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Dec 27, 1975
Old-line alcoholism treatment draws fire — Bakersfield Californian
Dec 17, 1975
The four basic social programs — Hawaiian American (Honolulu)
Dec 12, 1975
Customs sued — The Bryant Times (Ohio)
Dec 6, 1975
Narconon ... Confrontation to control — Delaware State News
Dec 5, 1975
Fort Harrison buyer eyes Dunedin condo — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Dec 4, 1975
Insufficient profits for Scientology E meter? — New Scientist
Type: Press
Source:
New Scientist Lafayette Ron Hubbard of the Church of Scientology is seeking to extend the life of the British patent for his E-meter. The patent (943 012) will come to the end of its natural 16 year life on 27 July, 1976, when anyone will be able to make and sell the meter. Obviously this strikes terror in the heart of the Church of Scientology, and it has given notice of intention to present a prolongation petition to the High Court of Justice. ...
Dec 3, 1975
Fort Harrison Hotel sale is official — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Type: Press
Author(s):
Susan Denley Source:
St. Petersburg Times (Florida) It's official: the Fort Harrison Hotel has a new owner. And the price that new owner paid, until now a well-guarded secret, was $2.3-million according to documents filed in the Pinellas County courthouse Tuesday morning. Speculation about the price has gone on in Clearwater business circles since Jack Tar Hotels Inc. announced in late October that it was selling the landmark on Ft. Harrison Avenue to Southern Land Development and Leasing Corp. of Jamaica, N.Y. Guesses have ranged from more than ...
Nov 22, 1975
Old Clearwater Bank building sale complete — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Nov 18, 1975
New Ft. Harrison 'tenant' says weather forecasts success — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Nov 14, 1975
Fort Harrison leased to state church group — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)More: news.google.com
Type: Press
Source:
St. Petersburg Times (Florida) United Churches of Florida, a new organization dedicated to relating religious thought to a changing modern world, has leased the Fort Harrison Hotel and will operate it as a facility for seminars involving groups of all denominations. Sorel Allen, director of membership and public affairs for United Churches, says the non-profit corporation is leasing the hotel from Southern Land Development and Leasing Corp., which will complete the purchase of the 272-room resort from Jack Tar Hotels Dec. 1. Allen said he ...
Nov 5, 1975
Fort Harrison purchasers to buy Clearwater bank building — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)More: news.google.com
Type: Press
Author(s):
Chuck Albury Source:
St. Petersburg Times (Florida) Southern Land Development and Leasing Corp., which is buying the Fort Harrison Hotel for use as a vacation and conference center for religious groups, signed an agreement Tuesday to buy the old Bank of Clearwater building on Cleveland Street and bank-owned office space with about 200 feet of frontage on N Ft. Harrison Avenue. ALTHOUGH individuals from Southern Land wouldn't comment officially on the purchase, they indicated that the space will be used for offices in connection with the hotel venture. ...
Oct 29, 1975
Closing of hotel started — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Oct 28, 1975
Fort Harrison Hotel bought; new owner plan to close it — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)More: news.google.com
Type: Press
Source:
St. Petersburg Times (Florida) The Fort Harrison Hotel, a downtown Clearwater landmark for a half century, has been sold and the new owners plan to close it — at least temporarily in December. Southern Land Development and Leasing Corp., a Delaware corporation, bought the hotel from Jack Tar Hotels Inc. of Dallas, Tex. The Jack Tar chain has owned the Fort Harrison since 1953 except for 14 months in 1969-70 when it was the property of Osias Hotels Inc. The new owners plan an announcement ...
Oct 11, 1975
Church of Scientology sues AMA for $1.6 million — St. Paul DispatchMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
St. Paul Dispatch The American Medical Association (AMA) is among several defendants in a $1.6 million libel suit filed Friday by the Church of Scientology of Minnesota. Other defendants in the suit filed in Ramsey District Court include the Minnesota State Medical Association Foundation (MSMAF), several foundation officers and Ralph Lee Smith, a writer for the AMA's "Today's Health" magazine. The church contends the AMA secretly hired Smith to do articles attacking various groups considered by the AMA hierarchy to be a threat to ...
Sep 16, 1975
OPERATION CAT More: link
Type: Document
[...] MAJOR TARGET: To plant grossly false information in government agencies, especially security services files, for later public retrieval and ridiculing exposure. [...]
Sep 13, 1975
Church of Scientology to warn of Interpol dangers — Rocky Mountain News (Denver, Colorado)More: link
Aug 2, 1975
Will real CIA agent please stand up? — Detroit Free PressMore: link
Type: Press
Author(s):
Chuck Stone Source:
Detroit Free Press ONCE THE PANDORA'S BOX of unsubstantiated allegations is pried open, it no longer becomes a question of, "Is there one?" but rather, "Who is the one?" Alexander Butterfield seems to have rebutted reports that he was the CIA's man in the White House. But is it even logical to assume such a direct contact exists? It is, if you know anything about Washington bureaucratic infighting. Is one of President Ford's 43 assistants and special assistants in league with the CIA? A ...
Jul 6, 1975
Stamped with the Waddy Wood architectural personality — Washington PostMore: link
Type: Press
Author(s):
Sarah Booth Conroy Source:
Washington Post [...] Many of the houses were more modest. He designed several groups of row houses. The 1810-1820 19th St. NW are handsome houses with red tile roofs, Flemish gables, baroque stone work, bay windows, lights courts and cream-colored brick with the trim originally sage green. According to Eig and Bryan, the six are now used variously as offices of the Founding Church of Scientology, a halfway house, and multi-family homes. [...]
May 10, 1975
Ask no questions, get no lies — Washington Star-NewsMore: link
Type: Press
Author(s):
William F. Willoughby Source:
Washington Star-News A COUPLE OF WEEKS AGO WHEN I landed at Heathrow Airport in London, I wasn't quite sure what was going to take place. I had read some pretty wild tales about the Scientologists, but only a couple of weeks before that I had read some even wilder tales about the British Immigration people and their attitude and actions toward the Scientologists in Omar Garrison's new book titled "The Hidden Story of Scientology." I didn't know for sure that I would be ...
Feb 1, 1975
On uncharted waters // A partial guide to groups exploring beyond the rational world — Texas MonthlyMore: books.google.com
Type: Press
Source:
Texas Monthly [...] The Church of Scientology. Founded by former science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard after he "proved conclusively that man is a spiritual being," Scientology is a "non-denominational" religion devoted to increasing the spiritual awareness of its flock. This is done by a process called Auditing, which seems to be a kind of confessional session in which a duly trained minister of Scientology guides a person into confronting emotional and spiritual logjams in his past. The actual techniques the auditor uses to ...
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