diff --git a/.install_tesseract b/.install_tesseract new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1a14f8330 --- /dev/null +++ b/.install_tesseract @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ +wget "https://github.com/uclouvain/openjpeg/archive/version.2.1.zip" +unzip version.2.1.zip +cd openjpeg-version.2.1 +mkdir build +cd build +cmake .. +make +sudo make install +sudo make clean +cd .. +cd .. +wget "http://www.leptonica.com/source/leptonica-1.73.tar.gz" +tar xzf leptonica-1.73.tar.gz +cd leptonica-1.73 +sed -i 's/#define HAVE_LIBJP2K 0/#define HAVE_LIBJP2K 1/g' ./src/environ.h +sed -i 's/-ltiff -ljpeg -lpng -lz -lm/-ltiff -ljpeg -lpng -lz -lm -lopenjp2/g' ./prog/makefile.static +./configure +make +sudo make install +cd .. +wget "https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tesseract/archive/3.04.00.zip" +unzip 3.04.00.zip +cd tesseract-3.04.00 +./autogen.sh +./configure +make +sudo make install +sudo ldconfig +cd .. +git clone https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tessdata.git +sudo cp tessdata/eng.* /usr/local/share/tessdata/ +sudo cp tessdata/ita* /usr/local/share/tessdata +tesseract -v diff --git a/app/models/file_set.rb b/app/models/file_set.rb index eff9c0096..52a3fcb6e 100644 --- a/app/models/file_set.rb +++ b/app/models/file_set.rb @@ -47,6 +47,7 @@ def create_derivatives(filename) dst = derivative_path('intermediate_file') FileUtils.mkdir_p(File.dirname(dst)) FileUtils.cp(filename, dst) + RunOCRJob.perform_later(id) if Plum.config[:store_original_files] end super end diff --git a/circle.yml b/circle.yml index 736153ca3..9a0eab0d2 100644 --- a/circle.yml +++ b/circle.yml @@ -11,7 +11,8 @@ dependencies: - kakadu pre: - npm install -g eslint - - sudo apt-get install libmagickwand-dev imagemagick redis-server tesseract-ocr tesseract-ocr-ita tesseract-ocr-eng sqlite3 libsqlite3-dev + - sudo apt-get install libmagickwand-dev imagemagick redis-server sqlite3 libsqlite3-dev + - bash ./.install_tesseract post: - sudo sh bin/ci_kakadu_install.sh - bundle exec rake rubocop diff --git a/spec/fixtures/contentdm_xml/Irish_People_Short.xml b/spec/fixtures/contentdm_xml/Irish_People_Short.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e3ecf2dfe --- /dev/null +++ b/spec/fixtures/contentdm_xml/Irish_People_Short.xml @@ -0,0 +1,292 @@ + + + + 1974-11-16 Irish People + Irish people (New York, N.Y. : 1972) + Irish People Inc. + 1974-11-16 + “The voice of Irish Republicanism in America” + Irish Americans – New York (State) – Newspapers; Irish – United States – Newspapers; Ireland – History – Indepdence and autonomy movements – Newspapers + 0888-3556 + + Text + eng + + + http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright + + IUPUI University Library + Irish People &lt;br&gt; http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + 2014-08-11 + Scanner: Konica Minolta PS7000C MKII, Archive view: 300 dpi tiff, Full view: 300 dpi jpg 2000 + + + 5063 + + 2014-08-12 + 2014-08-12 + + 5064.cpd + /IP/supp/5063/index.pdf + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5063 + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:80/cdm/ref/collection/IP/id/5063 + + + page1 + 5044 + + thumbnail + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5044 + + + access + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5044 + + + master + + + THE i RISH The Fools, The Fools, They Have Left Us Our Fenian Dead And While Ireland Holds These Graves, Ireland Unfree Will Never Be At Peace...': Padraic Pearse. VOL. II NO. 46 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1974 ;. * x-sr.1 8.00 PER YEAR 15 CENTS 10 PENCE UNERAL Unarmed Man Shot By British Thugs The Tricolour-draped coffin, with a black beret placed on top, bearing the remains of Gerard Coney leaving the home of his parents. and seeing a number of boys. He also saw soldiers on a hillside nearby. Some of the boys approached a van and a shot rang out. The man who was subsequently killed ran down the road away from the soldiers for about . 75 yards with his arms in the air. Another shot rang out and the man fell. The eyewitness did not see a gun at any stage by those who attempting to hijack the van. Fennell's widow, Norah, who is expecting another child in the New Year, said: We had been in England but came home a year ago. The only job Gerry could get was in Whiterock industrial estate. But he had been off sick this week. Mrs. Fennell's mother, Mrs. Winnie Pollock, said: I got to the scene of the shooting just as they were putting Gerry in the ambulance. I went with him. In the ambulance I opened his Continued on Page 3 A young Belfastman, shot in the hip by British troops at the scene of an attempted hijacking in the Twinbrook area, was fatally wounded by another bullet in the back as he ran with his hands raised to show he was unarmed, relatives said. He was identified as 27-year-old Mr. Gerard Fennell, of Broom Park, Twinbrook, married with a seven-year-old daughter, Sharon. The shooting happened about 200- yards from his home-at the junction of Stewartstown Road and Summerhill Road and the shots came from a nearby hillside manned by soldiers. They claimed that Mr. Fennell was 'an armed hijacker' and was shot dead when he turned his gun on them. According to the military, troops had stopped another man removing his gun after he was hit. But the driver of the van involved in the hijack attempt maintained, later, that the man who spoke to him and told him to drive his vehicle across the road was not armed. Another eye-witness also insisted that, at no stage in the hijack, did he see anyone with guns. A British Army statement alleged the man they shot was holding a gun to the head of the van driver. He was challenged twice and then he pointed his gun at the soldiers. The troops opened fire and the man was seen to drop. He then got up-still holding his gun-and went to take cover behind the van, the military statement went on. Father Eamonn Magee, of St. Luke's, Twinbrook, said last night he had spoken to the driver of the van within minutes of the shooting. The driver told him, specifically that the man who spoke to him and asked him to drive the vehicle across the road was not armed. The driver had said: I could swear he had no gun. Father Magee said he had questioned the driver carefully on the point. There had been another man present at the van, but the driver could not say whether he was in possession of a gun. Another eye witness told of looking out the window of his home Hunger Strike Protest By Republican Priso mors The thousands of mourners who attended the funeral near Coalisland this week of Long Kesh escapee, Hugh Gerard Coney, heard that other Republican prisoners in the concentration camp had started a hunger strike in protest against the conditions under which they had to live. This was revealed at the graveside, by Co. Tyrone Sinn Fein chairman, Mr. Aidan Corrigan, when he read a letter which he said had been smuggled out of the jail, the previous day, by a Co. Tyrone prisoner. He asked me, said Mr. Corrigan, to tell you of the insufferable, inhuman conditions and indignities which the men in Long Kesh have to suffer. He said that one group had already gone on hunger strike and that others would follow suit. Continued on Page 4 ON SATURDAY NOV. 16 A PROTEST PICKET WILL BE HELD OUTSIDE THE OFFICES OF BRITISH AIRWAYS