Young people in the early 1980s are taking on a set of attitudes and values remarkably different from those of the stormy ’60s a

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问题     Young people in the early 1980s are taking on a set of attitudes and values remarkably different from those of the stormy ’60s and ’70s. Instead of anti-establishment outbursts, today’s younger generation have turned more thoughtful and more serious. There is heightened concern for the future of the country and a yearning for the traditions and support systems that gave comfort in the past. Many young men and women of high-school and college age are having second thoughts about the "new morality" and condemn what a soaring divorce rate has done to families. They speak openly of gaining strength from religion. Patriotism, too, seems to be making a modest comeback.
    One change in the early 1980s is a questioning of the permissive moral climate of recent years. More young people, while hesitant to preach or to condemn their peers, cite the destructive effects of the drugs and alocohol that are so widely available in the schools. It is peer pressure that pushes teenagers into drugs, but now the habit often is dropped after high school, according to Debbie Bishop, a 22yearold secretary. James Elrod, a college junior in Kentucky, also reports that use of marijuana on campus has lessened. A Cornell University law student reflects the views of many with the comment: "I think that drug abuse is harmful to your own health and those around you." But he adds:" Drinking is fine only as long as it’s not done to excess."
    With the added pressures of a more uncertain world, most young people stress the importance of a healthy family life. Yet, as they look at the family’s breakup that has taken place in the past decade, they concede that the challenge for many is to make the best of one-parent families. "The American family is evolving and changing, "according to Nina Mule, "Women are going out into the world and having careers. They’re becoming more independent instead of being the burden of the family. "" But a great need remains for a family structure," says Nina, who still lives with her parents, "because people have to be able to survive emotionally." In Atlanta, 18-year-old Liss Jeiner feels strongly about what’s happened to the family. "People have realized that the family has disintegrated," she says, "But today’s family—particularly the black family—is trying to pull itself together and become the strong unit as it once was." A similar view is expressed by a senior at Brigham Young University :" A happy family means everything to me. I read a lot about how the American family is falling apart. But I see lots of strong families around me, and that makes me very optimistic."
According to the passage, which of the following statements in NOT true?

选项 A、Young people of ’60s and ’70s held radical attitudes towards life.
B、Young people of the early 1980s begin to turn back to traditional values.
C、Young people of the early 1980s folio-&’ the "new morality".
D、There are antiestablishment occurrences in ’60s and ’70s.

答案C

解析 根据第一段,当代即80年代的青年人持有的价值观念与动荡的六、七十年代的年轻人明显不同。当代的年轻人不再有反对既成体制的运动,而是变得更加爱思考,更加严肃认真。他们怀念曾经带来舒适的传统及其相应的体制。许多读高中和大学的青年男女对所谓的“新道德”正重新作出思考。此段中have second thoughts是指对过去的决定或看法重新思考,并怀疑其是否正确。所以,A、B、D三项都是正确的。只有C项不对,因为文中说80年代的青年人对“新道德”重新思考而非去遵循。
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