Rage 6- The Rehreiul College Reaeon - Thursday, November 12 . 1998 Felons, dead people on Va. By Craig Tim berg and Peter Pac The Washington Post Virginia auditors said Monday that more than 11,000 ineligible lelons and nearly 1.500 ilead people are regis tered to vote in the stale, a problem officials said eould undermine the in- tegrity of elections if lelf unchecked. in Fairfax and Prince William coun ties alone, there are 975 felons and 151 dead people registered to vote. making voter lists there among the worst in the state. "This points pretty clearly to the need for better list maintenance by the Stale Board of Elections and the lo cal registrars," said auditor Glen Tittermary. "Every city and county in the stale had at least two felons on the list." In last November's election, 1,700 felons east ballots statewide, the re port said, and 144 dead people were recorded as voting. Officials believe the latter number is the result ol cleri cal or other errors, not voter fraud. Auditors blamed the problem on outdated computers and poor manage ment at the State Board of Elections, saying the agency should have a sys tem for regularly cross-checking voter Too tall a human price is why many soldiers quit By Mark Eril/ Los Anueles rimes PORT DRUM. N.Y. -- When he was considering college during the peace ful days of the Cold War. Damon Wright, a native ol Grand Island. N.Y.. looked at ROTC more as a financing source than-a. c»suev -option, larlv since he w anted to attend a costly ; engineering school. He graduated in 1992 from Clarkson College and was commissioned as a lieutenant with the Kith Mountain's 2- 14, which fought in Vietnam, Korea and Nazi Germany, wrested Guam from Spain, battled Confederates in Virginia and Indians in Montana, though it got to Little Big Horn 100 late to help Custer. Wright and the rest of the 2-1 4 were assigned to Somalia at a time when the humanitarian mission had collapsed into a hunt for an intransigent warlord. One veteran of the campaign re membered coming to an intersection, taking a left and running into "every war movie you'd ever seen." Bombs went off. rockets whizzed by, bullets from every direction bounced oft buildings and skipped across the road. Soldiers today grope for words to de scribe the sheer quantity of carnage, the stunning density ol sound that sur rounded them, the apocalyptic image of burning barricades ol tires and the Rural Texans mourn dogs killed By Paul Duggan The Washington Post NLW BRAUNFELS, Texas - On the morning after her husband Osier died of a stroke last March, Eva Soechting woke up in their farmhouse and realized she was alone lorthe first time in 57 years. Their son and daugh ter were grow n, moved on. It w as just her and the dogs, and one aloof eat. The dogs -- Sarah, Beullah and Pup -- relieved the numbness of Soeehting's days, running and bark ing in the barnyard and across her 70 acres of mostly idle land. Over time, she noticed each had a distinct per sonality. She loved them, and she is sure they loved her. "I’d like to have them back," said Soechting, 87, managing not to cry. ” 'Course, I can't have them back, I know. That’d be impossible." The dogs were casualties of a liver ailment that has killed an estimated 30 dogs in Central Texas since Sep tember. The canine catastrophe at first puzzled veterinarians, but now the voter rolls rolls with lists of felons and death records Agency Secretary M. Bruce Mead ows acknowledged at a hearing Mon day, "Em not the best day-to-day manager in the world." and he said he would not seek reappointment when his lour-vear term ends in Janu- Several stale and local officials joined the criticism. "I’m dumbfounded," said Del. David B. Albo. R-Fairfax. "It makes me very mad. During an election, we are practically fighting for every vote, and to have an ineligible voter on the rolls, let alone allow them to vote, makes me very mud." Part of the challenge, say state and national election specialists, is the federal "motor-voter” law, which makes it easier for voters to register but harder for officials to make sure records are accurate and complete. Under the law, officially the National Voter Registration Act of 1995, vot ers can register at state agencies such as the Department of Motor Vehicles or by mail. While the law has achieved its goal of getting more people registered, elections officials all over the coun Doppler whir of choppers rising and falling, looking for something to kill. Because he was an M-h() gunner. Specialist Jim Guel/.ow's job was to blast away down alleys and side streets while the rest of the platoon crossed intersections. He looked through his night scope, bred his machine gun and vWHel*ed!l»vs.Aavgoib .fly baekwujuJ/ squirm in the dirt, dually he still. He only had a split second to decide: Was that running woman