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关怀热线:400-600-7921官网: 小黑雅思基础阅读词汇拓展教材(部分)AGRICULTURE REPORT - A Vegetable Garden Grows at the White HouseWritten by Jerilyn WatsonEarlier this month, Michelle Obama and twenty-three schoolchildren helped prepare the ground for an organic vegetable garden on the South Lawn of the White House. The first lady showed the young gardeners how to turn the soil for the one hundred square meter garden.The students from nearby Bancroft Elementary School will help grow fifty-five kinds of vegetables, herbs and berries. They will plant organic seedlings in a few weeks. The White House will provide organic fertilizer for the garden. Crops will include lettuce, spinach, broccoli, peas, onions and berries. Missus Obama said two beehives will provide honey. The whole Obama family, including the president, will pull weeds in the garden. The total cost of the seedlings and fertilizer is two hundred dollars.The vegetables and fruit will help provide meals for the Obama family, White House workers and guests. The produce will also go to a nearby center that provides food for homeless people. Michelle Obama said the main goal of the garden is to educate children and influence communities to choose and prepare healthful food.The garden will be the first on the White House lawn since World War Two. President Franklin Roosevelts wife Eleanor planted what was called a Victory Garden as part of the war effort in nineteen forty-three.Eleanor Roosevelt urged all Americans to grow their own vegetables and fruits. Much of the nations farm produce at the time was feeding American soldiers. More recently, President and Missus Clinton had a small garden. But it was planted in containers on the roof of the White House.The White House garden marks a victory for people like Professor Michael Pollan of the University of California, Berkeley. The writer and food expert has worked to increase public education about good food. He said gardens like the one at the White House help people reconnect with food and eat more healthfully.In a public letter to Mister Obama several months ago, Michael Pollan said a White House garden would set a revolutionary example of healthful eating and local farming for the whole country.AGRICULTURE REPORT - Working Magic in the Garden With BeansWritten by Jerilyn WatsonThis is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. Beans are a popular choice for home gardens. Specialists at the University of Illinois Extension say bush beans need the least work. The plants do not need supports to stand. Green bush beans used to be called string beans because of fibers along the pods containing the seeds. But plant breeding reduced the fibers, and now the beans are known as snap beans. Fresh ones break with the pleasing sound of a snap. Unlike bush beans, pole beans need supports to climb. But they need less space because they twist around poles or sticks. Also, because the plants are tall, a person can stand while harvesting the beans. Beans should not be planted until all risk of freeze has passed in the spring. Planting beans every two to four weeks until early August will provide a continuous harvest. Control weeds growing around bean plants, but be careful not to harm the plants. Their root systems are not very strong or deep. Seeds should be planted two and one-half centimeters deep. Make sure the soil is not too wet or the seeds could develop poorly. Bush beans should be planted five to ten centimeters apart. Space the rows at least forty-five to sixty centimeters apart. Plant pole beans ten to fifteen centimeters apart along rows, and leave about eighty to ninety centimeters of room between the rows. Or you could plant the beans along rows of hills with four to six seeds per hill. The hills should be spaced about eighty centimeters apart, and the rows should also be about eighty centimeters apart. The University of Illinois Extension service says you should harvest beans when the pods are firm and have reached their full length. Do not wait until the seeds inside are fully developed. Bean plants produce more beans if pods are continually removed before the seeds are mature. But wait until the plants are completely dry before picking beans. Picking beans from wet plants can spread bean bacterial blight, a disease that damages the plants. Beans should be moved to different areas of the garden each year. This is because diseases that infect beans can stay in the soil and infect the next bean crop. Not only are beans a healthy food, they are also good for the soil. Other plants take nitrogen out of the soil, but beans and other legumes replace it.And thats the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. For more advice for home gardens, go to . Im Bob Doughty.EXPLORATIONS - Environmental Film Festival Shows Beauty of World and Threats to LifeOICE ONE: Im Faith Lapidus. VOICE TWO: And Im Bob Doughty with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. The Environmental Film Festival in Washington, D.C., has been bringing movies to Americas capital for seventeen years. This year, the twelve-day festival showed more than one hundred and thirty movies from thirty-four countries. The movies were shown in fifty-two museums, embassies, and other places around the city this month. Many movies were about the state of the worlds oceans and sea life. The aim of the festival is to educate people about environmental issues affecting our planet. (MUSIC) MOVIE: After feeding the world for hundreds of years, we showed our gratitude by nearly wiping cod off the face of the earth. Today, the species is on the verge of extinction. And for the fisherman of Aveiro, the consequences have been devastating. VOICE ONE: That was from the movie The State of the Planets Oceans made by Hal and Marilyn Weiner. Its first public showing took place during the film festival at the National Museum of