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ean each other as a way of showi ng love i n their fami l y. Jane worns us that our grou is goi ng tobe very tired and di rty by the afternoon and she i s ri ght. H owever,the eveni ng m akes it al l worthwhi l e. We watch the m other chim pand her babies pl ay i n the tree. Then we see them go to sl eep together i n their nest for the ni ght. We real i ze that the bond between m em bers of a chim p fam il y i s as strong as i n a hum an fami ly. N obody before Jane ful l y understood chim p behavi our. She spent years observi ng and recordi ng thei r dai ly acti vi ti es. Si nce her chil dhood she had wanted to work wi th anim al s i n thei r own environm ent. H owever,thi s was not easy. When she fi rst arrived i n Gom be in 1960, it was unusual for a wom an to li ve i n a nly after her m other cam e to hel pher for the fi rst few m onths was she al l owed to begi n her er work changed the way peopl e think of chi m ps. For exam pl e, one i mportant thi ng she di scovered was that chim ps hunt and eat m eat. Until then every thought chim ps onl y eat fruit and nuts. She also di scovered how chi m ps m uni cate wi th each other, and her study of thei r body l anguage hel ped her work out thei r soci al system . For forty years Jane Godal has beenoutspoken about m aki ng the rest of the worl d understand and respect the li fe of these ani m al s. She has argued that anim al s shoul d be l eft i n the wi l d and not used for entertai nm ent or adverti sem ents. She has hel ped to set up speci al places where the can l i ve safel y. She i s l eadi ng a busy l i fe but she says: “Once I stop,i t al es crowdi ng i n and I rem em ber the chim ps i n laboratori es. It’s terri ble. It affacts m e when I watch the wil d chim ps. I say to m ysel f,’Aren’t they l ucky?’And then I thi nk about sm al l chi m ps i n cages though they have done nothing you have seen that you can never fet…“ She has achieved everything she wanted to do:working with animal s in their own environm ent, gaining a doctor?s degree and showi ng that wom en can l i ve i n the forest as m en can. She i nspi res those who want to cheer the achi evem ents of women. WH Y NOT CARRY ON H ER WORK? I enjyed Engli sh , bi ol ogy, and chem istry at school , but whi ch one shoul d I choose to study at uni versity ?i di d not know the answer until 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 cam e across an articl e about a doctor cal ed Lin Qiaozhi, a specalist in women?s lived from 1901 to 1983 .It seemed that she had been very busy i n her chosen career ,travl ing abored to study as wel l as writi ng books and ne of them caught m y eye. It was a sm al book explai ning how to keepi ng babi es clean,healthy and free from sickness. Why did she write that?Who were the wom en that Lin Qiaozhi thought neded thi s advice?I l ooked careful y at the text and real ize that i t was i ntended for women i n the countrysi de. Perhaps i f they had an emergency they coul d not reach a doctor. Suddenly it hi t m e how di fficult i t was for a woman to get medical trai ning ata that ti **冷凍食品有限公司 新建 萬(wàn)噸恒溫庫(kù)建設(shè)項(xiàng)目 可行性研究報(bào)告 **冷凍食品 有限公司 2020 年 8 月 **冷凍食品有 限 公司 新建萬(wàn)噸恒溫 庫(kù)建設(shè)項(xiàng)目可行性研究報(bào)告 and saw farm s that covered thousands of acres. Afrer di nner, they were back in an urban area, the busy port ci ty of Thunder Bay at the top of the Great Lakes. Because of the Great Lakes, they l earned, Canada has m ore fresh water than any other country in the worl d. In fact, i t has onethi rd of the worl d?s total fresh water, and m uch of it i s i n the Great Lakes. That ni ght as they sl ept, the trai n rushed across the top of Lake Superi or, through the great forests and southward towads Toronto. “The True North” from Toronto to Montreal The next m orni ng the bushes and m apl e trees outsi de their window were red, gol d and orange, and there was frost on the ground, confi rm i ng that fal l had arri ved i n Canada. Around non they arri ved i n Toronto, the biggest and m ost weal thy city i n Canada. They were not l eavi ng for Montreal until l ater, so they went on a tour of the ci ty. They went up the tal CN Tower and l ooked across the lake. In the di stance, they coul d see the Mi sty cl oud that rose from the great Ni agara Fal ls, whi ch i s on the south si de of the l ake. The water fl ows i nto the N i agara Ri ver and over the fal l s on i ts way to the sea. They saw the covered stadi um, hom e of several fam ous basketbal team s. As they wal ked north from the harbour area, Li Dai yu sai d, “Li n Fang, one of m y m other?s ol d schoolm ates, li ves here. I shoul d phone her from a tel ephone booth. ” They m et Li n Fei around dusk i n downtown Chi natown, one of the three i n Toronto. O ver di nner at a restaurant cal ed The Pink Pearl, the cousi ns chatted wi th Li n Fei , who had moved to Canada m any years earli er. “W e can get god Cantonese food here, ” Li n Feitol d them , “ because m ost of the Chi nese peopl e here e from South Chi na, especi al y H ong Kong. It?s too bad you can?t go as far as O ttawa, Canada?s capi tal. It?s approxim atel y four hundred kil om eters northeast of Toronto, so i t woul d take to l ong. ” The trai n l eft l ate that night and arri ved i n Montreal at dawn the next m orni ng. At the stati on, peopl e everywhere were speaki ng French. There were si ghs and ads i n French, but som e of them had Engl i sh words in sm al l er l etters. “We don39。t l eave unti l thi s eveni ng, ” sai d Li u Qi an. “Let?s go downtown. Ol d Montreal i s cl ose to the water.” They spent the afternoon i n lovel y shops and vi siti ng arti sts i n thei r workpl aces besi de the water. As they sat i n a Buffet restaurant l ooki ng over the broad St Lawrence Ri ver, a young m an sat down wi th them . “H el o, m y name i s H enri. I?m a student at the uni ve