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OEC 4
TO THE READER:

   Scientology is a religious  philosophy  containing  pastoral  counseling
procedures intended to assist an individual to  gain  greater  knowledge  of
self. The Mission of the Church of Scientology is a simple one-to  help  the
individual a~heive greater self-confidence and personal  integrity,  thereby
enabling him to really trust and respect himself and  his  fellow  man.  The
attainment  of  the  benefits  and  goals  of  Scientology   requires   each
individual's positive participation, as only through his own efforts can  he
achieve these.

   This is part of the religious literature and works  of  the  Founder  of
Scientology, L. Ron Hubbard. It is presented to the reader as  part  of  the
record of his personal research into Life, and should be construed  only  as
a written report- of such research and not as a statement of claims made  by
the Church or the author.

   Scientology and its sub-study, Dianetics, as practiced  by  the  Church,
address only the spiritual side of Man. Although  the  Church,  as  are  all
churches, is free to engage in  spiritual  healing,  it  does  not,  as  its
primary goal is increased knowledge and  personal  integrity  for  all.  For
this reason, the Church does not  wish  to  accept  individuals  who  desire
treatment of physical illness or insanity, but  refers  these  to  qualified
specialists in other organizations who deal in these matters.

   The Hubbard Electrometer is a religious  artifact  used  in  the  Church
confessional. It, in itself, does nothing, and is used  by  Ministers  only,
to assist parishioners in locating areas of spiritual distress or travail.

   We hope the reading of this book is only the first stage of  a  personal
voyage  of  discovery  into  the  positive   and   effective   religion   of
Scientology~

                     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                       Church of Scientology

This book belongs to
Date  I

                          r177
                          -1 he
                           Organization Exeputive
                                   Course

AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENTOLOGY POLICY

                                     by
                               L. Ron Hubbard

FOUNDER OF DIANETICS AND SCIENTOLOGY

                                  TECHNICAL
                                  DIVISION

PUBLICATIONS ORGANIZATION

                                Published by
                                     the
                     CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY OF CALIFORNIA
                          PUBLICATIONS ORGANIZATION

                           2723 West Temple Street
                                 Los Angeles
                              California 90026
                                   U.S.A.

The Church of Scientology is a Non-Profit Organization.

Dianetics@ and Scientology@ are Registered Names.

                   Copyright@ 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974
         1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959
         1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969
                              by L. Ron Hubbard
                             ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Scientology is an Applied Religious Philosophy

                   No part of this book may be reproduced
                 without permission of the copyright owner.

                          First U.S. Printing 1974
                          Second U.S. Printing 1976

                       Complete Set ISBN 0-88404-033-X
                         Volume 4 ISBN 0-88404-029-1

         The E-Meter is not intended or effective for the diagnosis,
                   treatment or prevention of any disease.

       Dianetics and Scientology are the trademarks of L. Ron Hubbard
                     in respect of his published works.

Printed in the United States of America by Kingsport Press, Inc.

CONTENTS

                          TECHNICAL

                           DIVISION 4

            (A study of this Division should include the section
                       on Fast Flow in OEC Volume 5.)

      1965  Technical Division 4 Org Board Outline 1
      2 Nov. 1967      Tech Division, Departments of Tech Services,
            Training and Processing     2
      27 Nov. 1959     Key to the Organizational Chart of the Founding
Church of
            Scientology of Washington DC (excerpt: Technical Division)    4
      14 Feb. 1961     The Pattern of a Central Organization
            (excerpt: Technical Division)    5
      20 Nov. 1965     The Promotional Actions of an Organization
            (excerpt: Technical Division 4)  7
      30 Sept. 1965    Statistics for Divisions (excerpt: Tech Division 4)
8
      12 Oct. 1966     OIC Graphs-Clearing and OT Course
            Div IV Statistics, LRH Comm Statistic  9
27 Apr. 1967     Tech Division Statistic (amendment to 30 Sept. 1965)
10
4 Oct. 1967 Auditor and Org Individual Stats 10
31 Mar. 1969     Completions Statistic, Triple Grades, Tech & Qual
Divisions   11
8 Apr. 1969 Cancellation of HCO P/L 31 March 1969  11
22 Sept. 1969    HGC Statistic (amends 30 Sept. 1965 & 31 Mar. 1969)
12
17 June 1970     OIC Change-Cable Change (amends 30 Sept. 1965)     Vol. 1-
359
14 Oct. 1970     Division IV Org Board, Ideal Scenes and Stats      13
5 Feb. 1971 Org Gross Divisional Statistics Revised (excerpt: Tech Division
4)    20
26 Sept. 1956    Flow Line for Personnel (HCOB)    20
1 Apr. 1957 Technical and Administrative Divisions 21
7 May 1957  Assignment of Auditors, Rooms, Students      22
1 June 1957 Rights of the Directors of Training & Processing, Staff
Auditors
      & Instructors regarding Preclears & Students (HCO Info Bull.) 23
11 July 1957     Tech Staff Certificate Validation (Assoc See Directive)
24
19 June 1958     Freeloaders Vol. 1-140
6 Oct. 1958 Who can be Processed-Who can be Trained      Vol. 1-510
14 Nov. 1960     Sign Up of Students & Pcs-Acceptance by D/P & DIT
(excerpt)   24
26 May 1961 A Message to the Executive Secretaries and All Org Staff
      Quality Counts (reissued 21 June 1967) 25
23 Oct. 1961     E-Meters to be Approved     Vol. 2-228
22 Jan. 1962     Crash Programme  26
30 Jan. 1962     Technical Director and Administrator    27
18 Feb. 1962     Technical Director Basic Hat      see-28
26 Mar. 1962     Staff Regulation-Relations with Pes and Students   27
6 Apr. 1962 Technical Director Basic Hat (cancels 18 Feb. 1962)     28
21 Nov. 1962     Re-issue of Materials  Vol 1-44, Vol 2-92
4 Apr. 1963 District Offices Technical Reports to HCO WW 29
4 Apr. 1963 Important Changes in Technical Reports to HCO WW  29
4 Apr. 1963 HCO WW Post Disbanded-HCO Technical Secretary WW  35
11 Apr. 1963     Technical Director's Weekly Reports     35
19 Apr. 1963     Handling Org Technical Queries    36
3 July 1963 Change of Routing: Org Technical Reports     36
4 Oct. 1963 Technical Council     37
10 Feb. 1964     Enrolment on Self Determinism (reissued 23 June. 1967)
37
24 Feb. 1964     Technical Supervision Changes     38
20 Mar. 1964     Technical Reports      39
12 Aug. 1964     Policy on Technical Information   39
 23 Sept. 1964    Auditing and Training Policies (excerpt)     40
 21 Jan. 1965     Vital Data on Promotion (revised 5 Apr. 1965)     Vol 2- 4
 7 Feb. 1965      Keeping Scientology Working (reissued 15 June 1970, 28
 Jan. 1973) 44
 14 Feb. 1965     Safeguarding Technology (reissued 7 June 1967)    49

                                V

28 Feb. 1965     Deliver     51
5 Apr. 1965 Handling the Suppressive Person-The Basis of Insanity   53
5 Apr. 1965 The No-Gain-Case Student    61
19 Apr. 1965     Training and Processing. Regulations-Technical Discipline
      Students' Questions    65
28 Apr. 1965     Technical Personnel    67
29 Apr. 1965     Ethics-Review (excerpt)     68
29 Apr. 1965     Bonuses     Vol 3-313
8     May   1965 Results of HCO Technical Investigation  Vol 1-405
1     July  1965 Ethics Chits     69
1     July  1965 Comm Cycle Additives   VoL 1-426
5     July  1965 Assignment of Tech Personnel      70
7     July  1965 Releases, Policy on    71
11 July 1965     Assignment of Tech Personnel (amends & cancels 5 July
1965) 70
13 July 1965     Testing     73
26 July 1965     Release Declaration Restrictions-Healing Amendments
74
1 Sept. 1965     Some Tech Div Policies 75
24 Sept. 1965    Student and Pe Reports 77
23 Nov. 1965     Mark V and Listing E-Meters Vol. 2-234
28 Dec. 1965     E-Meters Allowed 77
1 Feb. 1966 HGC Cure-Interne Training and Staff Auditors 78
1 Feb. 1966 Staff Auditor and Supervisor Procurement     80
10 Feb. 1966     Tech Recovery    81
10 Feb. 1966     Bonuses for Service Delivery      Vol 3-204
7 Mar. 1966 HGC Cure (Continued)  84
7 Mar. 1966 Star Rates on Tech and Qual Staff      85
8 Mar. 1966 High Crime 86
9 May 1966  Bonuses Adjusted (correction to 10 Feb. 1966)     VoL 3-206
21 July 1966     Tech vs Qual     88
22 Aug. 1966     Bonuses Adjusted (amendment & addition to 9 May 1966) Vol
3-207
17 Oct. 1966     Bonuses     Vol 3-209
21 Nov. 1966 Addendum to HCO Pol Ltr of
             17 October 1966, "Bonuses" Vol. 3-211
7 June 1967 Safeguarding Technology (reissue of 14 Feb. 1965) 49
21 June 1967     A Message to the Executive Secretaries and All Org Staff
      Quality Counts (reissue of 26 May 1961)      25
23 June 1967     Enrolment on Self Determinism (reissue of 10 Feb. 1964)
37
11 Aug. 1967     Second Dynamic Rules   89
20 Sept. 1967    Confidential Data      90
4 Oct. 1967 Auditor and Org Individual Stats 10
2 Nov. 1967 Tech Division, Departments of Tech Services,
      Training and Processing     2
20 Nov. 1967     Out Tech    90
27 Nov. 1967     Bonuses Adjusted (addition to 17 Oct. 1966,
      cancels 22 Aug. 1966)  Vol. 3-211
31 May 1968 Scientology Technology      91
31 May 1968 Auditors   VOL 0- 42
24 Aug. 1968     Dissemination    91
28 Oct. 1968     Technical Reports (cancels 20 Mar. 1964)     92
21 Nov. 1968     Senior Policy    92
20 Jan. 1969     A Vital Target-Trained Auditor Programme (LRH ED 81 INT)
93
29 Jan. 1969     Maintaining Standard Tech   95
5 Feb. 1969 Press Policy-Code of a Scientologist   Vol. 0- 25
20 Oct. 1969     Technical Divisions-Promotion and Responsibility   96
15 Nov. 1969     Rights and Duties      98
23 Feb. 1970     Ethics-Quality of Service   100
30 May 1970 Cutatives  102
3 June 1970 Orders to Divisions for Immediate Compliance
             (LRH ED 107 INT) (excerpt: Division IV)     104
15 June 1970     Keeping Scientology Working (reissue of 7 Feb. 1965)
see- 44
17 June 1970     Technical Degrades     106
14 Oct. 1970     Division IV Org Board, Ideal Scenes and Stats      13

                                Vi

                      THE AUDITOR'S CODE

20 Nov. 1950     Instruction Protocol-Official (reissued 2 Sept. 1970)
108
14 Oct. 1968     The Auditor's Code AD 18    111
2 Nov. 1968 Auditor's Code-Add to Pol Ltr 14 October AD 18    see-112
5 May 1969  Auditor's Code and Dianetics     234
2 Sept. 1970     Instruction Protocol-Official (reissue of 20 Nov. 1950)
108

               POLICIES ON "SOURCES OF TROUBLE"

6 Oct. 1958 Who can be Processed-Who can be Trained      Vol I-Slo
30 Aug. 1960     Training Restrictions  Vol. 1-512
27 Oct. 1964     Policies on Physical Healing, Insanity
      and "Froublesome Sources"   Vol. I-S13
5 Nov. 1964 Corrections to HCO Policy Letters      Vol. 1-516
10 Feb. 1964     Enrolment on Self Determinism (reissued 23 June 1967)
Vol. 1-516
27 Oct. 1964     Policies on Physical Healing, Insanity and Potential
      Trouble Sources (reissued 23 June 1967)      Vol. 1-517
      7 Apr. 1965      Healing Policy in Field     Vol. 1-521
      26 July 1965     Release Declaration Restrictions-Healing Amendments
Vol. 1-522
      21 Feb. 1969     Cancellation of Pol Ltr of November 5, 1964  Vol, 1-
523
      13 Mar. 1969     Addition to HCO Pol Ltr of 23 June 1967      Vol. 1-
523
      6 Apr. 1969      Dianetics  Vol. 1-524
      7 May 1969 Policies on "Sources of Trouble"  Vol 1-S25
12 June 1969     Dianetic Registration  VoL 1-527
16 May 1970 Institutional and Shock Cases, Petitions from     Vol 1-529

                               DEPARTMENT TEN
                      DEPARTMENT OF TECHNICAL SERVICES
                           Student Administration
                             HGC Administration

16 Apr. 1970     Tech Services    113
5 Sept. 1957     Testing     115
23 Nov. 1958     Scientometric Testing (See ED)    115
30 Apr. 1959     Additional Staff Auditors   116
9 June 1959 Student Files    116
19 Nov. 1960     Pc Scheduling    117
30 Jan. 1961     Case Files  117
24 Mar. 1961     HGC Admin Partial Hat-Staff Auditor Assignment     118
12 Dec. 1961     Training Activities    408
25 Apr. 1962     Hat of Course Administrator see-121
21 Aug. 1962     Body Router Hat  120
22 Apr. 1963     Hat of Course Administrator 121
9 May 1965  Auditing Fees-Preferential Treatment of Preclears
      Scale of Preference    122
4 July 1965 Pc Routing-Review Code      603
19 July 1965     Release Checks, Procedure for     574
12 Sept. 1965    E-Meters and Books for Academy Students 140
3 Nov. 1965 Pe Scheduling    124
I Feb. 1966 HGC Cure-Interne Training and Staff Auditors 78
29 June 1966     Keep Academy Check Sheets Up-to-Date    124
22 Sept. 1967    Solo Auditing Folders  475
11 May 1969 Standard Admin for Training and Tech Services     125
16 May 1969 Course Administration 209
29 May 1969 Dianetic Certificates 126
11 June 1969     Materials, Scarcity of (HCOB)     126
23 July 1969     Auditor Assignment Policies 127
29 July 1969     Course Administration Roll Book   128
8 Nov. 1969 Tech Services (FO 2175 reissued as HCO P/L 16 Apr. 1970)
113
16 Apr. 1970     Tech Services    113

                               vii

                      DEPARTMENT ELEVEN
                    DEPARTMENT OF TRAINING

                     DIRECTOR OF TRAINING

20 Nov.     1950 Instruction Protocol-Official (reissued 2 Sept. 1970)
108
10 Apr.     1957 Student Intensives     219
7 May 1957  Assignment of Auditors, Rooms, Students      22
13 May      1957 Financial Enrollment Procedure    129
24 May      1957 Stable Data for Instructors (HCOB-)     146
1 June 1957 Rights of the Directors of Training & Processing, Staff
Auditors
             & Instructors regarding Preclears & Students (HCO Info Bull.)
             23
25 Jan. 1958     Inept Students   148
6 May 1958  Modified Procedure for Signing Up Prospective
      Students & Pcs (Admin Directive)  130
9 May 1958  Who Should Take Which Class (HCOB)     130
26 Aug. 1959     Promotional Functions of the Academy (excerpt)     131
16 Oct. 1959     Handling Students' and Auditors' Reports (HCOB)    131
23 Oct. 1959     Academy Training 132
4 May 1960  Acceptance for ACC and Academy Courses 281
7 July 1960 Training Applicants   132
30 Aug. 1960     Training Restrictions  133
14 Nov. 1960     Sign Up of Students & Pes-Acceptance by D/P & D/T
(excerpt)   24
31 Jan. 1961     Academy Meters   134
14 Feb. 1961 The Pattern of a Central Organization
      (excerpt: The Academy of Scientology)  5
2 Nov. 1961 Training Quality (reissued 3 Mar. 1967)      134
8 Dec. 1961 Director of Training-Weekly Report Form      135
13 Dec. 1961     Extension Course Completion 136
14 May 1962 Training Sections     311
16 May 1962 HPA1HCA Training 136
19 Oct. 1962     Preparation of HPA/HCA Certificates     137
4 Apr. 1963 Director of Training Weekly Student Interviews    137
10 May 1963 Student Rates for HGC Auditing in SA Orgs    Vol. 3-231
8 Aug. 1963 "Plants" in Academies- Introduction of "Form" 5B  138
25 Sept. 1963    Right to Refuse HPA/HCA Student Application  139
18 Dec. 1964     Re: OIC Data     139
29 Apr. 1965     Ethics-Review (excerpt)     68
12 Sept. 1965    E-Meters and Books for Academy Students 140
1 Feb. 1966 Staff Auditor and Supervisor Procurement     80
29 June 1966     Keep Academy Check Sheets Up-to-Date    124
5 Oct. 1966 Students Terminating- Leave of Absence-Blown Students   469
3 Mar. 1967 Training Quality (reissue of 2 Nov. 1961)    134

                      COURSE SUPERVISION

Circa 1957  The Supervisor's Code (revised 15 Sept. 1967)     141
2 Dec.      1962 Supervisor's Stable Data (reissued as amended 7 Sept.
1967) 143
20 Nov.     1950 Instruction Protocol-Official (reissued 2 Sept. 1970)
108
5 Mar.      1957 Student Reports (HCOB) 145
17 May      1957 Definitions (HCO TB)   145
24 May      1957 Stable Data for Instructors (HCOB)      146
15 July     1957 Our First Lesson in Training (HCO TB)   147
4 Sept. 1957     Stable Data for Instructors (HCOB)      147
25 Jan. 1958     Inept Students   148
2 Apr. 1958 ARC in Comm Course (HCOB)   149
23 Apr. 1958     Vital Training Data for Training Hats and Registrar (HCOB)
149
29 Sept. 1958    Vital Training Data (HCOB)  ISO
4 May 19S9  How to Write a Curriculum (HCOB) 151
26 Aug. 1959     Promotional Functions of the Academy (excerpt)     131
16 Oct. 1959     Handling Students' and Auditors' Reports (HCOB)    131
24 Feb. 1960     ACC Hats    351

31 Jan. 1961     Academy Meters   134
14 Feb. 1961     The Pattern of a Central Organization
      (excerpt: The Academy of ScientOlOgY)  5
17 Apr. 1961     Training, Professional-New Policy 295
7 June 1961 Academy Schedule, Clarification of (HCOB)    297
2 Nov. 1961 Training Quality (reissued 3 Mar. 1967)      134
22 Nov. 1961     Training Course Rules and Regulations   152
8 Dec. 1961 Instructore Weekly Report Form   154
8 Dec. 1961 Students' Weekly Reports to Ron
      (amended & reissued 23 Oct. 1967) 155
20 Dec. 1961     Student E-Metering     307
10 Jan. 1962     HCO Standing Order No, 5-Students
      (reissued as amended 21 June 1967)     156
4 Apr. 1962 Training Course Regulations (Added)    157
16 Apr. 1962     Regulations, Academies and Courses      157
9 May 1962  Addition to Students' Weekly Report (adds to 8 Dec. 1961)
158
14 May 1962 Training Sections     311
21 May 1962 Tape Examinations     158
24 May 1962 Training-Session Cancellation-Auditing Section    318
26 May 1962 Training Drills Must Be Correct  159
9 July 1962 Special Briefing Course     404
12 July 1962     The British Mark IV E-Meter VoL 2-231
2 Aug. 1962 Training Aids    160
17 Sept. 1962    An Arrangement of the Academy     327
21 Oct. 1962     Auditing Supervisor and Auditing Instructors, Duties of
335
2 Dec. 1962 Instructors' Stable Data    161
14 Feb. 1963     How to Examine-Theory Examinations      163
15 Mar. 1963     Check Sheet Rating System   164
15 May 1963 Instructor Hats  164
18 Sept. 1963    Scientology Five-Scientology Instructors     165
24 Sept. 1963    Course Rules and Regulations      166
25 Sept. 1963    Hats of Student Instructors for SHSBC  168
27 Sept. 1963    Training Technology-Pink Sheets   171
23 Oct. 1963     Students'Weekly Reports to Ron    see-155
28 Oct. 1963     Student ARC Breaks    173
20 Feb. 1964     Regulations-Course (excerpt)      436
10 Apr. 1964     Scientology Courses (reissued as amended 23 June 1967)
174
12 May 1964      Theory Testing-Expiration Dates   175
25 May 1964      Instructor's Conference Report Form    444
11 June 1964     New Students Data     445
16 Sept. 1964    Understanding and Tape Lectures (reissued 21 July 1967)
176
24 Sept. 1964    Instruction & Examination: Raising the Standard of 177
4 Oct. 1964      Theory Check-Out Data (reissued 21 May 1967)
      (modifies 24 Sept. 1964)    181
28 Feb. 1965     Course Check Outs-Twin-Checking   183
16 Mar. 1965     Further Material on Study-Examinations
      (reissued 13 Sept. 1967)    184
 5 Apr. 1965      Handling the Suppressive Person-The Basis of Insanity   53
 5 Apr. 1965      The No-Gain-Case Student    61
 16 Apr. 1965     The "Hidden Data Line"      186
 16 Apr. 1965     Drills, Allowed  188
 19 Apr. 1965 Training and Processing Regulations
              Technical Discipline-Studente Questions    65
 5 May 1965 Supervisors      190
 16 May 1965      Important Explanation-Auditing Restrictions  221
 16 May 1965      Academy Courses-General Remarks-Zero Courses
      Hubbard Recognized Scientologist  347
 17 May 1965      Academy Processing    224
 17 May 1965      Urgent-CCHs (cancels 15 May 1962)      191
 24 May 1965      Student Guide to Acceptable Behaviour  458
 23 Aug. 1965     Deletion of TR 5 191
 26 Aug. 1965     Scientology Training-Twin Checkouts    192

