ARRL -- The national association for Amateur Radio ARRL -- The national association for Amateur Radio
Buckmaster -- Ad
Find on this site...
Site Index 
  
Search site:
  
Call sign search:
 
ARRL Member Login...
Username:   Password:

  
Register    Forgot userid/password? 
Quick Links...
Text-only 
ARRL Products:
VHF/UHF/Microwave

(More)

International Microwave Handbook -- Now Shipping! -- Reference information and designs for the microwave experimenter. Published by RSGB and ARRL.

ARRL's VHF/UHF Antenna Classics -- Practical designs and construction details from the pages of QST.

Microwave Projects -- Complete designs and ideas for the microwave experimenter: signal sources, transverters, power amplifiers, test equipment and more.

The ARRL UHF/Microwave Projects CD -- Practical projects, design and construction ideas for UHF and Microwave Experimenters

Microwave Projects 2 -- Out-of-stock! -- More innovative projects: transverters and transmitters, preamplifiers, power amplifiers, filters, and more.

   

ARRL Welcomes USTTI Students

Next month, the ARRL will welcome students from various countries from all over the world who want to learn how to administer and regulate Amateur Radio programs in their home countries. This course, offered by the United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI), will help participants create, administer and foster an Amateur Radio Service in their countries.

Designed for those in developing countries who regulate and manage their country's Amateur Radio Service, this course will help participants learn just who radio amateurs are. ARRL staff instructors will help course participants discover the ever-expanding universe of Amateur Radio communication. They will explain why Amateur Radio operators -- upwards of three million individuals in virtually every country of the world -- have earned licenses to operate stations in the Service and why they are recognized, both by their governments and internationally, as a valuable voluntary telecommunications resource. Course participants will also discover how a telecommunications administration can bring the benefits of a healthy Amateur Service to its nation.

Now in its 26th year, USTTI is a nonprofit venture involving leading US-based communications and information technology corporations and leaders of the federal government cooperating to provide tuition-free management, policy and technical training for talented professionals from the developing world. This is the 24th year the ARRL has participated in the program.


   



Page last modified: 01:53 PM, 10 Sep 2008 ET
Page author: awextra@arrl.org
Copyright © 2008, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.