF frequencies as
- well as the three NAF frequencies.
-
- AMATEUR RADIO SERVICE JOINT RESOLUTION UPDATE
-
- As of June 14 eight U.S. senators and 37 representatives had
- become co-sponsors of the Amateur Radio Joint Resolution (S.J.
- Resolution 90 and H.J. Resolution 199); they are:
-
- [Senate]
-
- Charles S. Robb (D-VA, Sponsor)
- Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI) *
- Dennis DeConcini (D-AZ) *
- Larry Pressler (R-SD) *
- Richard C. Shelby (D-AL) *
- Daniel K. Inouye (D-HI)
- William V. Roth (R-DE)
- James M. Jeffords (R-VT)
-
- [House of Representatives]
-
- Mike Kreidler (D-WA, Sponsor)
- Jim Cooper (D-TN) *
- Craig Thomas (R-WY) *
- John Murtha (D-PA) *
- Norman Mineta (D-CA) *
- Peter D-eutsch (D-FL) *
- D-ouglas (Pete) Peterson (D-FL) *
- Jerry Costello (D-IL) *
- John LaFalce (D-NY) *
- James Barcia (D-MI) *
- Martin Frost (D-TX) *
- John D-oolittle (R-CA) *
- Ronald Coleman (D-TX) *
- Lane Evans (D-IL) *
- Elton Gallegly (R-CA) *
- Paul Gillmor (R-OH)
- Michael Bilirakis (R-FL)
- J. D-ennis Hastert (R-IL)
- Bill Hefner (D-NC)
- D-on Edwards (D-CA)
- Charles Wilson (D-TX)
- Bart Gordon (D-TN)
- George Hochbrueckner (D-NY)
- Jim Leach (R-IA)
- Nancy Johnson (R-CT)
- Eni F.H. Faleomavaega (D-American Samoa)
- Richard Lehman (D-CA)
- Frank McCloskey (D-IN)
- Leslie Byrne ( D-VA)
- Lewis Payne (D-VA)
- Maurice Hinchey (D-NY)
- James H. Quillen (R-TN)
- Michael McNulty (D-NY)
- Jolene Unsoeld (D-WA)
- Arthur Ravenel (R-SC)
- Jim Ramstad (R-MN)
- Toby Roth (R-WI)
-
- * Original co-sponsor
-
- If your elected representatives are not on this list, please
- write to them about this important resolution. For details see
- July *QST*, pages 73 and 74.
-
- BRIEFS
-
- * Steven Rich, WA1DFL, died in early March in Revere, Mass.
- He was 46 years old and had suffered from a long-term,
- debilitating illness that finally claimed his life. Amateurs
- attending ARRL New England Division Conventions over the years
- often saw Rich there, in a sort of mobile hospital bed.
- On March 18 an editorial in the Lynn, Mass. *Daily Evening
- Item* had this to say about WA1DFL:
- "Following a police-escorted funeral procession that weaved
- past Rich's office at Revere High, the specially-modified house
- he'd just built on McClure Street, and many of the businesses and
- public buildings that because of him the disabled can now access,
- the only child of Abraham and Hannah Rich was laid to rest in
- Tifereth Israel of Revere Cemetery....
- "Rich turned down an office at City Hall in order to be near
- Revere's youth so they'd learn early we're not all cut from the
- same cloth....
- "Seeing his name on the side of a building would be
- redundant in that so much of Rich is already built into each
- structure.
- "No, this time Revere really needs to outdo itself. Steven
- J. Rich has earned nothing less. And for Heaven's sake, the
- Pearly Gates had better be handicapped accessible."
-
- * Clarification: In Letter No. 9 we reported that Bill
- Moore, KF5DL, was the only person to die in tornadoes that struck
- Tulsa, Oklahoma April 24. He was the only *Tulsa resident* to die
- in the storm; several highway commuters from other areas died on
- a nearby interstate highway.
-
- * This year U.S. Telecommunications Training Institute at
- ARRL Headquarters was held in May. Five telecommunications
- officials participated in the usual USTTI Amateur Radio
- Administration course, conducted by International Amateur Radio
- Union President Richard Baldwin, W1RU; IARU Secretary Larry
- Price, W4RA; and members of the HQ staff.
- Attending this year were Trevor Alphanso Atkinson, Office of
- Disaster Preparedness, Jamaica; Simon Bugaba, Telecommunications
- Engineer (Planning), Uganda; Ms.Seblewongel Ketema Irgete,
- Technician, Somalia; Chi Leong Hoi, Engineer, Macao; and Andrew
- Rouel Herbert Ogoo, Radio Officer, Gambia.
-
- * Dwayne Eskridge, W6LKE, died April 30, 1993 in Walnut
- Creek, California. Eskridge, an FBI agent, was on duty in
- Honolulu on December 7, 1941, and was one of the first radio
- operators to transmit word of the Japanese attack on Pearl
- Harbor. A story about him appeared in *QST* for December, 1991.
