' 'tv •i ■ DICKSON, Tom. (AP) — A van carrying prisoners burst intp flames along a highway Thursday, burning to death six handcuffed, shackled in mates locked in a wire cage. The fire apparently was started by. a broken drive shaft that pierced the fuel tank, investigators said. The driver burned his arms trying to save the prisoners, all of whan were in handcuffs and individual shackles. “The driver could not get close to the back of the vehicle to even open the door,” Tennessee Highway Patrol Lt. Mike Dover said. “The prisoners were consumed in the fire ” Dover said heat from the blaze burned so hot it welded the back door shut. Another guard riding in the van was not hurt. The van was operated by Federal Extradition Agency, a Memphis company that transports in mates. The prisoners had spent Wednes day night in Memphis and were sched uled to spend Thursday night in Chat tanooga on their way to a Florida prison, Dover said. The identities of the state prisoners were not immedi ately available. The van had pulled over because of mechanical problems on Interstate 40, about 45 miles west of Nashville, before catching fire. There was a fire extinguisher on I ■- -;iK board, but the guards could not reach it because of the heat and fire, authori ties said. The van lay charred along the me dian after the blaze. Glass blown out by die heat littered the highway. " . i >0 care, ..o.o hurt kids LITTLE ROCK, Aik. (AP) —A Baptist church board says it shut down its day-care center to get mothers to stay at home because working moth ers “neglect their children, damage their marriages and set a bad example. Now 27 parents are without day care, and state officials are rushing to license another facility to replace the center at the First Baptist Church of Berryville — a small town in north west Arkansas. “This is not ‘Happy Days’ and we are not living in the 1950s,” Katrena Alexander, 44, who runs a manufac turing company with her husband, said Thursday. Alexander ’s daughter Keanna was enrolled at the church’s day care for a year before it closed two weeks ago. The girl cried when she heard the news. “I don’t know of too many people here who can survive on one person’s salary, especially if that salary is mini mum wage,” she said. “This is just something that shouldn’t have hap pened in mis decade.” On Feb. 14, members of the First Baptist Qrarch’s Comer Stone Day Care board sent a letter to parents stat ing that the church would close the center in the spring and reduce its tu ition until its closure. In a letter that followed, the church said that while it was sensitive to the plight of single parents, it could not continue the center because its exist ence encouraged mothers to work out side the home. K. ii5 :.>• •* Mil it ; i The letter added that families could get by mi one salary if luxuries such as “big TVs, a microwave, new clothes, eating out and nice vacations” were forfeited. .... £ Matt Haney/DN Pig on the lam eludes capture by fuzz ANNISTON, Ala. — This town’s public enemy No. 1 is a 100 pound porker that refuses to give itself up. For three weeks the rogue pig has run amok, eluding capture and deftly taking the bait from the best-laid traps. Capt. John Dryden nearly nabbed his nemesis Tuesday, scrambling after it up a steep ravine. But the pig squeaked through die dragnet. MI was trying to detain him for questioning, but he failed to yield to my command to stop,” Dryden said. “Hey, I yelled Suey’ all I could.” Although the pig is laughed about by many, police say it is a public nuisance that could cause an accident if it darts out in traffic. Police phones are ringing three times a day with tips of the pig’s whereabouts and its latest capers. Members of the community have been fairing the law into their own hands, organizing small posses. “God intended for the home to be the center of a mother’s world,” the church said. “In Titus 2:5, women are instructed to be ‘discreet, chaste, keep ers at home, good and obedient to their own husbands....’” The day-care center closed March 14. The church’s pastor, Clyde Gray, and the day care’s board members could not be reached for comment; Gray ’s phone rang unanswered T1& day. The closure infuriated parents. “I don’t think any of us are trying to copy a man’s role, whatever that role may be,” Alexander said. “I still don’t know what those roles are. My husband does dishes just like I do.” The Arkansas Department of Hu man Sendees expedited a permit for the First Christian Church, also in Bepyville, so it could accept the 27 children. Convicted drug dealer gave cocaine money to Democrats in “95 NEW YORK (AP)—A convicted drug dealer wrote a $20,000 check to the Democratic National Committee from an account filled with cash from cocaine sales, The New York limes reported, quoting congressional inves tigators. Jorge Cabrera wrote the check in November 1995, the limes reported in today's editions, after a prominent Democratic fund-raiser met with him at a Cuban hotel to solicit a campaign contribution. Three weeks after the DNC got the money, Cabrera attended a Christmas reception at the White House hosted by Hillary