11 Blwf* SippHiro in UK Go*I m* v*mo >ou|>on« . ' wt «**«» mm* m*f at*m* o*m<* * 1888 Fronkln Blvd. 1 I (noKtto 7-tlo*on on Word) t Opart 10am to 11pm * * 344-2691R t t* WM t Ill I LAI I Y1NI —— —■ Wine Iktr % < «ii<* Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week $ Breakfast and Brunch Saturday and Sunday Mediterranean and West Coast Cuisine Fine Wines by the Glass, 1/2 Glass and Taste Tapas and Other Regional Appetizers Gourmet Desserts « FREE Wine Tastings Each Saturday 2:30 - 5:30 30 East Broadway (on the mall) • 686-3622 many listeners believe the sta tion is new (its first day on the air was May 27). those involved in the process of getting it off of the ground will tell anyone with ears how wrong they are. In fact, the history of KVVVA spans over four years, back to 198!) when students who want ed to start up a new radio station approached the ASIJO to place a measure on the ballot Students eventually voted to fund the sta tion, and immediately problems started. The first major ordeal was get ting a board of directors, such as u general manager, program director, etc it didn't help thut the KVVVA office kept getting moved from one dirty, claustro phobic location to another, including, some swear, u broom closet. The office finally moved to the mezzanine level of the KMIJ in 1991. and it is about the size and character of a men's restroom, which is a step up. But the biggest problem was not raw sewage seeping through the wall, but the Federal Com munication Commission, which simply ignored the station. Allyssa Jensen and Chandra Foote, both University seniors and KVVVA general manager and assistant general manager, respectively, said this is because theirs is a non-commercial endeavor. It is well known in the radio world tluit commercial radio always gets preferential treatment by the FCC, taking only an average of two years to get a license. Foote and Jensen attribute this to commercial stations having the money to be able to hire lawyers and lobbyists to apply pressure on the licensing process. While KVVVA could not afford to do this, they did find allies in Rep, Peter DeFazto. D Oregon, and Sen. Boh Pack wood, R-Oregon. who they believe helped lobby the FCC. The grinding process of get ting a license, and the accompa nying S100.000 spent to start the station up. appears to have paid off. KVVVA has received much positive feedback from the com munity this summer, and the Turn to KWVA, Page 25C