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WDUQ's on-air studio is a lot like the Post-Gazette newsroom -- not very pretty, but functional. Here you'll find plenty of high-tech gadgets, but also some dependable "old" technology -- an address file box, paper notes taped to the wall, three-ringed binders. WDUQ was founded 60 years ago as Western Pennsylvania's first public radio station. Now that Duquesne University has put the station up for sale, National Public Radio fans are wondering what's going to happen to programs like "Morning Edition" and "Car Talk." Sitting in the on-air seat, by the way, is Larkin Page-Jacobs, news reporter and local host for "All Things Considered."
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About Pittsburgh Revolution
Photographer Steve Mellon takes several pictures over a brief period of time, then stitches them together in a computer.
First Published: February 8, 2010, 5:00 a.m.