KALX (FM)

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KALX
Image:KALX (FM) logo.gif
City of license Berkeley, California
Frequency 90.7 MHz
First air date 192
Format College radio
ERP 500 watts
HAAT 238.0 meters
Class A
Facility ID 68999
Transmitter Coordinates 37°52′40.00″N 122°14′44.00″W / 37.8777778, -122.2455556
Owner University of California
Webcast Listen Live
Website berkeley.edu

KALX is a freeform FM radio station that broadcasts from the University of California, Berkeley in Berkeley, California. KALX, a community- and student-run radio station licensed to the University of California, Berkeley, broadcasts at 90.7 FM in stereo with 500 watts of power. The station employs three full-time paid staff members, but is largely run by its nearly 300 volunteers, including Berkeley students and other members of the local community.

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[edit] History

The station originally began broadcasting in 1962, as a carrier current station. By 1966, KALX (then known as Radio KAL, the call letters being derived from Berkeley's nickname "Cal") had moved from Berkeley's dormitories to Dwinelle Hall on campus, and Berkeley administrators began investigating the possibility of applying for a broadcast frequency for the station. KALX received its broadcast license and made its first FM broadcast, with 10 watts of power, in 1967. In 1981, the station began a successful fundraising drive to boost its power level to the present-day 500 watts, a level that was reached in 1982. [1]

[edit] Format

As a freeform radio station, KALX requires each DJ to play diverse styles of music within the course of a single show.DJs are encouraged to play three distinct musical genres during their show, plus four cuts from recently released albums per hour.[citation needed]

KALX offers a diverse range of public affairs programming. KALX functions as a great resource to the Berkeley community by offering many kinds of Public Service Announcements throughout its daily broadcast.

For a time in the 1970s, KALX was the flagship station of Major League Baseball's Oakland A's. At the time, it was all but unlistenable 10 miles from Oakland Coliseum.

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