carrying ammo? Or just her kid? "There was a couple of times I thought I shouldn't have hit something I did," said Guelzow, recalling the 30 or so people he's sure he mowed down. By the lime the battle ended 15 hours later, 18 Americans were dead and scores wounded. Hundreds ol Soma lis died, A few days later, President Clinton announced he was pulling troops out of Somalia. During a welcoming ceremony back at Fort Drum, then-Army Chief of Staff Gen. Gordon Sullivan told the weary 2-14 that they wouldn’t be sent anywhere for at least a year. Nine months later, Wright was leading his platoon to Haiti on a peacekeeping mission so frustrating that he said his troops weren’t even allowed to load their rifles during a raid on a militia, though they did anyway. When he came back to Fort Drum, Wright said money was tight, ammo mystery is solved. The epidemic, which appears to be waning, is be ing blamed on the inadvertent use of tainted corn in the production of dog food at a Temple, Texas, factory, ac cording to the manufacturer, Doane Products Co. More than 50 types of dry dog food produced at the plant in July and Au gust are being recalled this week from stores throughout Texas and in parts of Louisiana. But Doane said the batch confirmed to be fatal was sold only in Central Texas, much of it in and near New Braunfels, a farm ing community 30 miles north of San Antonio. As many as 20 dogs have died in the New Braunfels area, their livers poisoned by a corn mold called aflatoxin 81. "My clients are upset, very upset,” said Mark Rowley, who has treated about 16 liver-damaged dogs at his Loop 337 Veterinary Clinic here. Most of his clients, Rowley said, appreciate that Doane has been forth right in admitting responsibility, but that has not cased their worry and World and Nation try complain that it makes it tougher to protect voter lists from fraud and error. The several state agencies that now collect registration applications have little ability to make sure that voters meet citizenship and other re- quirements. "The problems are all over the place." said New Hampshire Secre tary of Stale William M. Gardner, president of the National Association of Secretaries of State. "You can tegis lerund vole without (an election oili cial) even seeing you." Registrars in Fairfax and Prince William counties expressed frustra tion that the State Board of Elections doesn’t have a computer system that does what the auditors did: cross check the voter rolls with lists of fel- ons and people who have died. State officials are studying creating such a system. Local registrars say they don't have access to information on felons and must rely on the state, which maintains the voter rolls. '"We don’t have the ability to de termine who is a felon or who is dead because we have no access to that kind of information," said Robert W. Beers, the Fairfax registrar. was rationed and live-fire training cur tailed. His wife was getting ready to graduate from law school. Rather than face getting shipped out again, he took his discharge. "We both decided that we didn't want that lifestyle." said Elizabeth Wright. He works in Buffalo, not too far -uwqy, frpip Gueizow, vyhc* also decided not to rc-enlixt and now works as-a mechanical designer. Both are watching where their old unit goes next. Though the di vision as a whole takes over the mission next year, the 2-14 is coming off a nine month stint in Bosnia that lasted twice as long as it was supposed to. One common casualty of such heavy-duty deployment is the collapse of families, soldiers say. E-5 Scott Hartman, who fought in Somalia with Wright and Guezlow, got out last year after nine years because he was staring at an assignment to Korea after stints in Germany. Haiti and the Sinai. Now he’s a Bell Atlan tic telephone repairman in Lebanon, Pa,, making almost twice what he made in the Army. He doesn't miss the old days. "You’re constantly in the Held," said Hartman, who blames his deployments for the breakup of his first marriage in 1996. "At the drop of a hat you're in some Third World country fighting over who knows what.” grief. Thirteen of the dogs he has treated have died so far. "We as veterinarians are also very, very upset," he said, "because there's very little we can do for these pels once they're affected." The company. based in Brentwood, Tenn., has issued a blan ket public apology to families whose pets have died and has set up a toll free hot line for owners who fear their dogs have eaten tainted food, said John van Mol, a Doane spokesman. The company is paying veterinary bills for dogs made sick by the food, van Mol said, and plans to dispatch representatives to meet personally with every owner who lost a dog, once an "appropriate” period of mourning has passed. They better be braced for an ear ful when they knock