Banner Graphic, Volume 22, Number 123, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 January 1992 — Page 2

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THE BANNERGRAPHIC January 27,1992

M-& hoosier lottery. Lotto America Lottery Line INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Here are the winning numbers selected Sunday and Saturday in the Hoosier Lottery: Sunday Daily Three 2-5-3 Daily Four 0-0-9-8 Lotto Cash jackpot: Estimated at $1 million Saturday Lotto Cash 9-35-40-41-42-43 Two winning tickets of a Lotto Cash jackpot estimated at $1 million were sold in New Albany and Alexandria. New jackpot estimated at $1 million. Daily Three 9,1,9 Daily Four 5,7,1,6 Lotto America jackpot 8-22-30-33-37-44 One winning ticket of an estimated jackpot of $9 million was sold in Jackson, Wis. New estimated jackpot is $2 million.

Banner Graphic (USPS 142-020) Consolidation of Th* Daily Bannar Established I*so Tho Harold Tha Dally Graphic Eatabliahad I*o3 To I* phon# 653-5151 Published dally except Sunday and Holiday* by Banner Graphic, Inc. al 100 North Jackson St., Graancaatla, 1N,40135. Sacond-claaa postage paid at Greencaatle, IN. POSTMASTER: Send add rase change* to the Banner Graphic, P. O. Boa 509. Greencaatle IN 40135. Subecriptlon Rate* Per Week, by carrier $1.40 Per Week, by motor rout* .01.45 Mail Subecriptlon Rate* R.R. IN Rest of Rest of Putnam Co. Indiana U.S.A. 3 Month* 021.00 023.00 025.00 0 Month* 040.00 045.00 050.00 1 Year $78.00 086.00 $95.00 Mail aubacrlption* payable In advance ... not accepted in town and where motor route service is available. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Pree* la entitled exclusively to the use lor republication of all the local news printad in this newspaper. Steve Henderahot General Manager/ Marketing Director Eric 8ern5ee.......................... Editor Wilbur C. Kendall Production Managar Gib Farmer Business Manager June Leer ..... Circulation Manager

GOT THE W JANUARY BLAHS? Check out the COMIC page Read the JEANE DIXON Horoscope Work the CROSSWORD puzzle Figure out the CRYPTOQUOTE There’s plenty to do everyday In the Banner Graphic

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

FIRST CITIZENS BANK MEMBER OLD NATIONAL BANCORP

and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, a member of the Federal Reserve System, at the dose of business December 31, 1991, published in accordance with a call made by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Reserve Act. ASSETS Dollar Amts, in Thousands Mil. Thou. Cash and balances due from depository institutions: Noninterest-bearing balances and currency and coin 5,453 Securities 20,080 Federal funds sold and secunties purchased under agreements to resell in domestic offices of the bank & of its Edge & Agreement subsidiaries, & in IBFs: Federal funds sold 378 Loans and lease fmandng receivables: Loans and leases, net of unearned income 58,612 LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses 686 Loans and leases, net of unearned income, allowance, and reserve 57,926 Premises and fixed assets 1,250 Other real estate owned 37 Other assets 1,182 Total assets 86,306 Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) 86,306 LIABILITIES Deposits In domestic offices 78,291 Nomnterest-beanng 12,558 Interest-beanng 65,733 Federal funds purchased and secunties sold under agreements to purchase in domestic offices of the bank & of its Edge & Agreement subsidiaries. & in IBFs: Secunties sold under agreements to repurchase 424 Other liabilities 287 Total liabilities 79,002 EQUITY CAPITAL Common stock (No. of shares a, Authorized 8,000 b Outstanding 8,000 200 Surplus 1,720 Undivided profits and capital reserves 5,384 Total equity capital 7,304 Total equity capital and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823fj) 7,304 Total liabilities, limited-life preferred stock, equity capital, and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) 86,306 MEMORANDA: Amounts outstanding as of Report Date: a. Standby letters of credit Total 2 b Amt. of Standby letters of credit in memo a. conveyed to others through participations 46 I, Kenneth R. Heeke, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this Report of Condition (including the supporting schedules) have been prepared in conformance with the instructions issued by the appropriate Federal regulatory authority and are true to the best of my knowledge an d belief Kenneth R. Heeke, SVP & Cashier, 1-21-92 We, the undersigned directors (trustees), attest to the correctness of this Report of Condition (including the supporting schedules) and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared in conformance with the instructions issued by the appropriate Federal regulatory authority and is true and correct. Dan L. Doan, David Jackman, Francis B. Cannon, directors MEMBER FDIC

