Mr. Voshinin. Belgium or in France. I don't know. I—you know, I don't like to question people too much.

Mr. Jenner. No. All you're doing is giving me what he said and what is at large in the community we talked about.

Mr. Voshinin. Yeah. So—but I don't know exactly, you know, if I would think if it would be of interest for anybody I would try to remember, of course, better but—somewhere, I don't know. He probably told me from which school it was, but I don't remember.

After that, he decided to emigrate to the United States, came here and saw that what he learned was of no use, so he went to school again—and he went to school in Austin.

Mr. Jenner. Austin, Tex.?

Mr. Voshinin. Austin, Tex.—and in Colorado. Now, whether it was Colorado the University or Colorado the School of Mines, I don't know. But he finally became a petroleum engineer. As I understand, he earned his master's degree.

After that, he went to work in some southern American country or—I think he was sometime in Mexico and in some other country—I think it was Venezuela, which I'm not sure again, it might be something else. And—uh—then I think he returned here again during the war.

Mr. Jenner. That's the Second World War?

Mr. Voshinin. Yes; during the Second World War, and——

Mr. Jenner. When you say, "returned here," do you mean returned to the Dallas area or to the United States?