Rodham Clinton and had his photograph taken with the Clintons and Vice President A1 Gore. Congressional investigators told the Times that Vivian Mannerud, a businesswoman from Miami, had promised Cabrera an invitation to a Miami fund-raising dinner honoring Gore if he gave the money. The revelations about die location of the solicitation of Cabrera’s gift, plus the source of die money, emerged from congressional investigators’ con ducting interviews in Miami, the Times said. Mannerud said she could not re call soliciting a contribution from Cabrera in Cuba, although die vaguely remembered meeting him there. The Times said it is unclear whether Mannerud or other Demo cratic fund-raisers knew about Cabrera’s criminal past. The donation was returned last October. “Once we found out about Cabrera’s past, we immediately re turned the money, and we fed we have put this behind us,” said DNC spokes woman Amy Weiss Tbbe. 1i8flon/Wortj|j^_ Israelis refuse to stop building until terrorism stops JERUSALEM (AP) — Armed with slingshots, Palestinian youths fired stones Thursday at Israeli soldiers guarding the tomb of a biblical matriarch, and both sides hardened their positions over the resumption of peace talks. Palestinians said Israel must freeze building of Jewish settlements before talks can resume. Israel refused, insisting that Yasser Arafat halt a wave of terrorism. The statements indicated that neither side planned to show flexibility before a summit Monday between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Clinton. Palestinians kept up daily protests that began when Israel began construction of a Jewish housing project in disputed east Jerusalem, where Palestinians want to establish their capital. In the West Bank town of Bethlehem, youths fired stones at Israeli soldiers guarding Rachel’s Tomb. Soldiers responded with tear gas and rubber bullets. Israeli media suggested Clinton will seek a compromise from Netanyahu — a freeze on Jewish settlement activity in exchange for adopting Israel’s proposal to speed up negotiations for a permanent peace agreement. Chicago man charged in rape and assault of 9-yearold CHICAGO (AP) — A 25-year-old ex-convict was charged Thurs day in the rape and beating of the 9-year-old child known as Girl X, nearly three months after she was found unconscious in a filthy public housing stairwell. - Patrick Sykes allegedly raped, choked and poisoned Girl X for sexual gratification, said Chicago police spokesman Paul Jenkins. It was “a crime of opportunity. He saw the.victim walking alone and went after her,” Jenkins said. Sykes, who was in prison from 1991-93 for attempted criminal sexual assault, confessed to the brutal attack of Girl X and revealed detail^ not known to die general public, Jenkins said. He was charged with aggravated criminal sexual assault, aggra vated kidnapping, predatory sexual assault, heinous battery, unlawful restraint and aggravated sexual assault of a minor, Jenkins said. Sykes was visiting Girl X’s building in the Cabrini-Green apart ment complex when he saw her walking up a stairwell, police said. He pulled the 64-pound girl into a vacant apartment and choked her into unconsciousness before sexually assaulting ha, Jenkins said. n Sykes poured a gasoline-type substance down her throat and scrawled • on her txxly with ajijarker for an “inane i'eason,”'Jenkins said.5' Jenkins said police were led to Sykes by a tip phoned into police 10 days ago. He wouldn’t reveal details about the caller, but said police ~ had tJbtaifted physical evidence that supported Sykes’ confession. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Giggling and putting up a brave front, youngsters lined up in two states for shots Thursday to protect them against hepatitis from a contaminated, illegal shipment of frozen straw berries. “Needles don’t scare me. I’ve already taken a lot of shots,” said 9 y ear-old Lucy Kadzhikyan, a fourth-grader at Ramona Elementary in iKdlywood. About 2,000 children in California and Georgia received shots Thurs day, and officials in four others states worked to prevent the spread of the disease from tainted berries believed to have been served in school lunches. One inner-city Los Angeles school served the suspect dessert cups on Monday after it was ieft off a list of schools warned last Friday. More than 700 kids and teachers at Mount Vernon Middle School will have to get shots next week. So far, the only reported cases of hepatitis attributed to the frozen, sliced strawberries have been in Michigan, with 175 children and adults sickened. Children at schools in Iowa, Arizona and Tennessee may also have eaten the tainted fruit. T* || 1 Questions? Comments? Ask for the hfchrSaskari JL Editor: DougKbuma A&E Editor: Jeff Randall Managing Editor: Paula Lavigne Photo Director: ScottBruhn Assoc. News Editors: Joshua GHHn Art Director Aaron Steckeihera Chad Lorenz Web Editor Michele Coffins Night Editor Anne Hjersman Night News - Opinion Editor Anthony Nguyen Editors: Bryce Glenn APWireEditor: JohnFuiwider LeanneSorensen Copy Desk Chief: JuHeSobczyk . 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