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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter
May 2015
May 9-10, 2015 - The National World War I Museum, in partnership
with the Santa Fe Trail Amateur Radio Club, will host a special
event station WW1USA from the grounds of the muse-um during the
centennial observance of World War I: Sinking of the RMS Lusitania.
The RMS Lusitania was a British ocean liner and the holder of the
Blue Riband (an unofficial accolade given to the passenger liner
crossing the Atlantic Ocean in regular service with the record
highest speed) and briefly the worlds largest passenger ship. She
was launched by the Cunard Line in 1906, at a time of fierce
competition for the North Atlantic trade. On May 7, 1915, she was
torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat, causing the deaths of 1,198
passen-gers and crew. She sank to the bottom in just 18 minutes.
(Wikipedia) The National World War I Museum is teaming with area
amateur radio operators to host spe-cial event station WW1USA from
the grounds of the Museum for 31 consecutive hours from Saturday,
May 9 at 10 a.m. through Sunday, May 10 at 5 p.m. During this time,
station opera-tors will contact hundreds of other amateur radio
operators across the world. Individuals are welcome to serve as a
guest operator of WW1USA at any time during regular Museum hours
with all guests receiving a special amateur radio operator
certificate. Please come and join us as we experience a pseudo
DX-pedition from the grounds of the Lib-erty Memorial across the
street from Union Station and just a few blocks south of downtown
Kansas City. Please bring your favorite headphones and and 1/8
adapter jacks so that you can connect to radios. If you are going
to operate CW and have a favorite bug or keyer, please bring that
with you so that you have the best experience with us. If you would
like to operate the SSB, or CW station, please send an email to
Larry Hall at
CENTENNIAL OBSERVANCE OF WORLD WAR I: Sinking of RMS Lusitania
By Larry Staples, W0AIB
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 2
Roxanne Baxter, AA7RXNew Assistant Director in Nebraska By Rod
Blocksome, K0DAS
Im pleased to announce the appointment of Roxanne Baxter, AA7RX
as an Assistant Direc-tor in Nebraska. Roxanne is active in several
areas of amateur radio and is interested in working toward getting
young girls and women interested in amateur radio. This is an area
I whole-heartedly support. To better acquaint you with Roxanne, Ive
included her ham radio resume below. I was bitten by the desire to
get my license at a science fiction/pop culture convention known as
DragonCon in 2010. The Atlanta Radio Club put on two presentations
during the convention, one with a zombie apocalypse theme, and I
enjoyed them so much that I earned my technician license just a few
weeks after I returned home. I upgraded to Amateur Extra a year
later. I became a Volunteer Examiner soon after upgrading, and Ive
helped with 15 exam sessions so far. Im also a Registered
Instructor, a donor to the Diamond Club and Spectrum Defense Fund,
and an ARRL Life Member. In 2014, I became the Public In-formation
Coordinator for the Nebraska Section, a position I still hold at
this time. Due to financial reasons, I did not get on the air until
October 2013, but Ive been active on HF since then. I earned more
than 5,000 points in the Centennial QSO Party, and I partici-pated
in both activations of W1AW/0 in Nebraska. I earned the Centennial
WAS Award, and I attended the ARRL Centennial Convention in
Hartford. I have earned the ARRL Worked All States award (Basic,
Digital, and 20m) and Ive worked 109 entities towards DXCC (between
LoTW and QSL cards, it looks like I just hit 100 confirmations!).
In addition to the ARRL, I belong to the Young Ladies Radio League,
AMSAT, FISTS, SKCC, the Pioneer Amateur Radio Club in Fremont, and
the Lincoln Amateur Radio Club in Lincoln. I helped my sons Boy
Scout troop participate in the Jamboree on the Air with a special
event callsign last year, and we made several contacts from their
campsite. My favorite amateur radio activities include chasing DX,
contesting (for fun, not to win), col-lecting QSL cards, and
talking with other hams (over the air and in person).