                                ix

21 Sept. 1965    E-Meter Drills   195
15 Dec. 1965     Students Guide to Acceptable Behaviour  196
10 Feb. 1966     Check Sheets, Course   466
29 June 1966     Keep Academy Check Sheets Up-to-Date    124
12 Oct. 1966     Examinations     198
29 Dec. 1966     Routing and Handling of SHSBC, Dianetic,
      Solo V1 and Academy Students      198
21 May 1967 Theory Check-Out Data (reissue of 4 Oct. 1964)
      (modifies 24 Sept. 1964)    181
21 June 1967     HCO Standing Order No. 5-Students
      (reissue& amendment of 10 Jan. 1962)   156
23 June 1967     Scientology Courses (reissue & amendment of 10 Apr. 1964)
174
21 July 1967     Understanding and Tape Lectures (reissue of 16 Sept. 1964)
176
11 Aug. 1967     Second Dynamic Rules   89
7 Sept. 1967     Supervisor's Stable Data (reissue & amendment of 2 Dec.
1962) 143
13 Sept. 1967    Further Material on Study-Examinations
      (reissue of 16 Mar. 1965)   184
15 Sept. 1967    The Supervisor's Code  141
18 Sept. 1967    Study-Complexity and Confronting  199
18 Oct. 1967     Academy Check Sheets-Supervisor Conditions   201
23 Oct. 1967     Students'Weekly Reports to Ron
      (reissue & amendment of 8 Dec. 1961)   see-155
22 Nov. 1967     Out Tech (see also revised reissue 18 July 1970, page 215)
Vol. 1-472
8 Mar. 1968 Checksheets      202
19 Oct. 1968     Course Completion-Student Indicators    202
24 Oct. 1968     Supervisor Know-How-Running the Class   203
24 Oct. 1968     Supervisor Know-How-Handling the Student     204
24 Oct. 1968     Supervisor Know-How-R Factor to Students     205
24 Oct. 1968     Supervisor Know-How-Tips in Handling Students      206
7     May   1969 Students Guide to Acceptable Behaviour  235
8     May   1969 How to Teach a Course  207
8     May   1969 Enturbulative Students 208
8     May   1969 Fast Flow by Attestation    237
8     May   1969 Teaching the Dianotics Course (HCOB)    238
14 May      1969 Star Rate Checkouts on Standard Dianetics Course   see-262
14 May      1969 How to do a Starrate Checkout     240
16 May      1969 Course Administration  209
24 May      1969 Progress Board   249
24 May 1969 Dianetics Course Supervision and Administration
             Supervisor Checkouts 252
29 May 1969 Dianetic Certificates 126
1 June 1969 Dianetics Training    253
3 June 1969 Dianetic Course Pricing     VoL 3-236
3 June 1969 Legal Statement concerning Dianetics & Medical Practice Laws
254
7 June 1969 Dianetics-Points Which Go Out and Wreck Pcs (HCOB)      255
11 June 1969     Materials, Scarcity of (HCOB)     126
12 June     1969 Dianetic Registration  257
24 June     1969 Dianetics-Pre-Auditing Examination      259
11 July     1969 Supervision (HCOB)     260
22 July     1969 Fast Flow Training (cancels 28 Jan. 1969)    210
27 July     1969 What is a Checksheet   211
29 July     1969 Course Administration- Roll Book  128
30 July     1969 Student Progress Board (cancels 24 May 69)   212
6 Dec.      1969 Tech Retreads and Retraining      see-216
8 June 1970 Student Auditing (cancels 29 Oct. 1965, 23 May 1969 11,
      17 May 1965 & 17 May 1965 11)     227
18 July 1970     Out Tech (revised reissue of 22 Nov. 1967)   215
22 July 1970     Tech Retreads and Retraining (amends 6 Dec. 1969)  216
16 Mar. 1971     What is a Course?      217
26 Jan. 1972     What is a Course? (amends 16 Mar. 197 1)     see-218

         (See Volume 6 for information on tape and film presentation)

                               X

                       STUDENT AUDITING

20 Nov. 1950     Instruction Protocol-Official (reissued 2 Sept. 1970)
108
10 Apr. 1957     Student Intensives     219
3 May 1957  Training-What it is Today-How we tell People about it (HCOB)
268
9 May 1957  Student Intensives    see-219
25 Jan. 1958     Inept Students   148
29 Oct. 1959     Processing of Academy Students    219
15 Nov. 1960     Staff Certificate Requirements    220
17 Jan. 1962     Auditor Assignment     220
7 Feb. 1962 Restriction on Saint Hill Area (amends 20 Dec. 1960)    409
24 May 1962 Training-Session Cancellation-Auditing Section    318
17 Sept. 1962    An Arrangement of the Academy     327
20 Sept. 1962    Co-Audit Unit    413
21 Oct. 1962     Auditing Supervisor and Auditing Instructors, Duties of
335
28 Oct. 1962     Z Unit-Case Review     417
28 Oct. 1962     Co-Audit Suspended     418
11 Feb. 1963     Auditing Regulations   426
13 Feb. 1963     V Unit      427
29 May. 1963     Clear Requirement      429
18 June 1963     Students Blowing 432
      2 Apr. 1965      Star-Rate Checkouts for Process (modification of 27
Feb. 1965)  453
      16 May 1965      Important Explanation-Auditing Restrictions  221
      17 May 1965      Free Scientology Centre     222
      17 May 1965      Academy Processing    224
      22 Oct. 1965     Requirements for Student Classification      225
      29 Oct. 1965     Student Auditing of Preclears     226
      30 Dec. 1966     What the SHSBC Student Needs to Know about
Foundation  471
      1 Feb. 1967      Student Auditing of Preclears (replaces 29 Oct.
1965) 226
24 Feb. 1968 Fast Flow for SHSBC Students' Preclears
              (amends 30 Dec. 1966)     472
23 Apr. 1968     Parent or Guardian Assent Forms   VoL 2-283
23 May 1969 Parent or Guardian Assent Forms  Vol. 2-289
23 May 1969 Dianetics Course Student Auditing      251
8 June 1970      Student Auditing (cancels 29 Oct. 1965, 23 May 1969 11,
      17 May 1965 & 17 May 1965 11)    227

                   DIANETIC AUDITOR'S COURSE

3 Apr. 1966 Dianetic Auditor's Course   228
2 Aug. 1966 Dianetic Auditing     229
22 Sept. 1967    Dianetic Auditor's Course Auditing Policy    230
23 Feb. 1968     Dianetic Auditor's Course Auditing Policy    231
25 Jan. 1969     Dianetic Auditor's Course Auditing Policy    231
3 Sept. 1969     Former HDAs, HPAs      Vol. 3-238

                             STANDARD DIANETICS
                            Training and Auditing

6     Apr.  1969 Dianetics   232
6     Apr.  1969 Dianetic Registration  see-257
5     May   1969 Dianetic Course Examinations      233
5     May   1969 Auditor's Code and Dianetics      234
7     May   1969 Students Guide to Acceptable Behaviour  235
7     May   1969 Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course Policy     237
8     May   1969 Fast Flow by Attestation    237
8     May   1969 Teaching the Dianetics Course (HCOB)    238
8     May   1969 Out Tech (revision of 22 Nov. 1967)     239
14 May 1969 Star Rate Checkouts on Standard Dianetics Course  see-2.62
14 May 1969 How to do a Starrate Checkout    240

                               Xi

16 May 1969 Course Administration 209
19 May 1969 Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course Policy (cancels 7 May 1969)
241
20 May 1969 Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course
      Course Materials Papers and Files 242
20 May 1969 Keeping Dianetics Working in an Area (HCOB)  245
23 May 1969 Dianetic Contract     247
23 May 1969 Dianetics Course Student Auditing      251
23 May 1969 Parent or Guardian Assent Forms  VoL 2-289
24 May 1969 Progress Board   249
24 May 1969 Dianetics Course Supervision and Administration
             Supervisor Checkouts 252
29 May 1969 Dianetic Certificates 126
1 June 1969 Dianetics Training    253
3 June 1969 Legal Statement concerning Dianetics & Medical Practice Laws
254
7 June 1969 Dianetics-Points Which Go Out and Wreck Pes (HCOB)      255
12 June 1969     Dianetic Registration (revises 6 Apr. 1969)  257
24 June 1969     Dianetics-Pre-Auditing Examination      259
11 July 1969     Supervision (HCOB)     260
27 July 1969     What is a Checksheet   211
27 July 1969     Antibiotics (HCOB)     Vol. 2-332
3 Aug. 1969 Starrate Checkouts on Standard Dianetics Course
      (corrects & replaces 14 May 1969) 262
2 Sept. 1969     Correction to HCO PL 12 June 1969-Dianetic Registration
see-258
3 Sept. 1969     Former HDAs, HPAs      Vol 2-295
5 Oct. 1969 Dianetic Courses, Wildcat (revised & reissued 10 Dec. 1969)
263
27 Oct. 1969     Training Aids (reissue of 2 Aug. 1962)  see-160
17 Nov. 1969     Dianetics and Scientology Services      401
10 Dec. 1969     Dianetic Courses, Wildcat (revised reissue of 5 Oct. 1969)
263

                    ACADEMY OF SCIENTOLOGY

12 Sept. 1956 The Summary of a Bulletin from the Academy in
             Washington D.C.-Concerning Training   264
3 May 1957 Training-What it is Today
      How We Tell People About It (HCOB)     268
21 Jan. 1958     ACCs-HPA/HCA (HCOB)    349
25 Jan. 1958     Inept Students   148
2 Apr. 1958 ARC in Comm Course (HCOB)   149
1 Oct. 1958 HCO Board of Review   269
2 Oct. 1958 Sale and Conduct of Academy Courses    272
9 Oct. 1958 Correction of HCO Policy Letter of October 1, 1958 (HCOB) see-
271
15 Dec. 1958     Academy Training Curriculum & Examination    274
16 Dec. 1958     Extension Course Curriculum (HCOB)      275
6 Jan. 1959 (Change of HCO Policy Letter of 15 December 1958) (HCOB) 277
19 Jan. 1959     Extra Weeks on HPA Course   277
10 Mar. 1959     BScn/HCS Course Tapes  Vol. 2-213
8 Apr. 1959 New HPA/HCA Tapes     Vol. 2-214
11 May 1959 HPA/BScn "Retreads"   278
13 Aug. 1959     Students Attending Courses  278
26 Aug. 1959     Promotional Functions of the Academy (excerpt)     131
31 Aug. 1959     Certifications   279
23 Oct. 1959     Academy Training 132
22 Feb. 1960     HPA Qualifications     279
29 Mar. 1960     HGC and Academy Prices for Minors Vol. 2-260
1 Apr. 1960 Training Requirements-Hubbard Apprentice Scientologist
             HPA/HCA-BScn/HCS (HCOB)    280
      4 May 1960 Acceptance for ACC and Academy Courses  281
      24 May 1960      Extension Course Prices     Vol. 3-227
      11 Oct. 1960     Case Assessments for Students     282
      2 Nov. 1960      HPA/HCA Course   282
      16 Nov. 1960     New Org Programmes    283

                                Xii

17 Nov. 1960 Anatomy of the Human Mind Course as a
      Pre-requisite for HPA Training    284
31 Jan. 1961     Academy Meters   134
14 Feb. 1961     The Academy of Scientology (excerpt)    284
27 Feb. 1961     Free Courses     Vol 3-228
13 Mar. 1961     Free Courses (revises 27 Feb. 1961)     Vol 3-228
5 Apr. 1961 HCAJHPA Rundown or Practical Course
      Rundown for Academics  285
10 Apr. 1961     HCO Ltd HPA/HCA Certificate Conditions  294
17 Apr. 1961     Training, Professional-New Policy 295
8 May 1961  Extension Course 296
26 May 1961 Modification of HPAJHCA, BScn1HCS Schedule   296
7 June 1961 Academy Schedule, Clarification of (HCOB)    297
23 Aug. 1961     HPA/HCA Policy   299
20 Sept. 1961    Training Policy  299
      6 Oct. 1961      Standardized E-Meter Book Exam    300
      9 Oct. 1961      Academy Training 302
      9 Oct. 1961      HPA/HCA Rundown Change (amends HCOB 7 June 1961)
see-298
      23 Oct. 1961     New Rundown for BScn/HCS Course   304
      2 Nov. 1961      Allowed Processes from Courses    305
      21 Nov. 1961     Training Course Requirements      306
      24 Nov. 1961     Saint Hill Tapes for HPA/HCA Courses   306
      20 Dec. 1961     Student E-Metering    307
      3 Jan. 1962      Upgrading of Auditors 308
      3 May 1962 Practical Auditing Skills   309
      14 May 1962      Training Sections     311
      14 May 1962      Training-Classes of Auditors      313
      16 May 1962      HPA/HCA Training 136
      21 May 1962      Training-Classes of Auditors (revised from 14 May
1962) 315
      24 May 1962      Training- Session Can cellation-Auditing Section
318
      24 May 1962      Questionnaire    322
      5 June 1962      Class II Training only by Academies and Saint Hill
324
      7 June 1962      Professional Training to be done in Academy & Saint
Hill Only   324
26 June 1962     Certification Requirements  32S
      2 July 1962      Rudiments Policy 549
      14 July 1962     Auditing Allowed 330
      24 July 1962     Academy Extra Weeks   325
      30 July 1962     Certification and Validation Requirements    326
      9 Aug. 1962      Names and Addresses of Academy Enrollees     Vol 1-
267
1 Sept. 1962     Healing Promotion      556
17 Sept. 1962    An Arrangement of the Academy     327
27 Sept. 1962    Clears Must Be Trained 334
12 Oct. 1962     HPA/HCA Written Examination 334
21 Oct. 1962     Auditing Supervisor and Auditing Instructors, Duties of
335
24 Nov. 1962     Objective One    338
8 Dec. 1962 Training-Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
      Summary of Subjects by Units      423
13 Feb. 1963     V Unit      427
13 Feb. 1963     Academy Taught Processes    339
23 Mar. 1963     Classification of Auditors-Class 11 & Goals  340
31 May 1963 Training of Clears (cancels 27 Sept. 1962)   341
10 June 1963     Scientology Training-Technical Studies  342
9 July 1963 HPA/HCA Certificate Check Sheet  342
30 July 1963     Current Planning 344
21 Aug. 1963     Change of Organization Targets-Project 80-A Preview
Vol 2- 95
22 Apr. 1965     Level 0 Comm Course    346
16 May 1965 Important Explanation -Auditing Restrictions 221
16 May 1965 Academy Courses-General Remarks-Zero Courses
      Hubbard Recognized Scientologist  347
17 May 1965 Academy Processing    224
24 May 1965 Student Guide to Acceptable Behaviour  458
18 Oct. 1967     Academy Check Sheets-Supervisor Conditions   201

                               Xhi

ACCs AND SPECIAL COURSES

21 Jan. 1958     ACCs-HPA/HCA (HCOB)    349
27 Nov. 1958     ACC Records 349
2 Jan. 1959 Instructors or HCO Staff-Processing Past ACC Students   349
23 Feb. 1960     ACC Files   350
24 Feb. 1960     ACC Hats    351
23 Mar. 1960     ACC Supervisor Hat     354
4 May 1960  Acceptance for ACC and Academy Courses 354
21 Dec. 1960     Curriculum for ACCs-Jan uary 1961 355
12 Sept. 1961    Curriculum for Clearing Courses   356
28 Dec. 1961     Clearing Courses 3S9
2 Sept. 1969     Old ACC Students 3S9

                          CLASS AND GRADE PROGRAMME
           (Earlier materials on the Class and Grade Programme are
               covered in sections on Academy, SHSBC and HGC)

26 Nov. 1963     Certificate and Classification Changes-Everyone Classified
360
6 Dec. 1963 Org Programming  363
11 Dec. 1963     Classification for Everyone (amends 26 Nov. 1963)  364
13 Feb. 1964     Classification   365
23 Feb. 1964     Classification   366
24 Feb. 1964     Org Programming  367
22 Apr. 1964 Summary of Policies on Classification & Gradation,
Certification,
             Franchise and Memberships, and the Auditors Division   369
5 May 1964  Summary of Classification and Gradation and Certification
373
18 June 1964     Professional Route Classification Requirements
      (addenda to 5 May 1964)     378
30 July 1964     Gradation Programme, Revised      379
23 Sept. 1964    Auditing and Training Policies (excerpt)     40
11 Dec. 1964     Full Table of Courses and Classification     380
17 Mar. 1965     Clearing and Training  383
14 Apr. 1965     Classification on GPMs 454
5 May 1965  Classification, Gradation and Awareness Chart
      (reissued 4 July 1970) 384
10 May 1965 Releases-Vital Data (revised & reissued 19 Sept. 1967)  387
28 June 1965     Releases, Different Kinds (HCOB)  389
5 Aug. 1965 Release Stages (HCOB) 390
23 Aug. 1965     Classification at Upper Levels-Temporary Measure   392
30 Aug. 1965     Release Stages (HCOB)  393
22 Sept. 1965    Release Gradation-New Levels of Release (HCOB)     395
27 Sept. 1965    Release Gradation-Additional Data (HCOB)
      (Supplements HCOB 22 Sept. 1965)  398
19 Sept. 1967    Releases-Vital Data (revised reissue of 10 May 1965)
387
2 Sept. 1969     Triple Grades    VoL 2-294
17 Nov. 1969     Dianetics and Scientology Services
      (cancels 5 May 1969, 17 May 1969 & 26 Oct. 1969)   401
IOMay 1970  Single Declare (cancels 6 Aug. 1966)   403
4 July 1970 Classification, Gradation and Awareness Chart
      (reissue of 5 May 1965)     384

                               Xiv

SAINT HILL SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE

9 July 1962 Special Briefing Course     404
12 Nov. 1962     Purpose of the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course  405
20 Dec. 1960     Restriction on Saint Hill Area    see-409
11 May 1961 Student Training-Auditing has Priority 405
18 Oct. 1961     Examinations     406
25 Oct. 1961     New Students Sec Check 406
6 Dec. 1961 Saint Hill Training-Candidates from Organizations 407
12 Dec. 1961     Training Activities    408
19 Dec. 1961     Saint Hill Retreads    see-410
7 Feb. 1962 Restriction on Saint Hill Area (amends 20 Dec. 1960)    409
13 Feb. 1962     3D Criss Cross Items   409
14 Feb. 1962     Saint Hill Retreads (amends 19 Dec. 196 1    410
12 Mar. 1962     Staff Training   410
25 Apr. 1962     Hat of Course Administrator see- 121
14 May 1962 Training Sections     311
14 May 1962 Training-Classes of Auditors     313
21 May 1962 Training-Classes of Auditors (revised from 14 May 1962) 315
24 May 1962 Training-Session Cancellation-Auditing Section    318
      5 June 1962      Class 11 Training only by Academies and Saint Hill
324
      5 July 1962      Course Rotation  411
      9 July 1962      Mimeo and Magazine Distribution, Sthil Course
411
      9 July 1962      Special Briefing Course     404
      19 July 1962     Clearing-Free Needles 552
      12 Sept. 1962    Saint Hill Graduates  412
      20 Sept. 1962    Co-Audit Unit    413
      27 Sept. 1962    Pay for Goals Finding 414
      28 Sept. 1962    Saint Hill Briefing Course Terminations      414
2 Oct. 1962 Termination & Classification     415
3 Oct. 1962 Rooms, Emptying for Cleaning     417
21 Oct. 1962     Auditing Supervisor and Auditing Instructors, Duties of
335
28 Oct. 1962     Z Unit-Case Review     417
28 Oct. 1962     Co-Audit Suspended     418
8 Nov. 1962 Departure Form   418
12 Nov. 1962     Purpose of the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course  405
14 Nov. 1962     Terminations from the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
420
23 Nov. 1962     Saint Hill Retread Fee 420
1 Dec. 1962 V Unit-New Students-Saint Hill Special Briefing Course  421
6 Dec. 1962 Saint Hill Special Briefing Course     422
8 Dec. 1962 Training-Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
      Summary of Subjects by Units      423
8 Feb. 1963 Curriculum Change     424
9 Feb. 1963 Saint Hill Course Goals     425
11 Feb. 1963     Auditing Regulations   426
13 Feb. 1963     V Unit      427
 14 Feb. 1963 Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
      Reimbursement Arrangements  Vol. 3-291
23 Mar. 1963     Classification of Auditors-Class Il & Goals  340
29 Mar. 1963     Clear Requirement     429
2 Apr. 1963      Food and Cleaning Regulations for Students   430
5 Apr. 1963      Organization Students on Saint Hill Course   431
22 Apr. 1963     Hat of Course Administrator 121
5 May 1963 Staff Member Enrolments     Vol 3-292
18 June 1963     Students Blowing 432
23 July 1963     Retreads on Saint Hill Special Briefing Course     432
2 Aug. 1963      Saint Hill Course Changes   433

                                XV

25 Sept. 1963    Hats of Student Instructors for SHSBC   168
8     Oct. 1963  New Saint Hill Certificates and Course Changes     434
24 Jan. 1964     Case Supervisor  435
20 Feb. 1964     Regulations-Course (excerpt)      436
2     Apr. 1964  To the Saint Hill Student: Instruction Targets     437
2     Apr. 1964  Use of Recreation Facilities, 1964      438
2 Apr. 1964 Saint Hill Enrolment-Materials, Courses,
      and Use of Class VI Processes     439
17 Apr. 1964     Food and Cleaning Regulations for Students   442
8 May 1964  Transport  443
13 May 1964 Transport (adds to 8 May 1964)   443
25 May 1964 Instructor's Conference Report Form    444
11 June 1964     New Students Data      445
16 Sept. 1964    Terminations     447
18 Sept. 1964    Final Classification on Termination from Saint Hill
447
13 Nov. 1964     Provisional Class VI Classification (cancels 18 Sept.
1964) 448
27 Feb. 1965     Course Pattern   449
17 Mar. 1965     Faculty Meeting Report 452
2 Apr. 1965 Star-Rate Checkouts for Process (modification of 27 Feb. 1965)
453
13 Apr. 1965     Course R6 Auditing     454
14 Apr. 1965     Classification on GPMs 454
14 Apr. 1965     Organization GPM Unit  455
23 Apr. 1965     Correction to HCO Policy Letter of April 14, AD 15
      Organization GPM Unit  see-455
13 May 1965 SHSBC Unit-Graduation 457
17 May 1965 Academy Processing    224
24 May 1965 Student Guide to Acceptable Behaviour  458
      3 June 1965      R6 EW 461
      28 July 1965     Course R6 Auditing    462
      6 Aug. 1965      Technical Queries from R6 Graduates    462
      1 Sept. 1965     Saint Hill Services and Prices    Vol. 3-235
      14 Sept. 1965    Classification Required Before Moving to Next Level
463
14 Oct. 1965     Course Pattern (amends 27 Feb. 1965)    464
19 Oct. 1965     Release Declarations   597
12 Nov. 1965     Transfers from SHSBC to Solo Audit Course    474
10 Feb. 1966     Check Sheets, Course   466
9 May 1966  Requirements for a SHSBC Supervisor    Vol. 1-117
17 Aug, 1966     Routing and Handling of SHSBC Students  468
13 Sept. 1966 Requirement for Termination on the SHSBC
             and Enrolment on Solo Course    468
5 Oct. 1966 Students Termina ting- Leave of Absence-Blown Students  469
12 Oct. 1966     Duration of SHSBC and Solo Course Requirements     470
30 Dec. 1966     What the SHSBC Student Needs to Know about Foundation
471
22 Sept. 1967    Solo Auditing Folders  475
27 Nov. 1967     R 6 Materials    475
24 Feb. 1968     Fast Flow for SHSBC Students' Preclears; (amends 30 Dec.
1966) 472
11 Dec. 1969     Training of Clears     VoL 2-299

                       SOLO AUDIT COURSE

25 Oct. 1965     Saint Hill Solo Audit Course      473
12 Nov. 1965     Transfers from SHSBC to Solo Audit Course    474
28 Dec. 1965     Enrollment in Suppressive Groups  see Vol. 1-484, Vol. 2-
284
13 Sept. 1966    Requirement for Termination on the SHSBC
      and Enrolment on Solo Course      468
5 Oct. 1966 Students Terminating-Leave of Absence-Blown Students    469
12 Oct. 1966     Duration of SHSBC and Solo Course Requirements     470
22 Sept. 1967    Solo Auditing Folders  475
27 Nov. 1967     R 6 Materials    475
29 June 1968     Enrollment in Suppressive Groups
             (amends 28 Dec. 1965)      Vol. 1-484, Vol. 2-284

                               Xvi

                              ADVANCED COURSES
                        Clearing Course - OT Courses

     (Policy Letters which give technical data belonging solely to Solo
   and above are found in the hats and course materials for those levels.)

