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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 1

Publication:
Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A gem Sports: Greg Norman triumphs at MemoriallC SMARTMoney: A guide to bartering in the age of computers MetroToday: Business is good and emissions are upIB Reds 4 Cardinals 0 Clearing SE winds lOmph. High 84, low 6212B Schourek 1-hitterlC 1 50t Volume 118 Number 266 Dayton Daily News (ISSN 0897 09201 POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to P.O. BOX 1287, Dayton, OH 45401. Second-class Postage Paid at Dayton, OH 45401 Dayton, Ohio, Monday, Juno 5, 1995 Copyright 1995 Dayton Newspapers, Inc. The First Cox Newspaper COMING THIS WEEK Doctor helps patients confront a certain future by fighting for Serbs stay tough Nothing told about pilot Small victories against death ASSOCIATED PRESS Storm warning 5,000 people evacuate their Florida panhandle homes as Hurricane Allison, the first storm of the season, is expected to hit this morning.

See story, Page 3A First veto: President Clinton is expected to issue the first veto of his tenure this week, although observers say others will follow as he deals with a Congress. The target is a bill that would cut $16.4 billion in federal spending.See story, Page 3A Clinton More on O.J.: Jurors in the double murder case involving O.J. Simpson -11- aHflaaBBBBBBaY WMfli.K-Jlk Ws' iliM-BaaaaaaaaV'''M may see gory photographs this week. Meanwhile, Christopher Darden, one of the prosecutors in the case, says he is ashamed of the imperfection of the proceedings and may change careers. See story and Q.

and Page 3A Analysis: Serbs see U.N. efforts as biased5A By Roger Cohen NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina Gen. Ratko Mladic, commander of the Bosnian Serb forces, has insisted that he will not give any information on an American pilot whose F-16 was downed on Friday until NATO renounces the use of air strikes in Bosnia, the United Nations said on Sunday. At the same time, the Bosnian Serbs again attacked Sarajevo, killing four people and wounding eight with a shell that landed close to the entrance to a tunnel under the airport that provides the Bosnian capital's only tenuous link with the outside world. As the Serbian encirclement of the city tightened, Lt.

Gen. Rupert Smith, commander of U.N. forces here, drafted a plan to secure a road out, if necessary with force, U.N. officials said. Maj.

Myriam Souchaki, a spokesman for the United Nations, said on Sunday that Mladic was insisting that he receive a guarantee that no further air strikes would take place before saying anything about the pilot or the release of 257 U.N. hostages held by the Serbs. "General Mladic made clear that until he has a meeting with the commander of United Nations forces in the former Yugoslavia and until he receives security guarantees, there will be no further hostage releases and no information on the pilot," she said. The American pilot was flying a routine NATO monitoring mission when his plane was downed by a Serbian missile near the northern town of Banja Luka. U.N.

military experts here are increasingly skeptical that the pilot is alive. "If he were alive, we believe the Serbs would have shown him by now," one official said. Mladic's demands amounted to a challenge to the American and Western European governments that have said they won't negotiate with the Bosnian Serbs until all hostages are released. Darden WALLY NELSON DAYTON DAILY NEWS WORLD CLOSE Dr. Robert Brandt: 'Death is inevitable.

You either die early or you die late. My job is to relieve their suffering along the 'It's not about death. It's not about being around dying all the time. I think of it as a matter of living with a very challenging Dr. Robert Brandt ugly disease on his own terms.

But Brandt felt most people at the memorial service had little but pity for a man whose life was cut short at 27. Brandt vowed he would never attend another patient's funeral again. And he never has. "Death is inevitable. You either die early or you die late.

My job is to relieve their suffering along the way." For AIDS patients, the way can be very long and very painful. As the only Miami Valley doctor to specialize in HIV and AIDS patients, Brandt has witnessed many agonizing descents toward death, sometimes spanning a decade or more. Month after month, the bond grows SEE D0CT0R4A By Cheryl L. Reed DAYTON DAILY NEWS Dr. Robert Brandt sat in the church pew and stared at the old pictures of Steve.