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 3
If enacted, this bill would direct the FCC to extend reasonable
accommodation for Amateur Radio antenna systems, as ordered in
PRB-1, to those amateur radio operators encum-bered by private land
use restrictions - sometimes referred to as CC&Rs. ARRL
President Kay Craigie, N3KN, and the full leadership of the ARRL
urge all hams to contact their Congressman and ask for their
co-sponsorship of this house bill. You can easily determine who
your congressman is by going to this ARRL web page:
http://www.arrl.org/contacting-your-congressional-representatives
There are several ways to contact your Congressman. One is to
telephone their local office and simply ask for the Congressman to
co-sponsor H.R. 1301. Mentioning the bill number is essential. You
can simply send an email to the Congressman by going to their web
page. You do not need to write a long message. Just say something
like "Please co-sponsor H.R. 1301, the Amateur Radio Parity Act of
2015. As your constituent and an Amateur Radio operator, I know how
our service in providing volunteer emergency communications during
times of disaster serves the public. Our ability to do so would be
strengthened by the pas-sage of this bill." Put this in your own
words and be sure mention the bill number (HR-1301) correctly.
Detailed Information about the bill is on the ARRL web site at
http://www.arrl.org/hr-1301 . Also posted there is information
about how to send postal mail to Congressmen most effi-ciently. If
you choose this route, consider including your QSL card to catch
their attention. As your ARRL Director, I ask that you take a few
minutes to contact your congressman and solicit co-sponsorship of
this bill. If you are not currently affected by private land use
regula-tion, please do this for other hams that are. As of April
21st, 45 Representatives have signed on as co-sponsors of the bill.
four of them
from our division. Lets see if we can get the rest.
HR-1301: The Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2015
http://www.arrl.org/contacting-your-congressional-representativeshttp://www.arrl.org/hr-1301
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 4
Here is a list of the Representatives for the ARRL Midwest
Division: KANSAS (7,280 Licensed Hams)
Tim Huelskamp: 1st District Lynn Jenkins: 2nd DistrictSigned on
as a co-sponsor Mar. 4, 2015 Kevin Yoder: 3rd District Mike Pompeo:
4th District
IOWA (6,157 Licensed Hams)
Rod Blum: 1st District David Loebsack: 2nd District David Young:
3rd District Steve King: 4th District
MISSOURI (14,800 Licensed Hams)
William Clay: 1st District Ann Wagner: 2nd District Blaine
Luetkemeyer: 3rd DistrictSigned on as a co-sponsor Mar. 16, 2015
Vicky Hartzler: 4th District Emanual Cleaver: 5th District Sam
Graves: 6th DistrictSigned on as a co-sponsor Mar. 16, 2015 Billy
Long: 7th District Jason T. Smith: 8th District
NEBRASKA (3,791 Licensed Hams)
Jeff Fortenberry: 1st DistrictSigned on as a co-sponsor Mar. 4,
2015 Brad Ashford: 2nd District Adrian Smith: 3rd District
Four of the nineteen representatives have already signed on as
co-sponsors. If you are in their district, please take a moment to
send them a thank-you message. When contacting your congressional
representative, it is sometimes helpful to mention how many
licensed amateur radio operators live in their state. So I have
included the figures from the FCC database in parenthesis.
Thank-you and 73's Rod Blocksome, K0DAS
HR-1301: The Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2015
(Continued)
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 5
Here`s a group picture of our Club that provided event
communications for the "Demon Dash
for Cash" Saturday, April 4th. Its a four mile fundraiser to
help purchase fitness equipment
for the Washington, Iowa Community Schools. Many other non-ham
volunteers helped also.
