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Subject:
From:
Phil Scovell <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
For blind ham radio operators <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 7 Dec 2008 10:26:24 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
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text/plain (28 lines)
Meagan,

Your story reminded me of a friend of mine, long passed away now for many
years, and he was an electronics genius.  I was 14 at the time I met him on
the air.  He worked for Western Electric in Omaha managing computers as they
stretched copper wire into miles and miles.  No fooling.  His job was to
keep the computers, at either end, working at precision speed so the wire
wouldn't break.  He was in his forties when we worked as novices on 80
meters and soon became personal friends, going to World Radio In Council
Bluffs together, and he put up my first tri band beam for me when we became
generals.  Anyhow, we called him Tex but that wasn't his real name.  I found
out that when Tex went to take his general test, this was when the FCC came
to Omaha to give the exams once every three months, he was so nervous, he
flunked the code test the first time.  The next time he tried, he kept
breaking the led in his pencil, pulled his headphone plug out of the jack of
the recorder, and about had a heart attack.  I think he took it three times
before passing.  I know a man who took the general test 13 times before
finally passing the written test.  When I went to take my general exam, I
was last in line and two groups of guys, about a dozen in each group, put on
headphones and took the code test.  The FCC examiner turned it up so loud, I
could almost copy every letter sitting across the room.  In the first group,
before the tape was turned on, a guy yelled out, "Hey, I can't hear anything
coming through my headphones."  The examiner calmly said, "That's because I
haven't turned the tape machine on yet."

Phil.
K0NX

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