IN N.Y. TO PROTEST INTERNMENT OF IRISH MEN AND WOMEN IN BRITISH JAILS TIME: 2 TO 6 p.m. Upwards of 8,000 people attended the funeral of Hugh Gerard Coney, the 24-year-old Annaghmore (Coalisland) man who was shot dead by British troops during Wednesday morning's escape attempt by Republican detainees from Long Kesh Concentration Camp. Coney, who was described in death notices as a lieutenant in the East Tyrone Command of the Provisional I.R.A., was buried with full military honours in St. Patrick's Cemetery, Clonoe, a mile from his home. The coffin, which was draped with the Tricolour and a football jersey of Clonoe G.F.C., of which he was a member, was borne for a quarter-mile from his home on the shoulders of fellow team-mates and members of the Republican movement. A guard of honour of Fianna Eireann and Clonoe G.F.C. marched on both sides of the hearse to St. Patrick's Church. The remains were received by Rev. Patrick Coyle, C.C., and Rev. Father Joachim, O.F.M., one of the chaplains at Long Kesh, and the priest who administered the Last Rites to Mr. Coney at the time of his death. Speaking during Requiem Mass Father Coyle said they were there to extend their sympathy to James and Kitty Coney, the parents of the dead man, and to his brothers and sisters. He added: We in this parish have over the past few years prayed at Mass for peace and justice for all of Ireland. In the days ahead, we will continue to do so, and we will remember the deceased in our prayers. Following the Requiem Mass, Mr. Coney was interred in the adjoining cemetery, where, following the sounding of the Last Post, men in para-military uniforms fired a volley of shots over the grave. In a graveside oration Seamus Loughran of Belfast, an ex-internee, said he prayed that the body of Gerard Coney would be the last one to be brought from the hell-hole of Long Kesh. He added: We have a duty to do all in our power to bring about the closure of Long Kesh and an end to internment . Mr. Loughran, Sinn Fein organiser in Belfast, said that, next to love of God came love of one's country, and nowhere more so than in Ireland had this proved true. It's truly a noble thing to die for one's country, he said. It's one thing to give one's life in the heat of battle. It's an entirely different thing to dedicate your life in pursuit of what you believe in, an ideal that you know can, and Con tinued on Page 3 Provos Hi-jack British Army Mail The Provisional IRA in Belfast on Monday claimed that they were studying a haul of British Army documents seized jn a mail van hold-up near the military headquarters in the North last week. Included in the haul, said the IRA, were letters to girl friends, wives and relatives from soldiers detailing army life the general theme of which was that complete demoralisation of the British soldier in Ireland. The IRA said that the mail bags also contained 10,000 in cash, together with money order payments to informers, details of commercial suppliers to the Army, confidential military documents, details of undercover cars and by plain clothes patrols, lists of deserters and absentees, and the names and addresses of UDR personnel. In a statement the IRA said: The Belfast Brigade intend to act immediately on the considerable amount of information obtained. The R.U.C. confirmed that five armed men had hi-jacked a Post Office van near Bridge Street car park in Lisburn at 6:30 p.m. last Friday. A police spokesman said that the van and its crew were driven to a side road four miles away near Hillsborough. There the raiders took several mail bags from the van and left the crew with the vehicle. The exact number of mail bags taken was not disclosed. The Army made no comment on the incident. Along with their statement on the raid, the I.R.A. released photostat copies of military documents, some of which were stamped restricted. The statement said: On Friday, November 1, 1974, in a well co-ordinated and selective operation, an intelligence unit of the Belfast Brigade captured mail belonging to the British Army. Then the IRA listed 11 items, beginning with letters from soldiers, details of commercial suppliers to the Army and lists of deserters and absentees. One item was money orders (Giros) made payable to individuals from all areas of the Six Counties. The IRA said: From this we now have a clear picture of who is supplying the British Army with information. Other items mentioned were: confidential military documents regarding a conference relating to the building of Long Kesh; confidential military documents to all police stations; a list containing names and addresses of UDR personnel; a list of male and female applicants for the UDR and other security forces together with details of referees, and letters from people in the 26 Counties stating that they wished to join the British Army. The IRA said that the details of undercover cars included tax books and details of car number plates. The Army admitted that some mail from soldiers was probably in the bags seized by the I.R.A., but it denied that any confidential documents were in the sacks. A spokesman, said: Anything of a sensitive nature would go through the British Forces Post or via a special courier. + + + page1 + Irish people (New York, N.Y. : 1972) + Irish People Inc. + + “The voice of Irish Republicanism in America” + Irish Americans – New York (State) – Newspapers; Irish – United States – Newspapers; Ireland – History – Indepdence and autonomy movements – Newspapers + 0888-3556 + IrishPp1974-11-16-001_page1.tif + Text + eng + + + http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright + + IUPUI University Library + Irish People &lt;br&gt; http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + + Scanner: Konica Minolta PS7000C MKII, Archive view: 300 dpi tiff, Full view: 300 dpi jpg 2000 + + + + page2 + 5045 + + thumbnail + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5045 + + + access + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5045 + + + master + + + CM LU LU North's Jail Riots Cost 2 Million Mmm iM Mm Damage estimated at nearly 2 million was caused in the Northern Ireland Concentration Camp and Jail riots two weeks ago, the Secretary of State Merlyn Rees told the British House of Commons on October 30th. He said the damage done at Long Kesh would cost one and a half million pounds, while that at Magilligan Camp amounted to over two hundred thousand pounds. He did not give any estimate for the repairs of Crumlin Road or Armagh Prison. Mr. Rees appeared to hint at new measures for the separation of detainees and convicted prisoners, saying that he hoped to make a statement shortly. He was unforthcoming on the question of building a new permanent prison in Northern Ireland, a project which would take several years. It is known that after Direct Rule was first imposed in 1972, it was proposed to build a new prison at Magilligan but this was rejected on a number of grounds, including the proximity to the Republic. Mr. Rees said that more than a thousand internees and detainees took part in the Long Kesh riot and that in the circumstances it was remarkable that there were so few casualties . ARROGANT CLAIM BY REES REFUTED Many men who were injured in the riots are still incarcerated in Long Kesh and have not been hospitalised them it proved ineffective because of the wind direction. They