Scientology Critical Information Directory

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Scientology library: “E-Meter”

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anti-psychiatry • auditing • australia • cost • david miscavige • disconnection • e-meter • food and drug administration (fda) • fraud, lie, deceit, misrepresentation • internal revenue service (irs) • l. ron hubbard's credentials • lawsuit • legal • medical claims • membership • operating thetan (ot) • purification rundown ("purif") • rehabilitation project force (rpf) • salary • scientology's "clear" state • sea organization (sea org, so) • security check ("sec check") • suppressive person (sp) • united kingdom (uk) • xenu (operating thetan level 3, ot 3, wall of fire)
Reference materials Secrets of Scientology: The E-Meter
304 matching items found.
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Aug 2, 1968
Father 'alarmed' at rise of the mind cult — Scottish Daily Mail (UK)
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Nigel Benson
Source: Scottish Daily Mail (UK)
A FATHER said yesterday he was 'alarmed' at the rise of Scientology. Mr Thomas Riley, 45, spoke after his daughter Kathleen, 15, was sacked from a job in the publications organisation of the cult in Edinburgh. Kathleen, of Niddrie Marischal Place, Edinburgh, worked for five weeks in the cult's offices which send out pamphlets and leaflets. Last night she told of tests she had been given on an 'E' meter. 'They asked all sorts of questions — they were really odd. ...
Aug 2, 1968
Life in the cult -- by Kathleen and Iain [part of the article missing] — Daily Record (Scotland, UK)
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Ian Metcalfe, Allan Gulland
Source: Daily Record (Scotland, UK)
A BOY and a girl told last night of what happened to them in while they worked at the Scottish headquarters of the Scientologists. THE GIRL, Kathleen Riley, said it was a bit frightening at first when she was given a kind of lie-detector test. THE BOY, lain Thomson, 20, claimed he was told to work for more than 15 hours — then sleep on a wooden floor. Kathleen, of 31 Niddrie Marischal Place, Edinburgh, said she was linked to an ...
Aug 1, 1968
Britain curbs activities of cult of Scientologists // Refuses to admit Americans known to be followers of the semireligious group — New York Times
More: link, select.nytimes.com
Type: Press
Author(s): Anthony Lewis
Source: New York Times
LONDON, July 31—On successive days this week groups of Americans arriving in Britain have been turned back because they are followers of a semi-religious cult known as scientology. The ban on scientologists, as they call themselves, was imposed by the British Government after a study. The Minister of Health, Kenneth Robinson, said in the House of Commons that he was satisfied that "scientology is socially harmful." "Its authoritarian principles and practices are a potential menace to the personality and well-being of ...
Aug 1, 1968
British bar Scientology 'students' // 'Socially harmful,' authorities claim — New York Times
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Anthony Lewis
Source: New York Times
LONDON — On successive days this weeks groups of Americans headed for Britain have been turned back because they are followers of a semi-religious cult known as "Scientology." The Bar on Scientologists, as they call themselves, was imposed by the British government after a study. The Minister of Health, Kenneth Robinson, told the House of Commons he was satisfied that "scientology is socially harmful." He said: "Its authoritarian principles and practices are a potential menace to the personality and well-being of ...
Aug 1, 1968
Ethics officers in cult 'look after staff' — Evening News (Edinburgh)
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Logan Robertson, Nigel Hawkins
Source: Evening News (Edinburgh)
We called at the Thistle Street Lane premises of Scientology last night and interviewed Mrs Judy Ziff, deputy director of Scientology's publications organisation in Edinburgh. The accommodation now occupied there by Scientology comprises former warehouse premises which a have been converted in about five weeks into extensive office accommodation, in which Scientology publications are redistributed to countries in many parts of the world. At 11.30 p.m., when we left, many members of the staff were still at work. We put a ...
