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Unit1 
Part 1 
B 
:
This is my family. I'm married. My
husband's name is Bill. 
We have two
children 
—
 a boy and a girl.
Our little girl is six years old, 
and
our little boy is four. Jennie goes to
kindergarten, and Aaron goes to 
nursery
school. My father lives with us. Grandpa's great
with the kids. He 
loves playing with
them and taking them to the park or the zoo.
:   
This 
is
a 
picture 
of
me 
and 
my
three 
sons. 
We're
at 
a 
soccer
game. 
Orlando 
is
twelve, 
Louis 
is
ten, 
and 
Carlos
is 
nine. 
All
three 
of 
them
really 
like
sports. 
Orlando
and 
Louis 
play
baseball. 
Carlos is into
skating. 
:   
This
is my wife June, and these are my three children.
Terri on 
the right is the oldest. She's
in high school. She's very involved in music.
She's in the orchestra. Rachel
—
 she's the one in the
middle 
—
 is twelve
now. And this is my son Peter. He's one
year older than Rachel. Rachel 
and
Peter are both in junior high school. Time really
flies. June and I have 
been married for
twenty years now. 
:   
This
is a picture of me with my three kids. The girls,
Jill and 
Anne, 
are
both 
in 
high
school. 
This 
is
Jill 
on 
the
right. 
She'll
graduate 
next year. Anne is
two years younger. My son Dan is in college. It
seems 
 
 
like
the 
kids 
are
never 
home. 
I
see 
them 
for
dinner 
and
sometimes 
on
Saturday mornings, but that's about it.
They're really busy and have a lot 
of
friends. 
 
C
Woman:  
Well, my brother was
six years younger than I, and er, I think
that 
when 
he
was 
little 
I
was 
quite 
jealous
of 
him. 
I
remember 
he 
had
beautiful red curls (mm) ... my mother
used to coo over him. One day a 
friend
and 
I 
played,
erm, 
barber 
shop,
and, 
erm, 
my
mother 
must 
have
been away, she must have been in the
kitchen or something (mm) and we 
got
these 
scissors
and 
sat 
my
brother 
down 
and
kept 
him 
quiet
and 
(strapped him down) ...
That's right, and cut off all his curls, you see.
And 
my mother just was so upset, and in
fact it's the first ... I think it’s one of
the few times I've ever seen my father
really angry.  
Man:  
What
happened to you?  
Woman:  
Oh
... 
I 
was 
sent
to 
my 
room
for 
a 
whole
week 
you 
know,
it 
was terrible.
Man  
But was that the sort
of pattern, weren't you close to your brother at
all?  
Woman:
Well as I grew older I think that er I
just ignored him ... 
Man:
What 
about ...
you've 
got 
an
older 
brother
too, 
did ... 
were
they 
close, the two
brothers?  
 
Woman:  
No, no my brother's
just a couple of years older than I ... so the
two of us were closer and we thought we
were both very grown up and he 
was just
a ... a kid ... so we deliberately, I think, kind
of ignored him. And 
then I left, I left
home when he was only still a schoolboy, he was
only 
fifteen (mm) and I went to live in
England and he eventually went to live
in Brazil and I really did lose contact
with him for a long time.  
Man:
What was he doing down there?
Woman:  
Well, he was a
travel agent, so he went down there to work ...
And, erm, I didn't, I can't even
remember, erm sending a card, even, when
he got married. But I re ... I do
remember that later on my mother was
showing me pictures of his wedding,
'cause my mother and father went 
down
there 
(uh 
huh)
to 
the 
wedding,
and 
er, 
there
was 
this 
guy
on 
the 
photos
with a beard and glasses, and I
said,
thought it was the bride's brother
or something like this (mm) ... and my
mother said frostily,
Questions for memory test:
1. According to the passage, how many
brothers does the lady have? 
2. When
the sister saw her mother coo over her younger
brother, how did 
she feel?
3. What's her father's reaction when he
got to know that the sister had cut 
off
her younger brother's hair? 
4. How old
was her younger brother when she left home?
 