claim that the helicopters were then ordered to fly low and spread the gas among the internees by the action of the helicopter rotor blades. This particular type of gas had not so far been used anywhere else in the world and in the U.S. tests carried out with the gas on rabbits showed that high concentration can cause permanent damage to the eyes. It replaces the old CS gas and caused much greater discomfort and irritation of the skin, eyes, nose and throat. INTERNEES BOYCOTTSECRET COMMISSION HEARINGS As part of a continuing strategy to make the system of detention without trial unworkable, the 450 Republican detainees at Long Kesh Concentration Camp have decided to boycott the secret commission hearings held inside the Camp to review detainees' cases. The boycott becomes effective immediately, according to Mrs. Maire Drumm, Vice-President of Provisional Sinn Fein, in Belfast on October 30th. The secret courts would not be used again because they had been proved to be a farce' The decision of the Republican detainees to boycott the commission hearings, which recommenced this week after a two-week break following the camp burning, means that commissioners will have to decide whether or not to review cases in the absence of detainees. It is or given any treatment despite the expected that they will, in fact, do so. seriousness of their injuries. It is now Just over 250 detainees have been clear that at least four hundred released in ones and twos by the detainees and internees were injured commissioners since December 1973, and many of these are still sleeping on wnen they began their hearings inside the ground under sheets of polythene. th? camP- 1*ne commissioners accept The internees have also stated that ev,dence at the hearings from when the British Army was sent into numbers of the security forces the Camp to punish the men, the h dden behind curtains. British Officers commanding them Mrs- Drumm sa'd that the decision were unable to control or restrain had Deen taken before Mr. Rees made their own soldiors, and afterwards h,s atement on Long Kesh and was were heard to refer to their mens' not ,n anV way a retaliation. She behaviour by calling them animal exPected that the 30 female detainees bastards . at Arma h Prison would follow the REES TRIES STARVATION example of the detainees in Long TO BREAK REBELLION There were also widespread tions that Mr. Rees was using starvation to try to break the rebellion against internment in Long Kesh. We publish here an accurate account of the food distributed to the men for the five days after the burning of the Camp. Wednesday October 16th - No Food. Thursday October 17 - One round of bread and one cup of milk Friday October 18th-Two rounds of bread and one cup of milk. Saturday October 19th - One cup of porridge and one cup of stew. Sunday October 20th - One cup of stew. BRhlSH ARMY USED CRGASIN LONG KESH There is no doubt that the British Army, used the new and more lethal CR gas for the first time in Northern Ireland in Long Kesh on October 15th. This new item in the Army riot control stock was approved by the Defence Ministry almost a year ago, but until two weeks ago, it was authorised for use only at Long Kesh. Prisoners, who are used to the effects of CS gas, claim that a new, more irritating and paralysing agent was used on them. Internees also claim that when the first batch of CR gas was used on Knights Of Equity Convention In Buffalo Dennis O'Reilly of Rochester, New York, was elected Supreme Sir Knight of the Knights of Equity at the 79th annual convention held at Buffalo, New York. O'Reilly recently retired as Deputy Fire Chief after serving 33 years with the Rochester Fire Department. Cork born he came to this Country in 1929 married and remained in Rochester since. He is the father of seven children. John Bolsinger of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, was elected Supreme Vice Sir Knight. Other elected were: Kenneth Power, secretary; Martin Schail, treasurer; Norman Fox, lecturer; Trustees are, John Marren, Daniel Clifford, Raymond McKelvy, Alfred Pedro, Michael Walsh, James Parks, and Bernard McClinchey. Reverend Thomas R. Bartley was reappointed Supreme Chaplain. Marion K. McMahon was elected national president of the Daughters of Erin the auxiliary to the Knights of Equity. Continued on Page 18 IK The end of the escape tunnel, just outside the perimeter An i-i +a ** lt; .* gt; . I I cnnmo +n nr rtn n + ltnv o r-i I fence. An internee was shot dead by British troops during rioting at Long Kesh camp following a break-out by Republican detainees early Tuesday. A Catholic chaplain who was in the camp said CS. gas was being used on the prisoners. He said he had seen at least 12 men spreadeagled against a compound wire and being beaten by troops. All of them were covered in blood, he said. Government sources said that 20 Republican detainees had escaped from the camp shortly after midnight. Eighteen of them were re-captured and a full-scale search was going on for the other two. A spokesman said a tunnel had been discovered in the camp during a search after the escape. Meanwhile conditions at the camp were described as shocking by an all-party delegation of Assemblymen who visited it. Members of the delegation, who inspected the camp on the invitation of the North's Secretary of State, Mr. Merlyn Rees, expressed fears that the camp might be burned down again if it were rebuilt. Rev. Ian Paisley, D.U.P. leader, who led the loyalist group, said the conditions were really sub-human and the S.D.L.P. delegation, consisting of Mr. Paddy O'Hanlon, Chief Whip, and Messrs. Desmond Gillespie, and Michael Canavan, said that the conditions were 100 times worse than they had imagined. Mr. Gillespie said last night there OGLAIGH NkhEIRE/VNN seems to be no other solution but to end internment and get rid of this place. These men have reached such a state of desperation that we were told that even if the camp is rebuilt, it would very likely be burned down again , he said. Mr. Gillespie said: We saw a meal being delivered to the loyalist compound in tin containers. It consisted of beef-burgers or sausage rools swimming in gravy and nothing else. The men refused to eat it and were existing on their food parcels. I got a list of complaints from Gusty Spence, the loyalist leader, which said Governor Truesdale should be sacked and protested that the men had neither light, heat nor hot water. The S.D.L.P. delegation said that because of orders most of the republican prisoners refused to meet them but they had chatted to some of them and learned of conditions which were really indescribable. Rev. Ian Paisley said that in the loyalist compound the conditions were sub-human he said. There was neither light nor heat and at night men were using candles. One toilet was so flooded that waders would be needed to use it. In one hut with 80 men, some were sleeping on soaking mattresses while others were lying on springs stretched across the hut. The Loyalist prisoners, he said, were refusing the food as a protest and were living on bread and tea and a quarter pound of margarine per day. r i UNITED BROOKLYN IRISH BAYRIDGE-FLATBUSH IRISH NORTHERN AID UNITS CHRISTMAS BENEFIT DANCE (or the Oppressed People of N.E. Ulster NOVEMBER 30th 1974 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Cummings Bros American