Aug 1, 1968
Girl tells 'News' about her job with Scientology // Inspect cult offices, says councillor — Evening News (Edinburgh)
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Logan Robertson, Nigel Hawkins
Source: Evening News (Edinburgh)
An Edinburgh Town Councillor has complained to the public health authorities about the offices in Edinburgh of Scientology — the system of religious philosophy of American origin, which claims to increase a person's ability. Mr I. W. Wintour, Chief Sanitary Inspector for Edinburgh Corporation, said today: "We have received this complaint and are investigating." —– Family find it 'disquieting' Today we give the account of a local girl, Kathleen Riley, of her job as an employee of the organisation Scientology. Councillor ...
Jul 27, 1968
Scientology prophet silent as 'orgs' dig in — The Scotsman (UK)
More: link
Type: Press
Source: The Scotsman (UK)
The main Edinburgh practitioner, it seems, is a Mr Ernest Saren, and at the appointments he produces a personality "graph" showing the questionnaire results on ten "personality dimensions" such as happy-depressed and capable-inhibited. The final column on the capacity analysis chart gives an I.Q. figure. Saren's qualifications for discussing people's problems on the basis of this questionnaire, according to a H.A.P.I. spokesman, are scientology qualifications only. One of those tested in the H.A.P.I. building this week, a 19-year-old apprentice who had ...
Jan 1, 1968
The Shrinking World of L. Ron Hubbard (TV) — Granada Television (UK)
More: transcript
Jul 24, 1967
Electric devices to be destroyed — AMA News
More: link
Type: Press
Source: AMA News
A U.S. District Court judge in Washington, D.C., has ordered the destruction of a collection of electric devices seized by the federal government from the Founding Church of Scientology. A jury ruled earlier that more than 100 "Hubbard E Meters" were misbranded because of labeling claims that they were effective for diagnosis, prevention, detection and elimination of the causes of all mental and nervous disorders (The AMA News, May 15, 1967). Federal attorneys said the only demonstrated effect of the machines ...
Mar 19, 1967
"Ratbagology" is here — Sunday Telegraph (Australia)
Type: Press
Author(s): Leslie Wilson
Source: Sunday Telegraph (Australia)
Scientology - or ratbagology as it has often been dubbed - made a bid to get started in Sydney this week, at a public meeting. The Hubbard Scientology Organisation is the mob of hustlers run out of Victoria last year and described in the British House of Commons two weeks ago as a group "extracting money from the weak and mentally ill." Boss of the show is L. Ron Hubbard - referred to as "L Ron, Mr Hubbard, Our Ron, Old ...
Item contributed by: Zhent (Anonymous)
Dec 11, 1966
Scientology as it is practiced in its Detroit temple — Detroit Free Press
Oct 1, 1966
Scientology and the FDA — Fate Magazine
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Richard E. Saunders
Source: Fate Magazine
Public will pay high price for its apathy — if even government agencies become electronic snoops. MOST AMERICANS take religious freedom for granted. Some may be vaguely aware that it is guaranteed by the first amendment to the Constitution because some of the very early settlers on this continent came in search of just this freedom, but their general attitude is one of indifference. Unfortunately their lofty assumption that churches never are harassed in this country is incorrect. Even more unfortunately, ...
Aug 22, 1966
Is this the happiest man in the world? — Macleans
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Wendy Michener
Source: Macleans
His name is John McMaster. Once he was a mess like the rest of us. Now he's a "clear", one of the saints of a new cult called Scientology — without a single "engram" left to bug him. SOMETHING VERY ODD is going on in Toronto. People are leaving the country, changing their occupations, giving up their children, leaving their husbands, wives, or lovers, changing their whole lives. All in the name of something called Scientology. The whole thing got started ...
Item contributed by: Ron Sharp
Aug 22, 1966
Minister is asked to investigate... The case of the processed woman — Daily Mail (UK)
More: link
Type: Press
Source: Daily Mail (UK)
THE MINISTER of Health has been asked to order an inquiry into Scientology, the pseudo-psychological cult, following the mental breakdown of a woman "student." The woman, who has a ten-year history of mental illness, is now compulsorily detained in hospital under a 28-day order. Her psychiatric background was known to the "highly qualified" Scientologist who recruited her to the cult and gave her forms of psychological "processing." Scientology practitioners and their "qualifications" have no official medical or academic recognition. Among the ...
