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On Mon, 15 Oct 2007 15:53:39 -0400, AF6AY wrote:
It's a cool late February weekday in the year 1956. I am 23 and a month out of active US Army duty, having spent the last three Army years in radio communications, I had decided to get a civilian commercial radio operator license two weeks prior. I've done the cram thing on over- drive, practically memorizing all of the looseleaf notebook FCC rules borrowed from a new friend at a broadcast station. I walk several blocks from the train station to the Federal Building in Chicago. I am alone, have never been walking in downtown Chicago before...but I am confident although a bit tired. The train ride was an hour and a half and the flat Illinois prarie boring as usual. The FCC Field Office is upstairs and I find it. Everything seems to be utilitarian-government. World War II ended 11 years prior and all federal offices look "war surplus" furnished. Three visible officials are brusque, bored, not effusive; i.e., it's like being back in the Army. Familiar. FCC guys are fussing with a paper-tape code machine Believe it or not, in 1974 I took my General code test on the same paper-tape code machine you saw the inspectors fussing with in 1956. The pitch jumped briefly about halfway through. Didn't faze most of us, but when the tape was over one of the guys being tested protested loudly & insisted on being tested again. Don't know if he passed on the second try. (the rest of us all passed on the first try, even with the jumping pitch) By the time I took the 20wpm for the Extra two years later, they were using a cheap portable cassette player. It worked, but most of the "soul" was missing. The train ride was from Milwaukee; I suspect the Federal Building was somewhat taller; and there was a Sears Tower along the walk from the train station, but I suspect it was a similar experience. |
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