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A boy's passport to the world
Charlotte Observer ^ | 6/1/08 | Joe DePreist

Posted on 07/06/2008 9:19:40 AM PDT by mylife

Posted on Sun, Jun. 01, 2008 A boy's passport to the world

Six-year-old Cameron Hasson's world just got a little larger.

The amateur radio license he recently earned puts him in touch with folks from all over.

He's a bona fide “ham” – probably the youngest in North Carolina and maybe the U.S., according to his instructor, Joe Hullender with the Gastonia Area Amateur Radio Club.

All that talk going on out in radio land – endless conversations about the weather and gas prices and whatever – Cameron takes it all in.

The world has opened up. He feels more connected. And he also feels closer to his parents: Eric, a computer consultant, and Beverly, a physical therapist at Gaston Memorial Hospital. Studying in the same class, they all earned their amateur radio licenses together.

Ham radio, like fishing, is something I've always admired, but never had much luck with.

Eric Hasson, 46, got the radio bug as a kid in St. Louis. It came from his dad, Jack, who was into citizens band radio during the CB craze of the 1970s – the “Smokey and the Bandit” days.

Eric decided to study for his ham license, but the FCC's requirement of testing for proficiency in Morse code was a brick wall for him.

His interest in electronics and computers grew as visions of being an amateur radio operator faded.

Until the brick wall collapsed. In late 2006, the FCC did away with the Morse code requirement and Hasson started thinking about ham radio again.

The idea kicked around in his mind for a while. Then, in March, he enrolled in a six-week class sponsored by the Gastonia Area Amateur Radio Club. On the first day, Hasson asked Hullender if a 6-year-old could learn the material. The answer was yes. Hasson asked Cameron if he'd like to try for a license. Cameron was game.

Two-way radio had already captured his imagination. He had a CB, a General Mobile Service and Dick Tracy-style Family Radio Service, complete with a Tracy wrist radio.

These radio services, which didn't require a license, gave his son a little more freedom, Eric Hasson said. His parents could check on him when he was out of sight and feel a greater sense of security.

When her husband and son signed up for the class, Beverly Hasson decided she'd join them.

The radio class was held at the Gaston County Police Community Room. Ages ranged from 6 to 76.

The final exam had 35 multiple choice questions; to pass, you had to get 26 right.

Cameron wanted a technician class license – the beginner's level. Hullender remembers his youngest student as “kind of quiet and serious.”

A kid, maybe, but one who was really into the subject.

Every night at home, Cameron was tutored by his dad. They did research together on the computer. They waded through technical material.

“It was hard,” Cameron recalled.

Test day rolled around. Eric Hasson wasn't sure his son would pass.

But he did.

Cameron wants to go up another notch and get a general radio license. He's a smart kid and will probably make it. But even if he doesn't, he's learned about focus and hard work and family togetherness. At 6, he's way ahead of the game.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: dx; ham; radio; swl
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To: bikerman

Thank you, I will pass that message on to Cameron (KJ4EDF). He is now working on his General, I don’t think he will get that ticket before he turns 7 next month but I also underestimated him on Technician.


121 posted on 07/24/2008 8:04:58 PM PDT by KJ4DLJ
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]


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