267 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
267 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
In My Opinion....
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An editorial by Donald L. Stoner, W6TNS
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This may be your first exposure to "The Amateur Radio
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Communicator" and The National Amateur Radio Association. I
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certainly hope it won't be your last. In my first editorial,
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I'd like to tell you about NARA, our plans for the future
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and what you can expect to see in this journal.
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Where Did NARA Come From?
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In November of 1988, the Federal Communications Commission
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slipped a bomb into our hamshacks and lit the fuse.. The FCC
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announced they were reallocating a portion of the 220 MHz
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band to a new communications service based on a petition
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submitted by United Parcel Service. Our national
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organization, The American Radio Relay League has tried to
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snuff out the fuse and get the decision reversed. But as
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far as I can tell, the 220- 222 MHz part of the band is a
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goner!
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How could this have happened? Well, for starters, we took
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the Amateur Radio Service and our fraternity for granted. It
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never occurred to us that the FCC might give some of "our"
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frequencies away just because we didn't use them.
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The FCC even warned us of their intention. In 1984 Robert
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Foosaner was Chief of the FCC Private Radio Bureau. He
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indicated in a CQ Magazine interview that the band was not
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being used adequately. Mr. Foosaner flatly stated it might
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be assigned to other services. Unfortunately we didn't
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believe him .
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I have a theory that the FCC confiscated these frequencies
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to send Amateurs a message. I believe the message is "shape
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up or ship out." Warm up the tar and start collecting
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feathers if you like, but in my opinion, the Commission did
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Amateurs an enormous favor. A two MHz slice of radio
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frequency spectrum is a small price to pay for awakening us
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from our long sleep.
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The Amateur Radio Service is coming back to life after 20 or
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more years of being totally oblivious to the changes taking
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place all around us. Amateurs are starting to ask how they
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can contribute to the fraternity. They want to improve
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themselves and they want to see the service revitalized.
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They want more young people to enjoy Amateur Radio.
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Teachers, particularly those who are Amateurs, are beginning
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to realize how the service can be used to educate our
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youngsters in a number of disciplines.
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This metamorphosis also happened to your humble editor in
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November of 1988. I've enjoyed Amateur Radio for almost 40
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years. In the 50's and 60's I wrote a number of books and
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articles for Amateurs. I have also taken the Amateur Radio
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Service for granted. I'm as guilty as anyone. But that
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stopped when we lost part of the 220 MHz band. The National
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Amateur Radio Association became more than just a gleam in
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my eye.
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What Are The Goals of NARA?
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Broadly speaking, the goal of The National Amateur Radio
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Association is the promotion of ham radio. The organization
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has four specific goals within this broad framework. These
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are to a) publicize or market Amateur Radio to the general
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public, b) attract young people to the Amateur Radio
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Service, c) help existing Amateurs achieve the greatest
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benefit from the Amateur Radio Service and d) make Amateurs
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aware that our radio frequencies are in jeopardy from
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commercial interests. Here are some of my specific thoughts
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on these four areas:
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Marketing Amateur Radio To The Public
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Many people don't understand the significance of marketing
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and sales. The difference is very germane to this
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discussion.
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Let's say you go into a ham radio store and tell the person
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behind the counter you want to buy an ICOM IC-781. He or she
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takes your order along with your money and hands you a
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radio. In this instance the person is simply an order taker
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and not even a sales person. A sales person tries to
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convince you to buy a specific product but they are not
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marketeers. The people who publish the brochures, run the
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advertisements and create your desire to own the IC-781 are
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the marketeers. Marketing /i3 creates the desire to have
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something.
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For as long as I can remember, we hams have been order
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takers. We have not been salespersons and by no stretch of
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the imagination could be called marketeers of ham radio. If
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someone expressed their desire to be a ham, or an ex-CB'er
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convinced us they were a born-again communicator, we'd "take
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their order" and accept them into our ranks. Until recently,
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we never tried to be salespersons or marketeers for our
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hobby.
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Deep down inside the human brain, is a little grey glob that
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scientists label the "I've got mine" lobe. In this area of
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the Amateur's brain is stored the feeling that we really
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don't want any more hams than we already have. We'll never
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admit it, even to ourselves, but the feeling is there. More
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hams equal more QRM, more problems with the FCC and more
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drift away from the way things used to be in the "good ole
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days."
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More is not always better. More people with an Amateur Radio
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license may not have a positive or beneficial effect on the
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Amateur Service. We must mold and shape these people in the
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traditions that have guided us since the early part of the
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century. How we accomplish this will be the subject of
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articles in future issues of this journal.
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Attracting Young People
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When I was a kid, ham radio was a young peoples hobby. My
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best friend was a guy named Barry Windsor. Barry and I were
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fascinated by ham radio. We used to go over to Sid Dunn's
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house every Saturday morning. I never saw Sid without a
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cigar in his mouth. It was just another one of his
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appendages. When the end of his "stoggie" would get all
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goopy and slobbery, he'd line it up on the edge of the
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workbench, along with the other stubs, to dry out.
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Anyway, Sid used to take time each week to teach us about
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ham radio. He'd work somebody in Upper Slobovia on 20 meters
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and our eyes would stand out on six inch stems. Then Sid
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would tell us the reason he could do this was (insert
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lecture here) his three element beam and how it worked, or
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the 304TL amplifier and how it worked, or radio propagation
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and how it worked. You get the idea.
