Dick Munro |
He was 85, reports The Journal-Review in Crawfordsville, IN.
Munro was an on-air announcer, program director and manager of WCVL-AM and WIMC-FM, where he helped launch the careers of young broadcasters and became a fixture at local government meetings and community events.
“He was a mountain of a man and a mountain of a broadcaster,” said Crawfordsville Radio general manager Dave Peach, who joined the station when Munro hosted a morning show on WCVL.
Richard Michael Munro was born on Jan. 10, 1936 in Chicago. After serving with the U.S. Army during the Korean War, a colleague invited him to a radio night class in Boston.
Munro worked at radio and television stations in Pennsylvania and West Virginia before applying for a job in Terre Haute when he learned a new station was going on the air in Crawfordsville.
Munro in 1990 |
Munro left WCVL a few years later to run his own station in Kentucky, but had returned by the 1980s to manage the Crawfordsville dial. (WIMC signed on in 1974 and WCDQ-FM joined the family of stations in 2000.)
“The radio station was his life,” said Jill Pursell, a former sales manager and general manager of the stations.
He’s also the author of the 2011 historical fiction novel “Tales of a Scottish Freewheeler,” which was set in 1790s in the Scottish Highlands. Munro enjoyed traveling to Scotland.
Until a few months before his death, Munro — a Chicago Cubs fan — was writing a book about baseball.
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