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In article ,
Steve Bonine wrote: Dan Yemiola AI8O wrote: Unfortunately there was a Mary Kay Cosmetics meeting being held on the other side of the ballroom, and every five minutes or so Mary Kay ladies would start clapping and singing, just like camp meeting. No "quiet, sterile FCC exam room " that day. At least they tried, sort of. My General class exam was held in the Federal Building in Knoxville, TN. I've seen other articles here that described using headphones for code exams; we did not have them. The room was one of those sterile 1960s government classroom/conference rooms, and the echo was horrendous. It was kind of like copying cw through QRN on 80 meters, which is just what I had been doing for the past few months, so I did pass the test. But I do wonder why headphones were provided for some exam locations, but not for others. 73, Steve KB9X I took my General Test at the FCC Office in the OLD Federal Office Building in Seattle, Washington, from the Steelie Eyed, Old Crone named Gertrude Johnson, who was the Office Secratary. She did a REAL Good impression of "Librarian from Hell". NO talking, no noise of any kind, if your eyes even left your desk, you FAILED. She was Code Proficent, clear up to 35WPM, and the EIC, Bob Deitch, was even Better. I took my First Class Radiotelephone Exam in the same place the next year, and Ms. Johnson was still there. Years later, when I took the Advanced Exam, in the NEW Federal Office Building, Bob Zinns was the examiner, and they just made you erase all the memory in your calculator. I had it a lot easier then, as I had been doing Marine Ship Inspections, with Inspectors from the Seattle Office for a couple of years, and had a good relationship whith all of them. A few years after that, I was approched by the FCC Region X Director, Bill Johnson, and was offered a position with the Commission as a Resident Field Agent for Southeastern Alaska, attached to the Anchorage Office. I spent 5 years working for them, untill the ALGORE BloodLetting, that destroyed Field Operations as we knew it. Bruce in alaska AL7AQ -- add path before @ |
#2
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 17:39:10 EDT, Bruce in Alaska
wrote: I spent 5 years working for them, untill the ALGORE BloodLetting, that destroyed Field Operations as we knew it. That was the first time that I heard Internet Al blamed for it. I had always thought that it was Der Hundt, when The Congress laid the task of rewriting the Cable TV rules on the agency but refused to approve any more slots (money) for the reg-writers. and he looked around to see who was expendable. He had no understanding of what the field did, no matter how hard we tried, and so the blood-letting of the field started. The then-Bureau chief (Beverly Baker, one of my law school mentors) resigned rather than go through with it. She was replaced by a former Chief Recruiting Sergeant for the Marine Corps.... (no further comment) I took early-out 10 seconds after it was offered. That's how good morale was under that cloud 12 years ago. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane From a Clearing in the Silicon Forest Beaverton (Washington County) Oregon e-mail: k2asp [at] arrl [dot] net |
#3
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In article ,
Phil Kane wrote: On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 17:39:10 EDT, Bruce in Alaska wrote: I spent 5 years working for them, untill the ALGORE BloodLetting, that destroyed Field Operations as we knew it. That was the first time that I heard Internet Al blamed for it. I had always thought that it was Der Hundt, when The Congress laid the task of rewriting the Cable TV rules on the agency but refused to approve any more slots (money) for the reg-writers. and he looked around to see who was expendable. He had no understanding of what the field did, no matter how hard we tried, and so the blood-letting of the field started. The then-Bureau chief (Beverly Baker, one of my law school mentors) resigned rather than go through with it. She was replaced by a former Chief Recruiting Sergeant for the Marine Corps.... (no further comment) I took early-out 10 seconds after it was offered. That's how good morale was under that cloud 12 years ago. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane From a Clearing in the Silicon Forest Beaverton (Washington County) Oregon e-mail: k2asp [at] arrl [dot] net ALGORE was the guy who was incharge of the "Reinvention Of Government" movement under the Clinton Administration. The Commission was one of first agencies that got "ReInvented", and FOB was the first Bureau that got slashed. It was interesting that the total number of employees stayed fairly static thru the whole process..... $60K Engineers and $45K Field Techs, replaced with $120K Economists, and $100K Lawyers.... and this saved money, How? Oh well, I really enjoyed my time with the Commission, and the friends I made, and still have, some of whom are still there. Although fewer, each year. Bruce in alaska -- add path before @ |
#4
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In article ,
Bruce in Alaska wrote: In article , Steve Bonine wrote: Dan Yemiola AI8O wrote: Unfortunately there was a Mary Kay Cosmetics meeting being held on the other side of the ballroom, and every five minutes or so Mary Kay ladies would start clapping and singing, just like camp meeting. No "quiet, sterile FCC exam room " that day. At least they tried, sort of. My General class exam was held in the Federal Building in Knoxville, TN. I've seen other articles here that described using headphones for code exams; we did not have them. The room was one of those sterile 1960s government classroom/conference rooms, and the echo was horrendous. It was kind of like copying cw through QRN on 80 meters, which is just what I had been doing for the past few months, so I did pass the test. But I do wonder why headphones were provided for some exam locations, but not for others. 73, Steve KB9X I took my General Test at the FCC Office in the OLD Federal Office Building in Seattle, Washington, from the Steelie Eyed, Old Crone named Gertrude Johnson, who was the Office Secratary. She did a REAL Good impression of "Librarian from Hell". NO talking, no noise of any kind, if your eyes even left your desk, you FAILED. She was Code Proficent, clear up to 35WPM, Wasn't she just scary? -- -------------------------------------------------------- Personal e-mail is the n7bsn but at amsat.org This posting address is a spam-trap and seldom read RV and Camping FAQ can be found at http://www.ralphandellen.us/rv |
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