单项选择题

案例分析题

Let us consider what science and technology have to contribute to the food problem.
The simplest way to increase food production,one might suppose,is to bring more land【B1】cultivation and put more people to work on it.Some of the underdeveloped countries have resorted to this【B2】approach,without notable success.It contains several fallacies.For one thing,it usually means【B3】into marginal lands where the soil and climatic conditions give a poor【B4】.Cultivation may quickly deplete this soil,【B5】it for pasture or forest growth.It is often possible,of course,to turn such lands into useful farms by agricultural【B6】;for instance,a sophisticated knowledge of how to use the available water【B7】an irrigation system may reclaim semi-arid grasslands for crop-growing.But the cultivation of marginal lands is in any case unsuccessful【B8】it is carried out by farmers with a centuries-old tradition of experience or by modern experts with a detailed knowledge of the【B94】conditions and the varieties of crops that are suitable for those conditions.Such knowledge is【B10】absent in the underdeveloped countries.
【B11】,we know that highly developed countries have not increased the【B12】of acres under cultivation,【B13】on the contrary have【B14】their marginal lands and steadily reduced the proportion of the population engaged in fanning.Efficient fanning【B15】concentration on the most efficient lands,and it results in greater production with【B16】people.The problem of the underdeveloped countries,then is to increase the【B17】of their farms and farmers.This would allow them to industrialize and to feed their people more adequately.It is not easy to【B18】,however.The farmers are conservative and resistant to change【B19】their methods of cultivation.The underdeveloped countries are greatly in need of studies and experiments to help them to【B20】modern agricultural methods to their own conditions.

【B1】()

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听力原文:W: Now without getting heavy on that but we were talking about women's liberation in Australia. That was one of the first countries. And I was merely going to say that we didn't have those things in Denmark. Women were equal in Denmark as far as I grew up.M: You were going to tell a story about how you came to Melbourne and you walked in to this pub for the first time.W: My first experience of that kind of separation of men and women, which I never had any understanding about...I never knew about that...and my first experience was in Melbourne. Down on the corner was this pub and I am going to go in with the boys and have a beer and then I thought, imagine all the girls. There are no girls here. There are only men. Where are all the girls? Well, women are not allowed in this bar here. It's only men.M: Public bar...the women and children used to sit in the Ladies' Lounge. It was so awfully ugly, right? And unappetizing. Bad light and totally ugly, right? So no woman with respect for herself would sit in there...W: All right and here comes then Germaine Greer...arrives...some years later.., she arrives on the scene. And the next time I visit a pub was in Esk and two women walked into the public bar and said 'we would like a beer' and they can't get served in that bar and they said 'no, we are not going to move' and there were a lot of things about police and all sorts of things coming in to it and it was...in the newspaper.M: And they chained themselves to the bar, didn't they? Oh, that was in Coronation Drive, Regatta Hotel.W: Yeah, well, they did it up in Esk too. It was on then.M: Right, she chained herself to the Regatta Hotel bar.W: The Regatta Hotel bar. That's famous.M: I wonder if she's still around.W: Anyhow...But that was just a talk.M: No, but that's absolutely right. And that was in 1972.W: But it was that type of thing.M: It's only bloody...sorry...more than 30 years ago...(23)A.She is from Austria.B.She is from Australia.C.She is from Denmark.D.She is from England.