In this comer Mike Tyson is fighting for his freedom

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Former heavyweight champ Mike Tyson is facing his most formidable opponent yet in the form of a teenage beauty pageant contestant who accuses him of rape. Jury selection was to begin today in the case against the 25-year-old fighter. THE 18-YEAR-old Miss Black America contestant told police she met Tyson at a rehearsal for the pageant and went with him July 19 to his hotel room, where he held her cm the bed, fondled her, performed oral sex and raped her. Tyson, who has repeatedly been accused of fondling women, insisted the woman consented to sex. “The woman knows what happened. I know what happened. I’m innocent,” the boxer said after a court appearance. If convicted of rape, criminal deviate conduct and criminal confinement, he could get up to 63 years in prison. REPRESENTING Tyson are local lawyer James Voyles Jr. and Vincent Fuller of Washington, who defended President Reagan’s assailant, John Hinckley. Hinckley was found innocent by reason of insanity. Fuller reportedly is receiving $5,000 a day. “If anybody can win this case, it’s Fuller,” said Plato Cacheris, a Washington lawyer and long-time friend. “His magnificent victory on the Hinckley case just demonstrates his prowess.” The prosecution has sought to match Tyson’s high-powered lawyers by hiring the flamboyant courtroom veteran J. Gregory Garrison. Fuller and Tyson “put their pants on one leg at a time, the last time I checked,” Garrison has said. AMONG THE possible witnesses: Virginia Foster, the chauffeur who drove Tyson’s accuser to and from his hotel the night of the alleged rape, and J. Morris Anderson, the pageant organizer who labeled Tyson a “serial buttocks fondler” in a $607 million lawsuit against him. Anderson later dropped the lawsuit. The trial has drawn news media from around the world. Reporters have been allocated half the seats in the 50-seat courtroom, leaving the rest of the press corps to watch on closed-circuit television in a room nearby. The trial will not be televised. State law bars cameras from the courtroom. SOME OF THE other seats in the courtroom are reserved for the public, and one spectator was in place today at 6 a.m., three hours before jury selection was due to start, hoping to earn one of the spots. It was unclear when there

Highlights of the case INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Key points, participants and a brief chronology in the Mike Tyson rape trial: • Defendant: Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson. • Charges: Rape, criminal deviate conduct, criminal confinement. • Accuser. An 18-year-old contestant in the 1991 Miss Black America Pageant • Setting: Marion Superior Court. • Judge: Patricia J. Gifford. • Prosecutors: Marion County Prosecutor Jeffrey Modisett; Chief Deputy David J. Dreyer, J. Gregory Garrison, a private attorney hired to assist. • Defense lawyers: Vincent J. Fuller of Washington, D.C., James H. Voyles Jr. of Indianapolis. • Prosecution argument: Tyson took the woman to his Indianapolis hotel room on July 19, where he sexually assaulted her. • Defense argument: The woman consented to sex. • The stakes: Tyson, 25, faces the end of his boxing career and a possible 63-ycar prison sentence if convicted. A chronology: • July 19. Tyson and the pageant contestant enter his room after spending a evening together. • July 22. Woman files complaint with police alleging Tyson raped her. • Sept. 9. Grand jury indicts Tyson after hearing 36 witnesses. • Sept. 11. Tyson booked and released on $30,000 bail. • Jan. 27. Jury selection to begin. would be enough room for the public in the courtroom. “I have sort of an interest in boxing," said Tracy Givens, 28 of Indianapolis, who is not related to Tyson’s ex-wife. “I’m planning on doing this all week.” There was no picketers at that time inside or outside the building. SgL Darrell Humphrey of Marion County building authority said a path would be cleared for Tyson’s entry and exit. TYSON, WHO had a criminal record as a juvenile, has been accused of assaulting several people

Clintons try to deflect infidelity rumors

By the Associated Press Democrat Bill Clinton says he hopes a television appearance with his wife in which he acknowledged causing “pain in my marriage” will end speculation about infidelity and refocus his presidential campaign on the issues. With his wife, Hillary, at his side, the Arkansas governor asked the American people Sunday night to judge his campaign on its merits instead of on rumors and allegations of infidelity in his past. IN A HIGH-STAKES interview on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” Clinton denied the allegations of Gennifer Flowers, a Little Rock woman who said in a paid tabloid interview that they had a 12-year affair. But Clinton refused to answer repeated questions about whether he had been unfaithful to his wife. “I’m not prepared tonight to say that any married couple should ever discuss that with anyone but themselves,” he said. With just three weeks left before the critical leadoff primary in New Hampshire, Clinton was hopeful

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MIKE TYSON Faces up to 63 years in IDOC

outside the ring since 1987, when he became champion. He paid $105,000 that year in the settlement of an assault case. > His former wife, actress Robin Givens, accused Tyson of terrorizing her. They divorced in 1989. In 1990, a New York jury ruled in favor of a woman who claimed Tyson grabbed her breasts and behind at a disco. She was awarded SIOO. The 1990 Miss Black America, Rosie Jones, has sued Tyson for SIOO million, claiming Tyson fondled her buttocks during the 1991 pageant. Outside the Canterbury Hotel, the alleged rape site, two dozen Guardian Angels marched and chanted on Sunday, carrying signs that read, “Do the Right Thing” and “Keep It Clean Don’t Get Mean.” “This will be a real uphill battle for women, because it involves one of the greatest sports figures of all time,” said Lisa Sliwa, the Angels’ national director.