He was Brandt's favorite patient, so much so that Brandt wanted to name his clinic after him. To Brandt, Steve embodied the ideal AIDS patient, one who insisted on living a full life until the end, even when the disease robbed patches of his thick Italian hair and blotched his creamy face with the purple tumors of Kaposi's sarcoma. When medical science could no longer help, Steve shared a glass of wine with his lover, then swallowed a handful of pain pills. It was June 15, 1991. Steve wanted friends and family to remember him as a man who conquered an A look at the Hubble telescopeWednesday.

In Sports: a NBA finals start Wednesday. Nike Open golf tournament opens today with pro-am at Heatherwoode in Springboro. The Cincinnati Reds play host to the Pittsburgh Pirates today, Tuesday and Wednesday. In Lifestyle: On Tuesday, author Judith Waller-stein discusses her book about making marriages work. On Wednesday, food and nutrition, a On Thursday, a look at many of the self-help books available.

SECOND OF TWO PARTS Ex-Eagle helps local band Before murder-suicide, signs of trouble missed Call 463-4636 and enter 9000 or these codes for news updates: 1000 By Dave I nation 1002 Digest DAYTON DAILY NEWS 1001 Vorld Headlines 1003 Hell froze over without Horoscope Lifestyle Randy Meisner. The former Eagles bassist and singer was not invited to join the reunited rock band for its much-lauded Hell Freezes Over tour. Neither was original guitarist Bernie Leadon. "We're kind of disappointed that we weren't asked to go Lottery ISBNSS Ann Landers 71 7 rtajs si Classified 7C Comics SS Crossword SS Path! SB Editorial SA 2A People Randy Meisner 1C Spcs In 1971, the group then known as Starbuck recorded an album for Atlantic Records that was never released, and then went their separate ways. They were reunited last year by Jim Foreman, a former Daytonian also living in L.A., who now manages the band.

The group plans to call itself Electric Range, pending attorney approval. Meisner, who also founded the band Poco. was asked to produce because of his experience with vocal harmonies. He's a good choice for a producer," said Refraze owner and engineer Gary King. "You can tell he spent a lot of time in the studio." The band invited family and friends, including local musicians Rick Fannin, Jeanne Destro and Kevin Gwin.

to the studio Saturday to record an ensemble chorus for the song. Old Timers. Meisner joined in, signaling King and engineer Allen Day from inside the studio as he sang. Country music veteran Hoyt Axton visited Refraze on Wednesday and Thursday to record several guest vocals for the album, which will be released this fall on George Carpenter's Dayton-based Smokehouse Records label. Carpenter is financing the $30,000 project and seeking national distribution.

Sinedu Tadesse Trang Ho Inside: Local universities' mediation efforts5A By Fox Butterfield NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE CAMBRIDGE. Mass. On the last day of final exams at Harvard University on May 27, Sinedu Tadesse did what she had never done in a lifetime of unblemished achievement: she missed a test. It was one of several little-noticed signs that something was wrong with Tadesse, 20, a gentle, brilliant junior from Ethiopia. No one.

it seems, not even her family, fellow students or advisers in her Dunster House dormitory, knew that she was despondent over her roommate's decision to move out and live with another student in the fall. Scoreboard 4C 118 with them or play a few songs when they performed in A Meisner said Saturday on a break from a recording session at Refraze Recording Studio in Kettering. "But if that 's what they wanted, what can you do?" Meisner, who lives in Los Angeles, has spent the last two weeks in Dayton producing a reunion album for a country-rock band that features area residents Peter Bradstreet and John Alden, former Daytonian Pat Aicholtz, and A musicians Robin Lamble and Billy Darnell Darnell played in Meisner's band following the latter's departure from the Eagles in 1977. II In retaliation, Tadesse stopped taking phone messages for the roommate, Trang Phuong Ho. and for two months refused to speak to her.

Still, knowing all that, family, friends and university officials cant explain why last Sunday, while Ho slept, Tadesse stabbed SEE STUDENTSA JS The Oay News is printed in is part on recycled paper and is "ecvciab? Eor rtcn Sm MS More can Newsline 463-4636. 6349.

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Years Available:
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