根据以下材料,回答{TSE}题
Although divided by religion, residentsof the United States are united by national holidays such as Thanksgiving andIndependence Day. For many, Thanksgiving evokes the smell of turkey baking inthe oven, a house packed with family and friends, and the often necessarypost-dinner nap.
However, not all U.S. residents share thesame rituals. For some, macaroni (通心粉) and cheese is a requisite part ofThanksgiving dinner, while for others, such a dish would never appear on themenu.
For some, turkey does not even make anappearance on the dinner table. Some of my Korean American friends celebrateThanksgiving not with the typical roasted turkey, but with Korean barbecue.Although these friends enjoy celebrating typical U.S. holidays, they prefer todo so while eating the foods of their home culture.
What do the traditions surroundingThanksgiving and Independence Day mean to recent immigrants to the UnitedStates, and what happens when the dominant culture conflicts with an individual´shome culture? Some, including my Korean American friends, have found ways to synthesizetwo different cultures into one personally meaningful holiday. Not all familiesare similarly successful. Likewise, what happens when students from immigrantfamilies begin college?
Should educators expect them to choosebetween the U.S. favorites of apple pie and baseball and their home culture, orshould they help students integrate their two cultural identities into one cohesivewhole?
These are the sorts of questions that JhumpaLahiri explores in The Namesake, her follow-up to Interpreter of Maladies, aPulitzer Prize-winning collection of short stories. In The Namesake, AshokeGanguli and his wife Ashima emigrate from Calcutta to Boston in the late 1960sto allow Ashoke to pursue a graduate degree. For their first few years in theUnited States, Ashima feels isolated and unhappy. She spends her days in bed,reading and rereading the same letters from her family in India.
Her isolation is simultaneously compoundedand reduced by the birth of her son. Although she now has an individual to occupyher attention, she is more acutely aware of the distance that separates herfrom her family in India, wishing she could turn to them for help with childrearing. In time, the Gangulis become involved in a network of other Bengalifamilies in the Boston area. This community serves as an extended family. Itsmembers spend most weekends together and share celebrations and sorrows overmajor life events.
{TS} Which of the following statementsis true according to the first paragraph?
A、American minorities don't regularlyobserve Thanksgiving or Independence Day.
B、After the Thanksgiving dinner, familymembers usually have a walk together.
C、Thanksgiving dinner always includesturkey, macaroni and cheese and barbecue.
D、Some Korean Americans celebrateThanksgiving Day with Korean traditional food.