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FCE Reading Practice Test Jan 09
THE ENGLISH SPEAKER
TEST 000
EXAMINATION PREPARATION EXERCISES: FIRST CERTIFICATE
Paper 3: Reading
TIME: 1 hour
PART 1: COMPREHENSION
Choose the answers you think fit best according to the text.
HAIR TODAY, GONE TOMORROW
“I started to lose my hair when I was 16. It kept on falling out and my confidence went. The other
blokes had great mops of hair. It was the fashion in the Seventies. By the time I was 21 it was so
bad that, when I saw this ad in the paper for a private hair clinic, I went along. I asked them how
much hair they thought I would lose and they said probably just a little at the corners, and they could
fill it in with some hair grafts.
“With these hair grafts I had to have a local anaesthetic. It was so painful. They took bits of hair from
the side and back, and replanted them into cuts made in the balding patch. The operation is very
unpleasant, especially when the anaesthetic needles are stuck into your scalp. But more hair fell
out, and I need more grafts. Over the next three years, I had more grafts, but it couldn’t keep up with
the hair loss. I had all these implants in front, and a bald patch behind. It looked worse than before
and my life was falling apart.
“My engagement was called off. My fiancee never commented about my hair, but I just didn’t feel
worthy of her. I was so fed up I went to another clinic. This time a salesman “consultant” came to
my home. He suggested more grafts, and something called a scalp reduction. I had four of these
operations over the next eighteen months. A piece of skin was taken from my scalp, and the skin on
either side was lifted and pulled inwards to be joined together with stitches. I had to have a week off
work after each operation because I couldn’t even smile. Even now my head feels tight around my
temples.
“This time I felt better, and looked better. But the hair loss persisted. It left patches and gaps. All
the time the clinic kept promising me a full head of hair. I was drinking heavily. Sometimes as many
as nine pints of beer a night, seven nights a week. It was the only way I could relax and feel confi-
dent with girls. I became so depressed that I was sent to see a psychiatrist.
“But I kept on with the grafts. This was at the same clinic. In the end I developed scars that wouldn’t
go away. They tried twice at the clinic to scrape the scar tissue away, but each time the scars
returned. Then they tried steroid injections, but that didn’t work either. Then I started to really worry
about the hair at the back of my head. I’d had so many grafts that it had been severely thinned
down.” [At this point, not surprisingly, the specialists at the clinic decided there was nothing more
they could do. They did, however, recommend an expensive hair growth lotion. It had no effect.]
“If only someone had listened to me. I feel cheated. Not just financially. I lost my youth living in a
limbo, hopping from transplant to transplant. I would give anything to be able to walk down the street
with long hair blowing in the wind.
“I mean, things are better now. I have a doctor who has got me off the steroids and tranquillisers I
was taking. Then I have cut down on my drinking. I have a girlfriend who is sympathetic, and we get
along really well with each other. But, I don’t know, it won’t go away. Only a few months ago, I
ordered an expensive wig from another clinic, and then cancelled. I still have to use this spray-on
scar camouflage and a hair thickener every morning. I cut my own hair. I mean, I just couldn’t go to
a hairdresser. And I always wear a hat when I’m out of doors.”
01. Why did he choose this hair clinic?
A. It advertised.
B. His hair was falling out.
C. His friends had a lot of hair.
D. He wanted to be in fashion.
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02. The implant operations were not successful because
A. in the end his hair looked unnatural.
B. his life was going to pieces.
C. of the anaesthetic.
D. he needed more grafts.
03. He had this tight feeling at the side of his head because
A. his girlfriend had left him.
B. he couldn’t smile.
C. hair had been implanted..
D. skin had been taken away.
04. He could only feel confident if he
A. had a full head of hair.
B. took steroids.
C. drank to excess.
D. saw a psychiatrist.
05. What did he develop after so many operations?
A. deep depression.
B. permanent scars.
C. thin hair.
D. a steroid dependence.
06. When they decided there was nothing more they could do, the specialists
A. gave him his money back.
B. offered him free cosmetics.
C. sold him a liquid hair restorer.
D. advised him to massage his head.
07. Looking back, he felt he
A. should have had better advice.
B. had wasted his youth.
C. had been very foolish.
D. had been unlucky.
08. At the present time, he
A. has made a complete recovery.
B. is self-conscious about his hair.
C. is dependent on his girl-friend.
D. visits a hairdresser regularly.
PART 2
Choose the sentences (A-J) which best fill the gaps (09-17). There is one extra sentence.
BABY-BEARING GRANDMOTHERS
Severino Antinori is an Italian obstetrician. Dr Antinori’s claim to fame is not that he is simply one of
the many doctors who provide artificial fertilisation, but that he provides such artificial fertilisation for
women who are long past normal child-bearing age. For example, in 1992, a 61-year-old widow from
Palermo, Sicily, had a baby. Dr Antinori had planted in her an egg fertilised with her husband’s
sperm. 09. ......
After 32 years of childless marriage, another Sicilian housewife, Giuseppina Maganuca, had a baby
planted by Antinori at the age of 53. She said: “My baby is an angel, and the doctor is a saint... “
Another woman, Anita Blokziel, aged 56, a former circus acrobat from Amsterdam, gave birth to a
baby girl. Of Antonori, she says: “The doctor has made me the happiest of women. 10.......
