Sarajevo suffers barrage as truce collapses SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — A once-promising cease-fire virtually collapsed Sunday in the heaviest artillery bombardment of Sarajevo since the truce went into effect 10 days ago. Bosnian authorities also accused Serb forces - of-deploying Scud-missfles-in-positions that threaten two northern towns. A Serb military spokesman denied the allegation. U.N. peacekeeping troops from Britain moved Sunday to protect U.N. relief ware houses i n Travn ik, a to wn 4 5 m i les north west of Sarajevo that is clogged with refugees fleeing approaching Serb forces. NATO warships began slopping and search ing vessels entering Yugoslav territorial waters in line with a U.N. decision Friday to toughen economic sanctions against Yugoslavia, which now consists of Serbia and Montenegro. Airborne radar and maritime patrol aircraft will assist seven NATO ships in coordination Bosnians accuse Serbs of positioning Scuds with the Western European Union defense alli ance, NATO officials said in Naples, Italy. The NATO ships include five destroyers 4rofn Italy, Germany, Greece; Turkey tmd-Brit ain, plus a Dutch and an American frigate, the USS Halyburton. The NATO and European forces have been monitoring the embargo in the Adriatic since July, but they have not had the authority to stop and board ships. Most materials reaching Yu goslavia have come overland or along the Danube River. The embargo was imposed in May to punish Serbia for fomenting the Bosnian war, which erupted after the republic’s majority Muslims and Croats voted in February for independence from Yugoslavia. More than 14,000 people have been killed in the fighting. aero rcncis nave since captured more man 70 percent of the republic, and Croat forces hold much of the rest. The Muslims hold ■Sarajevo and. little .else._______ ^Belgrade, the Yugoslav federal and Serbian capital, the head of the Serbian Orthodox Church said Sunday that Serbia, too, might become engulfed in war. Patriarch Pavle told the biweekly Duga he feared Serbia might be bombed or civil war m ight break out in regions with large Albanian, Hungarian or Muslim populations. A U.N.-brokered cease-fire that went into effect in Bosnia on Nov. 12 had been violated in some areas of the republic but had brought the capital, Sarajevo, one of its quietest inter ludes in an 8-month-old siege by Serb militias. On Sunday, however, heavy artillery shell ing struck numerous areas of the capital. U.N. peacekeepers said eight rounds landed near the Bosnian presidency building. Other details were not immediately available. Bosnia’s Muslim president, Alija Izclbcgovic, appealed to the United Nations to hah the alleged Serb miss i le deployments-. He accused the Serbs of using continuing peace talks as a cover for reorganizing their forces. A senior Bosnian army officer, who spoke on condition of anonym ity, claimed as many as 12 Scud surface-to-surface missiIcs were moved out of the Serb-controlled northwestern city of Banja Luka in a convoy on Wednesday. He said the missiles had been driven east ward and installed in the towns of Modrica and Odzak. Maj. Milan Pantovic, an information officer reached by telephone at the Bosnian Serb air force command in Banja Luka, denied the existence of Scud missiles in Bosnia. lomadoes tear through South, leave 16 dead By The Associated Press Tornadoes ripped through parts of the South Saturday night, killing 16 people, leveling houses and uproot ing trees and utility poles. “It’s unbelievable. We’re lucky we didn’t lose more lives than we did,” said W.L. Whittington, mayor of Brandon, Miss. Ten people were killed in and around the town. Tornadoes killed 15 people and injured at least 150 in Mississippi late Saturday and one person was killed early Sunday in Tennessee. Thunder slormsand tornadoes also caused dam age in Alabama and Georgia. Torna does were reported Saturday in Texas and Louisiana. In Brandon, 15 miles cast of Jack son, a tornado smashed through a mobile home park and then skipped across town to an upscale neighbor hood, where it killed three Cub Scout buddies enjoying a weekend sleep over and the father of one of the boys. Rescue workers and residents searched through the rubble after day light. At the mobile home park, rescue workers used doors from smashed houses as makeshift stretchers, said Charlie Wilkinson, civil defense di rector for Rankin County. At least six people were killed there, Whittington said. The tornado roared "through Bran donaboutmidnight. It leveled houses, uprooted trees and downed hundreds of power and telephone poles. At least 86 of the injuries were in Brandon, Wilkinson said. “It just whishcd through here like slicing hot butter,” Constable Martin Mann said of the Rankin County town. “We’ve got two-story homes not big ger than a bag of firewood. They’re wiped out.” “It was like a state fair — there were people all over the place,” said James L. Callahan, sheriff of nearby Leake County, where one person was killed. HOLIIMf STUFFER 1-800-242-8721 American Heart Association iHotiday SpeciaC , 10 sessions for $20 (tax included) Plus 1oz. tanning accelerator FREE Offer good only with this ad. Expires 1-1-93 ■ .Mil/, . * 70th & A l 489-6998 | Nebraskan Editor Chris Hoplensperger 472- 1766 Managing Editor Kris Karnopp Assoc. News Editors Adeana Letlin Assoc. News Editor/ Wendy Navratll Writing Coach Editorial Page Editor Dionne Searcey Wire Editor Alan Phelps Copy Desk Editor Kara Wells Publications Board Chairman Tom Massey 488-8761 Professional Adviser Don Walton 473- 7301 FAX NUMBER 472-1761 The Daily NebraskanfUSPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year, weekly during summer sessions Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m. and 5 pm Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Tom Massey. 488-8761. Subscription price is $50 for one year. 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