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Laboratory work (Travelling) Intermediate level Variant 1 Reading

Part 1 Read the text and decide if the following statements are true or false. 1 Ron Wheal thinks that most of the complaints his company receives are reasonable. 2 The family from Birkshire expected that someone would be available to look after their young children. 3 The company paid 500 as soon as they received the letter of complaint. 4 If you stay at a gite, you have to prepare your own meals. 5 The long-distance holiday company suggests that holidaymakers should find out about the area they intend to visit. Dear travel agent, please stop the cows staring at me For the next two weeks, tour operators will be sorting through the annual deluge of complaints. Ron Wheal, head of customer relations for Britains biggest holiday company, which took more than a million abroad this summer says, Holiday makers are complaining about petty, silly little things. Such as? The fact that their hotel is next to a road. How do they expect to get to their hotel if its not next to a road? Perhaps one of the most common complaints is that the holiday fails to live up to the brochure promises. A family from Birkshire with two young children were attracted by a twoweek package in a three-star hotel that was described as friendly and particularly suitable for families with children. It offered cots, baby minding, high chairs and early suppers. When they arrived, the hotel was not up to three-star standard, the staff were rude and the promised facilities for children were practically non-existent. An initial complaint which had been sent to the holiday company by the family was answered with an ex-gratia payment of 30. With the help of the consumer magazine, the family issued a summons claiming 500 which the holiday company eventually met in full. One of the big travel successes of recent years has been the gite holiday; a gite is selfcattering accommodation in France, often on a farm. The director of the Gite de Frances London office recently received a telephone call from one client furious about the cows that passed in front of her gite. Was she complaining about the mess? No, she was angry because the cows used to stop and look in at her as they went past the window. Britains biggest seller of long-distance holidays says that the majority of its complaints come from people who have chosen the wrong sort of holiday. People who fail to do their research could find themselves in the Caribbean during the hurricane season. Mr Wheal says that if someone really wants action over a spoilt holiday, they should try and sort it out with a holiday company representative there and then. Those who complain to the tour operator on their return and are unhappy with the response can take their case to the Association of British Travel Agents (ABTA) which will provide conciliation facilities free of charge. Part 2 This article describes how Gatwick Airport in the UK has made travelling easier for business passengers. Decide which of the extracts A-G match the numbered gaps in the text. There is one additional extract which does not belong in any of the gaps. A Looking at what London Catwick Airport has done, the solution

now, in hindsight, seems obvious. B But Fast Track has other benefits for the business traveller. C The best ideas in business are quite often the most obvious. D Even at the busiest times of the day, it now takes business passengers only a minute or two to pass through the barriers to go airside. E Many airlines offer attractive incentives such as free limousine and helicopter transfers, advance seat reservations and priority baggage handling. F For the busy executive, it is not so much that time means money, rather that he or she usually cuts it fine when getting to the airport. G This system, called Fast Track, enables First and Business Class passengers from all airlines using North and South Terminals to use a special dedicated route through passport control and security checks. 0=C For example, business travellers passing through Europe's airports have constantly bemoaned the fact that however much their ticket cost, or however much they were pampered in-flight the real hold-ups always came when passing through passport control and security, or waiting in duty free. 1 That last-minute report to finish, or taking just one more phone call, has spelt disaster for many business travellers suddenly finding themselves at passport control behind a plane-load of holidaymakers who are quite happy to take their time - after all they are going on holiday. 2 However, it is a simple fact that no other airport appeared to have tackled the problem successfully until London Gatwick became the first airport in the UK or Europe to implement a "red carpet" priority system especially for First and Business Class travellers. 3 A pass is given to eligible passengers at check-in. 4 The special entry gates to the departure lounges, however, only operate up until 2 p.m. The airport's research has shown that the bulk of business travel flights were before this time, with only a handful afterwards when the regular control points had no queues. However, it is a position that is regularly reviewed by the airport. 5 For instance, those who have hurried to the airport without the time to pick up any foreign currency can collect pre-ordered currency from a special Fast Track desk at the airport's bureaux de change. Or if they travel to the airport via the Gatwick Express, they can use the credit-card phone on the train to order the currency on the way from Victoria. Forgotten to buy a present for that important contact you are going to meet on arrival? Instead of queuing up with the leisure travellers at the duty free counters, Fast Track pass-holders can take advantages of their own check-out. Not surprisingly, Fast Track has been a smash hit with London Gatwick passengers (numbers using it have increased from 40, 000 a month when it first started, to 65, 000 a month at present). Perhaps the fact that other European airports are looking at emulating the Fast Track idea shows how big a step forward it is in taking the hassle out of business travel.

Word formation
Walking holidays The Real Walkers Company offers a (1) _______.of small group walking holidays which explore some delightful hidden corners of Europe, the Americas and Australasia. There is something for everyone to enjoy on these holidays, (2) _______ of age or level of (3) _______ . The brochure includes various destinations and a range of itineraries. These range from sightseeing tours of (4) _______ cities to undemanding walking trips in unspoilt coastal and country regions and, for the more (5) _______ traveller, challenging mountain or hill-walking expeditions. SELECT REGARD FIT HISTORY ADVENTURE

Key word transformation


Complete the following sentences using the words in bold. Use two to five words. 1 Working so much will make you tired. work If _________________, you will get tired. 2 You wont avoid an accident driving so fast. have If you keep driving so fast, ________________. 3 I dont have any scissors so I cant lend you any. If _________________, I would lend them to you. 4 It would be nice to be able to fly. wish I __________________. 5 Do you ever regret not going to university? had Do you ever wish _________________?

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