万头优质仔猪繁殖场调研报告(编辑修改稿)内容摘要:

busy l ife but she says: “O nce I stop,i t al es crowdi ng i n and I rem em ber the chim ps i n l aboratories. It’s teri bl affacts m e when I watch the wi l d chim ps. I say to m ysel f, ’Aren’t they l ucky?’And then I thi nk about sm al chim ps i n cages though they have done nothi ng wrong. Once you have seen that you can never fet…“ She has achieved everything she wanted to do:working with animals in their own environment,gaining a doctor’s degre and showi ng that wom en can li ve i n the forest as m en can. She inspires those who want to cheer the achi evem ents of wom en. WH Y NOT CARRY ON H ER WORK? I enjyed Engli sh , biol ogy, and chem istry at school , but whi ch one shoul d I choose to study at uni versi ty ?i di d not know the answer unti l one eveni ng when I sat down at the puter to do som e research on great wom en of Chi na. By chance I came across an article about a doctor called Lin Qiaozhi, a specalist in women’s diseases. She lived from 1901 to 1983 . It seem ed that she had been very busy in her chosen career , travl i ng abored to study as wel as wri ti ng books and arti cl ne of them caught m y eye. It was a smal book expl aini ng how to keepi ng babi es cl ean, heal thy and free from si ckness. Why di d she write that?Who were the wom en that Li n Qi aozhi thought needed thi s advi ce?I l oked careful l y at the text and real i ze that i t was i ntended for wom en i n the countrysi de. Perhaps i f they had an em ergency they coul d not reach a doctor. Suddenl y it hit me how difficult it was for a woman to get medical training ata that time. That was a generation when girls’ education was al ways pl acred decond to boys’. Was she so much cleverer than anyone else?Further reading made me realize that it was hard work and determination as well as her gentl e nature that got her into m edi cal school. What m ade her succeed l ater on was the ki ndness and consi derati on she showed to al her patiens. There was story after story of how Lin Qiaozhi, tired after a day’s work,went late at night to deliver a baby for a pool fam il y who coul d not pay her. By now I coul d not wai t to fi nd out m ore about her . I discovered that Li n Qiaozhi had devoted her whol e li fe to herpati ens and had chosen not to have a fam il y of her own. Instead she m ade sure that about 50, 000 babi es were safel y deli vered. By thi s tim e I was very not study at m edi cal col l ege l i ke Li n Qi aozhi and carry on her good work?It was stil not too late for me to improve my studies,prepare for the university entrance examinations , and … ELIZABETH FRY When the Quaker El i zabeth m ari ed Joseph Fry, i t seem ed as i f her li fe woul d be fortabl e and owever, Eli zabeth was not content wi th her easy li fe and her growi ng fam il y. She saw many poor people l i vi ng near her and she wanted to hel p them . O ne day she was asked to vi si t a pri son . At fi rst the pri son offi cers di d not want to l et her vi sit the wom en pri soners because they feared the pri soners woul d attack her, but Eli zabeth was not afrai d. She reali zed that the prisoners behave badl l y because they were treated li ke anim als. They had no beds, cl ean cl othes, food or heati ng. Any chi l d born in pri son had to stay there and had no chance of an education. Thi s m eant they woul d probabl y have to beg or steal when they grew up and then woul d return to pri son. So the fi rst thi ng Eli zabeth di d was to provi de food, cl ean cl othes and straw for beds. Later she began a pri son schol for the chi l dren and taught the wom en to sew, kni t and m ake goods to sel l. In thi s way they abl e to m ake a l i tl e money for them selves and gai n som e sel er li ndneshel ped her gai n the fri endshi pof pri soners and they began to try to im prove thei r condi ti ons for them sel ves. Later Eli zabeth was asked to go to the l eaders of Bri tain to di scuss how to im prove the condi ti ons for pri soners。 O f course she di d not do al the work on her ther Quaker women hel ped her and went around the country rai si ng m oney for her wprk. Some peopl e di d not li ke her i deas and quarel ed wi th her. They sai d that she shoul d spend m ore ti m e with her fami l y. Other people sai d she enjoyed being fam ous owever, her husband, Joseph, supported and encouraged her, so she conti nued worki ng to hel p im prove the l i ves of poor pri soners til l she di er i deas di d not di sapear after her death and her work was rem em bered i n 1947 when the Quakers were gi ven the N obl e Peace Pri ze. Uni t 2 A pi oneer for al l peopl e Although he i s one of Chi na’s m ost fam ous sci enti sts, Yuan Longping consi ders him self a farm er, for he works the l and to do hi s research. Indeed, hi s sunburnt face and arm s and his sl im, strong body are just li ke those of mi l i ons of Chi nese farm ers, for whom he has struggl ed for the past fi ce decades. Dr Yuan Longpi ng grows what i s cal ed super hybri d ri ce. In 1974, he becam e the fi rst agri cul tural pioneer i n the worl d to grow Ri ck that has a hi gh output. Thi s speci al strai n of Ri ck m akes i t posi bl e to produce onethi rd m ore of the crop i n the sam e fi el ds. N ow m ore than 60% of the ri ce produced i n Chi na each year i s from thi s hybri d strai n. Born i nto a poor farm er’s fam il y i n 1930, Dr Yuan graduated from Southwest Agri cul tural Col ege i n 1953. Si nce then, fi ndi ng ways to grow m ore ri ce has been his l i fe goal. As a young m an, he saw the great need for incresi ng the ri ce output. At that tim e, hunger was a di sturbi ng probl em i n m any parts of the countrysi de. Dr Yuan searched for a way to i ncrease ri ce harvests without expandi ng the area of the fi el ds. In 1950, Chi nese farm ers coul d produce only fi fty m il li on tons of ri ce. In a recent harvest, however, nearl y two hundred m il li on tons of ri ce was produced. These i ncrea。
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