Legion Hall 4516 Avenue D, Brooklyn, N.Y. 2 bottles par table of 10 Free Beer Donation 7.50 Co-Chairmen: E. Gallagher j. Toolan For Reservations and Directions Call: J. Toolan 212-IN-2-6550or M.McNicholl 212-469-9874 A. Cusick 451-0819 PATODOrai THE FENIAN AVENGER EXECUTED NOVEMBER 17*mzm. Bishops Again Betray Their People WE NEEDTHEM Last week saw two bishops again calling for support for the British forces in Ireland. Both bishops spoke on the same day (October 22) and both condemned what they called terrorism. The Catholic Bishop of Down and Connor (which includes Belfast), Dr. William Philbin, is a noted Conservative and upholder of the church-state alliance. On October 22nd, he gave yet another speech in favour of British power, when he urged Catholics to help the British Army and the Royal Ulster Constabulary. He said that everybody must show their revulsion towards the dominance of the organised terrorist. Certain groups in Northern Ireland Dr. Philbin said, Have by now, ensured that our generation will be marked in history by the stigma of organised savagery. We shall be known for developments that have been destructive and evil-the introduction into society of new kinds of atrocities and of inhuman ruthlessness in their execution. As one phase of barbarity abates, another unfailingly takes its place the Bishop went on. The bishop was not referring here to the savagery of the R.U.C. Special Branch and S.A.S. murder squads. He continued, in fact, to plead for support for these: Only the agencies of security are in a position to establish the peace and order we all need and desire, and to avert the growing degeneracy of our society. If we need them, as we do, daily and nightly, we have also a duty to help them . Dr. Philbin made no attempt to conceal his hatred for revolutionaries, and his love for tyrants. Who in God's name needs torturers and murderers daily and nightly The bishop continued with his references to Satan, whom he believes to be behind the principles of freedom and the rights of man. Enough of evil has emanated from among our numbers-just now, our most urgent need is to counter the widespread corruption of our children by agents of Satan . Perhaps the most suitable answer to this pervertion of principle and religion was given by a Republican paper published in the impoverished and crucified ghettoes of Belfast: The peoples' conscience are clear-who clothed the naked, sheltered the homeless and gave succour to the oppressed? ANGRY REACTION IN BELFAST In a front page article Belfast's Andersonstown News accused the bishop of urging people to turn informer . It also accused Dr. Philbin of remaining silent on the fate of the Long Kesh internees . The paper says there has been angry reaction n the Andersonstown area over the bishop's statement, and claims that local community leaders are concerned that the church is giving approval to the operation of plain clothes squads of S.A.S. and R.U.C. men . The paper also said that after the intervention of Catholic clergy, barricades were taken down in the Lower Falls in 1969 and four people were later killed in a battle with security forces after police and troops raided houses. BUCHANAN LASHES OUT On the same day as Dr. Philbin spoke the Protestant Archbishop of Dublin, Dr. Alan Buchanan, himself a former British soldier, made a similar speech. Dr. Buchanan said that it must be recognised that most bloodshed in the country was caused by irishmen . He also called on people in the South to do more in supporting the security forces on both sides of the border . He also stated he believed that we, as a people, could do far more to support Con tinued on Page 18 + + + page2 + Irish people (New York, N.Y. : 1972) + Irish People Inc. + + “The voice of Irish Republicanism in America” + Irish Americans – New York (State) – Newspapers; Irish – United States – Newspapers; Ireland – History – Indepdence and autonomy movements – Newspapers + 0888-3556 + IrishPp1974-11-16-002_page2.tif + Text + eng + + + http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright + + IUPUI University Library + Irish People &lt;br&gt; http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + + Scanner: Konica Minolta PS7000C MKII, Archive view: 300 dpi tiff, Full view: 300 dpi jpg 2000 + + + + page3 + 5046 + + thumbnail + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5046 + + + access + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5046 + + + master + + + (esh Loyalists Threaten Hunger Stele To De; The trouble-torn Long Kesh Concentration Cam was simmering on the verge of yet another crisis as more than 230 Loyalist prisoners vowed to go on a mass hunger strike to the death at midnight to protest at the sub-human conditions in the Loyalist compounds. The men, who are all UVF and Red Hand prisoners, have taken their action as part of an escalating UVF plan that follows the massive protest in the North when the Loyalist caused widespread disruption with more than 70 hoax bomb scares in 'hijacked vehicles. Another 200 Loyalist prisoners in Long Kesh, who belong to the UDA, are to decide whether or not they will join the hunger strike. A spokesman for the UVF prisoners in Belfast said that they have been refusing food from prison authorities for two weeks and have been surviving on food parcels brought in from outside. Many of them are ill because of the conditions, which have been aggravated since the Republicans burned down 80 of the camp last month. The only difference between Long Kesh and a Nazi concentration camp is that mass graves are not being Funeral Attended Continued from Page 1 pro bably will, cost you your life. The dice was loaded against the Republican movement, Mr. Loughran added, in terms of British Army strength and Britain's misuse of the law and involvement in torture, degredation and murder. Yet this choice of martyrdom has been accepted in every generation of our race, and great and noble souls have flung themselves into conflict, only to be crushed under the heels of the invader. Yet, again and again, rose the dominant need to be Irish and to be seen to be Irish and to fight for all that is truly Christian in the way of justice. Mr. Loughran went on: Love of Ireland could be said to be a love of death, but her children have never failed to answer the call to arms. They have never ceased to love her. Hugh Coney's name was now joined with those of Pearse and Barry, he said. Demanding the ending of internment, Mr. Loughran said: Our people must not be left to fight alone. There are many thousands of Ireland's sons and daughters abroad. They must also get into the fight. It's a fight for national emancipation. Realise your mighty strength. Together, we can accomplish what we please. Use it now for there is only one ending-success and the triumph of right and justice over iniquity and wrong. The dead man's parents, James and Christmas Dance. For Irish Relief Under a banner of United Brooklyn Irish the Bayridge and Flatbush units of Irish Northern Aid are scheduling a joint affair to raise fundsforthe common goal The thoughts of the Irish people suffering through another Christmas of deprivation are spurning their efforts to raise funds to be turned over in time to aid the families of prisoners in North East Ireland prior to Christmas. The joint Committee is comprised of: Evelyn and Bill