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KTEP is operating on low power due to transmitter issue on Nov. 9th.

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  • Pat Piotrowski has been associated with KTEP since 1983. Pat's love of music drew him to radio as a career. He became a student at the University of Texas at El Paso where he volunteered at KTEP hosting a latin jazz program. He was later hired as the local announcer for Morning Edition and the Morning Jazz program. Pat moved his way up to the Operations Director position which he held for 10 years before becoming General Manager of KTEP in 1999. He retired from that position in December 2019, but remains a volunteer at KTEP hosting the Wednesday Night jazz program and also producing State of the Arts.
  • Before her career in radio, Alison enjoyed a successful career as a concert flutist. While an illness cut her performing career short, she made a vibrant artistic transition, making the natural move to broadcasting, becoming a host and producer.
  • Internationally known jazz expert and former program director/ host of KJAZ of San Francisco, Bob Parlocha's rich, elegant voice is familiar to jazz audiences as host of Overnight Jazz.
  • Luis Clemens is NPR's senior editor for diversity. He works across the newsroom to build a broad foundation of diverse experts and sources in order to enhance NPR's news coverage.
  • Fred Child is the host of American Public Media's, Performance Today the most-listened-to classical music radio show in America. Fred is also the commentator and announcer for Live from Lincoln Center, the only live performing arts series on television.
  • From his groundbreaking transcriptions of Radiohead to his unforgettable interpretations of classic and new repertoire, pianist Christopher O'Riley has redefined the possibilities of classical music.
  • Host of Snap Judgment.
  • Host of Music from the Hearts of Space.
  • Family physician Dr. Zorba Paster has a down-to-earth style and irrepressible enthusiasm that have made him a favorite with health and fitness-conscious public radio listeners for well over a decade.
  • In the 1950s, when everyone else his age was listening to Elvis Presley, Jim Cullum locked onto the sounds of early jazz greats Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Bix Beiderbecke, and Jelly Roll Morton. He discovered his father's record collection of 78's, and spent one whole summer spellbound in his bedroom at home in San Antonio, spinning these scratchy discs and memorizing solos note for note.
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