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Sep 28, 1976
Scientologist's seized machine pistol may be illegal — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Sep 23, 1976
Police hold Scientologists' guns — Clearwater Sun (Florida)
Type: Press
Author(s):
Stephen "Steve" Advokat ,
Bill McCartha Source:
Clearwater Sun (Florida) Police confiscated a cache of weapons in a temporary Church of Scientology headquarters in Dunedin after the Scientologists abandoned the base, the Clearwater Sun has learned. All but four of the weapons, found "about 60 days ago" in the King Arthur Courts condominiums off State Road 580 just west of U.S. 19, are being held by Dunedin police. State and federal authorities are investigating. The one weapon sent elsewhere was a short-barreled Mauser, which was turned over to the U.S. Treasury ...
Sep 12, 1976
Despite suspicions, Scientology flourishes / 'We are the wave of the future,' Church's lifetime Guardian tells convention — Los Angeles Times (California)More: link
Sep 1, 1976
"Poor Man's Psychoanalysis?": Observation on Dianetics — The ZeteticMore: link
Type: Press
Author(s):
Roy Wallis Source:
The Zetetic The sociology of marginal medicine is a neglected field of endeavor. There exist only a mere handful of brief accounts of unorthodox therapeutic practices and their development in Western societies. I shall seek, therefore, to provide a contribution to this scant literature, in the belief that such studies are not only of intrinsic interest but also provide insight into a number of strains and tensions generated by advanced industrial societies and into some of the less orthodox methods of coping with ...
Jul 1, 1976
Church sues for U.S. file [exact date unknown] — Detroit Free PressMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
Detroit Free Press WASHINGTON — (AP) — The Founding Church of Scientology sued the National Security Agency Wednesday, seeking release under the Freedom of Information Act of intelligence files the agency admits it holds on the church group. The security agency first told the church that it could not locate the files, but after the Central Intelligence Agency said it had been provided the files by the National Security Agency, the NSA Wrote to the church and said the files had been located but ...
May 30, 1976
26 years of Scientology — Boston GlobeMore: link
Type: Press
Author(s):
Michael Carlson Source:
Boston Globe "What is true for you is what you have observed yourself. And when you lose that you have lost everything. Nothing in Dianetics and Scientology is true for you unless you have observed it and it is true according to your observation. That is all. Our aims are a civilization without insanity, without criminals and without war, where the able can prosper and honest beings can have rights and where Man is free to rise to greater heights." L. Ron Hubbard ...
Apr 20, 1976
Scientologists asking depositions in Cazares suit — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)More: news.google.com
Type: Press
Author(s):
Bill Cryer Source:
St. Petersburg Times (Florida) TAMPA — The Church of Scientology Monday filed a notice in U.S. District Court that it intends to take depositions from several newspaper executives, a reporter and employes of a Pinellas radio station. The depositions are being taken in connection with the church's $1-million libel and slander suit against Clearwater Mayor Gabriel Cazares. Cazares, who had earlier objected to giving his deposition to the church, will give his deposition today at the Pinellas County Courthouse in Clearwater, a spokesman for the ...
Apr 5, 1976
A Sci-Fi Faith — TIME Magazine
Type: Press
Source:
TIME Magazine The mystery began to unfold last fall in sleepy, sun-drenched Clearwater, Fla. The Southern Land Development and Leasing Corp. decided to buy the 270-room Fort Harrison Hotel, a downtown landmark, and a nearby bank building. Southern Land stated that the hotel would stay open, but another spokesman announced that it would become a center for the United Churches of Florida, a new ecumenical outfit that soon won endorsement from twelve local clergymen. When 200 tight-lipped strangers moved into the hotel, rumors ...
Apr 4, 1976
Scientology: the 'Astounding' fiction that became fact — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)More: news.google.com
Mar 26, 1976
Scientology called 'anti-God' — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Mar 26, 1976
Snyder calls Scientology 'anti-God' — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Mar 25, 1976
Same-day resale of Fort Harrison hotel disclosed — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Mar 24, 1976
Former Scientologists vow fight against cult — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Mar 24, 1976
Three Scientology critics barred from public lecture — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
Mar 21, 1976
Process R2-45 – An Inside Joke Or The Ultimate Retribution? — Clearwater Sun (Florida)
Type: Press
Source:
Clearwater Sun (Florida) Through "auditing" (counseling), a Scientologist strives to separate the spirit from the body. The most mysterious — and potentially most macabre — auditing process is R2-45. Though a Scientology spokesman says it should not be taken seriously, auditing process R2-45 is a special order directing scientologists to shoot disruptive foes. John McLean, a former Scientologist, said he saw the order while a member and believed that is what it meant. His mother Nan, also a former Scientologist, said she was told ...
Mar 20, 1976
Celebrities testify for Scientology — St. Petersburg Times (Florida)More: Celebrities from 1-B
Jan 8, 1976
Commission decries psychiatric mayhem — Herald-Dispatch (Los Angeles, California)
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