Mr. O’Connell. No; I can’t, I think—does it show she was a stenographer there?

Mr. Tavenner. Yes; shows she was paid a salary of $250 for the month of June.

Mr. O’Connell. I can’t remember. There could have been. I remember one little girl there and the name I remember is Marjorie. I think her first name was Marjorie. I don’t know if that was in the 1948 period or the 1950.

Mr. Tavenner. Mr. Chairman, I think the record should also show that according to the testimony of Mrs. Mary Markward, Rose Clinton was known to her as a member of the Communist Party in the District of Columbia and assigned to the Northeast Club of the Communist Party in this city.

In the course of her testimony Mrs. Markward said:

Rose Clinton, I believe she was active in the Committee To Defeat the Mundt Bill in 1949.

Mr. O’Connell. I wasn’t in the city of Washington in 1949 in connection with the National Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill.

Mr. Tavenner. However, were you not chairman for the National Committee to Defeat the Mundt Bill during that period?

Mr. O’Connell. Yes.

Mr. Tavenner. You signed quarterly reports showing who were employed and the amounts of salaries paid?