The Alford Memorial Radio Club Field Day will be held at Stone Mountain Park at the same location as last year. If you didn't come last year, you need to make sure you come this year.
Look for the Blue Police Sign in the bottom right portion of the park map and click on that quadrant.
Follow the road that turns in just before you get to the Police Station, and follow the road into the woods. That is where we will be so look for all the antennas.
Saturday Lunch will be Hotdogs and Hamburgers, and Dinner will be Smoked BBQ Pulled Pork, Corn on the cobb and all the fixings. Dinner will be served around 7:00pm. At Midnight we will serve Grits and oter goodies to help you keep your energy going all night long.
Setup on Friday will consist of hanging antennas and rounding up a few picnic tables, setting up a few tents. Please help your club out and make it a long weekend by coming out to help on Friday also..
All clubmembers, visitors and guests of the club will get into the park for free all weekend long - even during the overnight hours. Tell the folks at the gate you are part of the Ham Radio Field Day Event. See ya there!.
Alford Memorial Radio Club Member, Lew Howard, W4LHH, Silent Key. The following article is from the AJC.
Lew Howard, age 92 of Loganville, GA died May 10, 2008.
He is survived by his wife, Mary Howard; daughter and son-in-law, Kathy and
Stephen Neumyer of Loganville; brother and sister-in-law, William and Marge
Howard of Locust Grove, VA; 6 grandchildren, 1 great grandchild and one due
later this month; many nieces and nephews.
Mr. Howard's career included 10 years as a motion picture operator; 4 years
in the Navy, where he enlisted after the attack on Pearl Harbor; and 25 years
with RCA. While at RCA Lew was a microscope technician and subsequently
moved into management in the Theater and Industrial Division where he was honored
twice as Manager of the Year.
Lew was a lifelong "Ham" radio operator after he earned his operator's
license in 1933. He was well known in the "Ham" community for many of his hand
made pieces of equipment that he built while in retirement.
Memorial services will be held Thursday, May 15 at 6:30PM at Tom M. Wages
Snellville Chapel. The family will receive friends one hour before the service, at
the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers please make donations to Embracing Hospice Care, 2160
Fountain Drive, Snellville, GA 30078, in memory of Lew Howard. Condolences may
be sent or viewed at www.wagesfuneralhome.com Tom M. Wages Funeral Service,
LLC, Snellville, GA 770-979-3200
_________________________________________________________________________
Lew was a great member of our club and will be missed. Our Prayers go out to his family.
Thanks to Lee Flack. KD4HPD for bringing us this news.
Thanks to Jay Sager, WA4BXA for the photo.
Hamfest Meeting: Tuesday, April 22, 2008 at 6:30pm at Randy Bassett's home.
The 2007 Club Service Appreciation Awards are on the website at:. CLICK HERE TO VIEW Please Note: The Printer function is not working properly at this moment, but will be available in a few days. Thanks for your patience. Robert
The March - April 2008 E-TOTR is NOW ON-LINE! CLICK HERE
Barry Kanne, W4TGA is the Alford Memorial Radio Club Ham of the Year!
Vice President Steve Garrison, N4SEG presents the award to Barry Kanne, W4TGA.
Photo by Robert Tyler, KF4VBR
Barry is always helping someone at the club with his technical knowledge. He has helped Randy solve some of the strange repeater problems we have experienced in the past, helped us with the digital experiment at the 4th of July parade and he is always at every event helping somewhere.
Barry is our EC for Dekalb ARES and has worked hard to build our ARES group into a stronger and more organized team so we are ready to serve our local agencies as needed.
Barry is also the GAARES ASEC for Public Health, which means he is working with all of the Hospitals around the State to get them setup for Disasters, by installing Ham Stations in each hospital.
Congratulations Barry, and thank you for all you do for the club.
Our own Randy Bassett, KR4NQ is now into Hip Hop.
Randy just underwent Hip replacement surgery, and I hear he is hopping around now and should be back to limping in a few days. I hear he is doing well, but he will not make the January Club meeting to show off his new moves.
The New E-TOTR is now online, check out the January -February 2008 issue now!.