13 Dec. 1965     Staff on Saint Hill Clearing Course     476
28 Dec. 1965     Enrollment in Suppressive Groups  see Vol. 1-484
13 Jan. 1966     Regulations for Auditing of Staff and Students     476
3 Feb. 1966 Clearing Course- Submission of Folders 477
3 Feb. 1966 Clearing Course-Weekly Auditing Hours  477
13 Mar. 1966     Amnesty     478
29 Apr. 1966     Ethics: Clearing Course     478
9 May 1966  Bonuses Adjusted Vol. 3-206
4 Aug. 1966 Ethics-Clears, Invalidation of   479
9 Aug. 1966 OT Colour Flash-Colour Flash Addition  479
12 Aug. 1966     OT Course   see-483
12 Aug. 1966     The Operating Thetan Course 480
16 Aug. 1966     Clearing Course Security    480
22 Aug. 1966     Bonuses Adjusted (amendment & addition to 9 May 1966) Vol.
3-207
28 Sept. 1966    Clearing and OT Course Regulations
      Clearing and OT Course Case Supervision      see-487
30 Sept. 1966    Clearing and OT Course Regulations      see-487
14 Oct. 1966     Clearing Course Folders (cancels 3 Feb. 1966)      481
7 Nov. 1966 Clear Check-outs in Continental Orgs.  482
10 Nov, 1966     Clearing Course and OT Course Materials see-492
14 Nov. 1966     OT Course (replaces 12 Aug. 1966) 483
16 Dec. 1966     Clearing Course Regulation  483
17 Jan. 1967     An Open Letter to All Clears      484
11 Apr. 1967     Section III OT Prerequisite 485
26 Apr. 1967     Staff on Saint Hill Advanced Courses    485
1 May 1967  Advanced Courses Administration  486
6 July 1967 Advanced Courses Supervisors' Statistic      486
12 Sept. 1967 Clearing and OT Course Regulations
      Clearing and OT Course Supervision
      (replaces 30 Sept. 1966 & combines it with 28 Sept. 1966)     487
12 Nov. 1967     Clearing and OT Course Regulations (continues 30 Sept.
1966) 488
21 Nov. 1967     Additional Policies on Advanced Courses Security   489
27 Nov. 1967     Bonuses Adjusted (addition to 17 Oct. 1966,
      cancels 22 Aug. 1966)  VoL 3-211
9 Jan. 1968 Cancellation of HCO Policy Letter of 12 Sept. 1967
      and HCO Policy Letter of 13 Sept. 1967 491
28 Jan. 1968     Cancellation     see-490
2 Mar. 1969 Advanced Course-Security Check   Vol. 1-476
29 June 1968     Enrollment in Suppressive Groups
      (amends 28 Dec. 1965)  Vol. 1-484, Vol. 2-284
16 Dec. 1968     Security Div I   Vol. 1-490
3 Dec. 1969 Solo Auditing and Pregnancy 491
11 Dec. 1969     Training of Clears     Vol. 2-299
11 Aug. 1971     Advanced Courses Materials-Security of Data
      (replaces 10 Nov. 1966)     492

                        CLASS VIII COURSE

29 Oct. 1969     Classified Materials   493
3 Sept. 1969     Successful Class VIIIs 493
26 Oct. 1969     Class VIII & HDG 494
15 Nov. 1969     Class VIII Retread     VoL 3-239
28 Nov. 1969     Class VIII Retread (15 Nov. 1969 corrected)  YoL 3-239
16 Jan. 1970     Class VIII Requirement 494
20 Jan. 1970     Class VIII Retread
      ,(corrects 28 Nov. 1969 & 15 Nov. 1969)      VoL 3-242

                               xvii

            DEPARTMENT TWELVE
            DEPARTMENT OF PROCESSING
            HUBBARD GUIDANCE CENTER
            HGC AUDITORS
            (A study of this Department should include the
            Class and Grade Programme, pages 360-403.)
14 Feb. 1961     The Pattern of a Central Organization
      (excerpt: The Hubbard Guidance Centre) 6
20 May 1954 Atmosphere of the Clinic (extract from Clinical Procedure)
495
20 May 1954 The Auditors of the Clinic (extract from Clinical Procedure)
495
26 Sept. 1956    Registrar (Org Bulletin)          495
26 Sept. 1956    Procedure for Putting Auditors on Staff (Org Bulletin)
496
15 Nov. 1956     HGC Preclear Complaints (HCOB)    496
7 May 1957  Assignment of Auditors, Rooms, Students      22
13 May 1957 Financial Enrollment Procedure   129
17 May 1957 The Hubbard Guidance Center 496
1 June 1957 Rights of the Directors of Training & Processing, Staff
Auditors
      & Instructors regarding Preclears & Students (HCO Info Bull.) 23
10 June 1957     What to Tell New HGC Auditors to Process on Preclears
      (HCO Processing Bulletin)   497
10 July 1957     Hiring of Staff Auditors          497
2 Sept. 1957     Verbal Directions from LRH (HCOB) 497
5 Sept. 1957     All preclears are expected to     498
16 Sept. 1957    HGC Policy       498
16 Sept. 19S7    Hubbard Guidance Centre-Use of Title (HASI Staff Notice)
498
8 Feb. 1958 Since people will begin to expect being cleared. . .    499
4 Mar. 1958 Addition to HASI Policy Letter of Feb. 8, 1958 (HCOB)   499
6 May 1958  Modified Procedure for Signing up Prospective
      Students & Pes (Admin Directive)  130
9 July 1958 Staff Clearing (HCOB)       500
25 Nov. 1958     Techniques to be Used on HGC Preclears  Soo
23 Dec. 1958     Qualifications of HGC Staff Auditors    501
31 Dec. 1958     Routing of Profiles (HCO Sec'I Letter)  502
30 Apr. 1959     Additional Staff Auditors   116
2 June 1959 Correction of HCO Policy Letter of 23 December 1958
      Qualification of HGC Staff Auditors    501
19 Aug. 1959     Writing of Letters by Staff Auditors    Vot 2-365
26 Aug. 1959     Promotional Functions of the HGC (excerpt)   503
3 Sept. 1959     Director of Processing-Hat (Sec'l ED)   504
9 Oct. 1959 Staff Auditors   512
16 Oct. 1959     Handling Students' and Auditors' Reports (HCOB)    512
16 Oct. 1959     How to Prepare HGC Weekly Reports for Review 513
27 Oct. 1959     Processing of Children on the HGC Vol 3-226
1 Jan. 1960 Administrative Procedure for Reducing Overts 514
22 Jan. 1960     Requirements for HGC Auditors     515
29 Mar. 1960 HGC and Academy Prices for Minors
             (cancels & replaces 27 Oct. 1959)     Vol. 2-260
2 June 1960 Requirements for Staff Posts,    VoL 1-123
19 Aug, 1960     Registrar Lost Line    516
17 SepL 1960     Giving the Pc Full Hours    517
14 Nov. 1960     Sign Up of Students & Pes-Acceptance by D/P & D/T
(excerpt)   24
15 Nov. 1960     Staff Certificate Requirements    220
19 Nov, 1960     Pc Scheduling    117
      22 Nov,    1960  There will be no professional rates    (SA only)
Vol. 3-249
10 Jan. 1961     A Brief Outline of an HGC as Currently Done  518
30 Jan. 1961     Case Files  117
14 Feb. 1961 The Pattern of a Central Organization
             (excerpt: The Hubbard Guidance Centre)     6
27 Feb. 1961     Free Courses     Vol. 3-228

                               Xviii

      6 Mar. 1961      Restriction on SOP Goals Procedure     518
      20 Mar. 1961     Basic Staff Auditor's Hat   519
      24 Mar. 1961     HGC Admin Partial Hat-Staff Auditor Assignment
118
      31 Mar. 1961     The Director of Processing's Case Checking Hat
525
      5 Apr. 1961      SOP Goals Goofs  531
      25 Apr. 1961     D of P Form-Check Type One (modifies 31 Mar. 1961)
S32
      10 May 1961      Staff Auditors   534
      24 May 1961      SOP Goals Assessments 535
      26 May 1961      Basic Staff Auditor's Hat (refers to 20 Mar. 1961)
536
24 Aug. 1961     HGC Allowed Processes  536
29 Sept. 1961    HGC Allowed Processes  537
23 Oct. 1961     E-Meters to be Approved     VoL 2-228
27 Oct. 1961     Professional Rates Restored VoL 3-250
21 Nov. 1961     HGC Processing Liability    539
29 Nov. 1961     Class of Auditors (adds to 29 Sept. 1961)    541
28 Dec. 1961     HGC Allowed Processes  543
5 Jan. 1962 Reports from HGCs     544
17 Jan. 1962     Responsibility Again (reissued 7 June 1967)  546
22 Jan. 1962     Security Checks  547
17 May 1962 Rudiments Checks 547
29 May 1962 Professional Rates (adds to 27 Oct. 1961)    Vol. 3-251
1 June 1962 Auditing- Rudiments Check Sheet  548
2 July 1962 Rudiments Policy 549
14 July 1962     Auditing Allowed 550
19 July 1962     Clearing-Free Needles  552
13 Aug. 1962     Clearing    553
28 Aug. 1962     How to Write an Auditor's Report  554
1 Sept. 1962     Healing Promotion      556
12 Sept. 1962    Authorized Processes   557
27 Sept. 1962    Clears Must Be Trained 334
27 Sept. 1962    Valid Processes  558
8 Oct. 1962 HGC Clearing     559
16 Oct. 1962     Auditing Hours Limited 562
15 Jan. 1963     Routine 2-12     563
21 Feb. 1963     Urgent-Goals Check     564
6 Mar. 1963 Selling Techniques Forbidden     Vol. 2-325
11 Apr. 1963     Goals Finding and Goal Finders    564
13 Apr. 1963     Policy of HGCs   565
31 May 1963 Training of Clears (cancels 27 Sept. 1962)   341
18 Mar. 1964     HGC Allowed Processes  566
21 Aug. 1964     Staff Auditors (reissued 7 June 1967)   567
28 Sept. 1964    Clay Table Use   568
5 Apr. 1965 Handling the Suppressive Person-The Basis of Insanity   53
5 Apr. 1965 The No-Gain-Case Student    61
19 Apr. 1965     Training and Processing Regulations
      Technical Discipline-Students' Questions     65
17 May 1965 Free Scientology Centre     222
23 May 1965 Rebates    569
27 May 1965 Processing 570
14 June 1965     Folders, Marking of    571
17 June 1965     Staff Auditor Advices  601
      4 July 1965      Pc Routing-Review Code      603
      6 July 1965      Releases   571
      7 July 1965      Releases, Policy on   71
      12 July 1965*    Release Policies~Starting the Pc  572
      19 July 1965     Release Checks, Procedure for     574
      19 July 1965     Separation Order 60,5
      30 July 1965     Preclear Routing to Ethics  606
      24 Aug. 1965     Pcs Released Routing  606
      19 Nov. 1965     Auditing Reports 577
      30 Dec. 1965     PTS Auditing and Routing    578
      1 Feb. 1966      Staff Auditor and Supervisor Procurement     80

                               xix

I Feb. 1966 HGC Cure-Interne Training and Staff Auditors 78
18 Oct. 1966     SH Staff Auditor's Purpose  579
7 June 1967 Staff Auditors (reissue of 21 Aug. 1964)     567
7 June 1967 Responsibility Again (reissue of 17 Jan. 1962)    546
4 Oct. 1967 Auditor and Org Individual Stats 10
26 Aug. 1968     Security Checks Abolished   Vol. 1-486
14 Oct. 1968     The Auditor's Code AD 18    ill
2 Nov. 1968 Auditor's Code-Add to Pol Ltr 14 October AD 18    see- 112
23 July 1969     Auditor Assignment Policies 127
15 Nov. 1969     Rights and Duties      98
17 Apr. 1970     An Auditor and "The Mind's Protection"  580
8 June 1970 Student Auditing (cancels 29 Oct. 1965, 23 May 1969 11,
      17 May 1965 & 17 May 1965 11)     227
5 Mar. 1971 The Fantastic New HGC Line (HCOB)      581
6 Mar. 1971 Line Design-HGC Lines, An Example      585
25 Aug. 1971     How to Get Results in an HGC (HCOB)     586
28 Sept. 1971    Selling and Delivering Auditing   589

                       POWER PROCESSING

28 Apr. 1965     Power Processes  593
10 May 1965 Releases-Vital Data (revised & reissued 19 Sept. 1967)  387
20 May 1965 Power Processes  595
21 May 1965 Memorandum of Agreement     Vol. 2-270
14 June 1965     Six Power Processes    596
5 July 1965 Memorandum of Agreement
      (correction to 21 May 1965) see Vol. 2-270
23 July 1965     Priority of Power Processing      Vol. 2-272
20 Aug. 1965     Continuing Pc to Third Stage Release    596
20 Sept. 1965    Power Processing for the Public   see Vol. 2-272
21 Sept. 1965    Memorandum of Agreement (amends 21 May 1965) M 2-274
19 Oct. 1965     Release Declarations   597
30 Nov. 1965     Power Processing for the Public (replaces 20 Sept. 1965)
Vol. 2-272
6 Apr. 1971 Power Badges     597

                        CASE SUPERVISOR

24 Jan. 1964     Case Supervisor  435
24 Feb. 1964     Rundown of Case Supervisor Hat    598
24 Feb. 1964     Technical Supervision Changes     38
24 Feb. 1964     Nomination of Case Supervisor     600
14 June 1965     Folders, Marking of    600
17 June 1965     Staff Auditor Advices  601
4 July 1965 Pc Routing-Review Code      603
19 July 1965     Separation Order 605
28 July 1965     Case Supervisor, Special Attention      605
30 July 1965     Preclear Routing to Ethics  606
24 Aug. 1965     Pcs Released Routing   606
1 Feb. 1966 HGC Cure-Interne Training and Staff Auditors 78
29 Oct. 1968     Class VIII C/S Qual Stat    607
17 Jan. 1969     Pc Attestations  607
20 May 1969 Keeping Dianetics Working in an Area (HCOB)  245
15 Nov. 19 69    Rights and Duties      98
19 Jan. 1970     Registrars' Advice Form (HCOB)    Vol. 2-339
4     Feb. 1970  Pc Application Form for any Major Auditing Action  Vol. 2-
341
4     Feb. 1970  Pc Application for Major Actions (HCOB) Vol. 2-343
5     Mar. 1971  The Fantastic New HGC Line (HCOB) 581
6     Mar. 1971  Line Design-HGC Lines, An Example 585

                               XX

Appendix

                       OUTSIDE AUDITING

20 May 1957 Outside Auditing 608
9 July 1957 Private Preclears of HASI Staff
      Auditing Limit (Assoc Sec Directive)   608
26 July 1957     funds or Favors Received    608
11 Apr. 1958     Staff Members' Outside Auditing Regulation (HCOB)  609
27 May 1958 Outside Auditing 609
2 Jan. 1959 Instructors or HCO Staff-Processing Past ACC Students   349
29 Oct. 1959     Processing of Academy Students    219
1 Apr. 1960 Regulations for Staff Members and ex-Staff Members      610
27 Feb. 1961     Outside Pes of Staff Members      611
21 June 1962     Staff Members Auditing Private Pcs      611
16 Oct, 1962     Auditing Hours Limited 562
21 Mar. 1965     Staff Members Auditing Outside Pes      Vol 1-586
29 Mar. 1965     Excerpts from HCO Policy Letter of November 9, 1964
      and November 26, 1964 (revised) for Staff Hats     Vol. 1-587
13 Jan, 1966     Regulations for Auditing of Staff and Students     476

Note: The materials in this volume are listed mainly in order of
appearance. Additionally, some policies are listed in more than one section
(with page numbers in italics), as they deal with more than one area of
operation.

  Relevant policies from other OEC volumes are also listed, with volume and
page numbers in italics.

  A complete date order index appears in the back of the book, starting on
page 612.

Xxi

YOUR POST

  A post in a Scientology Organization isn't a job. It's a trust and a
crusade.

  We're free men and women-probably the last free men and women on Earth.
Remember, we'll have to come back to Earth some day no matter what
"happens" to us.

  If we don't do a good job now we may never get another chance.

Yes, I'm sure that's the way it is.

  So we have an organization, we have a field we must support, we have a
chance.

  That's more than we had last time night's curtain began to fall on
freedom.

So we're using that chance.

  An organization such as ours is our best chance to get the most done. So
we're doing it!

L. RON HUBBARD

xxii

  EXEC SEC
                 QUALIFICATIONS DrVXSI,
                 QUALIFICATIONS SECRE
      EASURY DIVISION 3      TECHNICAL DIVISION 4  1
                 QUALIFICATIONS SEC.:
      WURY SECRETARY   TECHNICAL SECRETARY
      I     I    I -
      Y     I
      REASURY SEC. SEC.           TECHNICAL SEC. SEC.         RESULT
CORRECTION
      I     -          I     Department 11   Department 14
      ADJUSTMENT BODY  PREDICTION ACTIVITY   PRODUCTION
      Department 8     Department 9    Department 10    Department 11
 Department 12   DEPARTMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF
                                  EXAMINATIONS     REVIEW

 DEPARTMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF
 DISBURSEMENTS RECORDS, ASSETS     TECHNICAL  TRAINING   PROCESSING
      MATERIEL    SEPYICES              Director of      Director of
                       Examinations     Review
      Director of      Direetor of      Director of      Director of
  Director of
      Disbursements    Rcwrds, Assets   Torimical  Training   Processing
            S, Materiel      Scrvices

Cep,'Isht 1965,1969 h, L. R..W bb.,d ALL WGHTS RESERVED

I

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 NOVEMBER 1967
Rernimeo HCO Exec See Hat Org Exec See Hat Tech See Hat Dept of Tech
Services Hats Dept of Processing Hats Dept of Training Hats

                        TECH DIVISION, DEPARTMENTS OF
                   TECH SERVICES, TRAINING, AND PROCESSING

    All Organization Boards are to be posted in accordance with the
following line-up which complies with HCO Policy Letter of February 28,
1966 entitled, "Danger Condition Data, Why Organizations Stay Small":

           DEPARTMENT OF TECH SERVICES
                 Director of Tech Services

               TECH ROUTING SECTION
                   Tech Routing Administrator Tech Pages

               STUDENT ADMINISTRATION SECTION
                   Student Administrator Student Unit and Level Log Clerk
                       Student Materials Supply Clerk Student Location Clerk
                       Student Files Clerk Student Pc Files Clerk

               HGC ADMINISTRATION SECTION
                   HGC Administrator HG,C. Pc Assignment Clerk HGC Room
                       Assignment Clerk HGC Priority List Clerk HGC Pe
                       Location Clerk HGC Files Clerk

               SERVICE SECTION
                   Service Administrator Information Clerk Housing Clerk
                       Transportation Clerk Passport Clerk Student/Pe Comm
                       Courier

               TECH RESERVATIONS UNIT
                   Tech Reservations Administrator Letter Typists

           DEPARTMENT OF TRAINING
                 Director of Training

               BASIC COURSES SECTION
                   Basic Courses Chief Supervisor HAS Supervisor HQS Super-
                       visor Dianetic Co-Audit Supervisor

               ACADEMY COURSES SECTION
                   Academy Courses Chief Supervisor Dianetic Auditor Course
                      Supervisor Level 0 Supervisor Level I Supervisor
                      Level 11 Supervisor Level III Supervisor Level IV
                      Supervisor

               SAINT HILL SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE SECTION (Saint Hill only)
                   SHSBC Chief Supervisor Unit A Supervisor Unit B
                      Supervisor Unit C Supervisor

               SOLO SECTION (Saint Hill only)
                   Solo Course Chief Supervisor Unit D Supervisor (Class VI)
                      Solo Audit Course Supervisor (Grade VI)

               ADVANCED COURSES SECTION (WW only)
                   Advanced Courses Chief Supervisor
                       Clearing Course Supervisor
                       Asst Clearing Course Supervisor
                       OT Course Supervisor
                       Asst OT Course Supervisor

           DEPARTMENT OF PROCESSING
            Director of Processing

               CASE SUPERVISION SECTION
                   Case Supervisor

               SECTION A AUDITORS
                   Section A Leading Auditors Auditors

               SECTION B AUDITORS
                   Section B Leading Auditor Auditors

               SECTION C AUDITORS
                   Section C Leading Auditor Auditors

               INTERN AUDITOR SECTION
                   Leading Intern Auditor Intern Auditors

Note that only the services actually delivered in your Department of
Training are to be posted. Only Saint Hill would post the SHSBC and only WW
would post Advanced Courses.

