Your server can only respond to requests it receives, and will only receive requests routed to it by DNS, so if you don't own the domain name, you can't receive public traffic directed towards it. You could silently redirect users from
http://66.15.101.250/test/
to the content found at http://testsite/test/
but they would still see the http://66.15.101.250/test/
url in their browser.
If you think about it, its a good thing you can't do this or I could make stealyourcreditcardinfo.com appear as paypal.com. Indeed most uses for what you are asking about would not be legitimate ones...
For your own internal testing purposes, you can make virtual host entry for testsite.com and your server will respond to any requests it receives for testsite.com. You then change your HOSTS file to point testsite.com to 127.0.0.1 and testsite.com will work in your browser, but only on your machine because you manually overrode your own DNS. The DNS everyone else is using is still pointing testsite.com to the actual IP address somewhere else