on Soeehting’s door. "I’ll give ’em hell!” she said in her raspy voice. She shook her head, muttering. "Damn sorry company and their damn sorry food.” Sarah lay down and died near the British public shrugs off media frenzy over gay politicians By Marjorie Miller Los Angeles Times LONDON -- "TELL US THE TRUTH TONY, Are we being run by a gay mafia?" cried a front-page head line in the Sun tabloid after a second member of Prime Minister Tony Blair’s Cabinet announced that he is gay and two others were "outed” in the media. The response Tuesday came not from Blair but from the British pub lic: Who cares? Despite the efforts of some British media to make political hay of gays in government, an opinion poll pub lished in the Guardian newspaper showed that a majority of Britons think that homosexuality is morally acceptable and not an impediment to holding high public office. “Following the lesson of the Clinton-Lewinsky affair, we may be seeing that the public is more toler ant than the press thinks it is," said Ralph Legrine, a professor at the Cen ter for Mass Communication Re search in Leicester. "They are less concerned about private details than the media are. ... There is a feeling that if people don’t want to announce their sexuality in public, no one should point a finger." Columnist David Aaronovitch con curred in the Independent newspaper Tuesday. Noting that Republican ef forts to ax President Clinton with the sex scandal involving former intern Monica S. Lewinsky had claimed House Speaker New t Gingrich's scalp and not the president's, he wrote that British newspapers "have not quite caught up with hist week's news Irom America." Arrests are made in Baja California massacre By Mary Beth Sheridan Los Angeles Times MEXICO CITY - After a two month investigation, authorities Tues day announced their first arrests in the gruesome slaying of 19 men, women and children in Baja California, the bloodiest episode of drug violence Mexico has witnessed. Authorities said the Sept. 17 mas sacre near Ensenada was committed by a gang that apparently worked for Ramon Arellano Felix, who is on the FBl's 10 Most Wanted list and is al legedly one of Mexico's top traffick ers. The gang had set out to settle a drug feud with Fermin Castro, an al leged small-time narcotics dealer who was among the victims, they said. "The members of the armed group had previously drunk alcohol and used cocaine, which explains the bru smokehouse one night a lew weeks ago, and Pup turned up dead last Tuesday in a field near the barn. A few days later, Beullah was pul to sleep at Rowley's clinic. Soechting sat by the wood stove in the dim light of her kitchen, where once she would listen through the window to the dogs at play outside. Now she heard only the autumn wind in the oak trees. The cat wandered by and rubbed against her, but she paid him no mind. "All three got along," she said, speaking of the dogs. "I’d sit out yon der by the yard fence there in my chair and they’d run around. They’d try to see how fast old Sarah could run, and old Pup would be trying to catch up with her. Well, that’d make me laugh! Old Sarah, she’d make a shortcut, run around there behind the storehouse, and Pup would be look ing for her." Sarah and Beullah, collies born in the same litter, were given to Soechting and her husband by a granddaughter about six years ago. Over the weekend. Agriculture Minister Nick Brown was forced to announce that he is gay when a former lover tried to sell his story to the Sun's sister paper, News of the World. Brown made the disclosure with the bitter aside. "I had rather hoped I could have a private life like other people" Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott rushed to Brow n's side, say ing that the British newspapers had become "judge, jury and executioner in this matter. It's totally unaccept able." Brown's announcement came on the heels of the resignation of Welsh Seeretary Ron Davies after he was robbed in a London park known for gay cruising. Davies, who is married, initially denied newspaper allegations that he was gay and refused to explain why he had resigned over being the victim of a crime. The Guardian later reported that Davies had agreed to meet a man in the park who was threatening to blackmail him over alleged sexual ad vances. Davies then gave an emo tional news conference in which he said, “We are what we are. We are all different,” but said that his sexual ori entation was his own business. Subsequently, Matthew Parris, a gay journalist for the Times of Lon don and former Conservative mem ber of Parliament, declared on the British Broadcasting Corp. that there are two other homosexual members of Blair's Cabinet - Culture Minister Chris Smith, who is openly gay, and Trade and Industry Minister Peter Mandelson. whom Parris said "is