¡¡¡¡There¡¯s always been tension(½ôÕÅ)£throughout our history£a kind of tension between private development and government control, especially when it comes to development of land for agriculture£®
¡¡¡¡Catherine Parr Traill£an expert in the nineteenth century£said that the natural beauty of Canada¡¯s wilderness would disappear because of agricultural development£®But, fortunately for us, what Catherine Parr Traill had said turned out to be not entirely true£®The Quinte Wildflower Project proves that people can come together to keep the beauty of the wilderness£®The project continues a trend(Ç÷ÊÆ)to beautify North American highways that goes all the way back to the 1960s and the beginning of the Adopt-a-Highway programs, the programs that use volunteers to clean up the litter along roadsides£®Since the sixties, beautification programs have been broadened to include the planting of native flowers and shrubs(¹àľ)
¡¡¡¡The Quinte Wildflower Project is the largest roadside planting of wildflowers in Ontario£®The project was born in 1996, with the help of private sponsors(ÔÞÖúÈË)and government gardening experts£®Areas along an 18-kilometer stretch of Highway 401£from Trenton to Belleville£most of the sites were planted with one of two native wildflower seed mixtures£®Both seed mixtures produce flowers that require little care and are hardy enough to grow in roadside conditions£®Each seed mixture contains several different species, and wildflowers grow well, so there¡¯s a steady show of colors from June to October£®
¡¡¡¡The Quinte Wildflower Project has been a huge success£®Its greatest success has been in attracting both public interest and private sponsors£®It shows that government and citizens can work together and that their joint efforts can and do work£®
(1)
The writer develops the topic of roadside beautification ________£®
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®
by comparing two different ways to the topic
B£®
by expressing disagreement with past efforts at roadside beautification
C£®
by discussing an example of a beautification project
D£®
by describing recent research in flower planting
(2)
Why does the writer mention the Adopt-a-Highway programs that began in the 1960s£¿
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®
To explain why early beautification projects failed
B£®
To encourage readers to volunteer for highway cleanup
C£®
To suggest an increase in supplying money for the programs
D£®
To describe the history of roadside beautification efforts
(3)
The word¡°hardy¡±in the third paragraph most probably means ________£®
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®
hard£working and likely to make great achievements
B£®
strong and able to stand difficult living conditions
C£®
ugly but strong enough to live through to live through very hard times
D£®
beautiful but likely to grow even better in some cold areas
(4)
What does the professor think of the work between government and private citizens£¿