i ORIGINAL AGGIE MUSIC! Texas A&M Composers Spotlight Sunday, April 28, 3:00 p.m. All Faith’s Chapel Concert Series Admission: $1.00 at the door Fast and Free Delivery special north Campus 260-9060 501 University Dr. (ftorthgate) South College Station 693-9393 1 103 Anderson (at ttolleman) PIZZA HUT DELIVERS! NORTH/SOUTH 260-9060 693-9393 $2 OFF SPttAi Any 15" Pizza I’i«a -Hut c FREE DELIVERY! Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-12a.m. Frl. & Sat. 11 a.m.-l a.m. *>un I 2 noon midmqhl Limited Delivery area Plot Valid with other Specials ■ , ’ 4 '' ■" Expires May 15,1985 PtORTH/SOUTH 260-9060 693-9393 $1 OFF / J5W& Any 13" Pizza L FREE DELIVERY! V pl^a ^-Hut Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-12a.m Frl. & Sat. 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Sun I 2 noon midniqhl Limited Delivery area Hot Valid with other Specials Expires May 15,1985 FunkyV OU,OH"- UK£ THE Flf KID5 ARBS! THEIf? H0(J5f Assoi BROWNSVI help of state c Gov. Mark. Whi ists will square today to proles cineration of to of Mexico. Environment thousands of pe lie hearing sc More than 6,0 similar hearings The public i sea burnings Management It ies wereconduc Sue Ann Fru jCoalition for P Organized the iroposed toxic Imiiied Rio Grai We don't re; ither blow to t aid. “We’re will The coalition pd television a Photo by SUE KRE.Mi Just Hanging Around (continue! Until recently, passersby near Davis-Gary art. Also dangling from the tree were three Hall were treated to an unusual display of bicycles and another shopping cart. MSC ALL NIGHT FAIR Informational Meeting April 30 7:00 p.m. 402 Rudder Please plan to attend if you're interested in helping with MSC ALL NIGHT FAIR '86 For more information call 845-1515 S' s N S N S N N i: S N N N 5 N N S J The declinin re the main re liot look good |)my, says Dr. iconomist at T lializes in the ii let. Junk Iowa town not complaininp about extra moil Associated Press MOUNT PLEASANT, Iowa — Mailboxes crammed full of “junk mail” may cause you to complain, but this small southeastern Iowa city has an 80,000-square-foot ware house full of the stuff — and no one complains. Metromail Corp. is one of Mount Pleasant’s largest employers, with 325 full-time workers out of a pop ulation of 7,320. It sends out 400 million pieces of mail a year, generating more than $20 million for the city’s post office. Every day three or four post of fice trailers, laden with up to 40,000 pounds of third-class mail, roll out of Metromail’s plant. “We feel very strongly that we’re ofth servicing a large part with « the advertis ing industry with a product that is not junk, with a product that is very expensive material,” Koch said. George O’Brien, vice president of the Mail Advertising Service Asso ciation in Washington, said the term “junk mail” was coined by newspa pers when advertising mail cut into newspaper revenues. | “There’s noi .ahead,” Griffin world market Bears, we’re lo< leclining oil pri I Combining c Brices with dec no; likely to lr limy, Griffin sai ■ A Texas R Advertisers can also targetpfiffltudy indicates to receive their mailings bastipeserves in Te age and income, and whetliffftining. T he s own homes or regularlybuybfffl984, 881 millk | produced. Tot Metromail, which is one sfeas estimated ; largest mailing services in thei-; But in the year try, lias mailed orders fromSfis expected to 20 million pieces, Koch said, Barrels with re On a single day, more than “|4.9 billion barre lion pieces of mail may movetB If oil produc the plant. And every day up to 90 trailers filled with brightly colored bro chures, sweepstakes cards, free sam ples and mail-order offers arrive at the plant to be processed for mail ing. Metromail is in the business of tar geting markets for specific products. The targeting is conducted at the company’s headquarters in Lincoln, Neb., where a computer stores infor mation on 75 million households and 85 million individuals, which may be the largest mailing list in the nation, Koch said. O’Brien said that in 1984,#! Postal Service handled 48,2 pieces of third-class mail, com| to 22.5 billion pieces in 1974. Of the 1984 volume, memli the Mail Advertising Service ciation accounted for about said. rease as the si face a 35 p< sserves and a in production o A 40 percent de assuming t Bained at $27 a fprive Texas of c Keith Koch, vice president and plant manager for Metromail, wants it known first and foremost that his company is not in the “junk mail” business. Advertisers send truckloads full of their unassembled advertising mail to Mount Pleasant, where it is assembled, addressed, sorted and mailed. One of the myths thathasl* villianize “junk mail” is thatitfl office is forced to subsidize! class mail, O’Brien andKodisi rgeting has become so sophisti- tnat .hi The preferred term, he said, “advertising mail.” Tart cated that an advertiser can request that products be sent to a city, or just a ZIP code or even just to homes along one specific mail carrier’s route. Actually, third-class m itself and then some, they Another myth, Koch: people do not like junk mail But after all is said and (hi junk mail is still just junktofnj can ask advertisers to remo«| name from their lists. Opry celebrates 60th year of unrehearsed broadcast:! Associated Press Plant your ad in The Battalion Classified " and harvest the RESULTS! Phone 845-2611 for help in placing your ad. NASHVILLE, Tenn. — It has survived three wars, the Great De pression, floods and MTV. It has weathered rock ’n’ roll, disco and New Wave. In this era of microchips, the Grand Ole Opry is as plain as a paper clip. This folksy hillbilly hoedown* dressed up a bit through the years, is America’s all-time musical smash. This year the Opry celebrates its 60th birthday, an American institu tion as country as a rocking chair, as appealing as bacon and eggs frying on a bright spring morning. “It’s like a family reunion — all day singing and dinner on the grounds,” says humorist Minnie Pearl, who has spent 45 years on the show in her flowered straw hat with dangling price tag, always bounding up to the microphone and exclaim ing: “Howwwww-deeee!!! I’m just so proud to be here!” The Opry bills itself as the oldest continuous live radio show, in the best of the tradition that holds that “the show must go on.” This year, The Opry bills itself as the oldest continuous live ra dio show, in the best of the tradition that holds that “the show must go on/’ This year, for the first time, it is also being tele vised regularly. for the first time, it is also being tele vised regularly. It has been staged hundreds of times more than “A Chorus Line,” which is the longest running Broad way play ever — almost 3,900 per formances. About a million people a year, up to a capacity 4,400 at each perfor mance, see the show in person, and millions in this country and Canada hear the live radio broadcast on WSM radio. The newly added tele vision broadcast, on The Nashville Network on cable television, reaches 20.6 million households. Fans travel an average; miles round trip for the shod pay $6 to $10 for tickets (of | nour show that typically f about 25 entertainers, eatl’l forming from one to three so®? Despite its boondocks ettf 11 Opry is now presented inaoq tic, $13.5 million auditorii®] a 120-acre, $23 million [ land USA.” It was moved ^ old downtown Ryman which was too small, stuffy^ quated. But even in the fanciers^ ings, the audience can still carpeted pews and hear i songs like Roy Acuffs far bash Cannonball.” Interestingly enough, the,-' not rehearsed. The pefl know what time they’re din orange-curtained stage 4 many songs to sing. H 10 ! bands supplement the member band, which usese necessary to play tunes the 1 ■ know. A quartet of backup J the Carol Lee Singers, charts if needed.