 
5. Where did
her brother eventually live? 
6. Who was
the guy on the photos with a beard and glasses?
 
PART 2 
A
Radio 
presenter:
Good 
afternoon. 
And
welcome 
to 
our
midweek 
Phone-In.
In 
today's
program 
we' 
re
going 
to
concentrate 
on
personal 
problems.
And 
here 
with
me 
in 
the
studio 
I've 
got
Tessa Colbeck, 
who
writes 
for 
Flash
magazine, 
and
Doctor 
Maurice
Rex, 
Student
Medical 
Adviser at the
University of Norfolk. 
 
The
number 
to 
ring
with 
your 
problem
is 
oh 
one,
if 
you 
are
outside 
London, two two two,
two one two two. And we have our first caller on
the 
line, 
and
it
’
s
Rosemary, 
I
think, 
er 
calling
from Manchester. 
Hello,
Rosemary.
Rosemary:
 Hello.
Radio presenter: 
How can we
help you, Rosemary?
Rosemary:
 
Well
it’s my dad. He
won
’
t let me stay out after
ten o'clock at 
night and all my friends
can stay out much longer than that. I always have
to go home first. It's really
embarrassing... 
Tessa:
Hello, Rosemary, love. Rosemary, how old are you,
dear? 
Rosemary
: I'm fifteen
in two month's time. 
Tessa:
And where do you go at night?--When you go out?
 
Rosemary:
 Just to my
friend's house, usually. But everyone else can
stay 
there much later than me. I have
to leave at about a quarter to ten.
Tessa:
 And does this friend
of yours-does she live near you?
Rosemary:
 It takes about ten
minutes to walk from her house to ours.
Tessa:
 I see. You live in
Brighton, wasn
’
t it? Well ,B
righton
’
s
…
 
Rosemary: 
No,
Manchester
…I
 live in
Manchester. 
Tessa:
 oh.
I’
m sorry, love.
I’
m getting mixed up. Yes,
well Manchester's 
quite a rough city,
isn't it ? I mean, your dad...
Rosemary:
 No, 
not
really. 
Not 
where
we 
live, 
it
isn
’
t.
I 
don't 
live
in 
the City Center or
anything 
like that.
And 
Christine's house
is in a 
very
quiet part.
Tessa:
 Christine. That's
your friend, is it? 
Rosemary:
Yeah. That's right. I mean, I know my
dad gets worried but
it
’
s perfectly
safe. 
Maurice:
 Rosemary.
Have you talked about this with your dad?
Rosemary:
 No. He just shouts
and then he says he won't let me go out at
all if I can't come home on time.
Maurice:
 Why
don't 
you 
just
try 
to 
sit
down 
quietly 
with
your 
dad--
sometime 
when
he's 
relaxed--and
just 
have 
a
quiet 
chat 
about
it?
He
’
ll
probably explain why he worries about
you. It isn't always safe for young
girls to go out at night.
Tessa:
 Yes. And maybe you
could persuade him to come and pick you up
 
 
from
Christine's house once or twice.
Rosemary:
 Yes .I don't think
he'll agree to that, but I'll talk to him about
it . Thanks. 
Part 3
Josephine: 
   
We
did 
feel 
far
more 
stability 
in
our 
lives,
because 
you 
see
... 
in 
these 
days
I 
think 
there's
always 
a 
concern
that 
families
will 
separate or something,
but in those days nobody expected the families to
separate.  
Gertrude:
   
Of 
course
there 
may 
have
been 
smoking,
drinking 
and
drug-taking 
years
ago, 
but 
it
was 
all 
kept
very 
quiet,
nobody 
knew
anything about it. But these days there
really isn't the family life that we
used 
to 
have.
The 
children 
seem
to 
do 
more
as 
they 
like
whether 
they 
know
it's right or wrong. Oh, things are very different
I think.  
Question: 
What was your parents' role in family
life?  
Josephine:
Well, my mother actually didn't do a
tremendous amount in 
the house, but she
did do a great deal of work outside and she was
very 
interested, for example, in the
Nursing Association collecting money for
it. We had somebody who looked after us
and then we also had someone 
who did
the cleaning.  
Gertrude: 
Well, 
we 
lived
in 
a 
flat,
we 
only 
had
three 
rooms 
and
a 
bathroom.
Father 
worked 
on
the 
railway 
at
Victoria 
Station
and 
my 
mother
didn't work, obviously. My father's wage I think
was about two 
 
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