Mr. Moulder. Let me ask you the date you received it. Approximately in what year?
Mr. Dennett. It must have been in about 1932.
Mr. Tavenner. How long were you engaged in the work of an organizer at Bellingham?
Mr. Dennett. Approximately 1 year. The latter part of 1932 through the early part of 1933.
Mr. Tavenner. Did you have any experience in youth work within the Communist Party while you were at Bellingham?
Mr. Dennett. Not too much in Bellingham. There was a little work of the Young Communist League there. They did interest a few students at the normal school. There was a normal school in Bellingham, and they did organize, I think, a half dozen young people who became interested in the theoretical work of Marx and Lenin. Most of those later became members of the Communist Party.
Mr. Tavenner. Was there an organization known as Pioneers, or Young Pioneers, in the Communist Party?
Mr. Dennett. Yes; Young Pioneers of America.
Mr. Tavenner. Are you now speaking of that group?
Mr. Dennett. No. That group I have just referred to was the Young Communist League, which dealt with a group in the younger age, but mature people. The Young Pioneers was an effort on the part of the Communist Party to organize a group which would be comparable to the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts.