The WAUP Reunion Gallery Pages
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Chuck Whyte

Chuck was Program Director at WAUP. He was also an editor for the Buchtelite, the campus newspaper. This photo is from the 1974 Tel-Buch.
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Pam Godfrey

Pam was one of our top disc jockeys and production people during the days when WAUP was a progressive rock station. She was also extensively involved with the station's news department.

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Rich Lampasone

Rich was also a WAUP Program Director. He was instrumental in the change of the station's music format from progressive rock to jazz. This picture shows Rich conducting one of his many educational tours of the production room.
Denny Schreiner

Denny was one of our best sports play-by-play and color commentators. This picture of Denny is actually him posing with the Akron U golf team. He was a great golfer and an awesome bowler as well.
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Pat Godfrey
Leroy Walker

That's Pat on the left, Leroy on the right (just in case your memory is really bad!). Pat worked in both music and news but is perhaps best remembered as the voice on the WAUP sign-on featuring Steve Miller's "Livin' In The USA". Leroy was a gentle giant of a man who served as WAUP's Program Director. He did a tour in Vietnam to prepare him for the job!
John Pendolino
Dave Geraci

John (left) and Dave (right) were our play-by-play team for WAUP's 1975 Akron U football coverage. The guys took great pleasure in beating the socks off WAKR. Both John and Dave had encyclopedic knowledge of sports and spent hours every week memorizing line-ups and statistics for each game. They prided themselves in calling every player by name, and not by number like Bob Wiley did.
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Jim Koeberle

Jim was one of several terrific news reporters we had on staff during the early 1970s. He was the news anchor on the original version of This Morning and was know for his witty writing style.
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Mendy Palumbo

Mendy seems like he owned afternoon drive-time news at WAUP during the mid-1970s. He was the anchor most weekdays for News Today (later known as News Spectrum) which ran from 5:00 to 5:30. Mendy is also remembered for the now-classic kung-fu movie he did for Dr. Lewis's film class (cue Deep Purple "Highway Star"!).