Gallagher, Patrick Biesty, Pat Riordan and James Smith of Bayridge Unit. Kate and John Toolan, Mary Cunningham, Ann Cusick, Mary and Pat McNicholl, Pat Mullin and Inge and Sean Toner of the Flatbush Unit. The affair will be 'held at Cummings Bros. American Legion Post, 4516, Ave. D. Brooklyn on November 30th, 1974 from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Two bottles per table of ten plus set ups. The donation is 7.50. For table reservations call J. Toolan 212-IN-2-6550 or A. Cusick 451-0819, M. McNicholl 469-9874. dug outside the wire, Loyalist Assemblyman Mr. Hugh Smyth said at the weekend. According to Mr. Smyth, 80 of the Loyalist prisoners were suffering from 'flu, or a severe cold. Because of the deterioration in the conditions of the men, due to the failure of the prison authorities and the Government to act, the prisoners had decided on the hunger strike as the only way to decent conditions. The strike would continue to the death, or until the authorities took action. It was later, reported that the Loyalist prisoners are to be moved to rebuilt accomodation in the compound. The UVF, meanwhile, has decided not to contest next year's election for the Northern Ireland Convention, while its recently formed political wing, the Volunteer Party, has dropped plans for a direct challenge for parliamentary influence. Instead, the UVF intends to restrict its political activity to that of a ginger group. Members will be encouraged to join other right-wing Unionist parties as long as this does not interfere with their duties as members of the UVF. Kitty Coney, and his girl friend Eilish McSloy followed the coffin along with his brothers, Jim and Frank, and sisters Collette and Noelle, from the family home, a short distance outside Coalisland, to St. Patrick's Church, Clonoe. Wreaths from relatives and many Republican organisations were laid on the grave. During the funeral a British army helicopter flew overhead, and roads leading to Coalisland were manned by R.U.C. and British troops. Coalisland came to a standstill and black flags were hung at windows and street corners. Businesses closed down in many Republican areas as a mark of respect and sympathy demonstrations attracted large crowds in Belfast, Derry and Newry. Vehicles were hijacked and set on fire in the Dungannon area. As a result of one hijacking, an hotel function planned for pensioners in Ballygawley estate had to be cancelled. British Thugs Continued from Page 1 shirt and I could see he had been shot in the back right through the heart. I was told, earlier, that soldiers were lying behind trees on high ground overlooking the new road at Wandleside factory. They were just waiting for an innocent victim to walk out of Twinbrook estate. I was told by a person who saw the shooting that Gerry had just asked the driver to put the van across the road when there was a shot. Gerry fell, shot through the hip and, as he went down, he raised his hands to show that he had n,o weapon. - Then, there was another shot-the one in the back that killed him. They say it was a 'black' soldier who shot Gerry. 'OFFICER'CLAIM A man who claimed to be speaking on behalf of the 1st Battalion, Belfast Brigade, Provisional I.R.A. said Fennell was an officer in their G Company. The spokesman said he was murdered in cold blood. We have been expecting reprisals against our volunteers after our successful operations over the past few days, he added. ii fgi ira On Friday evening November 1st 1974 a capacity crowd was on hand at Gaelic Park Casino to pay tribute to Mario Biaggi. Congressman Biaggi a strong vocal supporter of Ireland's right to freedom and self rule arrived at 11 p.m. with his gracious wife Marie and their lovely daughter. A standing ovation was accorded the Guest of Honor as he entered the Casino with his family. Congressman Biaggi, who has been long deserving of this Irish Night due to his constant speaking out in Congress on behalf of our war torn homeland, mingled and introduced his family to the packed house. On opening the evenings ceremonies, Inwood Irish Northern Aid Chairman, Mike Meehan presented a plaque to Margaret Clancy Muldoon, a recently married colleen from County Leitrim, for the dedication and outstanding services to the cause of Irish Freedom over the past three years. Guest Speaker Sister St. Hugh, editor of The Irish People Newspaper was then introduced to the receptive gathering. Sister spoke on Biaggi's loyalty to Ireland and to the Irish community in this country. It would be an insult to Mr. Biaggi , said Sister St. Hugh, if we even attempted to list the times and the occasions when Congressman Biaggi took a stand on behalf of the people of Ireland. According to Sister St. Hugh, no page is large enough to contain the number of occasions of dedicated service Mr. Biaggi has rendered to Ireland and to the Irish and Irish American people in the United States. In concluding Sister St. Hugh presented Congressman Biaggi with a plaque on behalf of The Irish People. Biaggi again received a standing ovation. In presenting the plaque Sister St. Hugh said she had one sorrow and that was that she was not presenting it to him as the mayor of New York City. We know one thing for sure, if Mr. Biaggi was the mayor of New York City we wouldn't have British double decker buses coming into the city next July . Overwhelmed with the applause and the introduction Mr. Biaggi stepped forward holding the plaque and with pride glistening in his eyes he thanked the people who placed so much trust and hope in him. ht A Huge Success en CD CO Sr. St. Hugh makes a presentation to Congressman Biaggi. Somehow or other, Mr. Biaggi said, when the picture of Ireland was being painted somewhere along the line the brush of justice never touched that little island and ever since it has been the victim of British oppression . Calling on the Irish people to unite Mr. Biaggi pointed out that politicians must be made to believe that the Irish issue will be politically profitable to them otherwise he said, your representatives will not take a stand for your cause . He pointed out that there are only six Greek Congressmen in Congress yet they were able to hold up Congress until aid was given to the 600,000 Greeks in Cyprus. What , he asked are your fifty-two Irish-American Congressmen doing for you? The final speaker of the evening was Father Vallaley who had just arrived from County Tyrone. The good Father related many stories on the atrocities that have become an everyday occurrence in Ireland's six occupied counties, and pleaded for total support of Irish Northern Aid as this organization would ultimately be responsible for driving the British Government and Troops out of Ireland. Prior to singing the National Anthems Bob McCann asked for support of the Baltimore Four, now laying in U.S. Federal Prisons because they chose to help our Freedom Fighters in Ireland. This Inwood Irish Northern Aid sponsored Tribute under the chairmanship of Tyrone's Sean McGonnell and his committee of Pat Brian Clarke, Danny McElroy, Kevin Duffy, Vera Baker, Brendan Heagney, Jim Touhy, Mike Marion Loftus and Carmel Costelloe did an excellent job in catering to the large crowd. As the evening came to an end Mike Meehan presented a check for 3,500.00 to the U.S. Representative, Irish Northern Aid Matt Higgins to be used in buying