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TEEIS ahd the Media In Jast month's issue of Teen News, we asked you t0 mail us your answers to the following questions: Have you read or heard today's news headlines? Where do yoน uรually get your news from? Do you read or listen to the news every day? What news are you interested in? Here are the results! Most of you (sixty-nine percent) prefer watching the news on TV, and thirty-five percent regularly log on to news websites. Thirty-one percent of you read or listen to the news every day, but only sixteen percent like watching current affairs shows. Youre more interested in national news than international news, but nearly eighty-five percent of our readers watch newS flashes about important events in the world. 4 So, is there any room for newspapers in today's world? Twenty-three percent of you said yes, but more than half (fifty-one percent) said you could live without them. Jake and Lisa explain their views: Jake Moreno (16) Tve never bought anewspaper. I usually find out about the news through a social networking site. That's how I heard about the tsunami in Japan. One of my friends added a link to a news flash. News websites are good too, becauseyou can listen to podcasts and watch videos. Lisa Sherman (15) Isometimes look at news websites, but haven't had time this week (too much homework!).I usually read a newspaper on the school bus.Ifollow the local news, and I also read the sports section.

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ke about markets? Boston Market Wins More Customerร Boston News 7 Haymarket vendors have a reason to celebrate. Their market is becoming more popular than ever. says (This is the busiest market in Boston! Vicky Green at her fruit stand. All the locals come close to downtown. It also has here because its very Convenient hours and the best prices in Boston! For hundreds of years, Haymarket has been the best place to buy fruits and vegetables in Boston. Vendors started gathering in this area of Bostons North End in the mid-1700s. The market grew larger in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, but almost wholesalers weren't able to sell to grocery stores. "Just remember that the fruits and vegetables are usually very ripe; says Stacy Mills, 30, 'so you need to eat them SOon. But you can get a lot of produce for a great price. And the vendors are much friendlier than salespeople in a supermarket." 4 disappeared when highway construction disrupted the street in the 1990s. The street is now filled with produce stands selling fruits and vegetables from all over the world. And customers love it. Prices here are often cheaper 3 than in the grocery store, so you can find some great In every grocery store you always find the same products, says Eileen Fisher, 21. Iprefer Haymarket because I can get some really exotic food here, for example, from Asia or North Africa. And there are many market stands to choose from The future has never looked better for Haymarket. It has truly become a Boston tradition! bargains, explainsร Nick Baines, 16. This is because vendors sell the produce that nearby

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