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Show 14V ill I ? T f 3 J t t i - : l w DESERET NEWS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER Bllgh's rowboat loq s soc for $90, 730 & 4 iHt LONDON (AP) lations, Bligh had jotted down rough sketches of some South Sea islands showing his boats route through the Barrier Reef and along the coast of Australia to safety in Timor. Bligh also set down some of his thoughts and fears during the voyage. We now anxiously pray to make land no sight of it, he wrote just before reaching Timor. And kind Providence protects us wonderfully, but it is a most unhappy situation to be in a boat among such discontented people who dont kow what to be at or what is best for them, he wrote on another occasion. small, water-staine- d notebook used by Capt. William Bligh as a log after his mutinying crew of HMS Bounty had cast him adrift in a rowboat, was sold in just 55 seconds for $90,730 at a Christies auction Wednesday . The leather-boun- d book, in which Bligh noted down every incident in his 3,500 mile voyage in the Bountys launch with a handful of companions, was bought by Maggs, the London firm of booksellers who refused to say for whom they were acting. Apart from navigational calcu ... six-wee- k, k ttt a mou mJS aw a w an tI A r 'fte-ir SS B B For the first time in more than LONDON (UFI) seven years of violence and bloodshed there is serious wholly talk of an independent lister republic separate from Britain and Ireland. As yet it is little more than an idea, a subject for debate, a little cloud the size of a hand. But, with nearly 1,700 dead since 199, tens of thousands injured, and much of the life of the shambles, the province reduced to idea is one that looks like taking root. We have come to the conclusion that being British does not mean much any more and that the time has come to look for an Ulster identity, say John Mckeague, a Protestant and one of the chief promoters of the idea. smoke-blacken- We should push for dominion status, similar to Canada and Australia, says John Orchin, an official of the Protestant Ulster Defense Association. But British officials fear that if Britain pulled her troops out of an independent Ulster, the result might be a bloodbath between Protestant and Roman Catholic paramilitary forces. A ft Jicihar firAws W W I I 25, 1976 A & B The British government has warned publicly of this danger more than once in the past. Basically, the idea is that Northern Ireland with two thirds Protestants its 1 5 million population and Roman Catholics should cease being a battleground between those who want it to remain part of the United Kingdom and those who want it to join an all Ireland republic ruled from Dublin. Instead, it is suggested, it could become an mdejwndent Ulster republic within the Commonwealth, in which the majority and the minority populations could sort out their differences by peaceful debate rather than by bloody warfare. Advocates of the idea are drawn mainly from the majority Protestant community, although some prominent Roman Catholic moderates have indicated support The proposal was first made public in a document called Your Future? Ulster Can Survive Unfettered, published under the auspices of the Ulster Loyalist Central Coordinating Committee, an umbrella organization for several hard-lin- e Protestant paramilitary groups. one-thir- d W But it was wntten with the help of two lecturers at Belfasts Queens University and presented at a news conference attended by leaders of the former Ulster Workers Council, which launched a general strike in the province in 1974 and brought down Britains attempt to set up a power-sharin- g executive of Protestants and Roman Catholics. The authors of the document argue that an independent Ulster would be larger than at least 30 independent states now members of the United Nations. They assert that Britain would be relieved of the burden of around $960 million in annual t anomic subsidies it hands out currently to Northern Ireland. The flag of a future independent Ulster, incorporating the diagonal red cross of St. Patrick and tiie red hand sy mbol of the province, was shown for the first time at the news conference. at This was follow-eby a weekend talk-iCorrymeela on the County Antrim coast attended by about 50 politicians, clergymen, academics, journalists, civil servants and private individuals. n Cannon fir into Lebanon Israeli hint to Syria - TEL AVIV, Israel (UPD An by military censorship apparent slip-u- p But when the guerrillas went to join the fighting in Beirut, the Christians seized the opportunity and organized militias to keep them from coming back. Israel promptly shipped them arms and ammunition and in recent months Israeli officers conferred with commanders of the Christian forces at the border fence. In a further effort to win the support of villagers cut off from the rest of has revealed the extent of Israeli aid to Christian militias battling Moslem lef-isand Palestinian forces across the border in Lebanon. It also was a reminder to Syria and its Palestinian allies that Israel will refuse to allow any concentration of hostile Arab troops along its northern ts frontier. Following a report of Palestinian nciHonc jjunpers w?!in4 miles and farther inside Lebanon, the Israel government radio said, "The Israeli army has been in action against these terrorists without crossing the border. Military sources say this means artillery support was now part of the Israeli effort to rid the frontier region of the Palestinian guerrillas who once used it as a base fur attacks on Jewish border settlements. The campaign is based on the help of Christian villagers linked with the rightist forces m the Lebanese civil war. T To this end, Israel supplied them with food and medical care and, according to unofficial sources, weaponry ranging from bullets to tanks. The region between the border and the Litani River, 10 miles to the north, is dotted with Moslem and Christian villages whose inhabitants once got along peacefully. But in recent years Palestinian guerrillas operated there without chalLebanese lenge from the army, although Israeli units made frequent night patrols that led to firefights in the rocky hills and scrubby forests. now-defun- , the control of the Palestinians that the area was known as Fatahland, after A1 Fatah, the largest guerrilla group. So firm was Aussie secrets leaked? SY'DNEY, Australia Defense secrets (UPI) leaked to the Soviets led to development of a new Soviet antisubmarine Tetoa) ftrvnoH aKomaw Kti Via the fence and offered basic foodstuffs at low prices, medical care and job opportunities. Military analysts say it is likely intelligence officers question the Arabs coming into Israel. Other sources say Israel promised to help the Christian villages if the guerrillas attacked. These sources, including Christian Arab leaders m Israel, say the army ignored this promise when leftist forces stormed the town of Aishiye in early October. They charge more than 100 persons were massacred, including women and children. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin publicly refused to meet with a delegation of elders from Aishiye and Defense Minister Shimon Peres was careful to say that no Israeli soldiers in Lebanon had anything to do with the civil war. But the shelling of Palestinians who threw mortar and rocket fire into nearby Christian villages made it clear that Israel will not put up with a return of the guerrillas to the border region. Israeli leaders trust the hint will be taken in Damascus, in case the Syrians hope to put into action what is seen here as their goal of joining Lebanon and Jordan in an aggressive arc around the northern and eastern fronts of the Jewish state. WATCHES Mens & Womens 0FF 3. .... I XUAi5.f-XiliuIul- 1 230 South Main, Salt lake We K8VEUSER PLAYBOY With the Carter Interview SPECIAL 32S-2S- SPORTCOATS Reg. to $85 $49 $19 JEANS NYLON QUILTED COATS Limited Selection SIZES 18 to 23 Reg. $35 12" 223 SOUTH MAIN s19 99 SHOES Reg. to $45 Reg. to $30 . M iggintu Choose a second one and 24t $039 . pay only. the boulevard UEEN 210 SOUTH MAIN All Bank Cards Welcome . . FASHIONS 232 South Main SPECIAL .. iGLBABAHer tgiVfcfrrl SHOE A gift idea for the person who has everything, a vermeil dogtag and chain. 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