普通高等学校招生全国统一考试广东卷2之七
ed yet academic articles by internationally famous scholars, as well as information on exhibitions and sales. Experience five monthly issues for as little as £ 5 each.
The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly gives you a global view with articles from four of the world's most respected newspapers. Read the news from different views and draw your own conclusions on the stories shaping our world. Try it for 3 months for just £ 15.55. Plus get a free copy of The Guardian Year 2003.
New Internationalist
Full of excellent writing and photography, the N1 covers one key subject each month, from Terror-ism to Poverty to Climate Change. Reporters from around the globe provide you with a comprehen-sive world view. PLUS: masses of fresh reports and stories to keep you up-to-date on world affairs. 3 months free and free World
Map. The Week
The Week is the only weekly summary giving you the best of the British and foreign newspapers in just 35 pages. Designed to be read in just 1 hour, it provides you with everything you need and want to know. Try The Week now with 13 issues for just £ 13. 75. If you decide it's not for you, just tell us within the first 6 weeks and you can get your money back.
72. Which of the following magazines will probably provide you with articles about music and paintmgs?
A. Apollo. B. The Week.
C. New Internationalist. D. The Guardian Weekly.
73. It is possible that most of the readers of the four magazines are ______.
A. men B. women C. children D. grown-ups
74. Which of the following would you most probably read if you want to get information from the worlds most popular newspapers?
A. Apollo The Week.
B. Apollo New Internationalist.
Curlers challenging pudgy stereotype
Bigger Chinese role sought in the Arctic
Apology letter showed goodwill toward China
Scientist named to US institute
British PM warns of worsening floods
Hollande admits problems in personal life
H7N9 vaccine trials urged as new cases continue to emerge
Winter storm cripples US Atlantic coast
Prince's star rises amid scandals
Fired professor rejects claim he broke nation's one-child rule
Telemarketing scams targeting rich and famous on the increase
Foreign demand for goods adds to air blight
Super Bowl braces for big chill on Feb 2
Weather authorities want to see holiday ban on fireworks
Terrorist cell smashed after attack in Xinjiang
Suspect claims he killed 40 as hitman for drug cartel
Coach profits drive up in China
New lunar rover unveiled at Chongqing tech fair
Shanghai expands garbage sorting plan
China eyes 2022 bid as it prepares for Sochi Games
Doctor gets death with reprieve for selling babies
White House fine-tunes Asia pivot to 'quench fire'
Dongguan's economy not hurt by sex-trade crackdown
Danish minister tours Beijing on her bicycle
Crucial Snowden questions loom large over Pulitzers
Emotional Rodman apologizes on return from DPRK
WeChat to manage wealth
'Jihad Jane' sentenced to 10 years for murder plot
US secretly fed political satire to Cuba in social media
'Selfish drivers' blamed for high death count in fire