warm clothing for the Irish men and women now interned in various concentration camp.s throughout Ireland. Inwood Vice Chairman Pat Clarke on left and Dance Chairman Sean McGonnell on right look on as presentation is made to Margaret Muldoon by Matt Higgins. r (212) 751-5470 Open 7 days a week L O'LUN NET'S 915 2nd Ave. N.Y.C. (betw. 48th 49th) Live Country Music And Dancing MODERN COUNTRY MUSIC Monday Through Saturday BLUE GRASS EVERY SUNDAY FOOD SERVED and BOOM AVAILABLE FOB PABTIES 1 J Shannon Travel Service, Inc. 75-24 37th Ave., Jackson Heights, N.Y. 11372 212-639-0667 or 212-639-7530. We Fill All Your Travel Needs - Domestic And Internationally Air-Cruises-HotelsTcurs-Packages-Youth Fairs, Etc. 8-Day Specials To Europe Patrick J. Neville, ?idie McManus, Joseph Whalen + + + page3 + Irish people (New York, N.Y. : 1972) + Irish People Inc. + + “The voice of Irish Republicanism in America” + Irish Americans – New York (State) – Newspapers; Irish – United States – Newspapers; Ireland – History – Indepdence and autonomy movements – Newspapers + 0888-3556 + IrishPp1974-11-16-003_page3.tif + Text + eng + + + http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright + + IUPUI University Library + Irish People &lt;br&gt; http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + + Scanner: Konica Minolta PS7000C MKII, Archive view: 300 dpi tiff, Full view: 300 dpi jpg 2000 + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + 1982-03-27 Irish People + Irish People (New York, N.Y. : 1972) + Irish People Inc. + 1982-03-27 + "The voice of Irish Republicanism in America" + Irish Americans – New York (State) – Newspapers; Irish – United States – Newspapers; Ireland – History – Indepdence and autonomy movements – Newspapers + 0888-3556 + + Text + eng + + + http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright + + IUPUI University Library + Irish People &lt;br&gt; http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + 2014-11-05 + Scanner: Konica Minolta PS7000C MKII, Archive view: 300 dpi tiff, Full view: 300 dpi jpg 2000 + + + 8168 + + 2014-11-11 + 2014-11-11 + + 8169.cpd + /IP/supp/8168/index.pdf + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8168 + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:80/cdm/ref/collection/IP/id/8168 + + + page1 + 8153 + + thumbnail + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8153 + + + access + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8153 + + + master + + + Twenty-Five Cents 12.00 per year people U.S.P.S. 070-77t 3 rt ma of mm mmueaiusM M AMSMCA Volume XI Number 12 March 27, 1982 ILIIMiEl ENDS VISIT The whirlwind American tour won by newly elected Free State head Charles Haughey along with the election from Garret FitzGerald concluded last week amidst mixed reviews. New York The tour began in New York with a visit to the Economic Club, comprising prestigious corporate executives and businessmen. Here Haughey's appeal was for American investment into the Free State economy. Haughey asserted that the economy was on sound basis and nearing the end of recession. However, as Haughey spoke, the Punt or Irish Free State pound, fell under the o; and fifty cent mark. Haughey was questioned about the north and here in a statement which dramatically contrasted with his public utterances during his prior term in office, asserted that the principal obstacle in the north was the British guarantee to Loyalists... We will have no progress until that is removed. Haughey also announced that he believed that the Free State would soon become an exporter of oil After the address, Haughey visited St. Agnes Church on 43rd St., the site of the apartment building where Haughey's predecessor, Eamon de Valera, was baptized. Washington The newly re-elected Free State head then journeyed to Washington, DC. He attended a White House luncheon with several Congressmen, Secretary Charles Haughey of State Alexander Haig, and celebrities, including Maureen O'Hara. Haughey was called upon to make an exchange of toasts. Instead, he spoke at length, stating: There is much to be done. And the first thing is that Britain be encouraged to seek more positively and more actively a change in attitude and outlook which would pave the way for unity and so enable her final withdrawal from Ireland to take place with honor and dignity. Reagan President Reagan later asserted that the United States would not become involved in influencing Vritish policy in Ireland. This reaction was praised both by Margaret Thatcher and Ian Paisley's deputy Peter Robinson. Haughey's position varied dramatically from his rhetoric during his first administration, wherein his visits to America were marked by attacks upon Irish-American opposition to British rule. The remarks generated for Haughey widespread publicity in Ireland, where Haughey holds a tenuous majority that may bring a new election within the year and in which Haughey is expected to campaign by assuming a mantle of Irish nationalism while maintaining collaboration with the British. A member of the Ulster Defense Association convicted for the assassination in Larne in 1980 of Irish Independence Party co-founder, Protestant John Turnly, claimed in a Belfast court at the conclusion ofthe trial that he had been working for the British Army's SAS squad. Twenty-seven year old Ro- they were all members of the bert McConnell named uio two SAS soldiers whom he claimed supplied him with information and with weapons for the killing and who had discussions with him on Miriam Daly, Bernadette McAliskey and John Turnly, all of whom were shot by the UDA in 1980 and 1981 in attacks claimed under the cover- name, the Ulster Freedom Fighters. In his statement McConnell said that in or around the month of April 1980,1 was working as a fish salesman in the Larne area. I was stopped one day near Cushendall by a van containing a number of men. I became satisfied subsequently that SAS and I had dealings with them on that and a number of subsequent occasions through their leaders who were Sergeant Tom Aiken and Corporal Mc- Gow. He said that at their behest he placed a listening device in a bar in Cushendall, County Antrim, in which Sinn Fein vice- president Gerry Adams was allegedly attending a meeting. He continued: During a series of subsequent meetings with them (the SAS) they discussed with me Republican leaders and in particular Turnly, Miriam Daly and Bernadette McAliskey... Continued on pg. 13 The two hundred and twentieth St Patrick's Day Parade in New York, despite a chilling rain, attracted more than one hundred and ninety bands and tens of thousands of marchers. A dramatic escalation of Irish patriotism in this year's parade was a highlight of the day, led by an Irish Northern Aid contingent nearly one thousand strong. This contingent included Sean Sands, whose deceased brother Bobby Sands, MP, was unanimously named Honorary Grand Marshal by the Parade Committee. (See story page 10) + + + page1 + Irish People (New York, N.Y. : 1972) + Irish People Inc. + + "The voice of Irish Republicanism in America" + Irish Americans – New York (State) – Newspapers; Irish – United States – Newspapers; Ireland – History – Indepdence and autonomy movements – Newspapers + 0888-3556 + IrishPP1982-03-27-001_page1.tif + Text + eng + + + http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright + + IUPUI