(Araucaria) Fwd: ARLX008 Former "The World Above 50 MHz" Conductor Gene Zimmerman, W3ZZ (SK)
Carlos Augusto Pereira
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Terça Junho 5 15:46:41 BRT 2012
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From: ARRL Web site <memberlist em www.arrl.org>
Date: Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 2:56 PM
Subject: ARLX008 Former "The World Above 50 MHz" Conductor Gene Zimmerman,
W3ZZ (SK)
To: augusto.pereira em gmail.com
SB SPCL @ ARL $ARLX008
ARLX008 Former "The World Above 50 MHz" Conductor Gene Zimmerman,
W3ZZ (SK)
ZCZC AX08
QST de W1AW
Special Bulletin 8 ARLX008
>From ARRL Headquarters
Newington CT June 5, 2012
To all radio amateurs
SB SPCL ARL ARLX008
ARLX008 Former "The World Above 50 MHz" Conductor Gene Zimmerman,
W3ZZ (SK)
Gene Zimmerman, W3ZZ, of Gaithersburg, Maryland, passed away on
Sunday, June 3. He was 71. Zimmerman wrote the popular QST column
"The World Above 50 MHz" from 2002-2011. He also served on the ARRL
Contest Advisory Committee, edited the VHF contesting column for CQ
Contest magazine during its five-year lifespan and was director of
the CQ VHF Contest from 2000-2002. An ARRL Life Member, Zimmerman
earned VUCC on six bands: 50, 144, 222, 432, 903 and 1296 MHz, as
well as DXCC, Worked All States and Worked All Continents on 6
meters. He was an early proponent of -- and participant in --
aggressive contest log checking.
First licensed in 1956 -- and an Amateur Extra since 1963 --
Zimmerman has logged several national Top-10 finishes in the ARRL
November Sweepstakes (both modes), as well as a second-place North
American finish in the CQ World Wide CW Contest (from VP2MDD). He
also placed in the Top 10 several times in the ARRL VHF QSO Parties
and in the ARRL VHF Sweepstakes.
Zimmerman earned a PhD in Microbiology from the University of
Maryland in 1968. He began his professional career at the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), where he spent a year as a technician in
an NIH laboratory, studying respiratory viruses. This experience
sparked an interest in virology and conquering the common cold.
After this, he conducted early research at NIH, studying the
relationship between retroviruses and cancer, the use of the simian
model for studying leukemia and the use of interferon as an immune
system modulator. In 1976, he joined the NIH Grants Associate
Program, which groomed promising scientists for careers in managing
NIH research programs. Zimmerman was then recruited to be the
Scientific Review Administrator of the Allergy and Immunology Study
Section of the Immunological Sciences Integrated Review Group, where
he evaluated research proposals to provide funds for research in
immunology.
"Gene brought the same intensity and depth of knowledge of his
career at the NIH to understanding propagation," said Ward Silver,
N0AX. "His tenure as the conductor of QST's 'The World Above 50 MHz'
usually resulted in a sharp recounting and analysis of the month's
unusual on-the-air events. I learned something from every single
column. But what most will remember about Gene, though, will be his
amazing capacity for storytelling and the twinkling of his eyes as
he told of the undoing of scoundrels with obvious and undiluted
glee. I've had the pleasure of being his roommate at Dayton and WRTC
and I don't believe I've ever laughed harder or longer. Gene knew
where all the bodies were buried and relished his role as sage and
historian."
Zimmerman was a shortwave listener before becoming a ham. After he
got his ticket when he was a freshman at Yale University, Zimmerman
became interested in weak signal VHF, due to his friendship with
Paul Doane, W1HAD, who at the time was a college student at Brown.
"I remained active on the VHF bands until I left Connecticut in
1964, but I also developed an interest in HF and VHF contesting," he
told the ARRL in June 2011. "When I moved to Washington, DC, I
became involved in HF contesting in a serious way, particularly
building multi-op contest stations with Tom Peruzzi, W4BVV (SK). I
returned to weak signal VHF in 1981 and built a pretty decent VHF
station, which I have expanded to 10 GHz."
Unlike HF where some band is open for long distance communications
all the time, Zimmerman said that openings on VHF are few and far
between -- and extremely exciting when they happen. "I guess I don't
like things that are easy, so I chose to do VHF+, "he explained.
"Over the years, I have worked more than 140 DXCC entities on 6
meters, 38 states and 9 DXCC terrestrially on 2 meters, 36 states on
222 MHz and VUCC on 50-1296 MHz. In contests, I have also been in
the Top 10 nationally several times from my home station, and have
won the multi-unlimited category four times with K8GP, the Delmarva
VHF and Microwave Society. I think once you have built an interest
in the VHF+ bands, it never goes away."
"Gene was a pleasure to work with, witty and insightful," said QST
Editor Steve Ford, WB8IMY. "I am sure he will be greatly missed by
many."
"Amateur Radio has had its share of characters but none were more
colorful or more widely respected than Dr Gene Zimmerman, W3ZZ -- a
man who in one breath could identify the source of the world's
greatest hot dogs, explain once-in-a-lifetime propagation and
recount the history of contesting and contesters," Silver said. "We
will all miss Gene's presence greatly and it is a sad day for us all
to learn of his passing."
Zimmerman was a member of the Delmarva VHF and Microwave Society,
K8GP, the Grid Pirates Contest Group, a Past President of the
Potomac Valley Radio Club and an honorary member of the Connecticut
Wireless Association. Funeral arrangements are pending.
The Zimmerman family has requested that memorial contributions may
be made in Gene's honor to the ARRL Education and Technology Fund.
NNNN
/EX
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