Archive for July 20th, 2008

20
Jul
08

Board – Artists should give credit where it’s due

Opinion / Li Xing

Artists should give credit where it’s due
By Li Xing (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-03-16 05:47

Pop band Flower has been troubled by a series of reports in the media and
on the Internet that at least four songs on their latest album are copies
of songs by a few international bands.

The four young men in Flower, signed to the EMI label, initially denied
the accusation. The media however has been relentless. The Beijing News
invited the chief music director of an arts publishing house to compare
the songs.

The expert concluded that the recordings of the four songs were
startlingly similar. One shared an almost identical melody, with the only
differences occurring in the seventh bar and the ending, with a song of
the Japanese duo Puffy AmiYumi. The company representing the Japanese duo
said their songs had clearly been “sampled.”‘

Flower lyricist Da Zhangwei admitted to the press this week that he and
his band mates have so many tunes stored in their heads that they “have
no time to identify, revise and delete” ones which aren’t theirs.

However, Flower is not the only band to have been singled out for
plagiarism recently.

A Mongolian song “Three Lucky Treasures,” which won second place at the
CCTV Spring Festival Gala on January 28, was accused by netizens of
imitating the theme song of the 2002 French film “Le Papillon.” Buren
Bayaer, the lyricist and singer of the song, has come forward to say that
he wrote the song in 1994. And in 1997, he recorded the song on 500
cassettes and gave 200 copies to his French friends, according to China
Radio International.

Although few people have the expertise to make the judgment, the
allegations themselves warn us again that plagiarism is an ill that is
hurting the creative mind.

It is true that increased international exchanges and an explosive amount
of information available on the Internet now provide far more
intellectual and cultural resources to people than in the past.

As well as the Internet, we have also inherited some 5,000 years of
historical, social and cultural legacies most without names of creators.

Seven years ago, a TV programme host proudly announced that a veteran
folk song singer was the composer of a well-known ethnic Hezhen song that
he’d sung for nearly 40 years.

People of Hezhen in Northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province were angry at
the remark, as all the composer/singer did was rearrange the main melody
of their ethnic folk song. They went to court, and won recognition for
the work.

Perhaps the singer wondered about the fairness of the decision. After
all, without his contribution, the vast majority of people would not be
aware of the beautiful sound of Hezhen music.

However, plagiarism could be a crime. We cannot be tempted to just copy
and paste and claim the results as our own ingenuity, without obtaining
permission or giving due respect and credit to those who have made
contributions.

Can we borrow from them or take their ideas as our own, without so much
as naming the sources that provide us the inspiration?

We cannot. If we do so, we are as wrong as the lead singer of Flower and
the veteran folk artist.

Email: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily 03/16/2006 page4)

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>> I will continue the story on my next post, happy reading!

20
Jul
08

Hero – Bush back to power after colonoscopy

WORLD / America

Bush back to power after colonoscopy

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-07-22 08:52

WASHINGTON – US President George W. Bush took back presidential power
after undergoing a routine colonoscopy Saturday.

In this photo released by The White House, US President George W. Bush(R)
and Chief of Staff Josh Bolten walk with the President’s dog, Barney at
Camp David, Maryland. Bush had five polyps removed during a “routine”
colon cancer check on Saturday but the White House said there was no
cause for concern and that he had resumed power after a brief handover to
Vice President Dick Cheney. [Agencies]

The White House made the announcement more than two hours after Bush
temporarily ceded power to Vice President Dick Cheney for the procedure
at 7:16 a.m.

In a letter sent to both Senate and House leaders, Bush reclaimed his
presidential power at 9:21 a.m.

Cheney served as acting president while Bush was under anesthesia during
the colon screening.

The colonoscopy was conducted at the presidential retreat of Camp David,
Maryland, while Cheney was at his home in St Michael’s, Maryland, 50 km
east of Washington.

The colon screening lasted about 31 minutes and five small polyps were
removed.

“None of the polyps appeared worrisome,” White House spokesman Scott
Stanzel said, adding that Bush is “in good humor and will resume his
normal activities at Camp David.”

After the colonoscopy, Bush had breakfast with some White House aides.

It was the second time that Bush has ceded power to Cheney due to a
colonoscopy.

On June 29, 2002, Bush handed over presidential powers to Cheney for more
than two hours during a routine colon screening.

Although the results were good, doctors advised him to undergo another
colonoscopy after five years.

Bush invoked Section 3 of the 25th Amendment to the US Constitution to
make the temporary power transfer.

The amendment was adopted in 1967 as a means of dealing with presidential
disability and succession.

Bush, 61, is the second president to invoke the presidential disability
clause.

Ronald Reagan was the first.

In July 1985, Reagan underwent colon cancer surgery and ceded power to
his deputy, the elder Bush.

The White House said no symptoms of cancer have been found in Bush, who
is a routine exerciser.

In 1998 and 1999, two polyps were discovered during medical checks when
Bush was governor of Texas.

Since then he has been undergoing regular examinations.

For ordinary people, a colonoscopy to screen for colon cancer is
recommended every 10 years.

But for a “higher-risk” individual, or if a colonoscopy detects
precancerous polyps, follow-up checks will usually be conducted every
three or five years.

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To be continued