University Library + Irish People &lt;br&gt; http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + + Scanner: Konica Minolta PS7000C MKII, Archive view: 300 dpi tiff, Full view: 300 dpi jpg 2000 + + + + page2 + 8154 + + thumbnail + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8154 + + + access + http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:445/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8154 + + + master + + + 2 GAP*61 FITZGERALD'S EIGHT MONTHS AS FREE STATE PREMIER IS cu honesty mate lyinepti BY KEVIN BURKE GARRET FitzGerald's eight- month term of office as Free State premier, which ended in Leinster House on Tuesday, March 9th, was the shortest premiership in the history ofthe state. It ended with his credibility in tatters and his ineptitude exposed. In the dying hours of his government, on Monday night, the Fine Gael leader U-turned for the last time, uselessly abandoning the supposed sacrosanct strictures of his vicious budget on VAT, subsidies and taxation of social welfare in a final vain attempt to buy the necessary independent votes and win the all-important prize of power. And capital projects at Whitegateoil refinery, Arigna mines and Dublin's port and docks site were blithely promised at a cost which put the unmentionable Knock airport in the shade. If his political acumen before the January budget had matched his lust for power after it, the general election need not have taken place and he could still be in office today. HUNGER-STRIKE It was on June 30th last year that Garret FitzGerald's coalition government took over from that of Charles Haughey, who had, to all intents and purposes, lost the general election because of his inaction on the H Block hunger- strike. FitzGerald, in the first heady hours of office pinpointed the hunger-strike as his most urgent priority. Four hunger-strikers were already dead at that time; six more were to die. In the next days he held a meeting with the British ambassador, significantly veiled in secrecy. And his first meeting with the hunger- strikers' relatives on July 3rd, was lengthy, but already concentrating on persuading them to undermine the protest. But following the death of Joe McDonnell on July 8th, FitzGerald, raising the hunger- strike for the first time in Leinster House, placed the onus for tho deaths on the British government. He dispatched two of his senior ministers to London, and later called on United States president Ronald Reagan and the EEC to intervene. That was the high-point of his hunger-strike effort. Discovering that actions were needed to back up his words, he began to back off and by tho end of July was publicly attempting to wash his hands of tho crisis. His statements from then on laid the blame on the IRA leaden ship not the British government. In the middle of August, relatives of the hunger-strikers were forcibly removed from government buildings. ECONOMY Meanwhile, Garret FitzGerald was well into breaking his first set of economic electoral promises. From the beginning of his government's term the cry went up that things were much worse economically than he had imagined and in fact the state was on the verqe of bank ruptcy. His first budget in mid-July, with a plethora of punitive measures, signalled that the electoral goodies wore not going to be delivered. Two days after getting it through Leinster House he sought to silence criticism within his own party, and his coalition allies, the Labour Party, by declaring a long summer holiday for the parliament to the end of October. But throughout the summer the voices of protest, among his own supporters and the vital independents, grew louder, spurred on, as August drew to a close, by a speech from his right-wing Minister for Industry John Kelly, Garret FitzGerald's meeting with Margaret Thatcher in London in November last year brought more evidence of his political ineptitude and of his readinoss to collaborate likening social welfare recipients to 'cannibal piglets'. Almost continuous price increases fuelled the grumblings and in September when FitzGerald went to chop the Tuam sugar factory as part of his 'lame ducks' policy, the outcry forced him to retract. In November, forty thousand angry farmers marched on Dublin in piotest at their worsening economic conditions. FitzGerald turned his attention then to wage costs and, as the centralised pay-deal talks headed for collapse, launched a verbal attack on workers' living standards which was enthusiastically taken up by employers' organisations. But here again, there was disappointment with his big talk when, as the year closed, he agreed a public sector pay increase of 15 , which although well below inflation rates, was most displeasing to pnvate sector employers. CRUSADE Under pressure politically because of his inability to take any effective economic action, FitzGerald, in September, hit, partly by accident, on a handy diversion. With monumental hypocrisy, and with much pious reference to Tone and Davis, he launched what became known as his 'constitutional crusade'. Supposed to be a total reform of the Free State constitution of 1937, it was primarily aimed, not at lemoving social injustice in the South, but at wooing loyalists in the North. His concentration on the removal of Articles 2 and 3 from the constitution, which claim territorial jurisdiction over thirty-two counties, and Ins description of the Free State as sectarian, won him praise ftom Doth the former Vanguard leader, now Official Unionist, William Craig, and from the murderous Ulster Defence Association. With the hunger-strike over in October, FitzGerald felt the way cleai for more extended collaboration with Britain. A meeting with Northern direct-ruler James Prior in Dublin preceded a summit in London with British premier Margaret Thatcher on November 6th. LONDON Before FitzGerald went to London he was nicely set up by Charles Haughey, who claimed that out of the Anglo-Irish study groups, which he had himself instigated with Thatcher, would come great things including a three-tier Anglo- Irish Council which should be announced at the forthcoming meeting. FitzGerald returned from London with an Anglo-Irish Council which was merely a name stuck on the existing system of meetings between government leaders and civil servants. He did not have the third tier, much-vaunted by Haughey, of a council of parliamentary members from London and Dublin. In London, FitzGerald had been craven. Humiliated by Britain's contempt for its weak hunger-strike protests, and trumpeting abroad that his state was bankrupt, he cut a sorry figure. To win his way back into Britain's good books he promised further collaboration in the future by way of joint courts to include Northern judges to try political offences in the South and by allowing RUC men to interrogate suspects in Free State garda stations. Meanwhile, both sides agreed to give the Criminal Law (Jurisdiction) Act a further try as an alternative to extradition, and by the end of his term in office FitzGerald had six of the Crumlin Road escapees imprisoned by the Dublin Special Court and the first Irishman in the same dock for political offences alleged to have taken place in England. Also, on the home front, legislation was being prepared to extend already repressive legislation, to end the right to bail, the right to silence in custody