Montana Standard (Newspaper) - April 18, 1976, Butte, Montana Page 15 Father inspires Inside Sunday Clouds on 2 weather Buffe vital 13 Game wardens 4 Beaverhead 22 Schmidt's 4 8 23 Television 10 Witchcraft 24 Page 16 Beaver Dam School beams 100th 323 1876-1976 Standard Good It's April 187 1976 25 cents World pauses for Easter observances By The Associated Press Pilgrims and Roman Catholic Friars kept solemn vigil In Jerusalem at the revered site of Christ's burial as Christians around the world observed a quiet Holy Saturday In preparation for Joyful Easter services com- memorating Jesus' rising from the Easter pageantry climaxes in the Holy Land on when the Latin Patriarch of Msgr. Giuseppe celebrates a pontifical Resurrection Mass at dawn in the Church of the Holy Pope Paul VI said Mass as tens of thousands of pers held candles In St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican on traditionally a quiet time in Holy In Roman lic Archbishop Joseph L. deciding to honor a picket line of striking National Broadcasting Co. canceled a planned Easter Mass NBC sauT broadcast of the Mass was canceled because the strike did not permit a live television broadcast from the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington D.C. The telecast will carry a re- peat of a religious film NBC in New York The will not go to He will give it at St. Cathedral in Cincinnati Sunday where he will be the principal celebrant and preacher for the Mass. Thousands were expected to attend Easter Sunrise Services Gun control biff backfires on sponsors in Congress WASHINGTON The House Judiciary Committee revived and sent to the floor a gun control measure this past but the Im- pact of its provisions on the proliferation of guns and Its viability in Congress are being The a compromise of a compromise of a would ban the future manufacture of concealable sometimes called Saturday night but not the possession or sale of the existing While the measure is the first to come to the Door of the House since 196t, the changes made to get it there have lost it the support of the people who worked hardest for new legislation this useless and does damage to the said a spokesman for Michael who has said he will oppose the Harrington introduced legislation to ban the sale and possession of all The proponents of strict gun control are worried that a as weak as the one reported by the Judiciary Committee will Mil all effort at handgun legislating for years to They point to the fact that this an amendment to the 1968 took eight years to bring to the Rep. John Conyers and chairman of the committee's subcommittee on spent more than a year gathering information through hearings held in Washington and in cities all over the After that Conyers introduced a earlier this year to ban handguns which was defeated in The that was eventually voted on in the full committee would have banned all would have set up a national tracing center for handguns and would have raised license fees from the current price of 110 to decrease the number of some about of whom are large suppliers of The that finally pawed banned the manufacture of Saturday night rather than concealable slightly increased license fees and made no reference to a national tracing which complained could be used as a means of licensing The has a mandatory sentencing provision for persons convicted of committing crimes with It also Units gun purchases to one gun within a 30-day period and requires a waiting period to buying guns to give time for a police check of the This law would b effect ive 9 0 days after its Whether such a can get through Congress so late in an election year is still an open although its first hurdle Is approval by the Rules Rose Alary Woods can have impounded atop Stone Mountain at with 20 ministers participating In two annual interdenominational It's a 1.3 mile walk up a trail to the but a was available for those who didn't want to In 25 people have been waiting for the ond Coming of Christ for nearly seven This Easier they are faced with the possibility of losing the home they use as headquarters to the Farmers Home but a spokeswoman says they are not feel God will provide for He always We may not be here to worry about it because He may arrive at any she The Metropolitan Com- munity church to Los Angeles planned to hold Easter sunrise services for the gay com- munity in the at the Los Angeles More traditional services were planned for Easter throughout the Jewel fops record PALM Fla. The daring robbery of a rious condominium complex netted thieves at least lion In Jewels and another million in cash and other making it the largest jewel heist In police said calculations are up around million now and we've only accounted for about 60 per cent of the strong said detective Peter will end up be- tween million and K million in jewels and about II million in other The Guinness Book of World Records lists UK greatest jewel robbery in history as occurring Nov. in Sierra when an armed gang stole dia- monds worth A robbery at the Hotel Pierre in New York resulted In an million of most of it according to Officers three gunmen WASHINGTON by Rose Mary tie tacks in the shape of a United States map and with the name in- scribed on bag containing about 250 golf tees Dick soap stone two In- ches The tie golf tees and elephants were among things Miss Woods left behind when she departed the White House along with her Richard M. Nixon on Aug. They were packed up and impounded by court order when the fight over Nixon's papers and tapes Woods wants them The U.S. Court of Appeals saying in an order last week that least a tial number of the are so plainly the personal and private property of appellee Woods and so lacking In historical or commemorative value or that they ought to be Lawyers for Miss the and outside ties Involved in the Nixon Brown leaves Standard for post at Tom 28, operations manager of The Montana has been named general manager of the John publisher an- Brown succeeds James general manager since 1971. Wingate has been named assistant to Lloyd president of Lee The and The Standard are divisions of whose appointment to the staff Is May 1, Joined The Standard as operations manager am. assistant to D. R. in February 1974. Brown was swing editor in the newsroom of the Billings Gaiette from 1973 until he came to He Joined the Gazette staff as a reporter to 1970. He began his newspaper career at the In to 1969. He then returned to Northwestern University In 111., to get his master degree in BROWN