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                  <text>In 2020, Time Magazine honored their first ever Kid of the Year, 15-year-old inventor Gitanjali Rao. She spoke to the reporter “about her astonishing work using technology to tackle issues ranging from contaminated drinking water to opioid addiction and cyberbullying, and about her mission to create a global community of young innovators to solve problems the world over.”&#13;
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Miss Rao is one of an astounding number of kid inventors, whose history stretches back at least as far as the 17th century, when Blaise Pascal began to work on the first calculator as a teenager. </text>
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                <text>On a cold and snowy winter's day, 10 year old KK Gregory was out building a snow fort when her wrists started to hurt because they were cold and wet. She remedied the problem by inventing Wristies, and wore them under her coat and mittens. She tested the invention with her scout troop who encouraged her to make more. She applied for a patent, trademarked the name, and started a company!</text>
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                  <text>On June 8, 2020, 6-year-old Alyssa McClelland’s first book was published.  My Big Curly Fro helped her express her emotions after being teased at school for her hair, and educates others about cultural and personal identification, low self-esteem, how to overcome insecurities, and how to create strong and meaningful friendships.&#13;
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                <text>Zastrozzi: A Romance is a Gothic novel by Percy Bysshe Shelley first published in 1810 in London by George Wilkie and John Robinson anonymously, with only the initials of the author's name, as "by P. B. S.". The first of Shelley's two early Gothic novellas, the other being St. Irvyne, outlines his atheistic worldview through the villain Zastrozzi and touches upon his earliest thoughts on irresponsible self-indulgence and violent revenge. An 1810 review wrote that the main character "Zastrozzi is one of the most savage and improbably demons that ever issued from a diseased brain".</text>
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                <text>When Zlata’s Diary was first published at the height of the Bosnian conflict, it became an international bestseller and was compared to The Diary of Anne Frank, both for the freshness of its voice and the grimness of the world it describes. It begins as the day-to-day record of the life of a typical eleven-year-old girl, preoccupied by piano lessons and birthday parties. But as war engulfs Sarajevo, Zlata Filipovic becomes a witness to food shortages and the deaths of friends and learns to wait out bombardments in a neighbor’s cellar. Yet throughout she remains courageous and observant.&#13;
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Yugoslav War, 1991-1995 -- Children. </text>
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                <text>Дневник советской школьницы. Преодоление&#13;
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                <text>Дневники Анны Франк и Нины Луговской могут рассматриваться как родственные документы. Прежде всего, они принадлежат тому новому разделу общей истории, который выделился в самостоятельную дисциплину, называемую микро-историей. Тоска о любви, жажда ее, - трудное взросление, мучительное состояние юности, общее место в биографии почти каждого молодого человека. Но одновременно с этими обыкновенными для девочек переживаниями в дневниках представлен тот исторический фон, на котором происходит действие ее жизни, и он-то оказывается замечательным комментарием к выставке 'Коммунизм - фабрика мечты'. Удивительно, почему она пишет то, что другие люди боятся прошептать кому-то на ухо. В книге представлены тюремные фотографии Нины, ее сестер и матери: анфас, профиль, номер. У Нины детское растерянное лицо. Миллионы таких фотографий хранятся в архивах. Но все уже умерли: кто от пули, кто в лагере, кто в ссылке. Нине Луговской повезло. Дневник Нины Луговской - прекрасное противоядие для тех, кому 'советский проект' все еще кажется привлекательным. Великая утопия обернулась кровавой историей. Об этом свидетельствует Нина Луговская. &#13;
&#13;
[The diaries of Anne Frank and Nina Lugovskaya can be regarded as related documents. First of all, they belong to that new section of general history, which has stood out into an independent discipline called micro-history. Longing for love, the thirst for it, is a difficult growing up, a painful state of youth, a common place in the biography of almost every young man. But at the same time as these ordinary experiences for girls, the diaries present the historical background against which the action of her life takes place, and it turns out to be a wonderful commentary on the exhibition "Communism - the Factory of Dreams". It's amazing why she writes something that other people are afraid to whisper in someone's ear. The book presents prison photographs of Nina, her sisters and mother: full face, profile, number. Nina has a childish confused face. Millions of such photos are stored in archives. But everyone has already died: some from a bullet, some in the camp, some in exile. Nina Lugovskaya was lucky. Nina Lugovskaya's diary is a perfect antidote for those to whom the "Soviet project" still seems attractive. The great utopia turned into a bloody story. This is evidenced by Nina Lugovskaya.</text>
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