                                             Mary Sue Hubbard
                                             The Guardian WW
LRH:jp.rd   for
Copyright@ 1967  L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard      Founder
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

3

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 NOVEMBER 1959

CenOCon     [Excerpt]

                       KEY TO THE ORGANIZATIONAL CHART
           OF THE FOUNDING CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY OF WASHINGTON DC

                    TECHNICAL DIVISION

Purpose: To ensure good  training  and  processing,  good  service  and  ARC
inside and outside the organization.

                    ACADEMY OF SCIENTOLOGY

Purpose: To train the best auditors in the world.

                    TRAINING ADMINISTRATOR

Purpose: To keep the materials and comm lines of the Academy in good  order.
To keep a Roll Book. To prepare and collect certification materials.

             HUBBARD CLEARING SCIENTOLOGIST COURSE

Purpose: To educate auditors in  the  techniques  and  skills  necessary  to
clear human beings.

                     COMMUNICATION COURSE

Purpose:  To  give  people  a  reality  on  Scientology  and  to  teach  the
communication formula by Dummy Auditing.

                  UPPER INDOCTRINATION COURSE

Purpose: To attain ability to handle bodies, objects and intentions fully.

                    THEORY & PRACTICE COURSE

Purpose: To create a competent auditor with  a  good  grasp  of  theory  and
practice of Scientology. All five levels of Indoc.

                    HUBBARD GUIDANCE CENTRE

Purpose: To do more for people's health and ability  than  has  ever  before
been possible and to give the best auditing possible. To help people.

                   PROCESSING ADMINISTRATOR

Purpose: To handle the persons, communications and materials of the  HGC  to
the end of improving and continuing the quality and business of the HGC.

                SCIENTOMETRIC TESTING IN CHARGE

Purpose: To give all and any tests or exams that  may  be  required  to  any
department or organization or  personnel,  and  to  keep  and  file  results
accurately to assist research and presentation, and to have  test  materials
in abundance to hand.

                PERSONAL EFFICIENCY FOUNDATION
Purpose: To run an amazingly successful HAS Co-Audit  Course,  to  keep  new
people coming in and the Co-Audit growing, at  least  five  new  people  per
week, and cases cracked and everyone  to  get  trained  further  or  cleared
fully in the HGC.

LRH:js.rd        L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1959
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    [Note: The full Policy Letter is given in Volume 7,
page 138.)

                                4

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 FEBRUARY 1961
Cen Orgs
Copy for each    [Excerpt]
Staff Hat
Not for Franchise
      PATTERN OF A CENTRAL ORGANIZATION

TECHNICAL DIVISION

                   The Personal Efficiency Foundation

    The PE Foundation is the entrance door of the public into  the  services
of the Central Organization, a knowledge of Scientology and a  higher  level
of civilization.

                           Test Section

    By means of advertising mailings and  word  of  niouth,  the  public  is
brought in to be tested and evaluated. This is done by the Test  Section  of
the PE Foundation. This  section  does  everything  possible  to  route  new
individuals into a PE Course.

                         PE Course Section

    A five evening PE Course is given weekly. Its  curriculum  is  precisely
laid down. Its total  purpose  is  to  explain  elementary  Scientology  and
prepare and route people into the Co-audit.

                      The HAS Co-audit Section

    Using precise processes developed for this section  only,  the  HAS  Co-
audit (Do it  Yourself  Processing)  seeks  to  improve  cases  and  further
interest people in  Scientology  so  that  they  will  take  individual  HGC
processing and individual training.

                    Summary of the PE Foundation

    The PE Foundation is an entrance point to Scientology.  If  it  faih  to
pass people from testing to a PE Course, from a PE Course  to  Co-audit  and
from Co-audit to the Academy and HGC then it is failing its  functions,  the
unit will be low and the Central Organization faltering.

    No section of the PE is an end-all where the public feels an action  has
been completed. That the PE Foundation in itself does a great deal  of  good
is indisputable. However, the moment it relaxes on this fact  and  fails  to
pass people along, it lets  down  every  staff  member  in  the  other  five
departments as well as its  own  people.  A  PE  Foundation  income  is  not
adequate  to  support  even  itself,  and  its  services  in  training   and
processing are not  wholly  adequate  to  functioning  in  life.  It  is  an
entrance door. It must be  alertly  watched.  Its  numbers  in  testing,  PE
Course and Co-audit today are the  organization's  units  and  Scientology's
people tomorrow.

    The PE Director is now, next to the Assn Secretary, the most responsible
person for solvency in a Central Organization.

                     The Academy of Scientology

    Headed by the Director of Training, the Academy is responsible  for  the
technical excellence of Scientology practice tomorrow.

    Teaching two different courses in the same classes, the  Academy  trains
Hubbard  Practical  Scientologists  and   Hubbard   Professional   (HPA/HCA)
Auditors.

    The Academy also teaches an upper level course once or more a year known
as the B.Scn (Hubbard Clearing Scientologist) Course.

                               5

    Precise scheduling, crisp training  and  true,  direct  answers  to  the
students' questions makes an Academy.

    The HPA/HCA Course enrolls more or less every Monday  unless  the  total
average unit is to  be  gained  expensively  through  individual  processing
only.

    The Practical course is the same as the old professional  course  except
that  it  is  for  people  "Who   don't   want   to   practice   Scientology
professionally". The professional course is  a  tougher  version  with  more
requirements.

    A bad Academy results in a bad HGC tomorrow  as  many  graduates  become
staff auditors.

    A good Academy is known by its snappy scheduling and the degree of basic
data and action the student actually absorbs.

                     The Hubbard Guidance Centre

    The HGC is headed by the Director of Processing,  under  whom  come  all
individual cases, (public and staff).

    The D of P is the case czar of the organization.

    The D of P's total administration is done by HGC Admin. The D of P  does
not do admin, only technical, but is  in  charge  of  admin  and  all  staff
auditors and the department.

    The D of P (or in case of more than  30  pes/week,  a  deputy  D  of  P)
interviews HGC cases  every  five  hours  of  processing  to  establish  the
quality of goals and rudiments and what the auditor is running.

    HGC Admin procures and  assigns  auditors,  gives  applicants  from  the
Registrar their case estimates, keeps the files of  cases,  oversees  proper
auditor handling of forms, oversees testing or gets  it  done  for  HGC  pcs
when PE testing is closed, finds and assigns rooms for auditing  and  keeps,
in general, the lines moving in the HGC.

    If the D of P does these things or worse, takes  preclears  to  process,
you don't have an HGC. You have a technical collapse.

    HGC quality must be high and stay high.  It  is  the  highest  technical
quality in the continent.

    An HGC staff auditor audits directly on current  run-down  and  produces
high case gains. HGC Staff Auditors  are  the  most  respected  auditors  in
Scientology and for a period of I I years have always  gotten  the  highest,
fastest results in Dianetics and Scientology. A staff auditor may refuse  to
process or refuse to release from processing any pc.

    The HGC was born to show  field  auditors  the  results  that  could  be
obtained, and lived on to carry  the  full  burden  of  successful  auditing
around the world.

                       Technical Report Forms

    A report by each student is required each week by the D of T.

    A report for each session given a pc is required from staff auditors  by
the D of P. These are "reports to I-RH".

    All these are ultimately received by HCO WW.

LRH:aec.js.rd          L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    [Note: The full Policy Letter is given in Volume 7,
page 147.1

                                6

                         THE PROMOTIONAL ACTIONS OF
                            TECHNICAL DIVISION 4

           (From HCO PL 20 November 1965, The Promotional Actions
          oj' an Organization, with the deletion of 71 per HCO PLs
        15 December 1965 and4February 1966. These are given complete
      for all divisions in Basic Staff Volume 0, starting on page 84.)

51.   TECHNICAL SECRETARY - Co-ordinates and gets done the promotional
      functions of Division 4.

S').  DEPARTMENT 10 (Dept of Tech Services) - Makes the customers happy and
      glad to be there.
53.   Gives brisk service.
54.   Acquires for the org a reputation for swift and excellent handling of
people.
55.   DEPARTMENT I I (Dept of Training) - Gives excellent training. (The
      soundest possible promotion quickly mirrored in numbers enrolling.)
56.   Routes dissidents quickly to Ethics and slows to Review.
57.   Briskly and punctually schedules classes.
58.   Accomplishes lots of completions.
59.   Turns out very competent auditors whose excellence promotes the
Academy
      (or College at SH) and Scientology.
60.   Writes letters to possible prospective students to get the Academy
(or College
      at SH) full. (This is an old, old activity of the D of T who never
depends on
      Registrars or magazines.)
61.   Makes sure the excellence of training that is there is bragged about
in
      magazines, etc.
62.   Gets students (Free Scientology Centre) to find new, raw meat pes of
their own
      around the town and audit them for student classification and gets
them to
      bring such pcs in for Release examinations and declarations (during
which they
      get routed through Registrar who presents the award) and refuses any
for
      classification in cases already known to be a paying pc of some org
or auditor.
63.   DEPARTMENT 12 (Dept of Processing) - Gets excellent results on all
pcs.
64.   Becomes well known for standard tech.
65.   Spots SPs and PTSs early and routes to Ethics. Routes bogged cases
quickly to
      Review.
66~   Takes responsibility for all cases in the whole area where the org
is,
67.   Makes auditors look and act professionally outside the HGC so people
will have
      confidence in them.
68.   Insists on clean, attractive HGC quarters and helps Materiel to
achieve and
      maintain them.
69.   Gets pcs in such good shape they are walking advertisements for the
HGC and
      Scientology.
70.   Writes letters to possible pes (the D of P has had this duty for 15
years).
71.   [Deleted per HCO PLs 15 Dec'65 and 4 Feb '66. Now appears as 85a.]

LRH:ml.td   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

7

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 SEPTEMBER 1965
                                  [Excerpt]

Remimeo Advisory Councils Advisory Committees

       STATISTICS FOR DIVISIONS

            Tech Division 4 -
Number of students and pes completed in the week.

The number enrolled is really only partly the Tech  Division's  as  if  they
give good service they will get enrollments. However,  the  completions  are
the real index of  a  Tech  Division  and  shows  up  any  weakness  of  the
division. So their statistic  is  only  total  completions  of  courses  and
auditing.  This  of  course  includes  graduations  from  any   course   and
completion of any result for the pc that brings a Grade Cert  or  just  ends
intensives.

    Completed of course means only certified or classed or  graded.  However
completion of a 25 hour intensive which satisfied the pc (no review  at  end
even if one occurred before the end) counts as a  pc  completed.  Five  hour
rehabs which did not result in  a  Grade  are  not  completions.  Five  Hour
assists bought as assists are done of course in Qual and so are not  a  Tech
statistic.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRHml.rd Copyright@ 196 5 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[ Excerpted from HCO P/L 30 September  1965,  Statistics  for  Divisions,  a
complete copy of which is in Volume 1, page 328. Statistics in use  for  the
Academy and HGC prior to the 1965 Seven Division Organizing Board  evolution
are given in Volume 1 on pages 318 and 323. The above P/L has  been  amended
by the following Policy Letters: HCO,  P/L  27  April  1967,  Tech  Division
Statistic, page 10; HCO P/L 22 September 1969, HGC Statistic, page  12;  HCO
P/L 29 March 1970, Tech and Qual Stats Revised, in the 1970 Year  Book;  HCO
P/L 17 June 1970 Issue II, OIC  Change-Cable  Change,  Volume  1,  page  359
(which also cancelled 29 March 1970); HCO P/L 5 February 1971 Issue  V,  Org
Gross Divisional Statistics Revised, page 20; and HCO P/L  5  February  1971
Issue 111, FEBC Executive Director Org GDSes, in the 1971 Year Book.]

8

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 OCTOBER 1966

St Hill and
WW only
Gen Non-Rernirneo

        OIC GRAPHS

                           Clearing and OT Course
                    Div IV Statistics, LRH Comm Statistic

    Clears and OTs are not counted in the Div  IV  graph  as  they  give  an
improper view  of  some  Gross  Divisional  statistics  in  that  they  mask
Releases actually made, an important datum.

    The Gross  Divisional  Tech  statistic  includes  only  completions  and
Releases made in Div IV. The HGC graph only includes Releases.

                        LRH COMM GRAPH

    The graph of the LRH Comm and the Office of LRH  Gross  statistic  shall
cease to be a point system  and  will  be  drawn  hereafter  I  for  1.  All
Releases, Clears and OTs made are included I for I in  these  graphs.  (OIC,
in initially implementing this policy,  should  revise  and  backdate  these
figures at least four weeks to plot a meaningful line.)

                   EXECUTIVE DIVISION COURSES

    An additional packet of graphs each labelled Exec Div Courses  shall  be
added to the SH graphs and included also  in  the  WW  graphs  to  which  it
actually belongs. They are as follows.

GRAPHS OF POST GRADUATE STUDENTS:

Graph I - is a dual graph consisting of a  straight  continuous  line  which
shows the number of students on the Clearing Course and a dotted line  which
shows the number of students on the OT Course.

Graph 2 - a continuous line; which shows the  numbei  of  Clears  made  that
week (Thursday 2:00 p.m. to Thursday 2:00 p.m.) and a dotted line  (when  it
comes to apply) showing the number of OTs made.

POST GRADUATE INCOME GRAPHS:

Graph 3 - a line which shows the amount of money received by Saint Hill  for
Clearing Course enrolments.

Graph 4 - a line which shows the amount  of  money  paid  in  by  OT  Course
students for the OT Course.

Graph 5 - a line which shows the amount of  money  paid  into  Qual  SH  for
reviews by reason of the Clearing Course.

              CLEARING COURSE SUPERVISOR STATISTIC

    The statistic of the Clearing Course Supervisor will remain  the  number
of completions tallied as number of parts completed.

LRH:rd      L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1966 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

9

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 APRIL 1967
      (Amendment to HCO Policy Letter of 30 Sept 1965,
Gen Non-Remimeo  "Statistics For Divisions")
01C
Tech Sec
Qual Sec    TECH DIVISION STATISTIC
Ad Council
Exec Council     Number of Students completed in the week
      Number of Preclears completed in the week.

    The Tech Completions statistic remains, the only change being that it is
now a dual  statistic  of  number  of  student  completions  and  number  of
preclear completions for the week. The definition  of  "completion"  remains
as defined in 30 Sept 1965 Policy Letter.
    It was found by a recent  Board  of  Investigation  that  a  total  Tech
completions statistic looked good, but on a breakdown it was seen that  this
was entirely due to an affluence only  in  preclear  completions  while  the
total student completions statistic was actually in  a  state  of  collapse.
This had been masked from Ad Council and Executive  Council  and  not  given
its proper importance due to the condition  having  been  concealed  in  the
total completions statistic.
    Both preclear and student completions statistics are equally  important,
reflecting different areas of the Tech See's responsibilities. Each is  half
the product of the org and must be seen as it is. Additionally, a  collapsed
student completions statistic, if  unhandled,  will  eventually  lead  to  a
collapsed gross cash statistic regardless  of  any  affluences  in  preclear
completions.

    So  let's  handle  these  two  stats  as  they  are  and  give  preclear
completions and student completions the  individual  importance  of  a  dual
gross divisional statistic for Tech.
    This will mean a slight change in the OIC cable.

                                      Written by a Board of Investigation
            David Ziff
            Joan Thomas
            J.J. Delance
      Exec Council WW
      Mary Sue Hubbard
LRH:jp.rd   The Guardian WW
Copyright@ 1967  for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

BPI   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 OCTOBER 1967
Auditor
FSMS  AUDITOR AND ORG INDIVIDUAL STATS

    The Individual Statistic of any Auditor is
    HOW MANY OF HIS PCS HAVE THEREAFTER BEEN TRAINED IN AN ORGANIZATION.
    The Individual Statistic of any organization (except SH) is
    HOW MANY TRAINED AUDITORS EXIST IN ITS AREA.
    The Individual Statistic of Saint Hill is
    HOW MANY TRAINED AUDITORS ARE THERE IN THE WORLD.

LRH:jp.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1967 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                                10

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 31 MARCH 1969

Remimeo
Tech & Qual
      Hats
01C Hats

       COMPLETIONS STATISTIC,

TRIPLE GRADES, TECH & QUAL DIVISIONS

    A completion is defined in HCO Pol Ltr 30th September, 1965 as certified
or classed or graded. It is further defined in HCO  Pol  Ltr  17th  October,
1966 Issue 11 as Grade Rehab, S & D, assist or See Check.

    Since each question of a Triple Grade is considered as a type of process
by itself which handles not a different Grade (process subject  matter)  but
a different flow (aspect) of the  subject  being  addressed,  for  statistic
purposes each flow of  a  Triple  Grade  should  be  considered  as  one  PC
completion.

                            David Dunlop     Int Tech Officer WW
                            Jim Keely   Qual See WW
                            Bruce Glushakow  HCO Area See WW
                                  Ad Council WW
                            Rodger Wright    LRH Comm WW
LRH:ei.eden Jane Kember      Guardian WW
Copyright @ 1969       for
by L. Ron Hubbard            L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 APRIL 1969

     Refers HCO PL 31 March 69

Remimeo

HCO Policy Letter 3 1 st March 1969, Completions Statistic is herewith
cancelled,

as it

A)    Changes the purpose of HCO Policy Letter 30 Sept 65 which states that
    a completion is a grade completed.

B)    Would give a possible 4 Bonuses to an Auditor per Auditing Grade.

      Proposed by
      H.G. Parkhouse
      2 D/G F WW
      for
      Jane Kember
LRH:ei.eden The Guardian WW
Copyright Q 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

I I

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 SEPTEMBER 1969

Remirneo

                 (Amends HCO Policy Letter of 30 Sept 1965)
                (Amends HCO Policy Letter of 31 Mar 1969, 11,
                                Item No. 19)

HGC STATISTIC

    The statistic for the HGC and the Tech Division is changed from PC
Completions to number of successful auditing hours delivered. This is in
line with HCO Bulletin, 29 July 1969.

TECHDIVISION

        The statistic is the number of successful auditing hours delivered.

        Number of student completions.

DEPT OFPROCESSING

        The statistic is the number of successful auditing hours delivered
        for the week.

        This is the statistic of the D of P and the HGC Case Supervisor with
        the HGC Auditor having the same statistic on an individual basis.

        "Successful auditing hours" are judged solely by the -thoroughness
        and exactness of technical application and are the total of sessions
        for which the Case Supervisor gives the auditor a "well done".

R.C. Ash    -    Org Exec See UK
Allan Ferguson   -     Qual See WW
Rosalie Vosper   -     HCO Area See WW
            Ad Council WW
Anne Tampion     -     HCO Exec See WW
Allan Ferguson   -     Org Exec See WW
Tom Morgan  -    Public Exec See WW
Rodger Wright    -     LRH Comm WW
Leif Windle -    Policy Review Section WW
Jane Kember -    The Guardian WW
      for
             L. RON HUBBARD
             Founder

LRH:RA.ei.cden Copyright Q 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

12

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 OCTOBER 1970

All Div IV Personnel
OES
HCO ES
HCO Area Sec
Dept 3 Hats

DIVISION IV ORG BOARD, IDEAL SCENES AND STATS

    Following is the Division IV Org Board with the Sections  and  Units  of
each Department listed and the Ideal Scene and new Stat given for each,

    The  Ideal  Scene  for  each  post  should  be  studied  and  thoroughly
understood, as this is the exact purpose of the post.

    The Stats have been worked out precisely so that each one  brings  about
the  Ideal  Scene  for  its  particular  post,  resulting  in  a  constantly
increasing Stat.

    The Awareness Levels  of  the  three  Departments-Prediction,  Activity,
Production are, of course, exactly right for bringing about the Ideal  Scene
and raising Stats of the Departments, and remain unchanged.

Lt. Cmdr. Joan Robertson CS-4 for L, RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:JR:sb.rd Copyright@ 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

13

TECHNICAL DIVISION THE PRODUCTION DIVISION   DIVISION IV

TECHNICAL SECRETARY

Ideal Scene:      Large  increasing  inflow  from  the  area  into  Div  IV
           producing the specific product of the org which is fully audited
           preclears and large numbers of well trained  graduated  auditors
           who are able and willing to audit and train others.

Star: Dual: 1. Total number of well done auditing hours in HGC.
           2.    Total points of all Students in the Department of Training
               for the week past based on the Flag Authorized Point System.

DEPARTMENT 10 DEPT OF TECH SERVICES

DIR OF TECH SERVICES

Ideal Scene:     Superlative Service to every Student and Preclear  and  to
           Departments  of  Training  and  Processing  so  that  sufficient
           materials,  equipment,  routing,  assignments  and   admin   are
           flawlessly handled resulting in  inflow  of  more  Students  and
           Preclears.

Stat: Dual: 1.   Total number of preclears in the Tech Div for the week,
minus five
            for any who blew, were misrouted, left incomplete, or on leave
            andlor who have not been retrieved from past blows and
misroutes.
      2.    Total number of students in the Tech Div for the week minus
five
            for any who blew, were misrouted, left incomplete, or on leave
            andlor who have not been retrieved from past blows and
misroutes.

TECH ROUTING SECTION

TECH ROUTING ADMINISTRATOR

Ideal Scene:     Flawless routing of bodies and particles so that Students
           and Preclears can get through their services with no delays.

Stat: Number of bodies routed correctly to completed cycle in or out of
      Tech Div, minus five for any one incorrectly routed or who went off
      lines or was not scheduled after arrival.
TECH PA GES

Ideal Scene:     Flawless routing of bodies and particles so that cycles
           may be completed without delay to Staff, Students or Preclears.

Stat: Number of correctly completed routing cycles-minus five for any
           incomplete or misrouted cycles.