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Gov. Bill Clinton: He’s done talking about it

the controversy was now behind him. “IT IS FOR ME,” he said as he arrived home in Little Rock. “I’m done.” Clinton and his wife said they had struggled to keep their mar-

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Jeffrey Dahmer: Life in prison or in a hospital *

Jury to determine Dahmer’s sanity

MILWAUKEE (AP) The jury at Jeffrey L. Dahmer’s sanity trial will sort through gruesome details and complex psychological analyses to answer the question: Was he insane when he drugged and dismembered 15 young men? Jury selection was to start today in the case of the former chocolate factory worker, who was arrested in July after police went to his apartment and found heads in a freezer, other body parts in boxes and genitals in a kettle. EARLIER THIS month the 31-year-old Dahmer pleaded guilty but insane to 15 murders. The jury must determine his mental state at the time of each killing. If found insane, Dahmer would be sent to a mental hospital, and after a year’s treatment could petition for release every six months. If deemed sane, he would receive a mandatory sentence of life in prison for each slaying. His lawyer must prove he suffered from a mental illness that either kept him from realizing his crimes were wrong or made him unable to stop himself from committing them. DAHMER HAS admitted killing 17 men and teen-agers since 1978, police said. But police said they have insufficient evidence in one case; another of the killings occurred in Ohio, where Dahmer will be tried later. Defense attorney Gerald Boyie said Dahmer was extremely nervous on the eve of the trial. He was

riage and family together and did not believe their past difficulties should keep them from the White House. When interviewer Steve Kroft described their relationship as an admirable “arrangement,” the governor interjected and said: “Hey, wait a minute ... You’re looking at two people who love each other. This is not an arrangement or an understanding. This is a marriage. That’s a very different thing.” PUNCHING THE air for emphasis, Mrs. Clinton added, “You know, I’m not sitting here like some little woman, standing by my man like Tammy Wynette. I’m sitting here because I love him, and I respect him and I honor what he’s been through and what we’ve been through together. And you know, if that’s not enough for people, then heck don’t vote for him.” The appearance was an extraordinary attempt to end questions about the rumors that

Dahmer is concerned with “the horror of it all. The fact of what he did. The fact that it will all come out...in open court.” —Gerald Boyle Defense attorney

concerned with “the horror of it all. The fact of what he did. The fact that it will all come out... in open court,” Boyle said. Dahmer was arrested July 22 after a man in handcuffs escaped from his apartment and flagged down a police car. Authorities said Dahmer told them he lured most of his victims by offering them money to pose for pictures., HE SAID HE had sex with some victims before giving them drug-laced drinks and strangling them. He said he cut up the bodies aqd saved one man’s heart to eat. A court document indicates Dahmer had sex with four corpses. The Wisconsin State Journal last week quoted Dr. Frederick Fosdal, a psychiatrist for the prosecution, as saying Dahmer claimed to have attempted lobotomies on victims in hopes of creating “zombie-like” companions.

have dogged the governor’s campaign for two weeks. The appearance was designed to save his campaign from a sudden dose of uncertainty after a promising start. In an interview with The Associated Press on Sunday, the Clintons said they hoped the public would understand. “WE JUST HAVE to wait and see,” Clinton said. “What I’ve done is take my case to the American people.” He told CBS, “The only way to put it behind us, I think, is for all of us to agree that this guy has told us about all we need to know. ... Let’s go on and get back to the real problems of this country.” Clinton said he hoped to avoid any further discussion of his personal life. “I cannot talk about this any more. The American people have to decide this,” he told the AP. “If they decide that someone else would be a better president, then I will go back to my wonderful life.” CLINTON QUESTIONED whether the rules of modem politics were such that “if people have problems in their marriage and there are things in their past which they don’t want to discuss which are painful to them, they can’t run.” “IN THE COURSE of this campaign, people in this country will see that Hillary and I love each other, we’re committed to our child and to our family,” Clinton said. “We have something to offer the country, and if they think it is better than what anyone else is offering, I think they’ll vote for me.” Meanwhile, a fired Arkansas state employee who had accused Clinton of marital infidelity issued a statement saying he would drop his wrongful dismissal lawsuit against the governor.