Here is a cut from his QRZ page...
"I was born and grew up in central Iowa. I graduated from Iowa State
Univ and The Univ of Iowa. I was a U.S. Navy officer in the Vietnam war
1967-70. "
and even more telling...
"I got my novice license, KN0RJV, in 1958 at age 15."
73s and thanks,
Dave
NK7Z
http://www.nk7z.net
On 08/26/2017 07:39 PM, WA2PNI wrote:
I find that interesting I just worked a station that gave me 1935. It's
possible, QRZ says born 1918 My hats off to him at that age and still
contesting.
That's if I received everything correctly. Anybody else work W0KK ?
-----Original Message-----
From: RTTY [mailto:rtty-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Peter Laws
Sent: Saturday, August 26, 2017 10:14 PM
To: Bill Turner <dezrat@outlook.com>
Cc: RTTY Reflector <rtty@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RTTY] Question for old timers
On Sat, Aug 26, 2017 at 10:07 PM, Bill Turner <dezrat@outlook.com> wrote:
I know during World War II hams were not allowed to transmit, but were
licenses issued during that time? In the current SCC contest, someone
sent me 1944 as their year first licensed. I challenged him on it and
he never came back. Anyone know?
Good question.
It always bugged me that the MIT club station would use "09" as the check in
the ARRL November Sweepstakes. Like the contest you mention, it's supposed
to be the "last two digits of the first year the station was licensed" ...
since no licenses were issued until 1912 ...
So your question is a good one. The QST archive is pretty hard to search
but surely it's in there.
--
Peter Laws | N5UWY | plaws plaws net | Travel by Train!
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