Committee to decide fate of owls or 3,000 jobs PORTLAND (At*) A Cahinot level committee intended lo i*- an (*%( ape v.ilvr for the Lndnngernd Species Ar t will decide soon whether to save 1.000 limber jobs rather than preserve flvvv.ivs for the threatened northern sjKilted ow l Three weeks ol expert testimony and intense cross examination on llie issue ended in I’ortiund last week. Sometime, in Mari ti or April, the commit too. pop ularly known .is the (aid Squad. will review the mountains of evident' und del iili whether to grant what wonhf la tie hr-.i ever exemption to the D* year old I .Dll.Ill}'' led Spel ji-s Ai I It the . j lit ! .1 Luge! battle liter whether lo preserve atliw. -.1 -. i |.gi ..vlh forests Spm ilically. the lih dung' .... ■ ( i . in. . will dei ide whether to al ii ; iiiil Management to sell timlx-r 1 ■ .■! . altered n r i MM) .Vi res in Western (tn-goti ft M D r- ...u -aeight t* i xeillpt the sales tl ,-u liu i nd. ian '. .! '.pei les Act Lite ! S I Ish arid \\ : • . ' . ] I . ■ . | 1 t II- .it 1 ‘ . I s I . :p (he s.i ,i -. I 111 lat ! ■ f.. 1 i ic.nn tV». hide tron: predators t l (iis Committee are am ti-il m lestlmom that the -i-i Iimlxir sales here will produce i.(KH) jobs m (ho Pacific Northwest, and that if thr vales are not suld. Ament an consumers will pay $500 million In higher prices for lumber produc Is. Rut/. If k said No one leslifled lhal the spotted owl would seller any significant impairment if the sales were sold," he added ’ file testimony has been very vague and gener alized and didn't deal w ith these limber sales at till Pat Parenteaii. a lawyer representing IJ S Fish and Wildlife, pointed to testimony from Harry Noon, a I s forest Service ecologist, that the owl was even worst ed! than earlier hcdieivetl His t (inclusion lhal timber harvesting on M.M lands essentially has to t ease lor the owl to have any c ham e lor recovery was probably the most dramatic testimony of the whole prot ceding. Pafonleau said Parrnlfau said lll.M had failed lo prove that the 21 ‘I million tmard feel of limber at stake yvos economically' signific ant. when the nation uses r>0 lullion board feet annually To grant an coemption, the committee must find that ;! IT M had no reasonable and prude ot alternatives 11.at tin- s,.it-s w ....hi hi et onottiic ally significant and ;! . u. tils d .leT.itine would ’ouiwc igh the value id the -•'.mill. . ;s made up df seven menifiers. mt hid :.it\ Manuel Li.i.in '.grit ultuie St t ■ ,-d Madig.in ami Army St . n tary Mich.i'd > on tlic panel are -the chairman of the (!otm; \dvisers. the administrator of tiic; Lnv'i \gent v, the t hief ot the National . . i Am.i .ph.-tit Administration and one per sen nomihali'd by Oregon Uo\ Barbara Roberts Tins is only (he third lime since ihe !.mi,inhered Spiv (iv \i:l became law in l‘i7;i that lhe God Siju.ni has lin'ii convened to consider an exemption An exemp lion for construction of the Toliico Diim in Tennessee was denied in favor of a small fish i ailed the snail dart er And the proposed Groyrocks Darn on the YVyoming Nehraska border was turned down for one of the origi nal endangered spec ins, the whooping crane Loggers, millworkers and Main Slrei't businessmen from timlier country were not given a chance to testify ut till' hearings In response to their complaints. Lujan, who chairs the Cod Squad, has set two more days lor public testimony starting Feb. 12 in Portland Lujan convened the (.cal Squad, saying he hoped it would bring an end to the long battle over the North west's forests Hut it is really only a small pari of a much larger conflii t raging over federal lands in Wash ington. Oregon and Northern California Lnvironmentalists have won a series ol victories in lawsuits charging the BLM and the Forest Servic e rou tinely violated the nation's environmental laws in plan ning timber sales in spotted owl habitat. lust Iasi week, a US district judge in Portland bloc ked III M limber sales in spotted owl habitat in Ore gon because the agenc v failed to write an environmen tal impel I statement