STUDENT ADMIN SECTION

STUDENT ADMINISTRATOR

Ideal Scene:     Flawless service to Students and classrooms so that there
           is never a'stop on Student or Classroom functions.

Stat: Total number of correctly issued, newly issued or newly made up
      course packs at hand minus 20 for every student on a course without
all
      his materials in hand, cumulative until remedied.

STUDENT UNIT AND LEVEL LOG CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Perfect Admin so that the logging reflects one for one
           Bodies present with bodies enrolled.

14

Stat: Total number of correctly logged items minus five for any omission or
           incorrectly  logged  item  and  plus  ten  for  perfect  student
           attendance during week.

MA TERIA LS SUPPL Y CLER K

Ideal Scene:     Sufficient numbers of material and packs for every student
           with some to spare of every item on every checksheet on the
           courses.

Stat: Total number of materials usefully supplied to the students and
classes
      minus ten each for any that were missing, incomplete or in poor
      condition.

STUDENT LOCATION CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Every student enrolled present and on time at every roll
           call or immediately located, brought in to Ethics and resumption
           of classes.

Stat: Number of students on courses minus 10 for any absence for each day,
           and plus 10 for perfect attendance for the week.

STUDENTIPC ASSIGNMENT CLERK

Ideal Seen e:    Every student comparably twinned, assigned and posted
           being audited and auditing.

Stat: Total number of students correctly twinned and assigned to co-audit,
      minus five for every student omitted, or incorrectly assigned or not
      posted or not twinned.

STUDENTIPC FILES CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Every student's file as auditor and pc complete and in PT
           as a perfect record of full auditing and having been audited.

Stat: Number of correctly filed items for the week minus five for every
item
      backlogged, misfiled or omitted and plus ten for files in correct
order
      and in PT.

FILES CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Course files in PT and excellent order for instant
           reference and data on cour%es.

Stat: Number of correctly filed items for the week minus five for every
item
      backlogged, misfiled or omitted, and plus ten for files in correct
order
      and in PT.

TAPE EQUIPMENTAND MAINTENANCE UNIT

Ideal Scene:     Tapes and tape machines in excellent condition and
           sufficient number with every tape on every checksheet available
           to students.

Stat: Number of tapes in excellent condition and plus five for every tape
      machine in good condition, and minus 20 for any missing tape on the
      checksheets and every tape and tape machine in disrepair.

HGC ADMINISTRATION SECTION

HGCADMINISTRATOR

Ideal Scene:     Lots of preclears being audited fully with flawless
           scheduling and routing and many more being brought in.

Stat: Number of individual HGC Preclears correctly handled, scheduled, and
      receiving auditing plus five each for any with finished time sent to

15

           registrar and cashier, and plus five for any paid  preclear  who
           was started earlier than he was scheduled for.

HGC ASSIGNMENT CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Lots of Preclears correctly assigned and scheduled being
           fully audited and progressing up the grades.
Stat: Number of preclears correctly assigned on the board minus five for
           any misassigned, omitted, or having to wait for auditors.

HGC ROOM ASSIGNMENT CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Sufficient number of comfortable attractive auditing rooms
           so that there are no distractions and no auditor or preclear has
           to wait.

Slat: Number of correctly assigned auditing rooms plus five for every room
           improvement cycle done.

PRIORITY LIST CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Priority Service quickly available for any Preclear who
           wishes and will pay for it without breaking up auditing already
           in progress.

Stat:       One point for every hour of priority auditing paid for and
delivered.

PCLOCATIONCLERK

Ideal Scene:     Any pe missing or blown instantly located and brought in
           to Ethics and resumption of service.

Stat: Number of pcs in the HGC minus ten for any absence from each session,
           and plus ten for every week with perfect attendance.

FILES CLERK

Ideal Scene:     HGC files in PT and excellent order for instant reference
           and data on auditors, preclears and HGC.

Stat: Number of correctly filed items minus five for any backlogged,
           misfiled or omitted and plus ten for files correctly in PT.

SERVICE SECTION

SERVICE ADMINISTRATOR

Ideal Scene:     Adequately housed students and preclears having adequate
           transport and area services with security in and good PR Area
           Control.

Stat: Number of students and preclears correctly housed plus ten points if
no
      flaps on housing, transport or passport lines, but minus fire for
each
      flap during the week.
      Note: "Flap" is defined as a condition of panic or confusion or out
      PR or error or delay in assignment resulting in any inconvenience to
the
      student or pc,

WORMA TION CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Helpful area information service given to preclears and
           students so that morale is high and PR Area Control is good.

Stat: Number of helpful pieces of information on service lines given to
           students or preclears.

LIO USING CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Every student adequately housed with good morale and PR
           Area Control.

16

Stat: Number of students correctly housed plus five points for every proper
      additional housing unit available, and minus ten for any housing
flap.
      Note: Use definition of flap as above.
      Definition of Housing Unit is: any proper room which houses up to
      three people, proper dormitories for six or more counting as ten
points.

TRANSPORTATION CLERK

Ideal Scene:     Every student having necessary transportation arrangements
           so that he can attend every service he has on time.
Stat: Number of students and preclears whose transport has been arranged
      during week, plus ten for no flap, and minus ten for every flap on
      transport lines during week.
      Note: Use definition of flap as above.

PASSPORTCLERK

Ideal Scene:     Wherever passports are required, every student's passport
           correctly handled with resultant lack of Port Flaps,
Stat: Number of student and preclear passports correctly filed and in
PTplus
      ten for no flaps and minus 100 for every expired, lost, stolen or
      incorrectly handled passport during week.
      Note: Use definition of flap as above.

TECI-1 RESERVATIONS UNIT

TECH RESER FA TIONS A DMINISTRA TOR
Ideal Scene:     Every paid or former preclear and student given a definite
           starting time and bringing this time closer to PT.
Stat: Total number of paid students and preclears who started service
within
      the week plus ten for every one starting at least one week before
      originally scheduled.

LETTER TYPISTS

Ideal Scene:     Lots of excellent, on-policy letters written to paid or
           former preclears and students to bring them in and/or start
           their service closer to PT.
Stat: Number of letters written to former students or preclears or any who
      have advance paid, plus ten points for any written to who come in for
      service, minus 50 for any poorly written or off-policy written
letter,

HSDC COURSE ADMINISTRATOR

(Note: The Dianetic Course Administrator would  be  required  only  in  Orgs
with very large Academies or  in  Orgs  where  only  Dianetics  Courses  are
given. SHSBCs and Academies will have the usual Course Administrators.)
Ideal Scene:     To supply all required Student equipment, material and
           supplies, and to route, log, record and file student cycles
           through the course.
Stat: Dual: 1.   Number of required items usefully added to course
               materials less 50 points for any required item not available
               to students.
           2.    Number of student cycles properly routed, logged, recorded
              and filed.

DEPARTMENT 11 DEPARTMENT OF TRAINING

DIRECTOR OF TRAIN17VG

Ideal Scene: Good tight courses producing lots of excellently trained and
fully

17

           audited graduated auditors who are willing and able to train and
           audit others by joining staff.
Stat: Dual: 1.   Total number of combined points of all students on courses
              based on Flag Authorized Point System.
           2. Total number of auditors graduated.

DIANETIC COURSES SECTION

HSDC AND HSDG COURSE SUPERVISORS

Ideal Scene:     Excellently run classes producing lots of  HSDG  Graduates
           who are willing and able to train and audit others and who go on
           to further training.

DIANETIC COURSE CHIEFSUPER VISOR

Stat: Combined points of all students on Dianetic courses based on the Flag
           Authorized Point System.

HSDCSVPERVISORS

Stat: Combined points of all students on the HSDC Course based on the Flag
           Authorized Point System.

HSDG SUPERVISORS

Stat: Combined points of all students on the HSDG Course based on the Flag
           Authorized Point System.

ACADEMY COURSES SECTION

A CADEM Y CO URSES CHIEF SUPER VISOR
Ideal Scene:     Excellently run courses by excellently trained supervisors
producing
      lots of excellently trained fully audited auditors who continue on up
to
      the next level and then to the SHSBC.
Sta t:      Combined points based on the Flag Authorized Point System of
all
      students on courses.

COURSE SUPERVISORS
Ideal Scene:     An excellently run course producing lots of excellently
           trained fully audited auditors who continue on up to the next
           level.
LE VEL 0 CO URSE SUPER VISOR
LE VEL 1 CO UR SE S UPER VISOR
LEVEL 2 CO UR SE SUPERVISOR
LE VEL 3 CO UR SE S UPER VISOR
LEVEL 4 COURSE SUPERVISOR
Stat: Each supervisor has the  combined  points  of  all  students  on  his
           course, points based on the Flag Authorized Point  System  minus
           3000 points for every student absent more than 2 study  days  in
           the week.

SAINT HILL SPECIAL BRIEFING CO URSE SECTION

UNIT SUPER VISORS A, B, C
Ideal Scene:     Tough, tight, complete training producing excellent
           auditors who will go on to upper levels fully able to handle
           anything.
UNIT A SUPERVISOR
UNIT B SUPER VISOR
UNIT C SUPER VISOR
Stat: Each Supervisor has the combined points based on the Flag  Authorized
           Point System of all his students minus  3000  points  for  every
           student absent more than 2 study days in the week.

18

SOLO SECTION

SOLO COURSE SUPERVISOR UNIT D CLASS VI

Ideal Scene:     Tough, tight course producing  superlative  self-determined
           auditors ready and able to go on to Clear and OT-and  go  on  to
           higher classes of auditing.
Stat: Combined points based on the Flag Authorized Point System of all his
      students minus 3000 points for every student absent more than 2 study
      days in the week.

SOLO A UDIT SECTION

Ideal Scene:     A tight, complete course producing well trained solo
           auditors who will go on to Clear and want to take the Briefing
           Course.

SOL 0 A UDIT CO URSE SUPER VISOR

Stat: Combined points based on the Flag Authorized Point System of all  his
           students minus 3000 points for every student absent more than  2
           study days in the week.

DEPARTMENT 12 DEPARTMENT OF PROCESSING

DIRECTOR OF PROCESSING

Ideal Scene:     An efficient, busy department with  lots  of  well  trained
           auditors fully auditing many preclears up  the  grades  so  that
           they will sign up for more auditing and go on to be trained,
Stat: Total number of auditing hours, less 25 for every pc backlogged more
      than 3 days.

TECH CASE SUPER VISORS
           Note: Per "HGC Cure" HCO PL I Feb '66, the Case  Supervisor  may
           not take Technical orders from the D of P. The  Case  Supervisor
           is under the Tech See, not the D of P *
Ideal Scene:     Flawless C/Sing of  every  folder  so  that  every  session
           results in F/N, GIs at Examiner, and every preclear is fully and
           properly audited without error.
Stat: % of FIN, VGI sessions at Examiner.

LEADING A UDITORS OF SECTIONS, A VDITORS

Ideal Scene:     Many hours of well done auditing resulting in happy, fully
           audited preclears who wish to become auditors and sign up for
           training.

LEADING A VDITORS
Sta t:      Total of all auditors'stats in his section, plus his own.

A VDITORS

Stat.-      Total of well done auditing hours that FIN VGI at Examiner plus
!12
      hour credit for every hour spent on folder error summaries, plus
credit
      for past sessions that ended with FIN VGls which did not last to the
      Examiner but brought about case progress and FIN VG1s later. If
      sessions had no flubs.
            Lt. Cmdr. Joan Robertson
LRH:JR:sb.rd           CS-4
Copyright @ 1970 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Amended by HCO P/L 1 March 1972, Case Supervisor Statistic, in the 1972
Year Book.]

19

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 FEBRUARY 1971
                                   Issue V
                                  [Excerpt]

                       ORG GROSS DIVISIONAL STATISTICS
                                   REVISED
            (Amends HCO Pol Ltr 30 Sept 65 - Stats for Divisions)

TECH DIVISION 4

I     Total points for all students in the Department of Training for the
    week past, based on the Flag authorized point system, per the latest HCO
    Policy Letter on Student points.

2.    Total number of WELL DONE hours audited in the HGC for the week past,
    as defined in HCO B 21 August 1970 "Session Grading. Well Done,
    Definition of" and HCO B 18 Oct 1970 "Auditors Stats on FN VGIs."

LRH:HE:mes.rd    HCO Aide
Copyright@ 1971  for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Note: A complete copy of this Policy Letter can be found in the 1971 Year
Book. See also HCO P/L 5 December 1972 Issue II, Student Completions
Statistic, in the 1972 Year Book.]

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                               NOT GREEN ON WHITE
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      LONDON

HCO BULLETIN OF 26 SEPTEMBER 1956

To Washington and London

FLOW LINE FOR PERSONNEL

    The Procurement of Personnel for the Organization Technical Staff should
be from the field or the School to the HGC, from the HGC to staff posts
when important and need filling.

    In other words, a blank for Day Instructor is filled from HGC staff-the
replacement on HGC staff comes from the field or from the students at the
School.

    Exception-Business staff is occasionally transferred to Technical staff.

    Reason-it is easier to brief on auditing than on what we do in the
Organization. Auditing not Organization is real to field and student.

L. RON HUBBARD

20

                     THE FOUNDING CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY
                   1812 19th Street N.W., Washington, D.C.

FOUNDING CHURCH POLICY LETTER OF I APRIL 1957

TECHNICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISIONS

    To better accomplish our goal, the organization is divided herewith into
two divisions:

    Technical and Administrative

    These bear as indicated on the new Organizational Board.

    The head of the Technical Division has the title of Technical  Director.
Under this  post  comes  the  Director  of  Training  and  the  Director  of
Processing and the Director of Testing and Counseling.

    The  Technical  Director  co-ordinates  all  training   and   processing
activities.  He  holds  auditors'  Conference,  cheeks   sessions,   assigns
preclears, he passes on schedules and subject matter in training.

    The Director of Administration  passes  on  all  administrative  matters
including procurement and central files as indicated on  the  Organizational
Board. NO change is made in  the  posts  of  Director  of  Training  or  the
Director of Processing  except  that  the  Director  of  Processing  is  now
expected to take pTeelears when  necessary  and  to  keep  a  close  eye  on
procurement.

    The Technical Director is  to  act  as  a  bridge  between  service  and
procurement and should work closely with the Registrar and Administration.

    This is put into effect in Washington after a 6-months' trial in  London
where the two divisions have functioned with  a  higher  income  level  than
ever before. It is being tried on for size in Washington.

L. RON HUBBARD
Executive Manager

21

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1

HASI POLICY LETTER OF 7 MAY 1957

ASSIGNMENT OF AUDITORS, ROOMS, STUDENTS

    Registrar has no authority to and must not assign auditors to preclears,
Auditing rooms to preclears or students to class.

    Director of Processing has no right to direct Registrar in signing up
    preclears.

    Director of Training has no right to direct Registrar in signing up
    students.

    There is no co-operation between Registrar and Directors  of  Processing
and Training.

    Registrar signs up anyone she pleases for any length of  time  with  any
promise or compromise. Only when signing up  is  complete  do  Directors  of
Training and Processing have any ownership.

    Directors of Training and Processing cannot direct Registrar in  cutting
back numbers of people to be processed or trained.

    Registrar signs up. Director of Processing and Director of Training cope
    with it.

    If a person can "only be processed on Thursdays for the next two years",
Registrar signs up. Director of  Processing  can  accept  it  or  argue  the
preclear into a three-week sprint.

    Exception: IF the Director of Processing will not accept a preclear  for
one week he feels is a 3-weeker, he can reject and send person back.

    Exception: IF the Director of Training will not accept a student  for  a
higher course than he believes student can take, he can reject for  a  lower
course or processing.

    Registrar just isn't in the HGC or the Academy.

    Costs more processing when this is done wrong.

    Penalty: Flagrant violation of this rule can bring about transfer from
    post.

    Registrar signs people up.

    Director of Processing and Director of Training cope.

    To do this otherwise is high treason to staff and public.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rd Copyright @1957 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

22

                                  NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                  ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                  NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                   1812 19th Street N.W., Washington, D.C.

HCO INFORMATION BULLETIN OF I JUNE 1957

             RIGHTS OF THE DIRECTORS OF TRAINING AND PROCESSING,
                       STAFF AUDITORS AND INSTRUCTORS
                      REGARDING PRECLEARS AND STUDENTS

    The Director of Processing may refuse a preclear already  registered  on
the following grounds, and only on these grounds:

    1 . Risk to Clinic by reason of low profile or connections.
    1 Not enough weeks bought by pc (example: bought one, needs three).
    3.      Non-payment of former debts to Clinic.

    He  may  not  refuse  a  pc  on  grounds  of  insufficient  auditors  or
inconvenience to staff. In case of refusal he returns pc to Registrar.

    The Director of Training may refuse a student already registered on  the
following grounds and only on these grounds:

    1.      Flagrantly needs processing of a more expert level than student
    intensive.
    2.      Signed up for a course for which student not qualified by
    earlier training.
    3.      Nori-payment of former debts to Academy.

    He may not refuse students on grounds  of  insufficient  instructors  or
classrooms. In case of refusal he returns student to the Registrar.

    A Staff Auditor may refuse to process a pc on following grounds:

    1 . Psychotic past history of institutional nature.
    2.      Marked antipathy to case.

    An Instructor may refuse training in his unit to a student who:

    1 .     Gives no evidence of having learned the basics taught in a lower
       unit. (In which case he returns student to the lower unit.)
    2.      Flagrantly needs processing. (In which case he sends student to
       Director of Training and thence to Registrar.)
    3.      Is chronically absent or tardy. (In which case he sends student
       to Director of Training.)
    4.      Who disobeys school regulations. (In which case he sends student
       to Director of Training.)

    A Director of Processing may refuse to sign out or release a preclear he
considers vitally in need of further processing.  In  which  case  he  sends
preclear to Registrar.

    The Director of Training may refuse to send a student to the Examiner by
reason that he will not be a credit to the corps of auditors.  He  is  under
no compulsion to train such a student beyond the  allotted  training  period
but may do so at his discretion.

    A Staff Auditor may refuse to release a preclear from the  HGC  whom  he
feels in vital need of further  processing  regardless  of  the  opinion  or
administration of the Director of Processing or  the  Registrar.  He  should
send the pc to the Registrar but may give further processing whether or  not
the preelear signs  up  for  more  and  despite  any  remonstrance,  of  the
Director of Processing.

    An Instructor may refuse to release a student to a higher  class  or  to
Examination despite the opinion or the administration  of  the  Director  of
Training.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rd

23

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                               NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                       ASSOCIATION SECRETARY DIRECTIVE
                     As per LRH's Memo of I I July 1957

TECH STAFF CERTIFICATE VALIDATION

    All Technical Staff must have their certificates validated before
hiring, or by August 15th at the latest.

Jack Parkhouse

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 NOVEMBER 1960
                                  [Excerpt]

Assn Secs HCO Secs Dir PrR

SIGN UP OF STUDENTS AND PCS

 ACCEPTANCE BY D/P AND D/T

    No pc or student may be sent to D of P or D of  T  without  having  been
signed up fully by PrR. D of P and D of T are not selling personnel.

    D of P may increase required hours before technical acceptance of pc. In
which case pc is returned to PrR for re-signing.

    D of T may reject a student for health or  security  reasons,  at  which
time PrR must re-sign for adequate processing. People with  a  Communist  or
subversive record or who are studying Scientology for use in  other  healing
fields-psychology,   medicine,   psychiatry,   psycho-analysis,    Christian
Science, may not be accepted for training.

    The D of T always does a security cheek  particularly  of  above  points
before accepting a student.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:js.rd
Copyright @ 1960
by L. Ron Hubbard      [Note: ThecompleteP01i Letter, entitled URGENT PR R,
      'L L found in Volume 2, page 261.1
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    can

                                24

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 MAY 1961
Remimeo     (Reissued on 21 June 1967)
All Staff
Tech Hats
Qual Hats   A MESSAGE TO THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARIES
      AND ALL ORG STAFF
      QUALITY COUNTS

    Clearing is now in the reach of every Scientologist.

    Excellent Auditor training is now in the reach of every Academy.

    And these are the only things in the long run that will count.

    When 1 see an Organization staff panting after  newspaper  publicity  or
going mad on the subject of dissemination, and at the same time  turning  in
to me bad results and poor  student  quality,  1  know  somebody  has  their
targets mixed up.

    Quality is the only thing  that  counts.  If  quality  in  training  and
processing is not given first rank and constant priority by  Secretaries  or
Executive Secretaries, then all the administration in  the  world  will  not
make the grade for any Central Org.

    Deliver the goods. That's a crude way to put it. But if you want  a  new
and better civilization you won't get it by  advertising  or  worrying  what
people think of you. You will get it only by releasing and  clearing  people
and sending them out into the society to get the show on  the  road  in  all
branches of human activity, including Scientology.

    1 know we have been a long  time  without  clearing  people.  But  we're
clearing them now. What does it  take  to  clear  people?  It  takes  highly
skilled and tightly supervised auditing. It takes good technology. It  takes
good technical application. ' '

    If you'll forget about how easy it is to mob students all up in a  class
and actually confront each student as an  individual,  make  sure  he  knows
every essential step he has  to  know,  make  sure  all  his  questions  get
answered, you'll have auditors that call audit.

    Will you please put attention on raising technical  skill  in  the  HGC,
releasing people, clearing people, and on the quality  of  training  in  the
Academy to the end of  getting  every  student  capable  of  all  the  steps
necessary to release people.

    1 have made the grade technically in the field  of  research.  Now  it's
time to drop all the booboo's and nonsense. All you have to do in an Org  is
release and clear people and turn out auditors who can  release  people  and
keep in contact with the public and treat them  well  and  you're  over  the
top.

    This morning 1 received a cable from an Org. An  urgent  cable.  Did  it
say, "How do you assess for a Pro-Hav level" or something sensible?  No,  it
didn't. It said, "Send us some biographical data for a  newspaper  article."
I spit. That Org is doing the lousiest job possible in Technical and is  all
worked up to get publicity. What's this? Do they think  a  society  in  this
shape will approve Scientology into power? Hell no! And to  hell  with  this
society. We're making a new one. So let's skip the approval  button  from  a
lot of wogs and settle down to work to make new people  and  better  people.
Then maybe you'll have a society.