L to R: Mitchell L., N0XOB, KI4TRO, NN0O, N0CHN, K0BKL, KD0YUY,
WR0U, KD0NEZ,
N0WDB, KC0YHU, and AB0DX
Demon Dash for Cash By Mark Lukins, AB0DX
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 6
Growth keeps organizations alive. Many people believe that you
can stay in the same place, but that is impossible. Without some
means of continually attracting new members, attrition makes
organizations die a slow death. About ten years ago I was asked
where ham radio was headed. My answer at the time was that it
appeared to be going away due to the internet. Af-ter all, anything
you can do with ham radio could be done on the internet. Since
then, the world has changed, and a new scenario is the potential
loss of the internet and cell phone in-frastructure. This has
caused many, including me, to rethink ham radio. I decided to see
if I could help grow the ham population by teaching technician
classes. For those who dont know, I started a flight school a
number of years ago to help grow the pilot population. I did this
with a different business model in mind. In the past, ground school
classes were 10 12 weeks long. In the present day, people dont have
that much patience, so I started teaching weekend classes. It
turned out to be very successful, so I thought I could apply that
idea to ham classes.
The plan was to wrap everything a newbie needs into one package:
The class, study materi-als, the VE test session, membership in the
local ham club, and even provide their first radio. Id make the
price reasonable so anyone could do it, then, get it all done in
one day. Anyone with even moderate interest would be able to become
a ham in short order. Of course, the real learning begins after
earning the license, so I had no expectation that they would become
ex-perts in a day. This is just a starting point. With their first
radio in hand, they should also be able to get on the air quickly.
If there is a secret to these classes, its calendar management.
Start at class day (T-minus zero), and work backwards on the
calendar until your initial announcement. Determine all the things
that need to be done in advance, and schedule them. Then I just
click down through all the tasks until class time. I also follow up
with the students to make sure they get connected with the club and
get on the air. Weve actually seen many of the newbies get on the
air within a week of getting their call sign. This is the real
satisfaction of accomplishment for me: not just them getting
licensed, but using it. Its not a perfect system yet, as Im still
working out a few kinks, but in general, its been very successful
and the feedback has been very positive. So far, I have held three
classes: No-vember, 8, 2014, March 7, 2015, and April 4, 2015.
Those three classes have produced 47 new Technicians, and I have
many more people expressing interest in these classes, so I will
continue doing them as long as there is a need. Our next class will
be May 16, 2015, with more to follow.
One-day Technician Classes in Iowa By Tim Busch, N0CKR
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 7
As a very goal-oriented person, I started looking at the FCC
database, just as I did with the FAA pilot database, wondering what
growth targets I could impose that could make a signifi-cant change
in the ham population. With just 62 new hams, we will make a 1%
increase in the number of total hams and 2% in the number of Techs
in Iowa. In less than a year, we've in-creased the membership of
the Cedar Valley Amateur Radio Club by 38%, but something else
significant stood out: We also lowered the average age of CVARC
members from 61 to 55 and the average years licensed from 31 to 23.
It's easy to imagine making significant increas-es in the ham
population with these numbers. Many thanks to the Benton County
Iowa VE Team for their help in getting these new hams tested
quickly and efficiently. We have certainly tested the limits of
their system, with as many as 26 tests in one day, but they met the
challenge with flying colors. This is exciting stuff! The best part
is hearing all the new hams getting on the air within hours of
receiving their licenses, and they appear to be regulars on the
local repeaters and are get-ting involved in local events. One
surprise is that I have received requests to teach these classes in
other areas or for pri-vate groups. I'm certainly open to doing
this. It's a great way to jump start or revive interest in ham
radio in your area. My email is N0CKR@ARRL.net. - 73
Tims Pin Map of His New Hams in Iowa
One-day Technician Classes in Iowa (continued) By Tim Busch,
N0CKR
mailto:N0CKR@ARRL.net
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 8
Class #1, November 2014, held in Atkins, Iowa. This was our
prototype class.
One-day Technician Classes in Iowa (continued) By Tim Busch,
N0CKR
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 9
Class #2, March 2015, held in Newhall, Iowa. Many happy new
hams!
