From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Birthplace ambiguity

Igor Bensen's on-line biography says he was born in Rostov, Russia. However, this could be Rostov-on-Don or Rostov Veliky. Based on the descriptions of the two cities in Wikipedia, and the fact that Igor's father worked within the Russian Agricultural Department, I think Rostov-on-Don is the more likely location. — Quicksilver T @ 23:33, 8 October 2008 (UTC) reply

Questions

  1. As the article currently is written, it says Bensen "... eventually reached the United States in the late 1940s ...", but the bio at http://www.gyroplanepassion.com/Igor_Bensen.html says he was awarded a Bachelor of Science degree (presumably in mechanical engineering) from Stevens Institute [of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey] in 1940. How can this be, unless it was by correspondence? This doesn't add up. (In 1940 Bensen was 23 years old, so the age for achieving a Bachelor of Science degree after a four- or five-year course of study would have been about right.)
  2. The last name "Bensen" isn't a Russian name. Did he have a different surname at birth, changing it once he arrived in the United States?
  3. I've found articles attributed to him, using the middle initial "B". What was his middle name? —  Quicksilver T @ 17:18, 3 May 2012 (UTC) reply
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Birthplace ambiguity

Igor Bensen's on-line biography says he was born in Rostov, Russia. However, this could be Rostov-on-Don or Rostov Veliky. Based on the descriptions of the two cities in Wikipedia, and the fact that Igor's father worked within the Russian Agricultural Department, I think Rostov-on-Don is the more likely location. — Quicksilver T @ 23:33, 8 October 2008 (UTC) reply

Questions

  1. As the article currently is written, it says Bensen "... eventually reached the United States in the late 1940s ...", but the bio at http://www.gyroplanepassion.com/Igor_Bensen.html says he was awarded a Bachelor of Science degree (presumably in mechanical engineering) from Stevens Institute [of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey] in 1940. How can this be, unless it was by correspondence? This doesn't add up. (In 1940 Bensen was 23 years old, so the age for achieving a Bachelor of Science degree after a four- or five-year course of study would have been about right.)
  2. The last name "Bensen" isn't a Russian name. Did he have a different surname at birth, changing it once he arrived in the United States?
  3. I've found articles attributed to him, using the middle initial "B". What was his middle name? —  Quicksilver T @ 17:18, 3 May 2012 (UTC) reply

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