[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fj88hvlIMP9V16VzWuJ_YorhOlrkykOzfGHO7bjEdlHw":3},{"answer":4,"createTime":5,"id":6,"options":7,"origin":12,"question":19,"related":20,"source":24,"type":25},[],"2023-10-12 20:47:47",99383274,[8,9,10,11],"It follows the standard naming practice","It is more accurate and scientific in terms of statistics","It encouraged them to embark on a political career","It is free from racial biases",{"count":13,"courseId":14,"courseImg":15,"courseName":16,"workId":17,"workName":18},2,"03d47696a7a2c3795ae26d9fa0fda41f","https:\u002F\u002Ftihai-oss-cloud.itihey.com\u002Fimg\u002F8f641d7d34ba82223d9cce54d8150cfd.png","剑指CET-6：大学生英语能力进阶","52a5f512f9b24f2f97ecc0c6c428b9bc","仔细阅读:原因结果题 + 细节题","Cet-6-1.20-Exercise 01 One hundred years ago, &quot;Colored&quot; was the typical way of referring to Americans of African descent. Twenty years later, it was purposefully dropped to make way for &quot;Negro.&quot; By the late 1960s, that term was overtaken by &quot;Black.&quot; And then, at a press conference in Chicago in 1988, Jesse Jackson declared that &quot;African American&quot; was the term to embrace. This one was chosen because it echoed the labels of groups, such as &quot;Italian Americans&quot; and &quot;Irish Americans,&quot; that had already been freed of widespread discrimination. Why did Jesse Jackson embrace the term &quot;African American&quot; for people of African descent",[21,26],{"answer":22,"createTime":5,"id":6,"options":23,"question":19,"source":24,"type":25},[],[8,9,10,11],"v1",0,{"answer":27,"createTime":5,"id":28,"options":29,"question":34,"source":24,"type":25},[],99383278,[30,31,32,33],"It led them to think poetry indispensable to management","It inspired them to view things from broader perspectives","It can help to locate profitable niches","It is noted for its detailed data analysis","Cet-6-1.20-Exercise 02 &quot;The grim economy seems to make the participants keener than ever to think 'out of the box' in the way poetry encourages,&quot; he told me. I'm not suggesting that poetry will guide our legislators to wisdom any more than prayer has. Just that it might make them a little more human. Poetry is no substitute for courage or competence, but properly applied, it is a challenge to self-certainty, which we currently have in excess. Poetry serves as a spur to creative thinking, a reproach to dogma and habit, a remedy to the current fashion for pledge signing. What was the impact of the poetry session on the program participants according to Professor Filreis"]