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Date: | Tue, 28 Aug 2007 13:51:49 -0600 |
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Butch. Jerry Foster was the ham in question. I bet Greenwood and
Johnson were behind the no antenna rules. I had heard that wires were
often dropped out of the north side of the Old school house that was
next to the new library or was that after your term there?
At any rate in 69 some more of us got tickets due again to Jerry and the
Jay hawk ARC and we had donated a BC348 receiver eventually an SX 111
and DX40B. We also had an SFB audible tuning aid and either the school
or another donation bought an 18avq which was placed on the roof of the
Admin Building with god knows how much rg8 which ran down to the
Teacher's Lounge in the west end of the Basement. I only made one
contact from that station the night before I was to leave for Idaho
WA0WPX I think (will need to check the cards at home) and the rest of
the group ran interference with Greenwood while I finished the contact
after lights out. Real repressave and also likely not a good way for me
to grow to like cw either.
I think they have had slightly better success at keeping a station since
but have no details.
Brett KD7JN
-----Original Message-----
From: For blind ham radio operators
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Butch Bussen
Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2007 1:39 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: antennas and such
When I was at the Kansas school for the blind back in 61, (I was in the
seventh grade, one of the teachers there had a husband who was a ham.
He put together novice classes, and we got our tickets, I think about 6
of us. After the school let us have classes, they wouldn't let us put
up any kind of antenna, said they were too ugly!! I never did get on
the air as a novice. I suppose that is why I never developed a taste
for c w.
73s
Butch Bussen
wa0vjr
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