Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 of 11:
⇑ Latest
↑ Later
Earlier ↓
Earliest ⇓
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
Jul 1, 1962
Asks Dr. Hubbard — East Grinstead Courier (UK)More: link
Type: Press
Source:
East Grinstead Courier (UK) WEALTHY Dr. Lafayette Ron Hubbard, the "Father of Scientology" is applying to East Grinstead Urban Council for permission to build a 75-room administration centre on grounds remote from his manor house home at Saint Hill. The move follows a confidential request from the council urging him to apply for planning permission to regularise use of the manor for office and research work. At present it is only scheduled for private residential use. In the meantime, some traders in the town have ...
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 ...
Mar 25, 1960
Have you lived before? Yes say these four — East Grinstead Courier (UK)
Sep 16, 1959
Police allege epilepsy cure was claimed — West Australian
Oct 23, 1957
'Diploma' witness won't talk — Mirror News (Los Angeles, CA)More: link
Type: Press
Source:
Mirror News (Los Angeles, CA) Joseph Hough, president of Fremont College and of Sequoia University on Melrose Ave., refused today to tell Assembly "diploma mill" investigators anything about his activities. Hough stood on the Fifth Amendment 22 times today and the First Amendment once as he refused to answer questions by Jim Loebl, counsel for the subcommittee. He also refused to tell if he had purchased a medical degree from the Free University of Mexico (Universidad de Libre Mexicana) in 1938. Another witness told of buying ...
Nov 16, 1955
Minister's trial reset here — Republic (Phoenix, AZ)More: link
Type: Press
Source:
Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Trial of Edd Clark, 56, a minister in the Church of American Science, yesterday was reset for Jan. 3 by Superior Judge Fred J. Hyder. Clark, who resides at 1811 N. First Ave., was scheduled to go on trial yesterday on a charge of practicing medicine without a license. Harry A. Stewart Jr., attorney for Clark, advised Judge Hyder he had been ill several weeks and had been unable to properly prepare his client's defense. Charles C. Stidham, chief deputy criminal ...
Sep 21, 1955
Clark trial set Nov. 16 — Republic (Phoenix, AZ)More: link
Type: Press
Source:
Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Edd Clark, 56, a minister in the Church of American Science, will go on trial Nov. 16 in superior court on a charge of practicing medicine without a license. Clark, 1811 N. First Ave., appeared yesterday before Superior Judge Fred L. Hyder and pleaded innocent to the charge. He was arrested early this month after a police woman and a secretary in the office of County Attorney William P. Mahoney Jr., charged they paid him $55 for treatment of non-existent ailments. ...
Sep 21, 1955
Medicine case plea is filed More: link
Type: Press
Edd Clark, 56, of 1811 N. First. Ave., a minister in the Church of American Science, pleaded innocent today to charges of practicing medicine without a license. SUPERIOR COURT Judge Fred J. Hyder set trial for Nov. 16. Harry Stewart, attorney for Clark, was granted 20 days to file motions challenging the information. He indicated he will challenge the case as an invasion of the province of religion, which is protected by the U.S. Constitution. Stewart said Clark is a minister ...
Sep 14, 1955
Defendant to contend interviews lawful — Republic (Phoenix, AZ)
Sep 13, 1955
Court action is planned in Clark case — Gazette (Phoenix, AZ)
Sep 8, 1955
Practitioner's hearing is set — Gazette (Phoenix, AZ)More: link
Type: Press
Source:
Gazette (Phoenix, AZ) Preliminary hearing for a practitioner of the Church of Scientology who has been accused of practicing medicine without a license has been set for 10 a.m. tomorrow. Edd Clark, 56, of 1811 N. First Ave. is accused in a complaint of accepting money from a police woman and a secretary for the county attorney's office for treating nonexistent ailments the women complained at to him.
Sep 5, 1955
Medicine charge filed; bond given — Gazette (Phoenix, AZ)More: link
Type: Press
Source:
Gazette (Phoenix, AZ) A man accused here of practicing medicine without a license, was free today on $1,000 bond after being named in a complaint filed in Northwest Phoenix Precinct Court. He is Edd Clark, 56, of 1811 N. First Ave., who allegedly accepted payments totaling $55 from a police woman and a secretary from the county attorney's office. Romona Wacker, the police woman, and Eythel Deuel, the secretary, said they made the payments to Clark after accepting his advice on how to cure ...
Sep 4, 1955
Scientology practitioner // Phoenix man jailed on medicine charge — Republic (Phoenix, AZ)More: link
Type: Press
Author(s):
Jack Karie Source:
Republic (Phoenix, AZ) A practitioner of the Church of Scientology was jailed here yesterday on a charge of practicing medicine without a license. Edd Clark, 56, of 1811 N. First Ave., was named in a five-count complaint filed before Justice of the Peace Stanley Kimball. Clark was released after making $1,000 bond. County Attorney William P. Mahoney Jr. said Clark's arrest culminated a six-month investigation made by his office, city police, and sheriff's deputies. Clark, who claims to be nearly blind, readily admitted having ...
Apr 30, 1953
Court bars 2 Dianetics practitioners — Detroit Free PressMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
Detroit Free Press The proprietors of a dianetics school today were on two-year probation, with court orders to stay out of business or go to prison. They are Earl Cunard, 8901 Dailey court, and Mrs. Refa Postel, 16345 Oakfield. Their so-called Detroit Dianetics and Scientology School was operated in Cunard's home until police raided it last March 25. In Recorder's Court yesterday, both pleaded guilty to operating a trade school without a license. DROP OTHER CHARGES More serious charges of conspiracy and practicing medicine ...