Item contributed by: Ron Sharp
Mar 20, 1966
One man Britain can do without / He is sending out spies to smear anybody who dares attack his strange cult — The People
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Derek Ive
Source: The People
HE IS SENDING OUT SPIES TO SMEAR ANYBODY WHO DARES ATTACK HIS STRANGE CULT [Photos / Caption: Mr. Hubbard . . . from him, dangerous words.] [Photos / Caption: Mr. Sharpe . . . from him, angry words.] BEHIND the elegant walls of a country mansion in Sussex, a nasty enterprise is being directed by the head of a strange American cult. It is an evil plan which will offend every fair-minded citizen in this country. The man is Lafayette Ron ...
Item contributed by: Ron Sharp
Feb 14, 1966
Attention the Minister of Health: This man is bogus — Daily Mail (UK)
More: link
Oct 16, 1965
Ron's Scientologists — The Bulletin (Australia)
Mar 21, 1964
Have You Ever Been A Boo-Hoo? — Saturday Evening Post
More: saturdayeveningpost.com (2.5 MB), link, scientology-lies.com
Type: Press
Author(s): James Phelan
Source: Saturday Evening Post
Saint Hill Manor is a traditional old English mansion that stands behind a high gateway on a quiet Sussex road some 30 miles south of London. Its size and age—it was built in 1728—give it an impressive but faintly brooding air. Before 1959 it was owned by the Maharaja of Jaipur, and before that by Mrs. Anthony Drexel Biddle. But it is a safe bet that in all its 236 years Saint Hill Manor has never seen anybody quite like its ...
Dec 8, 1963
Australians look into Scientology / Ask if preclear and entheta constitute medical fraud — New York Times
Apr 7, 1963
Scientology claims cure, chases Reds, vexes U.S. — Detroit Free Press
More: link
Type: Press
Author(s): Jack Mann
Source: Detroit Free Press
When the Church of Scientology offered last August to send its E Meter into battle against Communist subversion, President Kennedy didn't even say, "No thanks." Because this religious organization when scorned has political fury of a Hell it doesn't especially believe in, Mr. Kennedy will hear more about his oversight. In the meantime, the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has seized the E Meter. FDA, bureaucratically unconcerned with any spiritua or ideological magic the machine might work, had United States ...
Feb 13, 1963
Your sins and insanity — McGill Daily (Montreal)
Jan 12, 1963
The Miracles Isles — Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Jan 9, 1963
Scientology here worries health men — The Age (Australia)
Jan 7, 1963
'Emotion' Machines Seized — Pacific Stars & Stripes
Jan 1, 1963
U.S. Acts to Stop Use of Cure-All Device — The Evening Star
Jun 30, 1961
Scientology 'con game' says Conry — Humboldt Standard
Type: Press
Source: Humboldt Standard
"This is the greatest 'con' game since the pea went under the walnut," Leonard Conry, district attorney, said yesterday as he filed charges against Frank Clendon Metcalf, already in trouble with the City of Eureka for practicing and instructing courses in Scientology. The city has brought charges against Metcalf for practicing without a business license. The District Attorney's office yesterday filed another action under violation of the state revenue and taxation code. Conry contends that Scientology is a business and not ...
Item contributed by: Ron Sharp
Mar 25, 1960
Have you lived before? Yes say these four — East Grinstead Courier (UK)
Mar 25, 1960
I was a male, born of space parents... — East Grinstead Courier (UK)
Dec 31, 1959
Blow-offs
Mar 27, 1953
'Cure-all' machine like lie detector — Detroit Times
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Other web sites with precious media archives. There is also a downloadable SQL dump of this library (use it as you wish, no need to ask permission.)   In May 2008, Ron Sharp's hard work consisting of over 1260 FrontCite tagged articles were integrated with this library. There are more contributors to this library. This library currently contains over 6000 articles, and more added everyday from historical archives.