and further extend garda powers. CENSORSHIP But Garret FitzGerald will not just be remembered for his ardent collaboration with Britain nor for the viciousness of his economic measures in breach of his election promises. There were plenty of other memorable points which left his personal imprint on the office of Free State premier. Although a supposed liberal, he has nothing to show from his term to support this image. On the question of political censorship he displayed his attitude by the appointment of the hard-line Patrick Cooney as Minister for Posts and Telegraphs. In August, he drew widespread criticism at home, and derision abroad, by banning the newly elected Westminster MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone, Owen Carron, from RTE. And in the January election FitzGerald's determination to silence his republican critics, inspired an extension on the ban on Sinn Fein, which backfired when the enabling legislation was ruled unconstitutional by a High Court judge. JOBBERY Among the few grateful admirers who FitzGerald will have won for his period as premier are the British agents, the Littlejohn brothers, and the loyalist bomber Norman Parkinson of the UDA, all of whom were freed early from Mountjoy prison. There are also several beneficiaries of his corrupt patronage in the form of highly- paid jobs in the government and civil service. During his short spell, an array of political appointments of this kind include several of his political cronies and their relatives, including his own son and daughter-in-law. Even in the dying days of his government the hypocrite who had previously denounced political jobbery made partisan appointments in the garda, the judiciary and to state bodies. Garret FitzGerald goes down as yet another Irish leader who has failed and betrayed his people. Eight months of Garret FitzGerald were more than enough. Dublin's Clemency for UDA Prisoner The surprise release from Mountjoy Prison of UDA man Frederick Parkinson has produced some criticism alleging that the same humanitarian concern is not extended to Republican prisoners on either side of the Border. Parkinson (37), the father of two children, was serving a 12- year sentence for an attempted firebomb blitz in Dublin. He was convicted of having incendiary devices and firearms in 1977. He would have been due for release in 1986 with full remission. But, following intervention on his behalf by various people and organizations, he has been given a full remission on humanitarian grounds on condition that he does not come back into the Free State. For much of his period in Mountjoy, Parkinson shared accommodations in the prison's basement with the Littlejohn brothers who were released last year, also on humanitarian grounds, with half their sentences still to serve. Among the organizations which worked for Parkinson's release was the Catholic lay organization, the Knights of St. Colum- banus. Among the individuals who helped were Bishop Com- iskey, one of Dublin's auxiliary Catholic bishops, and a Unionist former mayor of Belfast, John Carson. Carson became friendly with the then Lord Mayor of Dublin, Fine Gael TD Fergus O'Brien, and last year they went on a joint tour of the United States. Carson admits that O'Brien opened up negotiations for him with the result that he met Dr. Garret FitzGerald and the then Minister for Justice, Jim Mitchell. James Eccles, until recently Supreme Knight in Ireland of the Knights of St. Columbanus, says that, together with Denis Maloney, also a Knight, and the solicitor who defended Parkinson, he visited him in prison on a number of occasions. Afterwards, they made representation to the Minister for Justice. At a press conference at UDA headquarters in Belfast, Parkinson praised the humanitarian policies of Fine Gael. They were the people who released me, and I am very grateful, he said. He added that he now regrets having gone into the Free State with the intention of doing damage. He had been treated well in prison and those Catholics and Protestants who had intervened to bring about his release contrasted starkly with certain Loyalist politicians whom he didn't name. He said that he would be remaining a member of the UDA. + + + page2 + Irish People (New York, N.Y. : 1972) + Irish People Inc. + + "The voice of Irish Republicanism in America" + Irish Americans – New York (State) – Newspapers; Irish – United States – Newspapers; Ireland – History – Indepdence and autonomy movements – Newspapers + 0888-3556 + IrishPP1982-03-27-002_page2.tif + Text + eng + + + http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright + + IUPUI University Library + Irish People &lt;br&gt; http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + + Scanner: Konica Minolta PS7000C MKII, Archive view: 300 dpi tiff, Full view: 300 dpi jpg 2000 + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + diff --git a/spec/fixtures/contentdm_xml/Irish_People_Short.yml b/spec/fixtures/contentdm_xml/Irish_People_Short.yml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..dd3d4de19 --- /dev/null +++ b/spec/fixtures/contentdm_xml/Irish_People_Short.yml @@ -0,0 +1,79 @@ +--- +:resource: MultiVolumeWork +:attributes: + :default: + state: final_review + viewing_direction: left-to-right + rights_statement: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NKC/1.0/ + visibility: open + :local: + source_metadata_identifier: Irish People <br> http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/cdm/search/collection/IP + viewing_direction: left-to-right +:source_metadata: +:thumbnail_path: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5044 +:collections: [] +:volumes: +- :title: + - 1974-11-16 Irish People + :structure: + :nodes: + - :label: page1 + :proxy: page1 + - :label: page2 + :proxy: page2 + - :label: page3 + :proxy: page3 + :files: + - :id: page1 + :mime_type: image/jp2 + :attributes: + :title: + - page1 + :thumbnail: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5044 + :path: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5044 + :file_opts: {} + - :id: page2 + :mime_type: image/jp2 + :attributes: + :title: + - page2 + :thumbnail: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5045 + :path: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5045 + :file_opts: {} + - :id: page3 + :mime_type: image/jp2 + :attributes: + :title: + - page3 + :thumbnail: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5046 + :path: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=5046 + :file_opts: {} +- :title: + - 1982-03-27 Irish People + :structure: + :nodes: + - :label: page1 + :proxy: page1 + - :label: page2 + :proxy: page2 + :files: + - :id: page1 + :mime_type: image/jp2 + :attributes: + :title: + - page1 + :thumbnail: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8153 + :path: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8153 + :file_opts: {} + - :id: page2 + :mime_type: image/jp2 + :attributes: + :title: + - page2 + :thumbnail: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/thumbnail.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8154 + :path: http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu:2012/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/IP&CISOPTR=8154 + :file_opts: {} +:sources: +- :title: + - Contentdm XML + :file: spec/fixtures/contentdm_xml/Irish_People_Short.xml