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Now the government is count ing on him to help save the milkvetch, a rare pea-like plant that he considers a poisonous weed. The plant is known to grow in only three places in the world: California’s Death Valley and two sites in western Nevada. One of those sites is on Pear son’s 160 acres of land near U.S. Highway 95, which snakes across the hundreds of miles of wide open spaces between Reno and Las Vegas. Here, brown, craggy mountains rise 8,000 feet from the valley floors filled with knee-high sagebrush, and Washington seems a million miles away. That’s still far too close for landowners like Pearson. Government scientists pro posed protection for the milkvetch under the Endangered Species Act back in 1992. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service formally withdrew the proposal this month, saying that the ground-hugging vine with pink flowers is in no immediate danger of going extinct. Besides, listing the plant could do more harm than good if some one decided to wipe it out in re taliation. “When you only have a couple of plants left, you hate to admit it but in some cases — at least here in Nevada — we’ve had threats made against the species,” said Chris Mullen, a biologist for the Fish and Wildlife Service in Reno. "A can of gasoline would take care of the whole species,” she said. Friends have suggested that a bulldozer or a drum of herbicide would end Pearson’s struggle over the milkvetch. “I could have gotten ri d of every one of these plants a long time ago if I wanted to,” he said. “I would prefer for it to continue to sur vive.” He wants it to survive on his terms, not the federal govern ment’s. The fate of the Sodaville milkvetch may lack some of the allure of a battle over grizzly bears, spotted owls or bald eagles, but critics of the Endangered Species Act like Pearson say the withdrawal of the 1992 listing proposal is a significant victory in their crusade to defend private property owners against the long arm of the government. “There is nothing in the Consti tution that says you have to quar ter spotted owls or poisonous plants,” said Pearson, an author and local organizer of People for the Constitution. "The act is completely illogical. It says we’re going to save every thing at any cost and we’re going to stick the landowner with the bill,” he said. The Endangered Species Act should be used to protect big fish and wildlife, Pearson said, “not ticks and flies, or locoweed for that matter.” Not everyone agrees. “There are many people who feel like every species that is on earth has its own intrinsic value by the fact it is here,” said Jim Morefield, a botanist at the Neva da National Heritage Program in Carson City who has done exten sive research on the milkvetch. “Who are we to guess why it is here or what its value might be?” The Northern Nevada Plant So ciety started raising concerns more than a decade ago about the status of the plant first collected in Mineral County near Sodaville, Nev., in 1882. The milkvetch thrived near hot and cold springs in the area, the same rare oasis on the high desert where Indians settled and later cattle ranchers established a stagecoach stop. “It’s been there obviously quite awhile before human beings were around,” Morefield said. “It takes several thousand to several million years for a plant species to develop.” One of Pearson’s biggest com plaints was the time it took the government to reach its conclu sion. He said the Endangered Species Act effectively prevents landowners from disturbing plant habitat while the plant is being considered for protection. Federal authorities blamed the lengthy delay on other listing pri orities, a limited budget and a moratorium on new listings Con gress enacted temporarily two years ago. The process took so long that a whole new national park has been created in the meantime. In fact, additional protection afforded the plant through the es tablishment of Death Valley Na tional Park in 1994 is one of the reasons the agency gave for pulling back the proposed listing. New York doctor killed by anti-abortion sniper Byuaroiyn inompson The Associated Press BUFFALO, N.Y. — Dr. Barnett Slepian’s own words signal a chilling premonition of his own violent end. In an August 1994 letter to the editor reacting to his frequent run ins with “nonviolent” anti-abor tion forces, he wrote: “Please don’t feign surprise, dismay and certainly not innocence when a more volatile and less restrained member of the group decides to react ... by shooting an abortion provider.” And in a television interview, the father of four worried about how his family would cope if his work ultimately led to his death. Slepian, a 52-year-old obstetri cian-gynecologist, was killed by a sniper who fired a rifle bullet through a window in his home Friday night. His was the first fa tality among five sniper attacks on upstate New York or Canadian abortion providers in the last four years. The killer remained at large Sunday as an international inves tigation continued. Police listed no suspects. All of the previous attacks have occurred within a few weeks of Nov. 11, Veteran’s