Explanation:
Background
You might know Elie Wiesel (September 30, 1928 – July 2, 2016) from his famous and harrowing autobiography, Night, that recounts his experiences as a prisoner in a concentration camp during World War II. Though he was just a boy at that time, the experience set Wiesel on a lifelong journey to fight genocide and stand up for human rights. He delivered this speech, “The Perils of Indifference,” at the White House in 1999 as part of a speaking series to mark the end of the 20th Century.
While You Read
How does Wiesel define indifference? What examples, stories, comparisons, and vocabulary does he use?
What are some of the criteria to define indifference?
Who is Wiesel’s audience for this speech? What does he want them to do or think differently after they hear his message and understand indifference on his terms?
What other vocabulary or unique terms does Wiesel define in this speech? Why?
Answer:
Women in space have been present and active since the beginning of human spaceflight. The first woman flew to space in 1963, two years after the first person, but it was not until almost 20 years later that more would be sent. Since then a considerable number of women from a range of countries have worked in space, though overall women are still significantly less often chosen to go to space than men and represent by 2020 only 10% of all astronauts who have been to space.By 2021 most of the 65 women who have been to space, have been United States citizens, with missions on the Space Shuttle and on the International Space Station. Other countries have had one (United Kingdom, France, South Korea, Italy) or two (USSR, Canada, Japan, Russia, China) women citizens in space, taking part in missions of programs with human spaceflight capability. Additionally one dual Iranian-US woman citizen has participated as tourist on an US mission.Women face many of the same physical and psychological difficulties of spaceflight as men. Scientific studies generally show no particular adverse effect from short space missions. It has even been concluded that women might be better suited for longer space missions.[3] The main obstacle for women to go to space remains gender discrimination.
The correct answer is A. Pompeii is a place that actually existed. This passage is factual. We just took the test and chose C, and we got it wrong, it is showing us that the correct answer was A.
The answer to your question is A. the computer was defective. I really hope this helps!
Answer:
It's B
Explanation:
It's closest to the text above. Words taken out, and some changed.