[NCC] W8KIC, Silent Key

Tom Lee tleek8az at gmail.com
Tue Dec 9 18:38:02 EST 2008


Fellow NCC Warriors,

It is with enormous sadness that I must report the passing of one of the
lions of our contesting world, Bob "Val" Edwards, W8KIC.  As many of you
know, Val was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in April.  Three weeks ago
his chief oncologist decided that because Val had lost so much weight and
was quite weak additional chemotherapy would do more harm than good.  At
that point, in-home hospice care was implemented.  Val died peacefully
Monday evening, at home, in his own bed, with his beloved wife Anne at his
side.  He is survived by Anne, his two sons and five step-children.

I last saw Val the Friday after Thanksgiving, just before CQWW CW.  He was
physically weak but was ambulatory and his brain was fully operational.  He
was engaged in the conversation and if he had not told me he was doped up on
methadone, I never would have known.  (I might have suspected he'd had a
martini or two but nothing more.)  We had a pleasant chat then (and the
weekend before) and both times the ever-present Edwards wit produced smiles
and pleasant thoughts.

Val had an unusually distinguished career as Professor of Chemical
Engineering at Case Western Reserve University, where he served as
department chair for many years.  He also held various administrative posts,
including associate dean and special assistant to the CWRU president.  The
Robert V. Edwards Student Reading Room was dedicated last month in
recognition of his commitment to his students.  He was the author of
"Processing Random Data: Statistics for Engineers and Scientists" (World
Scientific 2006), a book he somehow managed to write despite the enormous
time commitments required by his faculty/administrative duties and his
combined passions for ham radio and sailing.

In the radio world, Val was a well-known contester.  He was one of the
founding members of the Mad River Radio Club, and later became a founding
member of the North Coast Contesters. For many years, he participated in
multi-op efforts from the N4AR station in Kentucky.  (Val and Bill were
students together at Johns Hopkins.)  Later, he became a stalwart at K8NZ
and, beginning in 1986, at K8AZ.  Except when he was out of the country on
sabbatical, Val participated at every serious multi-op effort at K8AZ from
1986 through the 2008 ARRL CW contest.

If you sat down at a radio after Val got up, you always had to remember to
turn the AGC back on (and, in the old pre-computer days, to flip the switch
on the key paddle to allow for right-hand sending, since Val taught himself
to send left-handed so he could log with his right hand and send [and hold a
cigarette] with his left.)  No one on the AZ Crew was better at managing a
pileup, digging out a mult or carving out a run frequency.

I first met Val in 1966.  Val was a post-doc at CWRU and lived with his wife
and kids in a Cleveland Heights duplex (with a TH3 and a Cliff-Dweller on
the roof.)  I was a young ham in high school living nearby.  Over the years
we became good friends, a friendship which grew closer 10 years ago when Val
moved to Chesterland to build his dream house -- and dream antenna farm.

Val had the heart of a lion, the soul of a jazz musician and the brains of a
scientist.  But beyond that he had a mountain of the right stuff.  He was a
mentor to hundreds of students and sought out the under-achievers and helped
them reach their potential.  He extended that teacher-philosophy to the
younger ops at K8AZ.  With Val, nothing was impossible -- it just needed
thought and effort.

No matter what the subject -- radio, politics, anything -- Val could always
see, and help others to notice, the humor in things.  I think his quick wit
and easy chuckle are the things I will miss the most.

When a legend passes away, he leaves a hole that is never quite filled by
the rest of us.  The hole Val leaves -- in our hearts and in our lives -- is
bigger than most.  Rest in peace old friend.

Tom, K8AZ
*...-.-*
**


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