Day, which is known as Remem brance Day in Canada. In the 1994 letter to The Buffa lo News, Slepian said he did not begrudge anti-abortion demon strators who ‘‘scream that I am a murderer and a killer when I en ter the clinics at which they ‘peacefully’ exercise their First Amendment right of freedom of speech. “They may also do the same when by chance they see me dur ing the routine of my day,” he wrote. “This may be at a restau rant, at a mall, in a store or, as they have done recently, while I was watching my young children play at (a children’s restaurant).” But “they all share the blame,” Slepian wrote, when “a more volatile and less restrained mem ber of the group decides to react to their inflammatory rhetoric by shooting an abortion provider.” In a statement Sunday, the founder of Pro-Life Virginia called Slepian’s killer “a hero,” one who ended Slepian’s “blood-thirsty practice.” “We as Christians have a re sponsibility to protect the inno cent from being murdered, the same way we would want some one to protect us. Who ever shot the shot protected the children,” the Rev. Donald Spitz said. Slepian often expressed his fears that abortion foes were en couraging violence. In a 1994 in terview with Buffalo television station WIVB, Slepian said: “Maybe they are not going to per form it, but they’re setting up their soldiers to perform the violence.” Three years earlier, he told the station he was not afraid for him self, but for his family and chil dren. “I think, if I wasn’t around, what they would go through,” he said. All of his children were home when Slepian’s wife, Lynn, called 911 after the sniper’s bullet en tered the doctor’s back, pierced his lungs, exited his body and ric ocheted into another room. Fif teen-year-old Andy had been watching a Buffalo Sabres hockey game on TV and ran into the kitchen. “He saw blood in back of his dad,” Andy Berger, 14, a friend of Andy Slepian, told The Buffalo News. Generally, people on both sides of the abortion debate con demned the killing. The Revs. Rob and Paul Schenck of the National Clergy Council, who helped organize the massive “Spring of Life” abortion protest in Buffalo in 1992, urged “all people of con science to defend life peaceful ly” “The murder of Barnett Slepi an,” they said, “is wrong, sinful and cowardly.” Dr. George Tiller of Kansas, who was wounded in an August 1993 shooting in the parking lot of his clinic, called it “a well-orchestrat ed political Armageddon against women and their freedom.” Discovery crew will perform 33 research projects By Marcia Dunn The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — John Glenn and his geriatric ex periments may be grabbing all the headlines, but the flight of space shuttle Discovery will feature all sorts of scientific stuff — and six other people. The crew will test-fly a comput er and other devices intended for the Hubble Space Telescope, and release a sun-gazing satellite that got hung up in orbit last year. Dozens of cockroaches also are flying, as well as two oyster toad fish. The countdown for all this and more begins Monday. "We’ve got 83 different re search projects on board. We’ll be running them as a team, and I would like to see the whole team get that recognition,” said Glenn, the first and soon-to-be oldest American to orbit the Earth. The 77-year-old senator is both ered, even a little embarrassed, by the world’s attention focusing al most exclusively on him. “But I don’t know what to do about it,” he said, chuckling. ‘Tve tried to disembody myself and stand back and look at this thing as to why all the interest this time, because this is almost sort of a tidal wave of interest.” About 3,000 journalists are ex pected for Thursday’s launch of what’s been dubbed "The John Glenn Flight.” The typical draw for a shuttle liftoff: 300. The six others on Discovery’s crew — pilots, engineers and doc tors in their 30s and 40s who come from three countries — are happy to hand Glenn the spot light. “Everybody understands,” said shuttle commander Curtis Brown Jr. “This is natural. It’s human na ture because he’s such a hero. I know I haven’t done anything for anybody to remember my name.” Take away John Glenn and NASA still would have an “in credibly challenging” nine-day mission, said the lead flight direc tor, Phil Engelauf. “We couldn’t go do this mis sion without every single member on this flight,” Brown stressed. “There’s too much to do.” As soon as they’re in orbit, the astronauts will turn on three in struments in Discovery’s cargo bay: a computer, data recorder and high-tech icebox to be in stalled on Hubble by spacewalk ing astronauts in 2000. NASA wants to expose the equipment to 345-mile-high cos mic rays to make sure they’ll still work when they’re attached to the telescope that high up. It’s risky — one of the instru ments might break aboard Dis covery. But that’s preferable to sending something to Hubble that might conk out and cripple the prized telescope, said Rud Moe, a NASA payload coordina tor. “We don’t usually fly stuff in space to see if it’s good in space,” Moe said. “But this one is so crit ical that they’re doing exactly that just to really make sure.”