It is with great sadness that I announce that Howard P. Gould "Howie" W9HG is now a Silent Key. He died early this morning after a long battle with congestive heart failure.
Services for Howie will take place with the viewing and visitation on Sunday January 6, 2008 from 2:00pm to 4:00pm and from 6:00pm to 8:00pm at Horis Ward Funeral Home, Stone Mountain Chapel, 1355 Rockbridge Road Stone Mountain, GA. A Mass will be held at St. Stephen the Martyr Catholic Church, 5373 Wydella Road, Lilburn, GA at 10:30 am on Monday January 7, 2008. Cremation services will be held on Wednesday - (Family Members Only).
Although Howie was not a member of the Alford Club, I felt it appropriate to add the bio from Howie's QRZ web page. Howie helped many of us get our licenses, and was always in the heat of all of the discussions about amateur radio. He might argue with you all day long about something, but he was still your friend afterwards. Howie will be missed, by all of us in the Atlanta amateur radio community.
Born in South Boston in 1931 I always had a fascination for radio from the time I was able to walk and talk. My folks had an old radio that sat on a table in the living room that we listened to every evening that had an open type back of the cabinet exposing the tubes and their signal grid leads and the tubes had a orange glow and a slight feeling of heat coming off them that attracted me to investigate and poke fingers at. I remember one time putting my finger on a lead to one of the tube grid caps and the station we were listening to blasted in, that was my first contact with radio and I have been at it ever since.
I remember another embarrassing moment in time when I was in High School and had purchased my first what they called a 2 way portable radio that used A and B batteries and also plugged into A/C.
Having no money to purchase new batteries when the battery voltage dropped I decided to charge the batteries by way of 120V A/C, that was my first encounter with DC and AC voltages which resulted in a smoking radio and it was then I decided to learn about electricity and Ohms law and this eventually led to Ham Radio and an electronics career with a commercial radio and TV manufacturer. Being a tinkerer at heart Ham Radio became a natural for me and stepped me into many wiring and building projects through the ensuing years that followed me into the early days of analog circuits.
I have been involved with public service, handling of phone patches in the sixties from the Antartica for our military guys and gals, founded the 3905 Century Club and was one of the first officers for ECARS. I also am a member of the A1 Operator Club.
I served my country during the Korean War as a Marine and I serve now as a MARS Air Force operator with the call sign AFA2JI.
I especially enjoy making wire antennas of all sorts and talking on both phone and CW. I have some digital interests but being as I am from the old school of analog circurity and hand wired radios where you could actually find the exact one part that was defective versus changing out a block of components contained in todays's digital chips which hold a ton of components and circuitry, I am thouroughly satsified with good old radio. Ham Radio has been a good hobby for me as it has given me a chance to meet many people from all walks of life and sometimes be able to meet and help those along the way who are stumbling through their early phase of learning the radio art.
I was first licensed as a Novice class in 1955 and I have held the calls KN1HHN, K1HHN, W4NVF, and my present call W9HG so as to personalize and associate it with my name. I also passed the Extra in 1993 doing a blazing 20 wpm solid copy on the full text a skill I am deeply proud of since it is only a memory of a skill to be cherished now that they have dropped the morse code for an open road to an unearned Extra Class and I stilll don't get it. I am a certified VE heading a group that has been active since 1993, and I thoroughly enjoy watching new faces come into the hobby and become part of our fraternity especially those who earned it.
Ham radio is entering a new and excting era and I look forward to the new digital world that is being created which will renew interest in this old hobby of ours.
TECHFEST - 2008 January 12, 2008
Please do not forget TECHFEST put on by the Gwinnett Amateur Radio Society. This is an exciting event where you can learn about just about everything in Amateur Radio, from the newest digital modes to making antennas out of all sorts of strange things. This is a must for every Ham in the Atlanta Area.
DEKALB
ARES :The next regular monthly meeting is at:
1:00 pm April 26, 2008. To be held at: Dekalb County Fire/Rescue Headquarters located at 1950 W. Exchange Place, Tucker, Ga 30084.
Contact
Barry Kanne, for any questions at: EC@dekalbares.org
Copyright
1999-2008 The Alford Memorial Radio Club Inc. Page
updated: April 13, 2008
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