One-day Technician Classes in Iowa (continued) By Tim Busch,
N0CKR
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 10
Around the Midwest Division
ARRL Nebraska State Convention On March 21, 2015, the ARRL
Nebraska State Convention took place at the Lincoln Hamfest in
Lincoln, Nebraska. Section Manager, Matt Anderson KA0BOJ, presented
a variety of awards to deserving amateurs. The 2015 recipients of
the "Skip Miller W0KVM Lifetime Achievement Award" were Lyle Quinn,
W0US, and Dave Theophilus, W0NRW. "Nebraska YL Ham of the Year" was
Bev Bennett, KD0PTR. "Nebraska Young Ham of the Year" was Grant
Gardner, KB0BHO. "Nebraska Ham of the Year was awarded to two
recipients this year: Hugh Dunne, KW0R, and Jeff Bennett, W0WKP.
The Gwen Anderson K0GAA Memorial Award was also present-ed to two
recipients: Ed Loeffler, W0EJL, and Sharon Martens, KB0TVB (Sharons
award was presented at the March meeting of the Pioneer Amateur
Radio Club in Fremont on March 26th).
The Ararat Hambash, Kansas City, Missouri
Keith Kaiser, WA0TJT, of Kansas City, Missouri receives the
Amateur Radio Service to Scouting Award presented by Missouri SM
Dale Bagley, K0KY and congratulated by Midwest Director Rod
Blocksome, K0DAS
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 11
Around the Midwest DivisionThe Ararat Hambash
Jon Davis KCUSS receives DMRAAs 2015 Bob Ev-ans award for
service to the Amateur Radio community
Keith, WA0TJT, and Deborah, W0DLK, Kaiser at their Scouting and
Amateur Radio Table at the Ararat Hambash in Kansas City, Missouri
April 18, 2015
Midwest Division News and Photos Wanted! If you have news and
photos about events or activities from the Midwest Division, email
them to me at rod.blocksome@gmail.com. We will try to include as
many as possible in upcoming editions of the Midwest Division
News.
Thanks and 73, Rod, K0DAS, Director Midwest Division
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 12
Around the Midwest DivisionThe Des Moines Hamfest
Jon Davis, KCUSS receives DMRAAs 2015 Bob Evans award for
service to the Ama-teur Radio community at the Des Moines, Iowa
Hamfest April 18, 2015
Iowa SM Bob McCaffrey, K0CY and Midwest Division Vice-Director
Art Zygielbaum, K0AIZ man the ARRL Table
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p. 13
Midwest Division Special Events
05/02/2015 | Hawkeye Get On The Air May 2, 1500Z-2200Z, W0IO,
Iowa City, IA. University of Iowa Amateur Radio Club and Iowa City
Amateur Radio Club. 146.850; General portion of the 10 - 80 meter
bands, and 6 and 2 meters . QSL. University of Iowa Amateur Radio
Club, 203 Van Allen Hall, Iowa City, IA 52242.
w0io.uiarc@gmail.com
05/09/2015 | Sinking of the Lusitania May 9-May 10, 1500Z-2200Z,
WW1USA, Kansas City, MO. Santa Fe Trail Amateur Radio Club. 21.320
14.250 10.115 7.250. Certificate & QSL. National World War I
Museum, 100 W 26th St, Kansas City, MO 64108.
https://theworldwar.org/amateurradio
05/27/2015 | Ham Nation Bicentennial Broadcast May 27-Jun 4,
0001Z-2359Z, W1H, Goddard, KS. Ham Nation Post Show Net
Controllers. 28.468 14.268 7.278 3.847. Certificate. Dale L.
Puckett, 23440 W US Highway 54, Goddard, KS 67052. Special Event
operates between Episode 199 and 200 of the TWIT-TV network.
