Mr. Stenhouse. 1948.
Mr. Velde. Were you a member of the Communist Party at that time, Mr. Stenhouse?
Mr. Stenhouse. No, sir.
Mr. Tavenner. Will you define your duties in the various assignments you held while in China?
Mr. Stenhouse. Well, on the Commission it was research and analysis and reporting, and I wrote a report on the problems of reestablishing interregional trade in the Far East. And it was published by the United Nations—not under my name, but incorporated in a much larger volume.
Mr. Tavenner. Will you identify the volume and the article for the use of the committee?
Mr. Stenhouse. It must have been published. I suppose it was published in 1949 probably.
Mr. Tavenner. Under what caption?
Mr. Stenhouse. I don’t remember that. It was published by the Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East as a subsidiary agency of the United Nations. But my material wasn’t any single article. It was incorporated with a lot of other material by a lot of other people.
Mr. Tavenner. In other words, your article was used as source material in the preparation of a report by the United Nations. Is that what you mean?