Professional Documents
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Ujian Sumatif 1 Form 4 2016 Checked
Ujian Sumatif 1 Form 4 2016 Checked
Ujian Sumatif 1 Form 4 2016 Checked
TINGKATAN : ___________
1.
they
you
we
it
2.
along
near
with
by
3.
A. lay
B. lays
C. laid
D. laying
4.
A. but
B. or
C. with
5.
Sometimes
Normally
C. Although
6.
seasons
season
seasoned
seasoning
7.
fade
vanishes
dissolves
evaporates
8.
is
was
are
were
9.
in
from
by
out
make
makes
made
making
10. A
and
Mostly
SECTION B
[ 20 marks ]
Questions 11 20
Over 100 World and National Top Students, 1st Class And 2nd Uppers In The LLB,
CLP and ICSA Over The Past 2 Years.
PROFESSIONAL
Diploma for Legal Secretaries
Professional Development
Programmes
MEMO
11.Name of The College : .(1 mark)
Types of Programmes offered :
12(1 mark)
13(1 mark)
14(1 mark)
Benefits you get if you study there
15.(1mark)
16..........................................(1mark)
17..(1mark)
18..(1mark)
19......(1mark)
20. The discount you get if you register early is .... (1mark)
Questions 21 - 30
3
Judges
1. Dato Siti Noorhaliza
2. Ir.Dr Irwan Shah Ali
3. Tan Sri Dr Nawab Abu
23. Organiser
22. Theme
..
24. Number of Winners
25. Participants
.
..
.
..
26. Entry Closing Date
.
..
28. Final Competition Venue
29. Judge(s)
.
..
...
.
.
When doctors told Jane Wilson-Howarth her baby needed surgery, she feared
his life would not be worth living. So, she left behind the consultants, the
needles, the tests and took him far away to live among the sane, baby-loving
people of Nepal. Here is her story.
2
David, my son was born by emergency caesarean section in a hospital in
Cambridge, England. I had returned from Nepal, where we had been living, for
what I had hoped would be quick, uncomplicated delivery. The first thing I
noticed when they pulled him into the world was a gaping black hole in the
middle of his face. Strangely, I wasnt shocked by his appearance. I was
infatuated by the tiny life I held in my arms. We later told his brother Alexander
that elves could do the fine stitching to repair the harelip.
3
But things did not go well. David struggled to feed, he choked and slept a
lot. I could no longer hide my fear I knew that he was ill. We were back in
hospital before he was a month old. There we saw various specialists who
meticulously catalogued a long list of abnormalities. But they could not
convince us that something could be done to improve Davids quality of life.
4
He had blood test after blood test. Food supplements were squirted into a
tube that passed up his nose and into his stomach. These made him vomit. It
tore me apart watching the terror in his eyes. After days of tests and
consultations, the doctor told us among other things that David had holes in the
heart, only one kidney, spinal abnormalities and the fibres connecting the two
hemispheres of the brains were missing.
5
Before he left, and he seemed to be in a hurry to leave, he said, The baby
has to have open-heart surgery soon. Well prepare for it immediately.
6
His words sank in, but I had already made the decision. David was all right. I
screwed up my courage and took a deep breath. But he is so much more at
ease away from here. We dont want any more investigations and long-winded
reports. No more needles or tests unless you can prove they will improve his
quality of life.
7
He began to explain, but I interrupted. No. We fly to Nepal this Sunday.
8
On the day of our flight back to Nepal we must have looked haggard. David
looked beautiful despite the feeding tube in his nose, his harelip and his
defects. The Nepalese saw his soft-unblemished complexion and blue eyes.
On the plane, we had already entered sane, baby-loving Asia.
9
Back in Nepal, we ventured out every weekend and some evenings. One
stroll took us into a squatter settlement by the river where young mothers,
surrounded us, giggling, wanting to compare babies. How did you make such
a beautiful baby? Can he speak Nepali? I took him out of his pram to show
him off and they said, He is so handsome, so white, so clean! Their
admiration was a forgotten delight of having a new baby. No one in England
dared talk about him or ask about him.
10
The peace and pace of Nepal was healing for all of us, and Davids tube
stayed in less and less. Sometimes I would slip it in when his appetite was
6
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
poor, but I wasnt convinced that it was necessary any more. He took a great
liking to buffalo milk and yoghurt and by the time he was three months old he 45
was chubby. By the time he was three-and-a-half months old he smiled. That
was a milestone that severely handicapped children often never achieved.
11
Things got better and better after this. His weight increased and he seemed
to be doing so well that we decided to take a break and head into the
mountains. We flew to Pokhara and, with two guides carrying all our luggage 50
we walked north towards the grand Annapura, through the deepest gorge in the
world. Whilst I gasped for every breath, I could hear David amusingly chatting
softly to himself. At a height of 2807 m above sea level, we were short of
breath but the holes in Davids heart had stimulated him to produce more red
blood cells to cope in the thin mountain air.
55
12
When David was five months old, we took him back to the Cambridge
hospital. The clinical staffs were amazed at how well David had done. They
were astonished that his growing heart had repaired the holes. He no longer
needed the medicines and he never had that open heart surgery.
Adapted from an article Mountain Baby in the Guardian by Dr. Jane Wilson Howarth
Checked by,
..
(Susy Narayanan)
Head of English Panel
Certified by,
..
(Faizah Sanusi)
Head of Language Dept.