    Right here and right now this policy is laid down in  concrete  with  an
atomic branding iron.. THE FIRST AND PRIMARY  GOAL  OF  AN  ORGANIZATION  IS
DELIVERING THE FOREMOST TECHNICAL QUALITY  THAT  CAN  BE  DELIVERED  IN  ITS
AREA.

    All right. I've made my technical target bang in the bull's eye. You can
release and clear. You can train auditors well. Well, Christ! Let's  do  it,
do it, do it!

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:ph.jp.rd Copyright Q 1961, 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

25

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 JANUARY 1962

CenOCon

     URGENT
CRASH PROGRAMME

I WANT THIS DONE.

    Not that Orgs are failing,  they  are  not,  but  on  the  contrary  are
advancing. Not that you don't have a lot to do routinely, you do.

    BUT-our forward advance is stirring up certain exact problems common  to
every office. There,are certain remedies for these problems.  They  are  all
contained below.

    This is what 1 want you to institute as the highest importance.

    1 .     HCO Area See. Get Org Ruds in, one after the other, as rapidly
        as you can and then go over them again and again.

    2.      D of P-Outside pcs. At the end of each week's auditing on an HGC
        pc, check that pc out for MISSED Withholds and pull them. Do this as
        D of P, or appoint a special person who can really run a meter.  The
        only question asked is "Has a withhold been missed on you?" Clean up
        those missed. If other ruds wildly out, return  pc  to  his  or  her
        staff auditor to get the pc squared away. Do  this  on  Thursday  as
        part of pc's auditing time. Use a specialist, not the staff auditor.

       Use a British Mark IV only. This will zoom ARC with org and get  you
       the re-sign ups you are now missing.

    3.      HCO Sec's Staff Staff Auditor. Take staff  staff  auditors  into
        HCO but pay them from Central Org. Run the staff through one by  one
        and only pick up Missed Withholds with a British Mark IV meter. Pick
        up the missed W/Hs and then go to the next staff member. Applies  to
        all staff members. This is a specialist action. All HCO  supervised,
        and HCO supervises all staff auditing from here  on.  And  keep  the
        staff members winning on their auditing.

    4.      D of T. Get personal with your students. Get  them  winning  and
        graduating. Make auditors, don't just follow routine. Make  students
        straighten up students. Personal interview students frequently.  Get
        them winning. Do training by check sheet, not by mass classes.

       Get auditors graduating. Keep their interest up. Get students coming
       out of the Academy and have them auditing to high quality.

    5.      HCO Board of Review. Take exam for Class II and Ill off the  HCO
        Area Sec. Do good, sound examination. Does the staff member know the
        data not the commas. Find out what goofiness a person who can't pass
        an exam is up against and straighten it up, don't just  examine  and
        fail people. Get people passing perfect. Don't defy people  to  pass
        perfect. This data can be learned.  Remember  that  data  exams  are
        complemented with practical performance. (We have a student at Saint
        Hill who knows all the HCOBs and tapes perfectly  and  yet  couldn't
        give an assist to a cat or read a meter needle if he were threatened
        with hanging if he didn't do it.)

    These are the things that will get the erg there and raise your units.

    So please, please, please get on them fast and keep on them.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:sf.cden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

26

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 JANUARY 1962
CenoCon

            TECHNICAL DIRECTOR AND ADMINISTRATOR

    The last time orgs ran with minimal upset,  especially  in  London,  two
posts,  now  empty  everywhere,  were  filled.  These  posts   werelechnical
Director,  who  oversaw  all  technical  activities  and  Administrator  who
oversaw all administrative actions.
    These were two very busy posts.
    Units have been reduced since 1958 by
        (a) Lowered Technical results and
        (b) Administrative Omissions.

    In a  City  Office,  these  two  posts,  rather  than  the  director  of
department posts, should certainly be filled as a Tech Director  can  double
in brass as D of P and D of T. And an Administrator does  the  accounts  and
Dir Mat posts and oversees CF  and  Address  as  well  as  income  from  the
Registrar.
    So in a City Office these two posts should be filled at once,  and  some
executive posts dropped, at a great saving in units and personnel.

    In a Central Organization such as London and DC these two  posts  should
be filled in addition to existing executive posts. The scrambles in  CF  and
Address alone create more income loss than the added units.
    At present HCO Area is actually doing these  two  posts  in  almost  all
orgs. HCO Area has its own duties such as Org Ruds and  Hat  Checks  and  is
finding it hard to do these as  well  as  Tech  Director  and  Administrator
supervision.
    You may or may not fill'these posts elsewhere than London and DC. But  I
feel it would increase income and effectiveness.

LRH:sf.rd   L~ RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 MARCH 1962

                              STAFF REGULATION
                       RELATIONS WITH PCS AND STUDENTS

    No staff member or part time staff member shall have sexual relations or
any kind of sexual relationship with any student  or  preclear  who  is  not
their legal spouse, while that person  is  enrolled  in  the  Academy  as  a
student, or in the HGC as a preclear; nor  while  a  student  who  has  been
released from the Academy is waiting to take his or her HCO Board of  Review
test or examination; nor while a completed preclear  is  waiting  to  return
home.
    Penalty for infraction of this policy: Dismissal, with full  penalty  of
failure to complete staff contract.
    A notice to this effect should be posted permanently and prominently  on
both student and staff bulletin boards.

LRH:ph.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard      [See also HCO P/L 11 August 1967, SecondDymmic
Rutees,
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Volume 1, page 463.]

                               27

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 APRIL 1962
Central Orgs
All Staff
                      TECHNICAL DIRECTOR
                                  BASIC HAT
           (Cancels HCO Policy Letter of 18 Feb 1962, same title)

    The function of  the  Technical  Director  is  to  take  charge  of  all
technical  activities  in  the  organization.  The  Technical  Director   is
immediately below Association Secretary and immediately above  Directors  of
Technical  Departments.  The  Technical  Director  is  on  a  par  with  the
Administrator.
    The Technical Director displaces the Technical Council.
    The first three objectives of the Technical Director are as follows:
    I To make absolutely and personally certain that every HGC Preclear
    achieves
        positive and real gains in every week's intensive in the HGC.
    2.      To make absolutely and personally certain that every student in
        the Academy is able to audit on graduation and that graduation is
        done rapidly.
    3.      To make absolutely certain that staff morale is kept high using
        existing technology.
    The above are the Technical Director's priority functions.  It  will  be
found that when every week's intensive  in  an  HGC  pc  makes  a  real  and
positive gain for that pc, the pc will re-sign and send in  his  family  and
friends and that when gains are not so achieved the procurement  of  pes  is
very difficult. It will also be found that the Academy stays  full  only  so
long as tough tight 8-C is run on the students in  scheduling  and  training
and students are not kept forever on course. Staff morale  only  stays  high
when staff cases are kept cleaned up.
    4.      The Technical Director sees that the PE  Foundation  instruction
        and scheduling are well done and that no technical departure is made
        which will discourage PE attendees from enrolling.
    5.      The Technical Director sees to it that HAS Co-Audit processes do
        not include any that would tend to miss withholds on people  in  co-
        audit, which is to say, a withhold process must be ruled out if  not
        done by an instructor.
    6.      The Technical Director makes certain that proper technical
        subject matter only is given in any course lecture and function.
    Staff auditing effective now and staff staff auditors and staff clearing
programmes are transferred to the Technical Director. Staff  staff  auditors
are assigned directly to the Technical  Director  for  his  supervision  and
assignment on  staff  auditing  schedules.  Staff  staff  auditing  in  this
respect includes HCO staff  as  well  as  Central  Org  staff.  Staff  staff
auditors while dominantly used to audit  staff  may  also  be  employed  for
other technical purposes by the  Technical  Director  such  as  cleaning  up
missed withholds on HGC pcs, checking out HGC pes at the  end  of  intensive
and checking out Academy students.
    Staff technical training is done by the Technical Director or under  his
or  her  supervision.  Check  sheets  for  classification,  all  check   out
examinations  for  check  sheets  and  all  preliminary   steps   to   final
examination for classification are done by the Technical Director  or  under
his or her supervision. HCO is responsible only for  the  final  examination
given after all check sheets are filled out. HCO's responsibility  for  this
is under the HCO Board of Review.
    The  implementing  of  Technical  programmes,  the  training  of   staff
auditors, instructors and staff staff auditors, the  scheduling  of  classes
in the Academy or for any full or part time course of  any  kind  whatsoever
is done by the Technical Director.
    Note: There is no effort here to downgrade HCO. HCO has  inherited  this
hat little by little plus the Administrator Hat to such  a  degree  that  an
HCO See can no longer perform her basic functions.

                                              L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:jw.rd
Copyright Q1962  (Note: 18 Feb 1962, cancelled by this Pol Ltr, had the
same
by L. Ron Hubbard      text except for item number 6, which was added 6
April
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    1962.]

                                28

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 APRIL 1963

CenMon

DISTRICT OFFICES TECHNICAL REPORTS TO HCO WW

    A District Office is regarded as an adjunct of its Area Central Org.

    The technical standard and proficiency at each District  Office  in  the
Technical Director's Central Org Control Area are to be  under  the  closest
possible supervision of the Area Central Org Technical Director.

    Since  a  District  Office  is  intended  to  run  simplified   Co-audit
processes, no special reports are at this time envisaged as being  necessary
to be sent to HCO WW other than  the  report  on  District  Offices  in  the
Central Org Technical Director's Weekly Report.

    Therefore, no OCA graphs, etc are now required to be  sent  to  HCO  WW.
However, the Area Central Org Technical Director will require  these  to  be
sent to him along with any other report he may wish to  be  instituted  from
his District Offices for his own information.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright@ 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 APRIL 1963

CenOCon

I     IMPORTANT CHANGES IN TECHNICAL REPORTS TO HCO WW

    ALL technical reports hitherto being sent to HCO Technical Secretary  WW
are now to be superseded by the attached.

    Pre-cut stencils of these new reports have been  sent  to  the  RC0s  at
Washington DC, Los Angeles, London, Capetown and  Melbourne.  These  reports
should be run off on lightweight airmail paper, foolscap size  (13"  x  W'),
red on white, as soon as possible for distribution to the  Central  Orgs  in
their areas. (The. reports for Academy and HGC will be those  requiring  the
most copies.)

    The object of these new reports is to streamline the tech  report  lines
thus minimising excess admin,  and  at  the  same  time  ensuring  that  the
technical standard of the  highest  possible  quality  is  achieved  in  all
Central Orgs.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright (D 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

29

            (Original to Ron, duplicate held at Org for file)
TO    RON
From  Technical Director     (Org location)

Friday

Dear Ron,

  TECHNICAL DIRECTOR'S REPORT FOR TECHNICAL

AT- ORG FOR WEEK ENDING-

1. HGC.

   Number of HGC pes this week
   My comments and progress report for each pc audited in this HGC is
   attached.
   Comment on HGC as a whole this week

I am making absolutely and personally certain that every HGC Preclear
achieves positive and real gains in every week's intensive in this HGC.

                           Initial      Technical Director

2. Academy

   Number of times the Academy was personally visited by me this week hours
                                        spent

   Number of new students in the Academy this week
   Number of students attending the Academy this week
   Number of students graduated this week

   My comment and progress report for each student in the Academy this week
   is attached.
   Comment on Academy as a whole this week

I verify that students are not being treated as cases but as students. A
tough, tight 8-c is being run on students in scheduling and training and I
am making absolutely and personally certain that every student in this
Academy is able to audit on graduation and that graduation is being done
rapidly.

                           Initial      Technical Director

3. Staff Morale.

   Number of security checks given for new staff this week
   My reports on progress on each member on Staff Clearing Co-audit is
   attached.
   The following questions have been nulled this week on all staff members
   in this Org (including
   all HCO staff):
   "This past seven days, have you falsified any report?"
   "This past seven days, what have you done that staff does not know
   about?"
   Comment on Staff Morale as a whole this week

I am making certain that staff morale is being kept high using existing
technology.

                           Initial      Technical Director

30

4. PE Foundation.

   1 have personally visted the PE Foundation-times this week-hours spent.
   Number on PE Course Number on Cornin Course
   Number on other Courses (state name of Course also)
   Number of Sign-ups from PE Course this week

   Comment on PE Foundation as a whole this week

I have seen that the PE Foundation and scheduling are well done and that no
departure is being made which will discourage PE attendees from enrolling.

                           Initial -Technical Director

5. Technical at District Offices in this Org ControlArea.

   1 have received and inspected this week the 25-hour OCA (or equivalent
   Graphs from the following District Offices

   I have personally interviewed each District Officer (after Adcom) this
   week. What advice was sought

I have personally made this week a monthly spot-check on

                           (location of District Office(s)

I am seeing that the technical is of the highest possible standard on the
Co-audit at each District Office in this Central Org Control Area.

                           Initial      Technical Director

6. Course Lectures and Functions.

   I have checked and made certain that the proper technical subject matter
   only was given at these this week.

                              Initial   Technical Director

7. Staff Technical Training.

   Total number of passes this week
   Total number of flunks this week
   Total number of check-outs this week

   The following staff (names)

passed final examination by HCO this week (state also classification after
each name).

Comment on Staff Training as a whole this week

Initial     Technical Director

8. Comments and suggestions and recommendations

Best,

(Signed) Technical Director

31

HGC   (Org location)

Distribution:    Top two copies to RON, 2nd copy will be returned by HCO WW
          to Tech Dir. Triplicate to be returned by Tech Dir immediately
          after completion to DIP for action, then to HGC Admin for filing
          in pe's folder.

PROGRESS REPORT ON PC (name)      for w/e
Previous HGC auditing  (hours)
This Intensive from - to- amount of hours
This Intensive, Auditor's name          Class
Main process run
Amount of time spent on main process (approx)- (hours)
How many ARC Breaks were there?
Test Results: Graph: Good Change I No change / Lowered graph*
      IQ at start of this Intensive- After Intensive

Auditor's comment on progress

Date - Signed
                                             Auditor
(All the above to be completed by the Auditor in time for the DJP's end-of-
weeklend-of-Intensive* Interview with pc, and handed to DIP.)

Director of Processing Interview Report
E-Meter reading at start of Interview: TJA_ Sens-Type of Needle
(DIP hands pc's copy of Test results to pc. AN numbered questions hereon to
be asked direct of pc.)
1 . "What is your opinion of your Test results?"
2. "In this Intensive, has your auditor missed any withholds on you?"
      Yes/No* (meter null before proceeding further).
Result of Line Plot cheek with p

                 (Note each item not null and its read, also goal.) 3. "Have
you achieved your session goals?" Yes/No* "Your goals set for this
Intensive?" Yes/No* "Any other gains in this Intensive?" Yes/No* If answer
is No to any of these questions, state here goals or gains not made in this
Intensive

4. "Are there any suggestions you would like to make?"

Future Processing planned/signed up for (hours)*
DIP readies pc towards end of Interview, then asks:
5.    "In this Interview, is there anything you have failed to reveal?"
Yes/No*
      DIP mills before ending Interview.
E-Meter reading at end of Interview: TA-Sens-Needle
DIP thanks pc then ends Interview.
Comments and instructions on current state of case

Date- Signed     -Director of Processing

Technical Director's Report
I have personally reviewed this case.
My comments and instructions

Date  Signed     -Technical Director

HCO WW comment

Date  Signed

*Delete inapplicable

32

ACADEMY     (Org location)

Distribution:    Top two copies to RON, 2nd copy will be returned by HCO WW
         to Tech Dir. Triplicate to be returned by Tech Dir immediately
         after completion to DIT for action, then to Acad Admin for filing
         in student's folder.

PROGRESS REPORT ON STUDENT (name) for w/e

Title of Course: HPA/HCA/HPS/B.Scn/HCS/Retread/*

Date commenced on Course

Date due to Graduate

Length of time already on Course including this week -(weeks)

Stage reached on Course

Number of Passes this week

Number of Flunks this week

Number of Check-outs this week

(The above to be completed by the Academy Admin)

Unit Instructor's Comment

Date- Signed     - Unit Instructor
(All the above is to be completed in time for student's brief end-of-week
personal interview with Director of Training and handed to D/T)

Director of Training Interpiew Report

Is student within schedule of Course? Yes/No*

To be asked directly of student:

"How are you progressing on Course?"

"What axe you having the most trouble with?"

"What are you succeeding best at?"

Director Training instructions

Date  Signed     Director of Training

Technical Director Report

Comment on progress of this student

Instructions and recommendations

Date- Signed     Technical Director

HCO WW Comment

Date-       Signed

*Delete inapplicable

33

To    RON   (Original to Ron, duplicate held at Org for file)

From  Technical Director     (Org location)

Dear Ron,
      REPORT ON STAFF CLEARING CO-AUDIT FOR WEEK ENDING

Total number of personnel on Staff at this Central Org, including HCO this
week

Total number of staff audited this week
(Above and all number 1, 2, 3 and 4 below are to be completed by the HGC
Admin in readiness for Technical Director to complete this report.)

1.    Name of pc Auditor's name   Class-

2.    Total hours received up to start of this week
3.    Total hours given this week
4.    Total to date

Process being run

How is case progressing?

1.    Name of pc Auditor's name-  -- -  Class

2.    Total hours received up to start of this week
3.    Total hours given this week
4.    Total to date

Process being run

How is case progressing?

1.    Name of pc Auditor's nam    Class

2.    Total hours received up to start of this week
3.    Total hours given this week
4.    Total to date

Process being run

How is case progressing?

1.    Name of pc Auditor's name - -     Class--

2.    Total hours received up to start of this week
3.    Total hours given this week
4.    Total to date

Process being run

How is case progressing?

1.    Name of pe - Auditor's nam  -Class-

2.    Total hours received up to start of this week
3.    Total hours given this week
4.    Total to date

Process being run

How is case progressing?.

   Reports are being regularly submitted to me. All schedules for auditing
are being strictly maintained. 1 have personally checked the Line Plot of
each Staff pc regularly and 1 have personally checked out each item and
each goal found on Staff.

Comment on Staff Clearing Co-Audit as a whole this week-

[Note: The forrn is extended to cover more   Best,
preclears as above when run off for use by
the Technical Director.]     (Signed) Technical Director

                               34

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 APRIL 1963

cenocon

HCO WW POST DISBANDED - HCOIECHNICAL SECRETARY WW

    The post of HCO Technical Secretary WW is to be disbanded.

    Technical reports sent from Central Orgs to HCO WW are now to be handled
by and routed via Deputy HCO Executive Secretary WW to me.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright (D 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I APRIL 1963

CenMon

TECHNICAL DIRFCTOWS WEEKLY REPORTS

    At Orgs in which the Technical Director's post is yet unfilled, the
Assoc/Org Sec is to personally complete the new Technical Director's
Reports, as set out in HCO Policy Letter "Important Changes in Technical
Reports to HCO WW" dated April 4, 1963.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright @ 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

35

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 APRIL 1963

CenOCon

HANDLING ORG TECHNICAL QUERIES

    With the new technical reports being handled now by the Deputy HCO  Exec
See WW' it is  not  intended  that  technical  queries  be  included.  These
reports are Progress reports.

    All Org technical queries should be  well  within  the  scope  of  being
handled by the Org Technical Director.

    If the Org Technical Director is unable to handle a particular query, he
should always endeavour to settle  the  matter  by  telex  with  the  senior
Technical Director within his continent or with his Continental Director.

    In the very rare instances where a technical  query  cannot  be  settled
locally, a despatch  should  be  sent  to  Ron  by  the  senior  Continental
Technical Executive stating the  matter  briefly  and  it  will  be  handled
immediately.

      Issued by: Robin Hancocks
            Deputy HCO Executive
LRH:gl.rd        Secretary WW
Copyright (D 1963      Authorized by:   L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 JULY 1963

CenOCon

CHANGE OF ROUTING: ORG TECHNICAL REPORTS

    The original copies of  all  Org  technical  reports  are  to  be  seen,
commented upon where necessary, and initialled by the  Assoc/Org  See  prior
to being airmailed to HCO ww.

    For Orgs in Southern Africa and Australia, Org technical reports are  to
be routed via Continental Director and thence airmailed to HCO WW.

    Delays on these tech report lines are to be minimised as much as
    possible.

    These changes of routing are made so as to put in the correct command-
    lines.

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

36

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 OCTOBER 1963

Cenocon

TECHNICAL COUNCIL

PURPOSE:    To uphold and increase the Technical Excellence of the Organiza
      tion through supervision, advice and training.
DUTIES:     To put in and maintain the technical lines and data in the
      Organization. To clarify any technical difficulties.
MEMBERSHIP: The Technical Council is headed by the Technical Director, and
is
      composed of any Staff Member who is a Saint Hill Graduate with
      a Classification of III or above.
SCIEDULE:   The Council will meet on order of the Technical Director: as
      needed to resolve technical difficulties as observed by its members;
      on appeal from a Staff Member or Department Head.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.aap Copyright @1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 FEBRUARY AD 14
Rernimeo    (Reissued on 23 June 1967)
Tech See's Hat Qual See's Hat D of T Hat D of P Hat Registrar Hat Franchise
Field BPI
                ENROLMENT ON SELF DETERMINISM

    No applicant will be accepted at Saint Hill, or should be accepted by
any Organization for training or processing, who is not there oil his or
her own self determinism, but who has been ordered to training or
processing by an Organization, or who has been compelled to undergo
training or processing by, a manager, judge, relative or anyone other than
the applicant.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:gl.jp.rd Copyright @ 1964, 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

37

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 FEBRUARY 1964

CenOCon

TECHNICAL SUPERVISION CHANGES

Effective on receipt, the following changes should be made.

The post of Technical Director is abolished.

The post of Auditing Supervisor is abolished.

The new post of Case Supervisor is created.

A Technical Council is instituted.

    The HCO Area See takes over the function of  Technical  Director,  since
HCO is and always  has  been  responsible  for  ensuring  understanding  and
proper application of Technical in the Org.