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The Catholic church is certain that Dr Antinori is not a performer of miracles. 11.......
The head of the church’s bio-ethical commission has condemned his work as “horrifying”. 12.......
The early work in this field was done by Simon Fishel. He developed a technique for injecting a
single sperm into the female egg, the ovum. 13.......
According to Dr Fishel, “the only real problem that hasn’t been solved in this area is how old the
woman can be, and how safe the treatment is. 14........
Does this mean that women may continue to have children into their seventies and eighties, that the
power-women of today may now put off having a family until 2040? It seems like it. 15.........
It seems that about 30,000 women worldwide are being offered these hi-tech breeding systems.
They spend about $400 million a year. 16.........
The good doctor hit the headlines in Britain after it got into the newspapers that, as a result of his
efforts, an unnamed Englishwoman of 55 was expecting twins in December. The news was greeted
with scorn and derision in the newspapers, so much so that Dr Antinori has been consulting a Lon-
don-based libel lawyer. 17.........
A.
Nobody has that information
B.
It looks as if the granny-mummy, or, as the Italians call
them, le mamme-nonne, is going to be in the headlines for
a few months to come.
C.
The whole process should be treated with the contempt it
deserves.
D.
In its opinion, he is far more likely to be going to hell than
heaven.
E.
After taxes and overheads, Dr Antinori’s clinic makes
$600,000 a year clear profit.
F.
This technique has been combined with a hormone
treatment which rejuvenates the baby-carrying parts of
older women.
G.
He has given me a miracle.
H.
The Catholic press considers that he is creating
“prefabricated orphans” in that the parents will die before
their children have grown up or even left school.
I.
According to Dr Antinori, he had been contacted by a
representative of CNN chairman Ted Turner, who wanted
to know if the saintly doctor would treat his wife, the
55-year-old Jane Fonda.
J.
Her husband had died in 1985, but his sperm had been
frozen before his death.
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PART 3
For numbers 18-27, give the letters A-G for the type of accident for which this treatment is appropri-
ate.
EMERGENCY TREATMENT
I n which accident should you........
?
18. not touch someone
..........
19. avoid giving someone too much to drink
..........
20. put a blanket under them
..........
21. open the window
..........
22. protect the patient from sunlight
..........
23. drink sterilised water
..........
24. observe the victim’s breathing carefully
..........
25. not apply medication
..........
26. restrict the circulation of the blood
..........
27. not take away any clothing
..........
A.
Heat Burn
If the victim’s clothing is on fire, make him lie down and try to put out the flames with a rug, blanket
or coat. Do not remove any clothing from an area which has been burned as this may lead to infec-
tion of the burnt area. Do not wash or apply any cream or paste. Apply a dry dressing which should
be left exposed, but protect from sunlight. The belief that air must be completely excluded from a
burn is wrong, as is the practice of applying ointments to the burn. They may in fact start infection
and destroy any chance of healing without scars. If there are blisters, do not prick them.
B.
Electrical Burn
If possible, turn off the electric current, or remove the victim from the current. To do the latter, use
something that does not conduct electricity, such as a dry pole, branch or rope, or with dry clothing.
Do not touch him directly or with anything metallic or wet while he is still in contact with the live
outlet.
C.
Shock
If the burn victim is in shock, lay him on his back and make him comfortable and cover the burn with
a dry dressing. He should be protected from chilling, but of course there should be no application of
warmth because the raised temperature will increase demand by the tissues for oxygen, which loss
of blood may already have diminished. The patient should be given nothing to drink unless he cries
out with thirst. He should be allowed to sip, but not gulp. If necessary, give the liquid by the spoonful
to avoid gulping.
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D.
Snake Bites
If someone bas been bitten by a snake, he should be put on his back, and movement of any sort
should be prevented. A tourniquet should be applied round the limb between the bite and the heart,
and tightened until the veins stand out. If the limb becomes blue, loosen the band a little. Medical
help should be called for. In the meantime, raise the bitten limb to reduce circulation, and do not cut
or suck the bite or rub anything into it.
E.
Upset Stomach
If the person is sick repeatedly, do not let him eat any solid food for 24 hours. He should drink only
boiled or bottled water. If he has constantly to go to the bathroom, he should be given an alkaline
mixture, such as kaolin, obtained from the chemist. He should take one tablespoonful every four
hours. If the sickness continues, or returns after 24 hours, consult a doctor.
F.
Exposure
A person suffering from severe and prolonged exposure should be admitted to hospital as soon as
possible. In the meantime, place blankets both under and over the victim to prevent chilling. Do not
apply artificial warmth.
G.
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Get the victim out of the poisonous atmosphere, or if in a car, open all windows and doors after
turning off the engine. If you have to enter the poisonous atmosphere, take a deep breath at the last
minute, and do not rush. If you cannot get the victim out alone or at the first attempt try to get help.
If he is still breathing when he has been removed from the poisonous atmosphere, it is sufficient to
watch him to ensure that breathing continues until medical help arrives. If he is not breathing apply
artificial respiration at once. If he is still conscious he will probably recover quite quickly, but watch
him carefully.
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