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Happy
Birthday, KRVM!
The
first FM station in the Pacific Northwest turns 60
BY
VANESSA SALVIA
Local radio station KRVM, which bills itself as
"Keeping Real Variety In Music," is turning 60 this month and throwing
a party worthy of the diamond anniversary.
Many Eugene residents probably associate radio frequency
91.9 FM with the popular daily show "Breakfast With The Blues,"
but in fact the station was created in 1947 only to serve students
in the Eugene 4J school district, says KRVM Development Director
Bobbie Cirel.
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| KRVM
60th Anniversay Celebration featuring
The Conjugal Visitors (pictured), Saltlick,
The Strange Tones and The Sugar Beets. 7
pm Saturday, Nov. 17 • McDonald Theatre • Free.
KRVM
91.9 FM will broadcast the event live |
Station directors are certain that KRVM was the
first FM station in the Pacific Northwest, but they also suspect
it was one of the first three FM stations west of the Mississippi.
"We have trouble documenting some of that," Cirel says, "but we
began broadcasting December 6, 1947." For four hours a day, the
station served students with classroom instruction in broadcast
journalism and provided listeners with access to school board meetings
and sporting events. In the late 1960s, KRVM began broadcasting
nine hours a day, and the mid-'80s brought more music formatting,
but it wasn't until the early '90s that the station began airing
24 hours a day. Shortly thereafter, KRVM acquired the music library
of former local station KAVE, and then began the focus on instruction
and a variety of music which listeners enjoy today. "It's taken
us from being a small school radio station to a radio station that
is probably one of the first three buttons on most people's car
radios," Cirel says.
The station has sent out a call for broadcast program
alumni to join them or send them messages about where their careers
have taken them. Local KRVM alumni will be on hand as hosts of the
birthday event, including KVAL television news anchor Jodi Unruh,
KKNU country DJ Tracy Berry and rock station KNRQ DJ Al Scott.
KRVM's celebration will feature music from four
local bands, four cakes from Sweet Life ("because … we all
want real variety in cake too!" Cirel says) and a scrapbook with
KRVM memorabilia. One of KRVM's young students will help create
a time capsule with the theme, "Children are a message we send to
a future we'll never see." The student who will help with the time
capsule has instructions to come back and open it at the station's
100-year anniversary. "We'll just keep passing this along, because
[KRVM] really is too precious to lose," Cirel says.
If
you have previously been involved with KRVM or you know someone
who was, email teal_flannery@yahoo.com
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