cer- tainly gay." Mandelson did not respond, but tality with which they carried out the massacre." the head ol Mexico's ju dicial police. Gen. Guillermo Alvarez Nava, told a news conference Tues day. The killing at a ranch in El Sau/al, just outside Ensenada, shocked Mexi cans with its cruelty. Among the vic tims were children aged I and 2. Three gang members have been ar rested and charged with murder, pos session of drugs and arms, and orga nized-crime activities, Alvarez Nava said. Authorities also are seeking ar rest warrants against seven other al leged members of the group, includ ing its leader, identified as Arturo Martinez Gonzalez. Authorities said they cracked the case after the execution of two men in an Oct. 29 incident in Baja Cali fornia. That shooting bore the hall marks of the Ensen n da massacre: A by tainted food Pup. an Australian cattle dog, was a gift from her son a lew years ago, to help lend the 25 head of cows on the farm. "He was a heeler,” she said. "He was just getting to where, when I'd want the cows to get in the pen, and one or two would lag behind, Ed say to Pup, 'Go get 'em!’ And, by God, he'd grab 'em by the heels, and they’d let out for the barnyard. You ought to have seen it!" In mid-September, Rowley said, he and other veterinarians in the area began seeing more and more eases of dead dogs with their livers discol ored yellow and splotched with red. Eventually they sent tissue samples to the Veterinary Medical Diagnos tic Laboratory at Texas A&M Uni versity. After several weeks of tests, said toxicologist Catherine Barr, the lab determined that microscopic lesions on the livers had been caused by afla toxin 81, a mold that grows inside corn kernels that have been cracked open by insects in droughts like the BBC honchos did. issuing an edict that any reference to Mandelson's sexuality was off-limits. This prompted a revolt among BBC edi tors and reporters, who charged it was censorship and cronyism. Gay rights activists condemned the involuntary "outing ol politicians. Stonewall, a British gay and lesbian lobby, attacked Newsol the World lor forcing Brown to declare Ins sexual orientation. "Coming out is a personal decision and should happen at the time of their own choosing." the or- gani/ation stud 1 a prepared slate But some Times readers disagreed in Tuesday’s letters to the editor, stat ing that the public has a right to know which of their representatives are gay. particularly when Parliament is con sidering such issues as whether to lower the age of consent for gav sex. The popular Sun tabloid insisted the public has a "right to know" whether the country is run by a "gay mafia ol politicians, lawyers, palace courtiers and TV bigwigs ... a closed world ol men with a mutual self-interest." But two newspaper polls showed that the Sun was misreading public sentiment. In the Guardian poll, 56 percent of respondents said they thought homosexuality is morally ac ceptable compared to 36 percent who said no, and 52 percent said being openly gay was compatible with hold ing a Cabinet post. The Mirror tab loid asked its readers if they want to know the sexual orientation of their members of Parliament, and by late afternoon nearly two-thirds ol those who responded had said "no." group of men wearing uniforms ol the police and army gunned dowm victims as they lay on the Boor. Authorities gathered enough infor mation from survivors of the two at tacks to detain Armando Villegas Santacruz, who confessed to partici pating in the executions, officials said. He, in turn, led them to a ranch where officials discovered arms and military and police uniforms appar ently used in the Ensenada attack, authorities said. According to the investigation, the massacre at Ensenada occurred when the gang went to take KOO kilos of marijuana from Eermin Castro to settle an old debt, Alvarez Nava said. At least one of the gang members being sought is believed to be in the United States, the authorities said. one Texas has gone through this year. The lab then figured out what the dogs had in common: All had been eating food produced at Doane's Temple plant in July and August. The lab has been getting calls from worried dog owners, said Barr. "Ex plaining some of this medical stuff to owners is very difficult, especially if their animals are sick,” she said. "Because once the animal is sick enough for the symptoms to be rec ognizable, it's not a very good prog nosis at all." Bcullah had the symptoms: She wouldn’t cal, had almost no energy, was vomiting and appeared de pressed. Last Wednesday, as Row ley took Beullah away, he promised Socchting he would try to find her another dog. Socchting watched them go. "I told him, I said, 'Well, I want one that'll bark and run around. Don’t bring some quiet one,’ '’ she recalled. ”1 don't like the quiet."