Certificate will be issued for working 4 of the 6 stations in the
event. In addition to W1H, other stations are W0H, W5H, W6H, W7H
and W9H. All six station will QSL to stations submitting their QSL
with an SASE. Deadline for QSL receipt is December 31 2015. A QRZ
web page for W5H will contain the information for all six Spe-cial
Event stations. hamnationvideos@twit.tv or www.qrz.com/db/w5h
06/06/2015 | FOX TROTTERS OF MISSOURI Jun 6, 1500Z-2000Z, KDCA,
Ava, MO. Douglas County Amateur Radio Club. 14.210 21.250. QSL.
KDCA, PO Box 863, Ava, MO 65608. we will try all frequencies to see
what is open so listen for call sign kc0okp@yahoo.com
06/26/2015 | Edgar Fest 2015 Jun 26-Jun 27, 1000Z-2300Z, KC0UUF,
Edgar, NE. KC0UUF. 14.270 14.230 14.070 7.180. QSL. Dustin
Williams, PO Box 223, Edgar, NE 68935. kc0uuf@gmail.com
07/16/2015 | OMIK 63rd Anniversary Convention Jul 16-Jul 18,
1600Z-2359Z, K0MIK, Saint Louis, MO. OMIK Amateur Radio
Association, Inc. 14.295 7.185 3.920. QSL. Steve Schmitz, 754
Lantern Ln, Saint Louis, MO 63132.
For updated and additional Special Event listings, see:
www.arrl.org/special-event-stations
ARRL State Conventions in the Midwest Division
August 16, 2015Kansas State ARRL Convention Location: Salina, KS
Type: ARRL Convention Sponsor: Central Kansas Amateur Radio
Club
Website: http://www.centralksarc.com
mailto:https://theworldwar.org/amateurradiohttp://www.arrl.org/special-event-stationshttp://www.arrl.org/hamfests/kansas-state-convention-5http://www.centralksarc.com/
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p 14
06/14/2015 | Egyptianfest 2015 Location: Granite City, IL Type:
non-ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Egyptian Radio Club
Website: http://w9aiu.org
07/11/2015 | Pioneer ARC's 18th Annual Flea Market Location:
North Bend, NE Type: ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Pioneer Amateur Radio
Club
Website: http://k0jfn.com
07/11/2015 | W0MG Swap Meet 2015 Location: Waterloo, IA Type:
ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Northeast Iowa Radio Amateur Association
Website: http://www.w0mg.net/presentations/SwapMeet2015.pdf
07/18/2015 | Warrensburg Area Hamfest Location: Warrensburg, MO
Type: ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Warrensburg Area Amateur Radio Club
Website: http://www.waarci.org/hamfest/hamfestflyer_2015.pdf
07/19/2015 | Washington Hamfest Location: Washington, MO Type:
ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Zero Beaters ARC Website:
http://www.zerobeaters.org 08/02/2015 | Cedar Valley ARC Hamfest
Location: Cedar Rapids, IA Type: ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Cedar Valley
Amateur Radio club Website: http://cvarc.rf.org 08/09/2015 | SCARC
Hamfest Location: O'Fallon, MO Type: ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: St.
