The man complained of bad headaches after going to a Motorhead concert. He went to hospital for a brain scan. Doctors found he had bleeding inside his brain. He needed an operation to repair the damage from the headbanging. Doctors drilled a hole in his brain to release some blood. Two months after the operation his headaches disappeared. The head doctor Ariyan Pirayesh said: "We are not against headbanging. The risk of injury is very, very low. I think if our patient had gone to a classical concert, this would not have happened." He had good news for heavy metal fans and said they should carry on enjoying dancing, saying: "Rock 'n' roll will never die. Heavy metal fans should rock on."
1. TRUE / FALSE:Read the headline. Guess if a-h below are true (T) or false (F).
a.German doctors warned people not to dance to heavy metal music.T / F
b.A 50-year-old heavy metal fan had brain damage after headbanging.T / F
c.The man had a long history of head injuries.T / F
d.Doctors said there was a low risk of brain damage from headbanging.T / F
e.The man complained of headaches before going to a concert.T / F
f.Doctors drilled a hole in the man's brain.T / F
g.Doctors said heavy metal fans should switch to classical music.T / F
h.A doctor said rock 'n' roll would never die and fans should "rock on".T / F
COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS
1.Where does this story take place?
2.How old was the man who needed surgery?
3.What did the man's doctors say about his medical history?
4.For how long had the man been headbanging?
5.What did doctors say about the riskiness of headbanging?
6.When did the man get headaches?
7.What did the man find inside the man's brain?
8.What did the operation release?
9.What kind of concert did a doctor say might have been safer?
10.What did a doctor say heavy metal fans should do?
答案
TRUE / FALSE
a F b T c F d T e F f T g F h T
COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS
1.Germany
2.50
3.No previous head injuries
4.Many years
5.It was (very) low
6.After a concert
7.Bleeding
8.Blood
9.Classical concert
10.Continue dancing / rock on