Lnvironmentalists said the ruling 'could make moot whatever the God Squad does, because it covers the same limber sales, but is based on a different law the National Environmental Policy Act Wii) A fibnjaijtic Diifijer fbr fwo pterftowAtlTjc apd you could be celebratipg with your loved ope over a roipapiic dipper opValeptipe'afjqy! Traditional Or fun - You'll fipd Tlje Gift for That Special Sonjeoije! ► Beautiful Candy Gift Boxes ► Big Selection of Valentine Cards ^ Books of Love & Poetry ► Special Gifts ^ P&oto Processing & Enlargeinents Sepd A Message to Your Sweetheart Op Our Ml Of rove . m_,. TO A 7777777777TT77T7Tm9 Miss America emcee dies of lung disease LA JOLLA, Cal if (A I’) Hart I’ ,t r k •> the I V host .111(1 beauty i'incir who serenaded Miss Americas lot 25 years w 11 h his t r.iif cm .irk sung, There She Is died Sunday game show pageant H- w.is 77 Parks who was diagnosed n i I'tiily with an inoperable lung ills, a--..' .in d at Scnpps Memo rial Hospii.d in his sleep. vs dll ,S v\ ill' and 1 llililridi a I his S. !• said M.i:k Howi ll, a 1.11111 lv friend in addition to emceeing the M . ■■■■ A mmu a | ...;r.ill! lor 2 5 v .-.it. Parks dso work, I m ;.i dm, television and lilms His stage credits du lade tin- shit ring role in a Broadway pro d uction id tie I In1 Musk Man Storn in Atlanta as Bert Jacob son Parks began Lis career v\ i.iie slid young and i hanged his name to Id a marquee He was hired at Hi lor his lirsl Broads asling job by an Atlanta radio station Parks landed Ins lirs! job as a singer on the l.ddie Cantor Show He later worked as a stall announcer lor I BS from i >1 i.) until lu t'i Bi lor. Bn omillg tile M iss America pageant emcee, Parks' !; hr. - a k . allie ill !'»•« >. Vvhetl he landed the emi ee Job oil the :.i,liu quiz show Break the B.e ► ‘ He gain-, d wider fame us a radio personality beginning ir. Pith us the host ll( "Slop tile Musu Both radio shows s oo n moved to television, along with Parks It wasn't long before he was seen in daytime on quiz shows and in prime time He was host o! l'\ s 'Double or \ .tiling" Iroin 1 05 t-1 ‘*55 He wound up hosting a doz er: game shows, but it was js the tuxeijo-i lad i rooner sere •. ..ting M’ss Amoru as n Allan :. Cdy tiiat Me i- . ec known to millions P.irks was iirr.i as tin- Miss A meric a Pageant emcee in lOHti Pageant officials said 'do v wanted to give the show a younger look His Bring gelier :' >] nationwide sympathy and «i letterwriting campaign or ganized by Johnny Carson I bis was the (time) Ronald Reagan who's live years older than me was elecled presi dent, parks said in a 1 ‘>‘10 in ter v lew Ho (antId run the country but I was loo old to run a beauty pageant New is th.it sa k or what '" Parks mode a special return appearance In I'l'ttl, when he sang along with a recording of ins signature song He received a standing ovation when he walked on stage, hut the ap pearance was marred by gufles and he did not return Mis-, \mefica I’.:, an! Organ i/atiou child eve utive Leonard Horn praised Parks late Sunday tor his rule in building the pag eant's reputation He was a very important part of our history, and because o! what he contributed, we have a present and a future." Hum said, lauding Parks for his ability to let the young women be the stars Alter tin' Miss America fir ing Parks vsetil on to etncce other pageants ranging from a tugboat competition to a con test judging small dugs In an endearing and quirky ( ameu, Shirks plaved himself in the 1900 film comedy "The freshman with Marlon [Iran do In a send-up of Iris own beauty pageant performances, he serenaded a giant endan gered li/.ard that was to be served up as tire main course of a banquet He also had a dramatic televi sion career He began to act in the 1900s. making guest ap pearances on "Burke's Law," and in the 70s on "Ellerv Queen' and "The Bionic Wom an Parks also appeared as ring master of the syndicated Circus series in the early 70s Parks is survived In his wife of 4B years, Annette, Ins twin sons Joel and Jeffrey; daughter Annette !r; and two grandchil dren