Natural History. The movie tells about the effects of overfishing on local economies and on the health of the oceans. The movie also shows how climate change is threatening this ecosystem. In a striking closing scene, the ocean expert Sylvia Earle talks about the importance of protecting the beautiful world that lives under the sea. We asked audience member James Edwards how watching a movie about the environment can affect people. JAMES EDWARDS: I think a film like this can make a difference by raising peoples awareness of not only the problems that are out there, because a lot of films are gloom and doom, but solutions that are out there. What are other people doing, what can you do? VOICE ONE: Mister Edwards is an independent filmmaker in Washington, so he is very interested in the work that other people are doing. And, he says the subject of oceans interests him especially because he has been scuba diving since he was a child. VOICE TWO: The Museum of Natural History showed many other movies about the ocean. These included Fisheye Fantasea which explores how fish see in the ocean. Cracking the Ocean Code is about the work of scientist J. Craig Venter. In the movie he travels around the world documenting the genetic information of small sea creatures. At the Library of Congress, festival visitors could watch The Silent World directed by Jacques Cousteau and Louis Malle. When this movie came out in nineteen fifty-six, it was the first to show scuba diving exploration to the world. The movie takes place during a trip across the Mediterranean, Red Sea and Indian Ocean. (MUSIC) VOICE ONE:The Environmental Film Festival in Washington was started by Flo Stone. We asked her what gave her the idea to begin this event. FLO STONE: I founded the festival in nineteen ninety-three. Id worked on other film festivals, one on cultural diversity at the Natural History Museum in New York City. But in Washington, I thought it would be wonderful to do a festival on the environment very broadly, cooperating with many museums, universities, libraries, environmental organizations and even embassies from around the world. VOICE ONE: Miz Stone says the National Museum of Natural History asked if this years festival could pay special attention to the subject of oceans. FLO STONE: What is happening in the ocean films, of course, is the technology is so phenomenal. You can film the deepest parts of the ocean. You can track a shark that swims from Australia all the way to southern Africa and back. So, the ocean theme has been extremely popular and exciting. VOICE TWO: Not all movies at the festival were about oceans. One movie shown at the National Building Museum is called Designing a Great Neighborhood: Behind the Scenes at Holiday. It tells about building a community housing project in Boulder, Colorado. The future owners of the houses work together with different building designers to create environmentally safe houses that do not pollute. MOVIE: When solar panels supply both hot water and space heating, the goal of zero emissions begins to look achievable. VOICE TWO: The neighbors consider choices including solar energy, clean water and plantings. The movie gives an interesting lesson in how city communities can come together to build healthy and safe housing that is not costly. VOICE ONE: Several movies at the festival examined trash in different parts of the world. Cartoneros was shown at the Embassy of Argentina. Its director, Ernesto Livon-Grosman, was there to introduce his film. The movie is about trash pickers who collect paper in the streets of Buenos Aires. Then they sell the paper to sorting centers who prepare trash for recycling. The movie shows many people criticizing the work of the cartoneros. But in a country that was suffering a major recession, this kind of work was a good way for unemployed people to make money. And, the cartoneros provide a service to the city that is environmentally helpful. VOICE TWO: The documentary Recycled Life tells about people living in the garbage collection area in Guatemala City. The movie tells about the many families who live and work there. In Marina of the Zabbaleen director Engi Wassef explores a group of Christian garbage collectors in Cairo called the Zabbaleen. The film is presented through the eyes of a seven year old girl named Marina. The movie is about garbage and recycling but also about family, culture, and spirituality. The Canadian movie Addicted to Plastic is about plastic pollution. It was filmed over three years in twelve countries. The film explores ways to reduce the harmful effects of plastic waste. And it looks at new developments such as plastic made from plants. (MUSIC) VOICE ONE: Several of the festivals events honored the German filmmaker Werner Herzog. The natural environment plays an important role in his documentaries and other movies. For example, you could see his documentary Encounters at the End of the World which came out in two thousand seven. (MUSIC) WERNER HERZOG: These images taken under the ice of the Ross Sea in Antarctica were the reason I wanted to go to this continent. The pictures were taken by a friend of mine, one of these expert divers. VOICE ONE: In this movie, Herzog meets the many workers and researchers who live at McMurdo station in Antarctica. He learns about different projects that the scientists are working on. VOICE TWO: Werner Herzogs movie Grizzly Man tells about the bear expert Timothy Treadwell who lived with and studied bears in the state of Alaska. Fitzcarraldo is a Herzog film that was released in nineteen eighty-two. It tells the story of Carlos Fitzcarraldo, a rubber producer in Peru. VOICE TWO: This character fights against the forces of nature to try to realize his dream of building a performance center in Iquitos, Peru. (MUSIC) VOICE ONE: Several of the movies at the Environmental Film Festival dealt with food and agriculture. The