    Part of the function of the Tech Director is taken  over  by  the  newly
created Technical Council. This consists of the  HCO  Area  See  (Chairman);
the Assoc See/Org See; the D of P; the D of T; the Case Supervisor; and  the
Dir or PE. The council meets once a  week.  The  Technical  Council  is  not
substitutable for a Technical Director, since a council can  only  meet  and
decide action, not  handle  the  progress  of  individuals.  Therefore,  the
function of seeing that every student and pc is made happy is taken over  by
the Case Supervisor.

    Initially, the post of Case Supervisor may  be  filled  by  the  present
Technical Director. The function of Case Supervisor is  made  clear  from  a
rundown or hat separately published.

    The Case Supervisor is a HASI (FQ personnel but under the Supervision of
the HCO Area Secretary. On all matters affecting  cases,  whether  Staff  or
public pcs or Students, the Case Supervisor is answerable only  to  the  HCO
Area Secretary.

    The post of Auditing Supervisor is superfluous, since  auditing  in  the
Academy should be supervised by the Practical and Theory Supervisors, or  by
any available instructor, under the direction  of  the  D  of  T.  Schedules
should be arranged so that the Auditing units are not working  at  the  same
time as Practical or Theory.

    The report  line  to  HCO  WW  should  now  be  channelled  to  the  new
corporation, Scientology  Library  and  Research  Ltd,  which  is  concerned
partly  with  the  maintenance  of  good  Technical   everywhere   and   the
preservation  of  Technical  records.  The  correct  terminal  to  send  all
Technical reports to is Research Secretary WW.

    The HCO Area See is  responsible  for  seeing  that  these  changes  are
initiated smoothly and with minimum randomity.

      Issued by: Peter Hemery
            Org Supervisor WW
            for L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:dr.rd   Authorised by:   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

38

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 MARCH AD 14

CertOCon

     URGENT

TECHNICAL REPORTS

    All Central Organization technical reports shall hereafter be routed
personally to myself.

    All Academy Student reports shall be addressed by the student to me
personally. Such reports shall be on a weekly basis.

    A report on the Auditing of every HGC preclear shall be sent to me
personally at the end of each intensive. The form of such reports shall be
as in the past and should consist of copies of the actual auditor's
reports.

    Emergency or difficulty cases may be made the ~ubject of cable or telex.
No such requests may be telexed or cabled so as to arrive Saturday or
Sunday at Saint Hill. Only reports arriving Monday to Friday noon at Saint
Hill will be handled.

    Full information from and about every student and preclear, but not
public co-audit or PE members, must be sent through to me.

LRH:dr.gl.rd     L. RON HUBBARD

Copyright@ 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard      [Cancelled by HCO P/L 28 October 1968,
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Technical Reports, page 92.1

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 AUGUST 1964

General

Rernimeo
Magazine
Editors
Dissern Secs

POLICY ON TECHNICAL INFORMATION

    No technical information or reports may be printed or released except
from Saint Hill or approved first by Saint Hill.

    Reason: Failures of the Wichita and Elizabeth centres are traced to this
action of random technology.

LRH:jw.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

39

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 SEPTEMBER 1964
                                  [Excerpt]

AUDITING AND TRAINING POLICIES

                         COST OF SERVICE

    You must realize, despite propaganda about our expensiveness,  that  our
services break into two parts.

    (a) Cheap, broad services for everyone.
    (b) Personal services at a much higher (but cheaper than any other
    field) price.

    Don't get confused and try to make (a) expensive or (b) cheap.

    Whenever I get a plea from some staff to "cut our prices" I now  realize
they haven't got (a) and (b)  separate  and  they're  confused  and  try  to
identify all service with all service.

    Make our cheap services (PE, HAS, Co-audit, brief assists)  very,  very,
very cheap. Give them away, in fact. This  is  broad,  general  Scientology.
You have to spend money to give them away. The book auditor,  the  Extension
Course, the dollar book, the magazine, these are all  part  of  these  cheap
services.

    Most orgs err in never really spending money on cheap services. They get
all tied up with income needs and sell only  expensive  services  and  never
get a whirlwind of interest going.

    Cheap service costs the org money.  You  have  to  hire  staff  just  to
administer it. You have to have people to care for it.  You  answer  letters
from book auditors (but the Letter Reg doesn't) and PE people and greet out-
of-Towners with a hostess.
    You don't turn such traffic off because it doesn't buy. You form a place
for it to come to like a public lounge. You give it tape plays. You whip  it
up to a roar. And you don't let  it  into  your  production  departments  or
lines because it bothers these and upsets them.

    For instance, you never give away an Academy Course. You  always  charge
heavily for it. But you give public tape plays that train the "multitude".
    ALL PERSONAL SERVICES RENDERED TO THE INDIVIDUAL  RESULTING  IN  A  GOOD
PROCESS RESULT OR A WORTHWHILE CERTIFICATE MUST BE CHARGED FOR HEAVILY.

                            COURSES

    The in between on this above was the HQS  Course.  Hence  the  following
training policies are adopted as of January 1, 1965.

    ALL HUBBARD QUALIFIED SCIENTOLOGY COURSES MUST COST THE SAME AS  HUBBARD
CERTIFIED AUDITOR COURSES.

    The policy of gradient course costs is abandoned as unsuccessful.

    THE COST OF A CERTIFICATE COURSE  MAY  NOT  BE  LESS  THAN  ONE  MONTH'S
AVERAGE PAY FOR THE AREA IN WHICH IT IS GIVEN AND MUST BE IN CASH.

    By average pay is meant the average upper lower class  or  lower  middle
class pay scale. (Example  guesses:  U.K.  about  f  50.  U.S.  about  $500.
Australia aboutE75. South Africa about f 80.)
    HIGHER LEVEL COURSES CAN BE CHARGED FOR AT HIGHER RATES (HCS AND HSS).

    Have more courses of shorter duration with less in them.
    The policy is-

    DON'T TEACH CERTIFICATE COURSES OF MORE THAN  ONE  MONTH'S  DURATION  IN
CENTRAL ORGANIZATIONS.
    DON'T HOLD STUDENTS BEYOND ONE MONTH.

40

    This requires more certificates and classifications to be used.
    Example: Have an HQS Course  lasting  one  month.  Next  year  have  the
student back for his HCA. Next year get him in for his HPA, etc.
    Make the student study at home "to get  his  classification  so  he  can
enter the, next course" or "get some processing before next  enrollment"  if
the student seems shaky. Don't hold the student ,  on  course  because  he's
shaky. Give him his certificate and note what he has to do before  the  next
one. Hold back classification if not sure.
    PRESENT CERTIFICATES AT COURSE COMPLETION.
    CERTIFICATES DO NOT DEPEND ON EXAMINATION.
    ONLY CLASSIFICATION CAN REQUIRE EXAMINATION.

                              HAS

    The exception in courses is HAS which is a public course and cheap.
    DO NOT TEACH PROCESSING IN HAS COURSES.
    Teach only study, good definition materials, the philosophy of life,
    etc,

                          HAS CO-AUDIT

    THE PUBLIC CO-AUDIT MAY ONLY DO SUPERVISED ITSA.
    No Clay Table, definitions or any fancy processes of  any  kind  may  be
done in the Co-audit. Only R-I-C.
    Co-audits will thrive if they're cheap and,attendees only listen.  Don't
try for any results.  If  cases  don't  progress  suggest  HGC  auditing  at
regular rates "since you're a special type of case".
                              HQS
    TEACH AN HQS STUDENT TO DO ASSISTS, 8C, HAVINGNESS AND TRIO WELL.
    Whatever else they're taught, make sure they do the above well.
    These were the howling successes of the late '50s.  Polling  all  active
auditors showed they had their best results and  realities  on  these  only.
They're easy to teach. They work well.
    Use the whole training programme for HQS but make them do these 4 things
well as auditors and make them do them when they get out  and  process  pcs.
And they'll mostly win. Try more and they'll do them too  badly  and  mostly
lose.

                              HCA
    TEACH THE BALANCE OF REPETITIVE PROCESSES, THE AUDITING CYCLE AND METERS
AT HCA LEVEL.

                              HPA

    TEACH CLAY TABLE HEALING IN HPA COURSES.

                              HCS

    TEACH CLAY TABLE CLEARING IN HCS COURSES.

                              HSS
    Until 1968 GPMs will be taught only at Saint Hill.

                         CLASS REVISION

    This gives the following table of certificates and classes.
    PE-Level 0-actually begins the HAS Course.
    HAS-Level O-Philosophy, study, no auditing but  co-audit  sign  ups  use
Itsa. Consists of about 60 lessons, mainly about Life and  What  Scientology
is and how to study "Learning how to Learn", vocabulary of Scientology.
    HQS-Class I-Comm Course, Upper Indoc, Assists, 8C, Havingness, Trio.

41

    HCA-Class II-Repetitive processes, metering.

    HPA-Class III-Assessments, Clay Table Healing.

    HCS-Class IV-Clay Table Clearing.

    HAA-Class V-Not used just now.

    HSS-Class VI-GPMs-Taught only at Saint Hill until 1968.

    HGA-Class VII-Not yet being offered but mainly OT type processes already
developed.

    This changes classification levels  slightly  at  the  bottom  but  only
because it didn't work out well the way it  was  laid  out.  This  must  not
interfere with the classification of existing Academy  students  because  of
this policy.

                           PROMISES

    DELIVER WHAT WE HAVE PROMISED.

    We must do what we promise we will do even when it was  a  staff  member
error. The best way to avoid embarrassment is not to promise what you  won't
eventually deliver.

    Acaderny students promised on enrollment what they'll receive must
    receive it.

    The above policy changes were made necessary by the policy that we  must
have shorter courses more often and by the following  policy,  now  possible
because of technical break throughs.

    A COURSE MUST CULMINATE IN TEACHING A DEFINITE SKILL OR SKILLS.

    When you plan a course, plan to have  the  student  able  to  perform  a
definite action well when he completes  it.  Don't  have  fuzzy  generalized
ideas of a course such as  "teach  him  to  be  an  auditor",  "Make  him  a
Scientologist" or "Make him  a  Class  IV".  Whatever  you  advertise  as  a
generality, the D of T and instructors must, in their  own  minds  think  of
making a student into an auditor that can do certain definite  things,  such
as "run an assist, do 8C,  do  trio,  run  havingness".  Then  all  training
culminates in a skill and so  can  have  a  definite  ending  for  both  the
student and instructor.

    The other knowledge that makes an auditor  and  a  Scientologist  is  of
course strung out over these courses.

                             HGCs

    HGCs MAY OFFER ONLY WHAT THEIR STAFF AUDITORS CAN DELIVER.

    If the staff auditors are trained to certain processes the HGC can offer
them. If the staff auditors are  not  trained  to  certain  processes,  they
can't be offered.

                        PART TIME STAFF

    Clarifying the position of "consulting auditors":

    NO HGC MAY "OCCASIONALLY" EMPLOY AUDITORS.

    This means exactly that an HGC auditor is a staff auditor all the  time,
week after week, or he isn't  ever  used.  The  confusion  on  this  is  the
definition of "part time".

    A "part-time" auditor is one who works part of the  working  week  every
week for the organization and always the same part of the working week.

    AN AUDITOR WHO HAS AN OUTSIDE  AUDITING  PRACTICE  MAY  NOT  BE  AN  HGC
AUDITOR OR STAFF MEMBER.

    STAFF MEMBERS MAY NOT AUDIT OUTSIDE PCS OR RECEIVE  MONEY  FOR  AUDITING
STUDENTS OR PCS OUTSIDE THE ORG  AND  MUST  BE  BROUGHT  IMMEDIATELY  BEFORE
COMMITTEES OF EVIDENCE IF FOUND TO BE DOING SO.

    For a staff member to do outside auditing for pay is  very  serious  and
can lead at once to an org's collapse (and has done so).

                             CONSULTING AUDITORS
 For an organization to hire an auditor "when a pc is available" is a grave
                                  source of

                               42

trouble. The erg is not able to train such staff  or  hold  a  standard  and
acts only as a procurer of pes for field auditors.  The  public  stays  away
from such HGCs in droves by actual test.  The  practice  is  called  "Hiring
Consulting auditorsP. It is forbidden.

    It stems from a misguided effort to hold up units. It does hold them  up
for a while and then collapses the org.

    It is unfair to the field auditor since he is just kept hanging on in
    some cases.

    When this policy barring consulting auditors was first  issued,  it  was
not meant to include "part time" staff. Part time staff is usually  composed
of non-practising Scientologists who audit week-end or evening pes  for  the
org and are on units every week, rain or  shine.  1  am  sorry  if  any  ARC
Breaks were caused.

                    ASSIGNING AUDITING TIMES

    THE REGISTRAR MAY NOT ASSIGN TIMES FOR AUDITING.

    The most insidious practice the Registrar can drift into  (next  to  not
signing up anyone) is selling times of audit.

    The Registrar has no business in that department.

    The Registrar sells quantities of auditing and refuses to promise, when.
This, the Registrar must say, is a technical matter and up to the D of P.

    THE DIRECTOR OF PROCESSING MUST NOT ASSIGN AUDITING AT LESS  HOURS  THAN
12Y2 PER WEEK.

    Exception: Where a special programme of 5 hour assists  if  being  sold,
the policy becomes "except not less than 5 hours per week for assists".

    It is unfair to the pc to do the psycho-analytic nonsense. of an hour or
two a week as it doesn't even catch up with his PTPs and so wastes  all  his
auditing.

    Further an org can go broke doing this. Its staff auditors are so strung
out in their assignments that they don't turn in a week's worth of work  yet
draw full units. It's a sure road to low units and collapse  to  go  psycho-
analyst on us and let the public buy an hour or two a week. Crazy  in  fact.
I've seen it happen with fantastic upsets. The idea gets around: the  public
hasn't "got the time". for 25 hour intensives. It's just hearsay. In  actual
fact if the D of P says, "Look here, you won't get any good out of  an  hour
a week. Just handling your current problems will eat up your benefits.  Take
a week off and get 25 hours" 80% of them will. The rest, the  D  of  P  says
"All right, it's 21/2 hours a night for 5 nights  (or  121/2hours  over  the
week-end)." And they will do one or the other.

    AN HGC PC IS ENTITLED TO A CERTIFIED AUDITOR.

    The above is long standing policy.

    AN HGC STAFF AUDITOR MAY AUDIT ONLY PROCESSES WITH WHICH HE IS  SURE  HE
CAN GET RESULTS.

    The above policy is a new stress on an old idea. The moral is, run staff
training courses to get staff auditors up to running higher levels.

    ONE WEEK'S PROCESSING (25 HOURS) SHOULD COST AN AVERAGE MONTH'S PAY  (AS
IN TRAINING).

    But Processing of a special nature at higher levels can be charged at
    higher rates.

    No policies or programmes not specifically  changed  by  the  above  are
changed. All other policies remain in force.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRHijw.rd
Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note:  A  complete  copy  of  this   Policy   Letter   entitled   Policies:
Dissemination and Programmes can be found in  Volume  2,  page  41.  It  was
modified by HCO P/L 19 October 1964, Pricing Formulas, Volume  3,  page  95,
which was later cancelled by 14CO P/L 18 April 1965, Prices Lowered  because
of New Organization Streamline, Volume 3, page 93.1

43

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 FEBRUARY 1965
      REISSUED 15 JUNE 1970
Remimeo
Sthil Students   (Reissued 28.1.73 to correct word on p. 48,
Assn/Org Sec Hat para 2. [Change in this type style.])
HCO Sec Hat
Case Sup Hat
Ds of P Hat
Ds of T Hat
Staff Member Hat
Franchise
(issued May 1965)

Note: Neglect of this Pol Ltr has caused great hardship on staffs, has  cost
countless millions and made it necessary in 1970 to engage  in  an  all  out
International effort to restore basic Scientology over the  world.  Within,5
years after the issue of this PL  with  me  off  the  lines,  violation  had
almost destroyed orgs. "Quickie grades" entered in and denied gain  to  tens
of thousands of cases. Therefore  actions  which  neglect  or  violate  this
Policy Letter are HIGH CRIMES resulting in Comm Evs  on  ADMINISTRATORS  and
EXECUTIVES. It is not "entirely a tech matter" as its neglect destroys  orgs
and caused a 2 year slump. IT IS THE  BUSINESS  OF  EVERY  STAFF  MEMBER  to
enforce it.

ALL LEVELS

                         KEEPING SCIENTOLOGY WORKING
                      HCO See or Communicator Hat Check
                     on all personnel and new personnel
                                as taken on.

    We have some time since passed the point of achieving uniformly workable
technology. The only thing now is getting the technology applied.

      If you can't get the technology applied then you can't deliver what's
promised.
It's as simple as that. If you can get the technology applied, you can
deliver what's
promised.
      The only thing you can be upbraided for by students or pcs is "no
results".
Trouble spots occur only where there are "no results". Attacks from
governments or
monopolies occur only where there are "no results" or "bad results".
      Therefore the road before Scientology is clear and its ultimate
success is assured if
the technology is applied.
      So it is the task of the Assn or Org Sec, the HCO See, the Case
Supervisor, the D
of P, the D of T and all staff members to get the correct technology
applied.

    Getting the correct technology applied consists of:

    One:    Having the correct technology.
    Two:    Knowing the technology.
    Three:  Knowing it is correct.
    Four:   Teaching correctly the correct technology.
    Five:   Applying the technology.
    Six:    Seeing that the technology is correctly applied.
    Seven:  Hammering out of existence incorrect technology.
    Eight:  Knocking out incorrect applications.

                               44

    Nine:   Closing the door on any possibility of incorrect technology.

    Ten:    Closing the door on incorrect application.

    One above has been done.

    Two has been achieved by many.

    Three is achieved by the individual applying the correct technology in a
    proper manner and observing that it works that way.

    Four is being done daily successfully in most parts of the. world.

    Five is consistently accomplished daily.

    Six is achieved by instructors and supervisors consistently.

    Seven is done by a few but is a weak point.

    Eight is not worked on hard enough.

    Nine is impeded by the "reasonable" attitude of the not quite bright.

    Ten is seldom done with enough ferocity.

    Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten are the only places Scientology can bog  down
    in any area.

    The reasons for this are not hard to find. (a) A weak certainty that  it
works in Three above can lead to weakness in Seven,  Eight,  Nine  and  Ten.
(b) Further, the not-too-bright  have  a  bad  point  on  the  button  Self-
Importance. (c) The lower the IQ, the more the individual is shut  off  from
the fruits of observation. (d) The service facs of people make  them  defend
themselves against anything they confront good or bad and seek  to  make  it
wrong. (e) The bank seeks to knock out the good and perpetuate the bad.

    Thus, we as Scientologists and as an organization must be very alert  to
Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten.

    In all the years 1 have been engaged in research 1  have  kept  my  comm
lines wide open for research data. 1 once had the idea that  a  group  could
evolve truth. A third of a Century  has  thoroughly  disabused  me  of  that
idea. Willing as 1 was to accept suggestions and data,  only  a  handful  of
suggestions (less than twenty) had long run value and  none  were  major  or
basic; and when I did accept major or basic suggestions and  used  them,  we
went astray and 1 repented and eventually had to "cat crow".

    On the other hand there have been thousands and thousands of suggestions
and writings which, if accepted and acted upon, would have resulted  in  the
complete destruction of all our work as well as the  sanity  of  pes.  So  1
know what a group of  people  will  do  and  how  insane  they  will  go  in
accepting unworkable "technology". By  actual  record  the  percentages  are
about twenty to 100.000 that a group of  human  beings  will  dream  up  bad
technology to destroy  good  technology.  As  we  could  have  gotten  along
without suggestions, then, we had better steel ourselves to continue  to  do
so now that we have made it. This point will,  of  course,  be  attacked  as
"unpopular", "egotistical" and "undemocratie'. It very well may be.  But  it
is also a survival point. And 1  don't  see  that  popular  measures,  self-
abnegation and democracy have done anything for Man  but  push  him  further
into  the  mud.  Currently,  popularity  endorses  degraded  novels,   self-
abnegation has filled the South East Asian  jungles  with  stone  idols  and
corpses, and democracy has given us inflation and income tax.

    Our technology has not been discovered by a group. True,  if  the  group
had not supported me in many ways 1 could not  have  discovered  it  either.
But it remains that if in its formative stages it was not  discovered  by  a
group, then group efforts. one can safely assume, will  not  add  to  it  or
successfully alter it in the future. 1 can only say  this  now  that  it  is
done. There remains, of course, group tabulation or  co-ordination  of  what
has been done, which will be valuable-only so long as it does  not  seek  to
alter basic principles and successful applications.

    The contributions that were worth while in this period  of  forming  the
technology  were  help  in  the  form  of   friendship,   of   defence,   of
organization, of dissemination, of application, of advices  on  results  and
of finance. These were great contributions and

45

were, and are, appreciated. Many thousands contributed in this way and  made
us what we are. Discovery contribution was not however  part  of  the  broad
picture.

    We will not speculate here on why this was so or  how  1  came  to  rise
above the bank. We are dealing only in facts and the  above  is  a  fact-the
group left to its own devices would not have evolved  Scientology  but  with
wild dramatization of the bank called "new ideas" would have wiped  it  out.
Supporting this is the fact that  Man  has  never  before  evolved  workable
mental technology and emphasizing  it  is  the  vicious  technology  he  did
evolve-psychiatry, psychology,  surgery,  shock  treatment,  whips,  duress,
punishment, etc, ad infiffitum.

    So realize that we have climbed out of the mud by whatever good luck and
good sense, and refuse to sink back into it again. See  that  Seven,  Eight,
Nine and Ten above are ruthlessly followed and we  will  never  be  stopped.
Relax them, get reasonable about it and we will perish.

    So  far,  while  keeping  myself  in  complete  communication  with  all
suggestions, I have not failed on Seven, Eight, Nine  and  Ten  in  areas  1
could supervise closely. But it's not good enough for just myself and a  few
others to work at this.