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Barry and I and some of the other kids pecked away at keys
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rather unsuccessfully trying to learn the Morse code. I lost
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track of the others but finally made the grade when the FCC,
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in their infinite wisdom, created the Novice and Technician
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license.
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Somehow, someway, we must resurrect the magic aura that
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existed back in Sid's hamshack. Essentially, we must try to
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give something back to our fraternity in exchange for all
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the wonderful things it has given us.
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It's not going to be easy! Today kids have computers,
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Nintendo games, cars, the opposite sex and Madonna, MTV and
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a million other distractions. We've taken the first step to
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redress the problem of attracting young people by creating a
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new "code-free" license. What this license becomes, and
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whether it is successful in attracting newcomers is entirely
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up to us. If we don't tell anyone about the Amateur Radio
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Service and how easy it is to become a ham, the new
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Technician Class license will be a "dud." In short, we must
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all make an effort to /b1 market ham radio to the public.
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In marketing, you commonly give away a sample which gets the
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"hook in and set", to use a fishing metaphor. That's what
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the new Technician license can do that for our fraternity.
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It can be the "hook" that we use to attract people to
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Amateur Radio.
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But we must get out and hustle the service to young people.
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That's where NARA comes in. We intend to tell our members
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how to recruit youngsters. We intend to print stories about
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how others have done it successfully.
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We believe the place to recruit youngsters is in the schools
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as early as possible. Again, we are going to have a lot to
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say about our schools in future issues of "The Amateur Radio
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Communicator".
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Helping Existing Hams
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Like it or not, a lot of hams passed their written test
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simply by memorizing the questions and the correct answer.
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Why not? What's wrong with that? You memorize the code don't
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you?
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But these hams are not particularly proud of the fact they
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don't understand the answers or even the questions. They are
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curious about the technical aspects of the Amateur Radio
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Service.
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I have yet to meet a ham that does not want to improve him
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or herself. Some Volunteer Examiners have established
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classes to teach people how to become a ham. Who has a class
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to teach you how to upgrade from Novice/Technician to
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General? Very few, I suspect.
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Each issue of "The Amateur Radio Communicator" will have a
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theory article. Hopefully they will be as useful and
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interesting to existing hams as well as to newcomers. If you
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have specific questions that you would like to see answered
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in this publication, send them to "Editor- A Touch Of
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Class".
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Preservation Of "Our" Frequencies-
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I put the word "our" in quotes. We seem to think of the
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radio spectrum as "ours." A number of bands of frequencies
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are /i1 loaned for our use, by the Federal Communications
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Commission. We can continue to use them so long as it is in
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the national interest to do so. Make no mistake about it
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fellow hams. The FCC did not let us use parts of the radio
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spectrum because they think we are nice guys or gals. They
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do so because it is more in the national interest to loan
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these frequencies to the Amateur Radio Service than to
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someone else. If that equation changes, more frequencies
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will be lost to other activities which are perceived by the
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FCC to better advance the national interest.
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In November 1988, the FCC brought the point forcibly to our
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attention. They reminded us, once again, "If you don't use
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'em, you're gonna lose 'em!" Some of our bands are barren
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waste-lands that we Amateurs seem to be saving for a "rainy
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day." Six meters is under utilized except for a few hardy
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souls in Southern California. The Commission knew the 220
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MHz band was not adequately occupied. It won't be adequately
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occupied even when the FCC allocates the 220- 222 MHz
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portion for land mobile use. We have already lost the 902
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MHz band and the fate of our satellite "S" band will be
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decided next year by the World Administrative Radio
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Conference (WARC) in Spain.
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The 1296 band is priceless. Do you know of anyone who
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operates this band? Does your ham store have any 1296 MHz
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equipment in stock or do they have to order it? Is there a
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1296 MHz repeater in your town. I doubt it.
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If we maintain our "business as usual" approach, we are
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going to lose more frequencies. A lot more!
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NARA hopes to create an environment where confiscation of
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frequencies used by Amateurs would be unthinkable both
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politically and economically. But NARA cannot do it without
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your help and support.
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What Can You Do?
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I'd love to think that one Amateur can single handedly
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correct all the ills of the past few decades. My ego would
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get a tremendous boost to see bureaucrats quake at the sight
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of a NARA letterhead.
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The reality is that nothing is going to happen without your
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support. No one person can make the necessary changes. Even
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a group like NARA cannot do it without your help. Only you
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can make the Amateur Radio Service above reproach and
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criticism. You must become concerned about the growth of our
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fraternity and the education of our youth. You must do
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something about the status of radio spectrum used by
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Amateurs. You can show your support by joining the National
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Amateur Radio Association. If you sit down this evening and
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wrap a membership application around your check for $10.00
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it /i1 will make a difference.
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Hopefully, I have been able to demonstrate the application
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of "Marketing 101" in this editorial. Have I been able to
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create a desire to join a young and aggressive organization
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that is concerned about our fraternity? Your graduation test
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will be found toward the back of this journal in the form of
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a membership application blank.
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73, de Don, W6TNS
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