Abstract
We who were his students at Townsend Harris. Hall and the College of the City of New York always referred to him as "the Doctor," in distinction from run-of-the-mill Ph.D.s on the faculty. Some of us were wireless amateurs (not "hams," please) and he was our special benefactor not only as a teacher but as a generous donor of equipment to the City College Radio Club, founded in 1914 but hardly a going concern until the following year. By that time we were fairly experienced: another boy of 12 and I had a primitive station in the Bronx in 1908 (wavelength unknown, range about four blocks, call letters "YF," which in American Morse had a beautiful lilt.)

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