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 had 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 th 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 follow the "new morality". D. There were anti-establishment occurrences in ’60s and ’70s. [单项选择]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 had 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 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 follow the "new morality". D. There were anti-establishment occurrences in ’60s and ’70s. 我来回答: 提交
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