Charles Amateur Radio Club Website: http://WB0HSI.org
Midwest Division ARRL Hamfests
http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/egyptianfest-2015http://w9aiu.org/http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/pioneer-arc-s-18th-annual-flea-markethttp://k0jfn.com/http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/warrensburg-area-hamfest-1http://www.waarci.org/hamfest/hamfestflyer_2015.pdf
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ARRL Midwest Division Newsletter May 2015 p 15
08/21/2015 | 26th Annual Joplin Hamfest Location: Joplin, MO
Type: Sponsor: Website: http://www.joplin-arc.org 08/29/2015 |
Bellevue Amateur Radio Club Hamfest Location: Papillion, NE Type:
ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Bellevue Amateur Radio Club 09/12/2015 |
Ak-Sar-Ben ARC Flea-Esta Location: Springfield, NE Type: ARRL
Hamfest Sponsor: Ak-Sar-Ben Amateur Radio Club Website:
http://www.aksarbenarc.org 10/03/2015 | Wichita Area Hamfest
Location: Wichita, KS Type: ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Valley Center
Amateur Radio Club Website: http://www.vcarc.org 10/31/2015 | 24th
Halloween Hamfest Location: Kirkwood, MO Type: ARRL Hamfest
Sponsor: Saint Louis ARC Website: http://www.halloweenhamfest.org
10/17/2015 | SouthSide ARC Hamfest Location: Belton, MO Type: ARRL
Hamfest Sponsor: SouthSide ARC
Website: http://southsidehamfest.com
11/07/2015 | Raytown ARC Hamfest 2015 Location: Raytown, MO
Type: ARRL Hamfest Sponsor: Raytown Amateur Radio Club
Website: http://K0GQ.com
11/14/2015 | NARCfest 2015 Location: Nixa, MO Type: ARRL Hamfest
Sponsor: Nixa Amateur Radio Cub
Website: http://smlrs.info/hamfest-flyer
For updated Hamfests and Conventions Calendar, go to:
http://www.arrl.org/hamfests-and-conventions-calendar
Midwest Division ARRL Hamfests
http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/bellevue-amateur-radio-club-hamfesthttp://www.arrl.org/hamfests/ak-sar-ben-arc-flea-esta-3http://www.aksarbenarc.org/http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/wichita-area-hamfest-3http://www.vcarc.org/http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/24th-halloween-hamfesthttp://www.halloweenhamfest.org/http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/southside-arc-hamfesthttp://southsidehamfest.com/
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Director: Rod Blocksome K0DAS k0das@arrl.org 319-393-8022
Vice Director: Art Zygielbaum K0AIZ k0aiz@arrl.org
402-421-0839
Iowa Section Manager: Bob McCaffrey K0CY
Kansas Section Manager: Ron Cowan KB0DTI
Missouri Section Manager: Dale Bagley K0KY
Nebraska Section Manager: Matt Anderson KA0BOJ
DX Advisory Committee: Bill Morgan K0DEQ (MO)
Emergency Communications Advisory Committee: Reynolds Davis
K0GND (NE)
Contest Advisory Committee: Jim Cochran K0RH (KS)
Division Legislative Action Chair: Mike Edwards WB9M (MO)
Legislative Action Coordinators: Nick Critelli K0PCG (IA); Bruce
Frahm K0BJ (KS & NE); Mike
Edwards WB9M (MO).
Assistant Directors (Missouri): Paul Haefner K0JPL, Fred Miller
KB0WIL, Dave Propper K2DP,
Barbara Rich KG0UT, John Rogers W0WC, Kent Trimble K9ZTV, Roger
Volk K0GOB, and Eric Zust
W0TT.
Assistant Directors (Kansas): Mike Albers K0FJ, Jim Andera K0NK,
Andy Anderson W0AFQ, Bill
Henderson K0VBU, Charlie Hett K0THN, Jon Jones N0JK, Brian Short
KC0BS, and Rick Tucker
W0RT.
Assistant Directors (Iowa): Don Boyvey AK0BG, Dennis OBrien
KA0DOS, C.W. Pantel K0IIR,
Jim Spencer W0SR, and Jim Lasley N0JL.
Assistant Directors (Nebraska): Frank Cahoy K0BLT, Stan Coleman
N0YXV, Reynolds Davis
K0GND, Bill Duffy KA0VXK, Joe Eisenberg K0NEB, Allen Harpham
KB0ASQ, Todd LeMense
KK0DX, Mike Nickolaus NF0N, and Roxanne Baxter AA7RX.
Midwest Division Webmaster: Steve Schmitz W0SJS email:
w0sjs@arrl.net
Midwest Divisions website at http://www.arrlmidwest.org/
ARRL Midwest Division Leadership
mailto:k0das@arrl.orgmailto:k0das@arrl.orghttp://www.arrlmidwest.org/