CQ Announces 2008 Hall of Fame Inductees:
from
The ARRL Letter, Vol 27, No 20
on
May 23, 2008
Website:
http://www.arrl.org/
Add a comment about this article!
CQ Announces 2008 Hall of Fame Inductees:
Just before Hamvention weekend, CQ magazine announced its 2008 Hall of
Fame inductees, welcoming 14 new members into the CQ Amateur Radio Hall
of Fame, three new members of the CQ DX Hall of Fame and two new members
of the CQ Contest Hall of Fame. The CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame honors
those individuals, whether licensed hams or not, who have made
significant contributions to Amateur Radio; and those amateurs who have
made significant contributions either to Amateur Radio, to their
professional careers or to some other aspect of life on our planet. The
CQ Contest and DX Halls of Fame honor those amateurs who not only excel
in personal performance in these major areas of Amateur Radio but who
also "give back" to Amateur Radio in outstanding ways.
The 2008 inductees to the CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame (listed
alphabetically) are:
Gaston Bertels, ON4WF -- Honorary President, former President and CEO,
UBA (Belgian IARU Member-Society); Founder & President, AMSAT Belgium;
Chairman, ARISS Europe.
L. B. Cebik, W4RNL (SK) -- Noted antenna authority, prolific author on
topics relating to antennas and antenna modeling. One of Cebik's last
articles for QST, "A New Spin on the Big Wheel," appeared in the March
2008 issue. The article, co-written with Bob Cerreto, WA1FXT, looked at
a three dipole array for 2 meters. This was a follow-up to their article
in the January/February issue of QEX that featured omnidirectional
horizontally polarized antennas. Cebik authored the "Antenna Options"
column for QEX. Cebik, an ARRL Life Member, passed away last month at
age 68.
Gordon England, ex-W3AWO -- Deputy Secretary of Defense; former
Secretary of the Navy; former defense industry executive.
Admiral Edmund Giambastiani, N4OC -- Retired Vice Chairman, Joint Chiefs
of Staff.
Gerald Griffin, MD, K6MD -- Brigadier General, Medical Corps, US Army
(Retired). Led medical brigades and humanitarian missions in various
combat zones; delegate to NATO medical advisory committee
Larnelle Harris, WD4LZC -- Multi-award-winning gospel singer/songwriter.
Lenore Jensen, W6NAZ (SK) -- Co-Founder, Young Ladies' Radio League
(YLRL). Jensen wrote articles for QST, such as "Ask Not What Amateur
Radio Can Do for You" (September 1978) and "California Hams Assist
During Mud/Flood Crisis" (June 1980). During the 1930s, she acted in the
radio drama Ma Perkins and later starred with McDonald Carey in the Lock
Up TV series. Jenson was featured on This Is Your Life for her important
contributions during World War II. After Pearl Harbor, she founded radio
training courses for the American Women's Voluntary Service (AWVS),
specializing in phone patches between servicemen overseas and their
families, running more than 50,000 phone patches during the Vietnam War.
Jensen's stepdaughter, Cynthia Wall, KA7ITT, wrote several ham
radio-related adventure books for young people that were published by
the ARRL.
John Kanzius, K3TUP -- Inventor of possible cure for cancer using RF
energy; process for possible use of seawater as fuel. Kanzius's work was
featured in the February 2008 issue of QST.
Charles (Chip) Margelli, K7JA -- DXer and DXpeditioner; in 2005,
successfully represented hams in Morse code vs text-messaging
competition on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. He has written several
articles for QST since 1973, including "Field Day 2003 from Cuba" in the
December 2003 issue. In his capacity as Vice President for Amateur Sales
and Marketing for Heil Sound, Margelli arranged the donation of
equipment to The Laird Campbell Memorial HQ Operators Club station,
W1HQ.
Philip S. Rand, W1DBM (SK) -- TVI pioneer; author, Television
Interference. Rand was an electronics engineer for the Remington-Rand
Corporation in the late 1940s, when Amateur Radio faced a crisis in the
form of interference to the early VHF television sets. Rand worked with
the ARRL to develop TVI suppression techniques for channels two through
six. ARRL's then-Technical Editor George Grammer, W1DF, designed high
pass filters for the primitive TV sets, while Rand developed new methods
of shielding for amateur transmitters. Rand published articles in QST
Magazine spanning 50 years, from "A Shack on Wheels" in 1933 to "The
Beeper, An Audible Frequency Readout for The Blind Amateur" in September
1983. Rand served as ARRL New England Division Director in 1955 and
1956.
Vice Admiral Scott Redd (Retired), K0DQ/A92Q -- Former Director,
National Counterterrorism Center; Retired Commander, US Fifth Fleet;
active contester and DXer.
Tony Tether, PhD, K2TGE -- Director, Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA)
Dr Hamadoun I. Toure, HB9EHT -- Secretary-General, International
Telecommunication Union (ITU). Dr Toure received his Amateur Radio
license in October 2007. An interview with Dr Toure appears in the May
2008 issue of QST.
John Townsend, PhD, W3PRB -- Space program pioneer, aerospace industry
executive.
The 2008 inductees to the CQ DX Hall of Fame are:
John Devoldere, ON4UN, who more or less single-handedly popularized
DXing on 80 meters. His book, Low Band DXing, the last several editions
of which have been published by the ARRL, is considered the "bible" for
DXing on these bands, with more than 50,000 copies sold. In 1979,
Devoldere was the first ham to earn CQ's 5-Band Worked All Zones (5BWAZ)
award; he holds 80 meter DXCC Certificate #1 and currently has 357
countries confirmed on that band.
Nellie Saltiel de Lazard, XE1CI, a pediatrician and DXer/DXpeditioner,
has earned just about every major DXing award. She has operated from
more than a dozen different countries, including being the first female
to operate from Palestine (E4).
Bob Schenck, N2OO, has made his greatest contribution to DXing behind
the scenes as QSL manager for more than 100 DX stations as well as more
than 130 DXpeditions. Schenck is founder of the QSL Manager's Society.
The 2008 inductees to the CQ Contest Hall of Fame are:
Paolo Cortese, I2UIY, has too many Top 10 finishes to list. Off the air,
he served for more than a decade as the HF Contest Manager for
Associazione Radioamatori Italiani, Italy's national Amateur Radio
association and IARU Member-Society. Cortese wrote a book on contesting
and has been a member of the CQWW Contest Committee since 1990,
co-director of the CQ WW RTTY DX Contest and CQ WPX RTTY Contest since
2005. He has also written articles for QST and NCJ.
Randy Thompson, K5ZD, has multiple wins in the CQ World Wide DX Contest,
ARRL Sweepstakes, CQ WPX (CW and SSB), CQ 160 and the IARU HF
Championship. His station has also hosted many #1 performances by guest
operators. Thompson is three-time editor of the National Contest Journal
(NCJ) and co-founder of the eham.net Web site. He has just been named
Director of the CQ WPX Contests. Thompson is a member of the Yankee
Clipper Contest Club (YCCC).
Source:
The ARRL Letter
Vol. 27, No. 20
May 23, 2008
There are no comments on this article:
Post One
|
Email Subscription
My Subscriptions
Subscriptions Help
Other News Articles
ARISS Contact on Amateur Television and YouTube:
Two Canadian Stations on 500kHz:
Eagle Radio Ham Honored for Long Service:
Bright Spot -- Ray Grob NN8R:
K6VVA's FCC Petition For Rulemaking (Identity Protection):
|