Journalism before going to A Idaho Brown graduated from high school to and from Oregon State In 1969. His Is a teacher at West Junior High materials got together and drew up a list of things she can have as soon as a district judge gives his The describing items packed in 44 vides a glimpse into what a presidential secretary collects and has close at There is a copy of cial List of for each year of his and of published by friends of Nixon to September 1972. And also Mr. Richard ty's book about Sen. George Nixon's 1972 And The Rise of by Jules There are tapes by the Trida and Edward Cox's Rose Garden of a White House Christmas tree lighting Nixon's In- auguration ceremonies In 1969 and one of the funeral of Dwight D. In box 9W, according to the there are 25 books of matches embossed with a seal on one side and Jan. 20, 1969" on the And there are toward the end of the long that record the proceedings that led to Nixon's resign Some of the Senate Watergate some of the publications of the House committee that recommended Nixon's there Is a Supreme Court States v. Richard M. It was that decision that forced Nixon to give up the most damaging tape recording of all the presidency as overpowered two security guards and a switchboard then looted deposit boxes early Wednesday at the swank Palm The thieves then stole cash and checks from the building's of- police No one was injured In the floor building complex where apartments cost between 000 and yes indeed UUs at a disla nee of 60 you can rightfully claim the nickname of according to the findings of psychologists at The psychologists studied the ability of a falcon to see objects from far away and found that to daylight Its vision was at least 2.6 times sharper than The researchers suspect that the falcon's visual acuity resembles that of other whose eyes are similarly constructed and used to detect small preys from great By the the falcon they studied an American kestrel could spot a ladybug on the sidewalk when perched atop an 18-story apartment The bird might be able to see it from even farther away if the insect were The by Dr. Robert Fox and graduate students Stephen Lehmkuhle and David are described to Ihe April issue of the journal KRISTINE 7, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim 954 cap- tures 1he virtues of an old-fashioned Easter as she prepares to receive her first communion in Immaculate Conception Church In tune with the annual Southwest Montana Is expected to bright sunshine and warm breezes this photo by Walter Healthy competition delivers blow to ailing postal service Calif. In high school youths employed by the People's Gas Co. are delivering more than 1.5 million utility bills yearly to Two executives to this 60 miles past of Los deliver the Wall Street Journal to southern California and parts of adjoining states and do it so well that the weekly news magazines are giving them their In a man who operates a carpet cleaning business has formed a company to deliver local promising service for anyone the mall to him in tiie The postal service may take him to court for violating its protected under In various entrepreneurs are delivering advertising messages and even letters to competition with the financially troubled U.S. Postal which last year for the first time began to lose mail The new competitors include newcomers to the business as well as proven such as United Parcel which is broadening its service areas and increasing All of this is deeply troubling to the postal Postmaster Gen. Benjamin Bailar has is dear from recent ex that there is a lot of price elasticity to our business as rates go our volume The lost volume in going to competitors across the Interviews by The New York Times around the nation in recent weeks indicate private competition has arisen because of dissatisfaction with the quality of service by the postal service and since higher postage rates have made private services economically Figures from last year showed that mail volume fell to every important classification of domestic mail except for magazines and for which postage Is subsidized by And with Congress balking at proving million to continue the subsidization of publications through 1978, publishers are scrambling to find alternate means of Edward Klees and Ronald Coble left a small electronics firm here six years ago to form a trucking company and were under way for only three months when they got an inquiry from a Wall Street Journal asked If we could deliver copies of the Wall Street Journal to Los Angeles on the same day it was Coble The young men quoted a price for the job and said they would also deliver to southern Nevada and After several the Increased mail fees in effect WASHINGTON The Postal Service's fees for special registered mail and other services increase on Sunday by up to 33 per cent. The special delivery charges go up from 60 cents to 80 the minimum money order fee from 23 cents to 30 the certified mall fee from 30 cents to 40 cents and the minimum registered mail charge from 95 cents to Other are from 2Q cents to 25 cents for 25 cents to 30 cents for special handling and 70 cents to 85 cents for The increases had been announced previously by the Postal service got under way in January 1972. The Wall Street Journal prints the newspapers here in one of its satellite and then drops them by air or rail at distribution points In Los Las the Phoenix area and the Inland the company formed by Klees and takes over from In November 1974, Inland took Readers Digest as a delivering cop ies at fi rst By this the volume should Increase to Klees and to more than a year the summer of 1977. The newest clients are week and U.S. News and World with a volume of magazines and prospects of in- creasing this to as many as In the near business is not without its Klees Uke many other private Inland Is that It cannot put magazines in home which under laws can be used only by the U.S. Postal A Introduced by Sen. James Republican of New would allow al I delivery serri ces to use Peopl of Chic ago pu I six boys in low-income neighborhoods to work seven years ago this delivering utility but the purpose was not to save Just wanted to help youngsters and encourage them to stay In school at Ihe said Michael director of customer service for the gas the bookkeepers of People's noticed In 1974 that thr private force of delivery boys was paying i Is own and by last year it was calculated that the deliveries were being made et slightly more than nine cents per First class rates are now 15 cents an