- Eskridge, an ARRL Life Member, was 73, and leaves his wife,
- Virginia Eskridge.
-
- * It's hard to imagine a DXer who does not have a few choice
- QSLs courtesy of long-time manager Arden Hopple, W3DJZ. Hopple
- died May 22 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He was 80 years old. His
- obituary in the Harrisburg *Patriot News* noted that he "was an
- amateur radio operator and held No. 1 status for number of
- countries contacted."
-
- * James O. Weldon, AA5ST, died April 19, 1993, in
- Williamsburg, Va. He was 88 years old. Weldon, who lived in
- Dallas, founded Continental Electronics Corp. there. The company,
- according to a Dallas newspaper account, built transmitters for
- the Voice of America network as well as communications equipment
- for broadcast facilities worldwide.
- According to current Continental president Robert McDonald,
- Weldon's high-power RF designs led directly to the first "super
- stations," including XERA in Villa Acuma,
- Mexico, which ran a half-million watts in 1938.
- According to an acquaintance, Weldon passed his 20 wpm code
- test to upgrade to Amateur Extra Class at the age of 86.
-
- * In a mail vote the ARRL Board of Directors has changed
- Bylaw 16 of the Articles of Association to read:
- "Recognizing the importance of liaison between the
- Corporation and other IARU member Societies, the President is
- authorized to invite the president of another IARU member
- Society, or his designated representative, to attend and
- participate in meetings of the Board, without the right to vote
- thereat."
- This change took effect June 7, 1993, and permits President
- Wilson to invite the president of the Radio Amateurs of Canada to
- represent the RAC at the upcoming ARRL board meeting in July.
-
- * With the dissolution of the Canadian Radio Relay League in
- May, the ARRL once again is responsible for fulfilling ARRL
- Canadian memberships. Thus, the 3,186 CRRL members who were
- receiving *QST Canada* have been added back to the ARRL
- membership rolls as "foreign" associate members.
-
- * ARRL membership figures are nearing their all-time high,
- which was 168,961 at the end of 1978. *Full* memberships are
- already at an all-time high.
-
- * The new French ARSENE Amateur Radio satellite became
- available for Mode S use on June 1. The 16-kHz uplink passband is
- centered at 435.100 MHz, with a corresponding downlink passband
- centered at 2446.540 MHz. Authorized modes include SSB and CW.
- The investigation continues concerning the failure of the
- satellite's 2-meter packet downlink.
-
- * Dean Straw, N6BV, has joined the HQ staff as Senior
- Assistant Technical Editor. He will be responsible for the *ARRL
- Antenna Book* and other antenna-related publications. Dean's
- experience is in the maritime electronics industry. He holds a BS
- in engineering and applied science from Yale University. He lives
- in Windham, New Hampshire.
-
- * Peter Kirby, general manager of the Radio Society of Great
- Britain, visited ARRL Headquarters in early June, along with his
- assistant Justine Hodges. They discussed marketing and related
- issues with League managers.
-
- * The FCC will begin accepting applications from Amateur
- Radio organizations to be club and military recreation station
- call sign administrators on July 26, 1993 (see FCC Order 93-249,
- *The ARRL Letter*, May 25). The ARRL Board of Directors will
- consider the matter at their meeting in July.
- The League already has written to the FCC to express its
- desire to be a call sign administrator.
-
- Jack Titterington, W1EOF became the oldest graduate of the
- University of Rhode Island in February, when he received his
- bachelor's degree at age 80. The achievement earned him feature
- stories in three local newspapers and a special commemorative
- award from Rhode Island Lt. Gov. Robert Weygand, about whom
- Titterington says "I've known him since he was born."
- W1EOF's primary interest over his 61-year Amateur Radio
- career has been traffic handling, nearly all on CW, resulting in
- making the ARRL's Brass Pounder's League 54 (monthly) times, 43
- in a row! He also has been a Section Traffic Manager and was RI
- Section Manager from 1977 to 1981.
- Titterington began college in 1986 after his wife died.
- "I tried economics and am firmly convinced that no one in that
- field knows exactly what is going on," he says. "I finally
- settled on psychology. My last course was Shakespeare and was
- very exciting."
- During his college career Jack Titterington suffered a
- ruptured gall bladder, double pneumonia, and, finally, lymphatic
- cancer that physicians called "hopeless." The cancer cost him a
- year out of school, after which he finished the requirements for
- a degree.
- Jack also is a volunteer examiner for both the ARRL and W5YI
- VECs and has worked with the HandiHam System.
- Of all the certificates a 61-year amateur career can
- produce, W1EOF is proudest of his ARRL A1 Operator award. "You
- cannot seek it but have to wait for it to come to you," Jack
- Titterington says, "and to some of us it never does come!"
-
- *eof
-