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  2. Viktor Tsoi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktor_Tsoi

    Viktor Robertovich Tsoi was born on 21 June 1962, in a maternity hospital on Kuznetsovskaya Street in Leningrad.He was the only child of Valentina Vasilyevna Tsoi (née Guseva), a Russian schoolteacher, and Robert Maximovich Tsoi, a Soviet Korean engineer from Kyzyl-Orda, Kazakhstan, where his Korean parents had been exiled after Stalin's 1937 deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union.

  3. Konchitsya leto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konchitsya_leto

    The Kino TV channel reviewed the film, in which Ekaterina Zagvozdkina noted: "The film itself begins with a concert of Viktor Tsoi in the city of Almaty, and ends the day after his death, on August 15, 1990. This time is the Tsoi era, or rather, its very end, but the film tells a different story.

  4. List of companies paying scrip dividends - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_companies_paying...

    This is a list of publicly traded companies that offer their shareholders the option to be paid with scrip dividends. Name Country ACS [1] Spain: Banco Santander [2]

  5. Zakroy za mnoy dver', ya uhozhu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zakroy_za_mnoy_dver',_ya...

    "Zakroy za mnoy dver', ya uhozhu", (Russian: Закрой за мной дверь, я ухожу, lit. 'Close the door behind me, I'm leaving') or simply "Zakroy za mnoy dver'" is a song by the Soviet rock band Kino from their sixth studio album, Gruppa krovi (Russian: Группа крови [ˈɡrupːə ˈkrovʲɪ], lit.

  6. Kino (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kino_(band)

    Kino (Russian: Кино, lit. 'cinema, film', pronounced) is a Russian rock band formed in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) in 1981.The band was co-founded and headed by Viktor Tsoi, who wrote the music and lyrics for almost all of the band's songs, until his death in 1990.

  7. Social dividend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_dividend

    The government of Singapore distributed a "growth dividend" to most of its citizens in 2011 financed out of ballooning government revenues from high rates of economic growth. However, unlike a social dividend, the "growth dividend" was a one-time disbursement and is not a regular disbursement. [24]