题干

奥斯威辛集中营记录了人类历史上最黑暗的日子。阅读下列材料:

材料一 从欧洲各地来的犹太妇女、男人和儿童被押解到奥斯威辛—比肯奥死亡营。……到达后即被谋杀的人数大大高于作为囚犯送到集中营去的妇女和男人的数字。据美国历史学家劳尔—希尔贝格推测,在奥斯威辛—比肯奥集中营存在的五年中,因疾病被处决,被毒气室大批谋杀而死亡的人数超过100万。

                                                                                                                                                                ——(德)古德龙·施瓦茨《纳粹集中营》

材料二 1947年7月2日,波兰议会通过法案,把奥斯威辛集中营改为殉难者纪念馆,在馆内耸立着奥斯维辛纪念碑,并在周围划定了一个默哀区,以示对死难者的深深哀悼。馆内陈列着绞死集中营头目赫斯的绞架以及法西斯潜逃时来不及运走的2吨头发和一些饰物、用具乃至儿童靴鞋等遗物,这一切都是为了向世界上所有的***勃兰特,来到了波兰华沙犹太人纪念碑前,……在冰凉的风中,勃兰特一步步走到死难者的墓碑前,在全世界的注视下,这位二战中反纳粹的英勇斗士,做出了一个令所有人震惊不已的动作:他跪倒在地。一位记者写道:“不必这样做的他,替所有必须跪而没有跪的人跪下了。”

                                                                                                                                                                ——电视纪录片《大国崛起》解说词

请回答:

上一题 下一题 0.0难度 选择题 更新时间:2010-11-30 02:09:51

答案(点此获取答案解析)

同类题3

阅读理解

    A great invention by an 18-year-old high school student grew out of a simple problem most teenagers meet with.

    “I'm a teenager and I have a cellphone and my cellphone battery always dies,so I was really looking for a way to improve energy storage,” Eesha Khare said on Tuesday. “That's how I came across the super capacitor.”

    The teenager who came from California, and graduated from high school last week,won a $50,000 prize on May 17,2013 at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for creating a device that can store enough energy to charge a cellphone in 20 to 30 seconds.

    “It charges very quickly and can store a lot of energy,” Khare said. “The cool thing is that it's a lot thinner than one strand of hair.”

    Khare hasn't used her invention to recharge a cellphone yet,but she used it to power a light-emitting diode (LED) in order to show its capability(容量). If used on cellphones,the supercharger would slide on to the phone's battery to juice it up in a matter of seconds. The technology isn't available to consumers yet,and it could be years until it is.

    At an Intel event in Phoenix,Khare won the Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award,taking second place overall in the world's largest high school science research competition. She beat out more than 1,600 finalists from 70 countries. She said that she has been approached by several companies to continue her research,but she is now focused on attending Harvard University in autumn.

    “Right now,just my education,but hopefully we'll see what happens in the future,” she said about her plans. “I have a lot of interests,so we'll see what I do in the future.”