Swedish film Cows Are Nice looks at cow farmers trying to make a living in the milk industry. In the Brazilian movie Mister Bene Goes to Italy, a manioc flour producer travels from Brazil to Italy. There, he meets small farmers from around the world who are interested in the slow food movement. Return of the Honeybee was shown at the Carnegie Institute for Science. It explores the political and economic effects caused by the disappearance of honeybees. The film shows the important role these bees play in the worlds food chain. The movie Nora! examines the career of restaurant owner and cook Nora Pouillon. Her restaurant in Washington, D.C. had the first officially organic kitchen in the United States. She has become an important leader in the organic and local food movements. (MUSIC) VOICE TWO: Flo Stone says that this years festival was so popular they had to turn crowds away because there was no room for all the people who wanted to see the movies. Here she explains part of why these films are so popular. FLO STONE: I feel that film takes you to places. It introduces you to people all over the world. You get to hear their voices. It inspires you. And the variety of the films is what is so exciting. VOICE ONE: The Environmental Film Festival in Washington plays an important role in helping increase understanding about a subject that is important for people all over the world. (THEME) VOICE TWO: This program was written and produced by Dana Demange. Im Bob Doughty. VOICE ONE: And Im Faith Lapidus. You can download podcasts from our Web site, . Join us again next week for Explorations in VOA Special English.HEALTH REPORT - New Test Could Speed Tuberculosis ResultsWritten by Caty WeaverThis is the VOA Special English Health Report. Tuberculosis killed one million three hundred thousand people around the world in two thousand seven. In addition, almost half a million people who were infected with tuberculosis and with H.I.V. also died. Those were listed as H.I.V. deaths. An estimated one-third of all people are infected with tuberculosis. But the bodys natural defenses are usually strong enough to prevent an active case. Even so, the bacteria remain in the body. If the immune system weakens at any point, they begin to spread and then attack. The bacteria that cause TB usually settle in the lungs. They spread through the air when the person coughs or sneezes or even sings and talks. One of the most important things is to identify cases quickly - especially drug-resistant cases, which are increasing. The patients need to be kept away from other people and begin treatment as soon as possible. Multidrug resistant tuberculosis, or MDR-TB, will not get better with antibiotics normally used for tuberculosis. So doctors must use stronger, second line drugs when the first ones fail. Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, or XDR-TB, will not respond to any of those drugs but might still be treatable. Now, researchers say they have found a much faster way to identify drug-resistant TB. The studys lead author is Graham Hatfull at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. He says current tests can sometimes take weeks in rural and poor areas of the world. By that time, the patient may already be dead. The scientists used viruses called bacteriophages to speed the process. These viruses attack bacteria. The researchers injected them with a gene that produces a green glow of light. They also injected some with first line antibiotics and others with second line drugs. Then they combined the bacteriophages with TB bacteria. If the bacteria glow, it means they are drug resistant. The researchers say a clinic worker could identify the glow with equipment available in many clinics. Test results would not have to wait for the bacteria to grow in a laboratory far away. For now, the test itself needs more testing. But Professor Hatfull is hopeful this will take months and not years. Researchers from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York also took part in the study, financed by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The findings appear in the journal PLoS ONE, published by the Public Library of Science. And thats the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Caty Weaver. Im Steve Ember.EDUCATION REPORT - Studying in the US: Where To Live?Written by Nancy SteinbachThis is the VOA Special English Education Report. March Madness is the name for the busy championship season in American college basketball. But March also means another kind of madness - the nervous wait for admissions letters from colleges and universities. This week in our Foreign Student Series, we jump ahead to the subject of where to live. Housing policies differ from school to school. Some schools have limited housing or none at all. Dormitory buildings might house a small number of students or many hundreds. Some dorms have suites. A suite has several bedrooms, a common area and a bathroom. Other dorms have rooms along a common hallway. Two, three or four students might share a room. Males and females often live on different floors of the same building. Or they might live on the same floor, or in some cases even share a suite if permitted. But single-sex housing is usually also available. Different groups and organizations such as fraternities and sororities might have their own houses where their members live. And there is often housing for married students. Some dorms are nice, others are not so nice. But many students say they like the chance to make friends and be near their classes. Cost is another consideration. Dorms can cost less than off-campus housing. But school-owned housing can also cost more, though the price may include meals. Here are some questions to ask before making a decision: How much privacy can a student expect? Will the school provide
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