ML147662
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Subject 1: (Interview). Subtitle: Unidentified husband and wife. Timecode In: 00:01:47. Timecode out: 00:33:56. Notes: Logging ban discussion. Subject 2: (Interview). Subtitle: Rose Nu. Timecode In: 00:37:55. Timecode out: 00:47:28. Notes: Includes comments by an unidentified male. Subject 3: (Sound Effects). Subtitle: Market place ambiance. Timecode In: 00:47:36. Timecode out: 01:19:25. Subject 4: (Sound Effects). Subtitle: Tibetans repairing roof. Timecode In: 01:27:54. Timecode out: 01:32:55. Show: YGRP Log of DAT #: 4 Engineer: McQuay Date: October 2000 ng = not good ok = okay g = good vg = very good *CHINESE NAMES WRITTEN AS PRONOUNCERS EXCEPT FOR NAMES OF RESERVES ON FIRST PAGE* :03 Barking dogs and birds / birds¿at :06 some distortion Female :08 I didn't I just visit. Yeah :11 Joyce :11 oh you worked in the WWF office in Beijing. :13 Female :13 china program yes. (laughs) :16 Joyce :19 that's nice, I bet you got to travel a lot (she laughs) around china, did you? :22 Female :22 Umm¿not so much. When I was china daily reporter (McQuay interrupts asks her to slide back :36) Joyce :37 Well, the panda is their logo. Female :38 yeah, I have been to ??, ??,??, you know those kinds of reserves, ??. Joyce :51 well, we're part of NPR called R.E. and R.E. does long stories like documentaries and usually about nature. And about the environment, forestry 1:09 (McQuay gives mic instructions)¿ Joyce 1:12 ¿forestry and wildlife. That sort of thing. So we've decided to come here and do a story about the 4 rivers project. But one of the things that we heard about was the logging ban and that you and your husband had started an NGO and had had some influence over what had happened. So should I ask your husband or you about how that got started. Maybe he'd like to tell us a little bit. 1:42 Female 1:43 you mean the logging ban¿. 1:45 Joyce 1:45 ¿ yeah, how did that go, how did that happen. What's the roll of logging in this region and then what caused the ban. 1:55 Female 1:55 OK, (she speaks in Chinese to her husband until 2:47. They both laugh at 2:48. His response in Chinese begins at 2:50 and goes until 3:03 when she begins translating) 3:01 Female 3:02 I started filming of the (U-ness-tah-most) monkey from 1992. 3:12 Husband 3:13 (in chines) 3:15 Female 3:16 and I didn't expect that this filming has (@3:20 R.E. voice interrupts, says sorry) been going on for three years. 3:23 Husband 3:23 (in Chinese) 3:35 Female 3:34 I didn't expect either, within 3 years seen that only seen the monkeys for twice, for two times. 3:43 Husband 3:44 (in Chinese) 3:47 Female 3:47 why its so difficult to see the monkeys there, I think there are several reasons. 3:52 Husband 3:53 (in Chinese) 4:06 Female 4:07 First of all the total population of the snub-nose monkey is already very few. There are less than a thous¿ah¿15-hundred monkeys in the world. 4:19 Husband 4:19 (in Chinese) 4:28 Female 4:28 and over the population are only distributed northwest of Yunan within the boundary of Lang-tsan river west and Shin-shah river in the east. (car horn under last word) 4:40 Joyce 4:40 and Lang-tsan is the Yangtse¿ 4:42 Husband/Female 4:42 May-kong 4:43 Female 4:43 yeah and Shin-shah is the Yangtse so between May-kong and Yangtse. Very narrow area 4:49 Husband 4:54 (in Chinese) 5:08 Female 5:09 and from early 70's the primitive forest in N.W. Yunan has been commercially logged. A great amount of the primitive forest has been lost. 5:22 Joyce 5:23 who's doing the commercial logging, are these local companies? Or they come from the east or from the north or from outside of china? 5:30 Female 5:30 ... (Notes truncated)
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Archival information
- Cataloged
- 24 Dec 2009 - David McCartt
- Digitized
- 24 Dec 2009 - David McCartt
- Edited
- 24 Dec 2009 - David McCartt