Apr 10, 1953
Dianetics pair pleads innocent // Denies practicing medicine illegally — Detroit Free PressMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
Detroit Free Press Two operators of the Detroit School of Dianetics and Scentology pleaded innocent Thursday to charges which grew from a police raid March 25. They were Mrs. Refa Postel, 45, of 16545 Oakfield, and Earl Cunard, 26, of 8901 Dailey Court, where the school is located. They were accused of conspiring to practice medicine without a license and conspiracy to operate a private trade school without a license. * * * DIANETICS is a mental health pastime which has been called "poor ...
Apr 10, 1953
Dianetics to get test in court — Detroit NewsMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
Detroit News [Picture / Caption: DIANETICS IN COURT—Earl M. Cunard and Mrs. Refa Postel, operator of a dianatics school, pleaded innocent when arraigned on charges of conspiracy to practice medicine without a license and running an unlicensed vocational school—News Photo.] THE SO-CALLED "science" of dianetics will be explored in Recorder's Court April 21. That is the date set by Judge George Murphy for examination of charges against Earl Cunard and Mrs. Refa Postel, whose Detroit Dianetics and Scientology School, 8901 Dailey court, was ...
Mar 27, 1953
'Cure-all' machine like lie detector — Detroit Times
Mar 27, 1953
Arrest gives pair fine new engrams — Detroit Free Press
Mar 27, 1953
Policeman forfeits job for Dianetics — Detroit News
Mar 26, 1953
Police hold 2 in raid on 'Dianetics School' — Detroit News
Jan 1, 1952
Fads & Fallacies In the Name of Science - Chapter 22: Dianetics
Aug 1, 1951
Boiled Engrams — American Mercury
Type: Press
Author(s):
Willard Beecher ,
Calder Willingham Source:
American Mercury In May of last year, from the modest little town of Elizabeth, New Jersey, came a voice that promised complete salvation for mankind on this earth. That in itself is nothing new, but this particular voice was a powerful roar, worth at least a footnote in any account of our troubled age. It was the voice of a man by the name of L. Ron Hubbard. Until this moment, Hubbard had been known as a writer of science fiction fantasies. But ...
Aug 1, 1951
Dianetics // A critical appraisal of a best-selling book that originated in the realm of science-fiction and became the basis for a new cult — Consumer Reports
Type: Press
Source:
Consumer Reports Dianetics is the title of a book (and a "science") which, for many months, held its place as a best seller in the non-fiction field. According to its originator and to thousands of dianetics adherents, it is "the new Modern Science of Mental Health." Dianetic research institutes have been founded in many cities, with the dual purpose of studying mental and psychosomatic ills in the light of dianetic theories, and of training potential practitioners or "auditors" to treat sick people by ...
Apr 3, 1951
Dianetics group to quit city because "we're not wanted" — Elizabeth Daily JournalMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
Elizabeth Daily Journal The Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation, 275 Morris Avenue, target of a suit accusing it of operating a medical school without a license, is moving its national headquarters out of Elizabeth because it has no desire to remain where it is not wanted. Transfer of the national headquarters to Wichita, Kan., effective April 15 was announced yesterday by the foundation. A spokesman indicated the principal reason is the pending District Court suit. Charles Leonard, in charge of press relations for the foundation, ...
Apr 1, 1951
Dianetics. L Ron Hubbard, 452 pages. Hermitage House, New York, 1950, $4.00 [review] — American Journal of Digestive DiseasesMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
American Journal of Digestive Diseases DIANETICS. L. Ron Hubbard, 452 pages. Hermitage House, New York, 1950, $4.-00. Because a considerable mass of non-medical people have been puzzled by this book, and some of them seek the opinion of physicians with respect to its value, it might be an advantage if the physician could have it appraised without being forced to read it. This review, made for that purpose, takes the attitude that Hubbard has not produced any scientific proof to support his theories, and consequently "dianetics ...
Mar 30, 1951
Zilboorg denounces 'Dianetics' at forum — New York TimesMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
New York Times The practice of "dianetics," a theory for the treatment of psychosomatic and other ills, was attacked as "dangerous" last night by Dr. Gregory Zilboorg, psychiatrist, at a meeting held under the auspices of the Physicians' Forum at the New York Academy of Medicine, 2 East 103d Street. The attack on "dianetics," the theories of which are expounded in a best-selling book of that name by L. Ron Hubbard, was said by a spokesman for the Physicians' Forum to have been the ...
Mar 28, 1951
Dianetics charges to be amplified — Elizabeth Daily JournalMore: link
Type: Press
Source:
Elizabeth Daily Journal The State Board of Medical Examiners, which has filed a District Court suit against the Hubbard Dianetics Research Foundation, 275 Morris Avenue, yesterday promised to give the foundation more specific details in its charge that the Elizabeth organization is conducting a medical school contrary to the law. The trial date is set for May 15. The case came before District Court Judge Milton A. Feller on a motion by George Meier, of Bloomfield, attorney for the Hubbard Foundation. Under court rules, ...
Page 10 of 11 :
⇑ Latest
↑ Later
Earlier ↓
Earliest ⇓
Permalink