    Whenever this control as per Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten has been relaxed
the whole organizational area has failed. Witness Elizabeth, N.J.,  Wichita,
the early organizations and groups. They crashed only because  I  no  longer
did Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten. Then, when they were all messed up, you  saw
the obvious "reasons" for failure. But ahead of that they ceased to  deliver
and that involved them in other reasons.
    The common denominator of a group is the reactive bank. Thetans  without
banks have different responses. They only have their banks in  common.  They
agree then only on bank principles. Person to person the bank is  identical.
So constructive ideas are individual and seldom get  broad  agreement  in  a
human group. An individual must rise above an  avid  craving  for  agreement
from a humanoid group to get anything decent done.  The  bank-agreement  has
been what has made Earth a Hell-and if you were looking for Hell  and  found
Earth, it would certainly serve. War, famine, agony  and  disease  has  been
the lot of Man. Right now the great governments of Earth have developed  the
means of frying every Man, Woman and Child on  the  planet.  That  is  Bank.
That is the result of Collective Thought  Agreement.  The  decent,  pleasant
things on this planet come from  individual  actions  and  ideas  that  have
somehow gotten by the Group Idea. For that matter,  look  how  we  ourselves
are attacked by "public opinion" media. Yet there is no more  ethical  group
on this planet than ourselves.

    Thus each one of us can rise above the domination of the bank and  then,
as a group of freed beings, achieve freedom  and  reason.  It  is  only  the
aberrated group, the mob, that is destructive.

    When you don't do Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten actively, you  are  working
for the Bank dominated  mob.  For  it  will  surely,  surely  (a)  introduce
incorrect technology and swear by it, (b) apply  technology  as  incorrectly
as possible, (c) open the door to any destructive idea,  and  (d)  encourage
incorrect application.

    It's the Bank that says the group is all  and  the  individual  nothing.
It's the Bank that says we must fail.

   , So just don't play that game. Do Seven, Eight, Nine  and  Ten  and  you
will knock out of your road all the future thorns.

    Here's an actual example in which a senior executive  had  to  interfere
because of a pc spin: A Case Supervisor told Instructor A to have Auditor  B
run Process X on Preclear C. Auditor B afterwards  told  Instructor  A  that
"It didn't work". Instructor A was weak on Three  above  and  didn't  really
believe in Seven, Eight, Nine  and  Ten.  So  Instructor  A  told  the  Case
Supervisor "Process X didn't work on Preclear C". Now this strikes  directly
at each of One to Six above in Preclear C, Auditor B, Instructor A  and  the
Case Supervisor. It opens the door to the introduction of  "new  technology"
and to failure.

    What happened here? Instructor A didn't jump down  Auditor  B's  throat,
that's all that happened. This is what he  should  have  done:  Grabbed  the
Auditor's report and looked it over. When a higher executive  on  this  case
did so she found what the Case Supervisor and the rest missed: that  Process
X increased Preelear C's TA to 25 TA divisions  for  the  session  but  that
near session end Auditor B Qed and Aed with a

46

cognition and abandoned Process X while it still gave high TA and  went  off
running one of Auditor B's own manufacture, which nearly  spun  Preclear  C.
Auditor B's IQ on examination turned out to be about 75.  Instructor  A  was
found to have huge ideas of how you must never  invalidate  anyone,  even  a
lunatic. The Case Supervisor was found to be "too busy with admin.  to  have
any time for actual cases";

    All right, there's an all too typical  example.  The  Instructor  should
have done Seven, Eight, Nine and  Ten.  This  would  have  begun  this  way.
Auditor B: "That process X didn't work." Instructor  A:  "What  exactly  did
you do wrong?" Instant  attack.  "Where's  your  auditor's  report  for  the
session? Good. Look here, you were getting a lot  of  TA  when  you  stopped
Process X. What did you do?" Then the Pc wouldn't have come close to a  spin
and all four of these would have retained certainty.

    In a year, 1 had four instances in one small  group  where  the  correct
process recommended was reported not to have worked.  But  on  review  found
that each one had (a) increased the TA, (b) had been abandoned, and (c)  had
been falsely reported as unworkable. Also, despite this abuse,  in  each  of
these four cases the recommended, correct  process  cracked  the  case.  Yet
they were reported as not having worked!

    Similar examples exist in instruction and these are all the more  deadly
as every time  instruction  in  correct  technology  is  flubbed,  then  the
resulting error, uncorrected in the auditor,  is  perpetuated  on  every  pc
that. auditor audits thereafter. So Seven, Eight,  Nine  and  Ten  are  even
more important in a course than in supervision of cases.

    Here's an example: A rave recommendation is given a  graduating  student
"because he gets more TA on pes than  any  other  student  on  the  course!"
Figures of 435 TA divisions a session are reported.  "Of  course  his  model
session is poor but it's just a knack  he  has"  is  also  included  in  the
recommendation. A careful review isundertaken because nobody at levels 0  to
IV is going to get that much TA on pes. It is found that  this  student  was
never taught to read an E-Meter TA dial!  And  no  instructor  observed  his
handling of a meter and it was  not  discovered  that  he  "overcompensated"
nervously, swinging theTA 2 or 3 divisions beyond where it needed to  go  to
place the needle at "set". So everyone was  about  to  throw  away  standard
processes and model session because this one student  "got  such  remarkable
TA". They only read the reports and listened to the brags and  never  looked
at this student. The pes in actual  fact  were  making  slightly  less  than
average gain, impeded by a rough  model  session  and  misworded  processes.
Thus, what was making the pcs win (actual Scientology) was  hidden  under  a
lot of departures and errors.

    1 recall one student who  was  squiTreling  on  an  Academy  course  and
running a lot of off-beat whole track on other students after course  hours.
The academy students were in a state of electrification  on  all  these  new
experiences and weren't  quickly  brought  under  control  and  the  student
himself never was given the works on Seven, Eight,  Nine  and  Ten  so  they
stuck. Subsequently, this student  prevented  another  squirrel  from  being
straightened out and his wife died of cancer resulting from physical  abuse.
A hard, tough instructor at that moment could have  salvaged  two  squirrels
and saved the life of a girl. But no, students had a right  to  do  whatever
they pleased.

    Squirreling (going off into weird  practices  or  altering  Scientology)
only comes about from non-comprehension. Usually  the  non-comprehension  is
not of Scientology but  some  earlier  contact  with  an  off-beat  humanoid
practice which in its turn was not understood.

    When people can't get results from what they think is standard practice,
they can be counted upon to squirrel to some degree.  The  most  trouble  in
the past two years came from orgs where  an  executive  in  each  could  not
assimilate straight Scientology. Under instruction in Scientology they  were
unable to define terms or demonstrate examples of principles. And  the  orgs
where they were got into plenty of trouble.  And  worse,  it  could  not  be
straightened out easily because neither one of these people could  or  would
duplicate instructions. Hence, a debacle resulted in  two  places,  directly
traced to failures of instruction earlier. So proper instruction  is  vital.
The D of T and his Instructors  and  all  Scientology  Instructors  must  be
merciless in getting  Four,  Seven,  Eight,  Nine  and  Ten  into  effective
action. That one student, dumb and impossible though he may seem and  of  no
use to anyone, may yet some day be the cause of untold upset because  nobody
was interested enough to make sure Scientology got home to him.

    With what we know now, there is  no  student  we  enrol  who  cannot  be
properly trained. As an  instructor,  one  should  be  very  alert  to  slow
progress and should turn the

47

sluggards inside out personally. No system will do it, only you or  me  with
our sleeves rolled up can crack the back of bad studenting and we  can  only
do it on an individual student, never on a whole class  only.  He's  slow  =
something is awful wrong. Take fast action to correct it, Don't  wait  until
next week. By then he's  got  other  messes  stuck  to  him.  If  you  can't
graduate them  with  their  good  sense  appealed  to  and  wisdom  shining,
graduate them in such a state of  shock  they'll  have  nightmares  if  they
contemplate squirreling. Then experience will gradually  bring  about  Three
in them and they'll know better than to chase butterflies when  they  should
be auditing.

    When somebody enrols, consider he or she has joined up for the  duration
of the universe-never permit an "open-minded" approach. If they're going  to
quit let them quit fast. If they enrolled, they're aboard,  and  if  they're
aboard, they're here on the same terms as the rest of us-win or die  in  the
attempt. Never let them  be  half-minded  about  being  Scientologists.  The
finest organizations in history have been  tough,  dedicated  organizations.
Not  one  namby-pamby  bunch  of  panty-waist  dilettantes  have  ever  made
anything. It's a tough universe. The social veneer makes it seem  mild.  But
only the tigers survive-and even  they  have  a  hard  time.  We'll  survive
because we are tough  and  are  dedicated.  When  we  do  instruct  somebody
properly he becomes more and more tiger. When we instruct half-mindedly  and
are afraid to offend, scared to enforce, we don't make  students  into  good
Scientologists and that lets everybody down. When Mrs.  Pattyeake  comes  to
us to be taught, turn  that  wandering  doubt  in  her  eye  into  a  fixed,
dedicated glare and she'll win and we'll all win. Humour her and we all  die
a little. The proper instruction attitude  is,  "You're  here  so  you're  a
Scientologist. Now we're going to make you into an expert auditor no  matter
what happens. We'd rather have you dead than incapable."

    Fit that into the economics of the situation and lack of  adequate  time
and you see the cross we have to bear.

    But we won't have to bear  it  forever.  The  bigger  we  get  the  more
economics and time we will have to do our job. And  the  only  things  which
can prevent us from getting that big fast are areas in  from,  One  to  Ten.
Keep those in mind and we'll be able to grow.  Fast.  And  as  we  grow  our
shackles will be less and less. Failing to keep One to  Ten,  will  make  us
grow less.

    So the ogre which rnight eat us up is not the  government  or  the  High
Priests. It's our possible failure to retain and practise our technology.

    An Instructor or Supervisor or Executive must  challenge  with  ferocity
instances of "unworkability". They must uncover what did  happen,  what  was
run and what was done or not done.

    If you have One and Two, you can only acquire Three for  all  by  making
sure of all the rest.

    We're not playing some minor game  in  Scientology.  It  isn't  cute  or
something to do for lack of something better.

    The whole agonized future of this planet, every Man, Woman and Child  on
it, and your own destiny for the next endless trillions of years  depend  on
what you do here and now with and in Scientology.

    This is a deadly serious activity. And if we miss  getting  out  of  the
trap now, we may never again have another chance.

    Remember, this is our first chance to do so in all the endless trillions
of years of the past. Don't muff it  now  because  it  seems  unpleasant  or
unsocial to do Seven, Eight, Nine and Ten.

    Do them and we'll win.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:jw.rr.nt.ka.mes.rd Copyright @ 1965, 1970, 1973 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL
RIGHTS RESERVED

4R

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 FEBRUARY 1965
      (Reissued on 7 June 1967, with the word
Remimeo     "instructor" replaced by "supervisor".)
All Hats
BPI   SAFEGUARDING TECHNOLOGY

    For some years we have had  a  word  "squirreling".  It  means  altering
Scientology, off-beat practices, It is a bad thing. I have found  a  way  to
explain why.

    Scientology is a workable system. This does not  mean  it  is  the  best
possible system or a perfect  system.  Remember  and  use  that  definition.
Scientology is a workable system.

    In fifty thousand years of history  on  this  planet  alone,  Man  never
evolved a workable system. It is doubtful if,  in  foreseeable  history,  he
will ever evolve another.

    Man is caught in a huge and complex labyrinth. To get out of it requires
that he follow the closely taped path of Scientology.

    Scientology will take him out of the labyrinth. But only if  he  follows
the exact markings in the tunnels.

    It has taken me a third of a century in this lifetime to tape this
    route out.

    It has been proven that efforts by Man to find different routes came  to
nothing. It is also a clear fact that  the  route  called  Scientology  does
lead out of the labyrinth. Therefore it is a workable system, a  route  that
can be travelled.

    What would you think of a guide who, because his party said it was  dark
and the road rough and who said another tunnel looked better, abandoned  the
route he knew would lead out and led his party to  a  lost  nowhere  in  the
dark. You'd think he was a pretty wishy-washy guide.

    What would you think of a supervisor  who  let  a  student  depart  from
procedure the supervisor know worked. You'd think he  was  a  pretty  wishy-
washy supervisor.

    What would happen in a labyrinth if the guide let some girl  stop  in  a
pretty canyon and left her there forever to  contemplate  the  rocks?  You'd
think he was a pretty heartless guide. You'd expect him  to  say  at  least,
"Miss, those rocks may be pretty, but the road out doesn't go that way."

    All right, how about an auditor who abandons the  procedure  which  will
make  his  preclear  eventually  clear  just  because  the  preclear  had  a
cognition?

    People have following the route mixed up with "the right to  have  their
own ideas." Anyone is certainly entitled to  have  opinions  and  ideas  and
cognitions-so long as these do not bar the route out for self and others.

    Scientology is a workable system. It white tapes the  road  out  of  the
labyrinth. If there were no white  tapes  marking  the  right  tunnels,  Man
would just go on wandering around and  around  the  way  he  has  for  eons,
darting off on wrong roads, going in circles, ending up in the sticky  dark,
alone.

    Scientology, exactly and correctly followed, takes the person up and out
of the mess.

    So when you see somebody having a ball getting everyone to take, peyote
    because

49

it restimulates prenatals, know he is pulling people off the route.  Realize
he is squirreling. He isn't following the route.

    Scientology is a new thing-it is a road out. There has not been one. Not
all the salesmanship in the world can make a bad route a proper  route.  And
an awful lot of bad routes are being sold,  Their  end  product  is  further
slavery, more darkness, more misery.

    Scientology is the only workable system Man has. It  has  already  taken
people toward higher I.Q., better lives and all that. No other  system  has.
So realize that it has no competitor.

    Scientology is a workable system. It has the route taped. The search  is
done. Now the route only needs to be walked.

    So put the feet of students and preclears on that route. Don't let  them
off of it no matter how fascinating the side roads seem to  them.  And  move
them on up and out.

    Squirreling is today destructive of a workable system.

    Don't let your party down. By whatever means, keep them  on  the  route.
And they'll be free. If you don't, they won't.

L. RON HUBBARD Founder LRH:jw.rd Copyright @ 1965, 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

50

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 FEBRUARY 1965

DELIVER

    Now that we can deliver, the first thought  of  every  staff  member  in
every Org from Saint Hill  through  the  main  orgs  down  to  the  smallest
Franchise Office should be to deliver Scientology  training  and  processing
to every person responding to their promotion. Books  and  all  other  items
should be delivered effectively and rapidly to buyers.  Certificates  should
be delivered to all  who  earn  them.  Classification  should  be  delivered
quickly to those who can pass.

    The action of Promotion is to offer as many as can be reached  something
each of those reached will want and buy.

    After Promotion obtains response, one must deliver. That means good case
gains to preelears and students,  good  reality  and  useful  knowledge  and
skill to every student.

    Delivery, if not done swiftly and cheerfully and effectively,  balls  up
the lines, retards growth and keeps everyone marking time.

    The first job of the books personnel is to deliver books ordered.  There
is no other action to take. Just deliver. Keep the invoice  line  simple  by
simply invoicing everything  ordered  and  note  whether  paid  or  not.  In
shipping books or such items not paid  for,  request  the  sum  owing  while
holding the first invoice and  when  it  comes  let  invoicing  make  a  new
invoice showing payment and let  shipping  relate  it  to  the  old.  Refund
overpayments regardless of what the customer said unless  it's  a  donation.
Keep book shipping simple. Deliver books. Be sure  books  are  on  hand  and
deliver them. That's all one does in Books.

    When someone buys training, sign the person up, and deliver the training
and a good case gain too.

    When someone buys processing, give them the processing called for at the
pc's level whether you advertise you will or not and  deliver  a  case  gain
and a completed level.

    Deliver. When promotion has promoted a response, don't get  chatty  with
the response. Just tell the person what it is, how much it costs,  how  easy
it is and when he should get it; or to come in and get it, and deliver.

    Promote, organize and deliver.

    We can now deliver technically.

    You don't have to "make Scientology work". You don't have "to  alter  it
so it will work". You don't have to dream it up. All you've  got  to  do  is
be; skilled in doing exactly what's taught and  you'll  deliver  handsomely.
you can deliver it, so deliver it.

    On a pc who has never been processed, do Level 0. Give him or her an HCO
Board of Review certificate as a pc for that  level  when  it  is  complete;
when a pc has Level 0 Grade certificate, do I. Etc. Boot them up as fast  as
you can. Do only what the Levels are. Issue a certificate when  they're  all
flat on the TA for that grade.

    On people who have been scattered through one or another of the levels,
    finish up

51

anything missed in the lowest level, then the next level, then the next,
etc. When a pc has completed IV finally, be sure your staff can do~VI on
him.

    To get an org or individual to deliver effectively, remove the
distractions from the delivery channel, remove the barriers to delivery,
detect and get rid of the non compliance to orders to deliver. And deliver
pure Scientology, effectively.

    Get a move on. Learn what's to be delivered and deliver it.

    Same with a course. Deliver it and certify you have. That's all.

    You're selling wins. Deliver them.

    The whole human race is about to start going up. They'll move to the
degree you deliver and no faster. So let's get the show on the road.

    Nobody now has to do anything arduous. Just find people, make them want
and pay for delivery and then deliver.

    That's all.

    Let's go.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

52

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 APRIL 1965
Gen Non-Reinimeo I
HCO See Hat HCO JUSTICE DATA RE ACADEMY & HGC
Tech See Hat
. of P Hat  HANDLING THE SUPPRESSIVE PERSON
. of T Hat  THE BASIS OF INSANITY

    The suppressive person (whom we've called a Merchant of Fear  or  Chaos
Merchant and which we can  now  technically  call  the  suppressive  person)
can't  stand  the  idea  of  Scientology.  If  people  became  better,   the
suppressive person would have lost. The suppressive person answers  this  by
attacking covertly or overtly Scientology. This thing  is.  he  thinks,  his
mortal enemy since it undoes his (or her)  "good  work"  in  putting  people
down where they should be.

    There are three "operations" such a case seeks to engage upon regarding
Scientology: (a) to disperse it, (b) to try to crush it and (c)  to  pretend
it didn't exist.

    Dispersal would consist of  several  things  such  as  attributing  its
source to others and altering its processes or structure.

    If you, feel a bit dispersed reading this Policy Letter,  then  realize
it is about a being whose whole  "protective  colouration"  is  to  disperse
others and so remain invisible.  Such  people  generalize  all  entheta  and
create ARC Breaks madly.

    The second (b) is done by covert or overt means. Covertly a suppressive
person leaves the org door unlocked, loses the E-Meters, runs  up  fantastic
bills, and energetically and unseen seeks to  pull  out  the  plug  and  get
Scientology poured down the drain. We, poor fools, consider  all  this  just
"human error" or "stupidity". We rarely realize that such actions, far  from
being accidents, are carefully thought out. The proof that  this  is  so  is
simple. If we run down the source of these errors we wind up with  only  one
or two people in the whole group. Now isn't it  odd  that  the  majority  of
errors that kept the group enturbulated were attributable to a  minority  of
persons present? Even a very "reasonabl&' person  could  not  make  anything
else out of that except  that  it  was  very  odd  and  indicated  that  the
minority mentioned were interested  in  smashing  the  group  and  that  the
behaviour was not common  to  the  whole  group-meaning  it  isn't  "normal"
behaviour.

    These people aren't Communists or Fascists or any other ists. They  are
just very sick people. They easily become parts of suppressive  groups  such
as  Communists  or  Fascists  because  these  groups,  like  criminals,  are
suppressive.

    The Suppressive Person is hard to spot because of the dispersal  factor
mentioned 'above. One looks at them  and  has  his  attention  dispersed  by
their "everybody is bad".

    The Suppressive Person who is visibly seeking to knock  out  people  or
Scientology is easy to see. He or she is making such a fuss  about  it.  The
attacks are quite  vicious  and  full  of  lies.  But  even  here  when  the
Suppressive Person exists  on  the  "other  side"  of  a  potential  trouble
source, visibility is not good. One sees a case going up and  down.  On  the
other side of that case, out of  the  auditor's  view,  is  the  Suppressive
Person.

    The. whole trick they use is to generalize entheta. "Everybody is bad."
"The Russians are all bad." "Everybody hates you." "The People  versus  John
Doe" on warrants. "The masses." "The Secret Police will get you."

    Suppressive groups use the ARC Break mechanisms of generalizing entheta
so it seems "everywhere".

    The Suppressive Person is a specialist in making others ARC Break  with
generalized eritheta that is mostly lies.

    He or she is also a no-gain-case.

    So avid are such for the smashing of others by covert  or  overt  means
that their case is bogged and won't move under routine processing.

53

    The technical fact is that they have a huge problem, long  gone  and  no
longer known even to themselves which they use hidden or forthright  vicious
acts continually to "handle". They do not act to solve the environment  they
are in. They are solving One environment, yesterday's,  in  which  they  are
stuck.

    The only reason the insane were hard to  understand  is  that  they  are
handling situations which no longer exist. The  situation  probably  existed
at one time. They think they have to hold their own, with overts  against  a
non-existent enemy to solve a non-existent problem.

    Because their overts are continuous they have withholds.

    Since such a person has withholds, he or she can't communicate freely to
as-is the block on the track that keeps them in  some  yesterday.  Hence,  a
"no-case-gain".

    That alone is the way to locate a Suppressive  Person.  By  viewing  the
case. Never judge such a person by their conduct.  That  is  too  difficult.
Judge by no-case-gains. Don't even use tests.

    One asks these questions:

    1 . Will the person permit auditing at all? or
    2.      Does their history of routine auditing reveal any gains?

    If (1) is "No", one is safe to treat the person as  suppressive.  It  is
not always correct but it is always safe. Some errors will be  made  but  it
is better to make them than to take a  chance  on  it.  When  people  refuse
auditing  they  are  (a)  a  potential  trouble  source  (connected   to   a
Suppressive Person); (b) a person with a big discreditable withhold;  (c)  a
Suppressive Person or (d) have had the bad luck to be  "audited"  too  often
by a Suppressive Person or (e) have been audited by an untrained auditor  or
one "trained" by a Suppressive Person.

    [The last category (c) (untrained auditor)  is  rather  slight  but  (d)
(audited by a Suppressive Person) can have been  pretty  serious,  resulting
in continual ARC Breaks during which auditing was pressed on without  regard
to the ARC Break.]

    Thus there are several possibilities where  somebody  refuses  auditing.
One has to sort them out in an HGC and handle the  right  one.  But  HCO  by
policy simply treats the person with the  same  admin  policy  procedure  as
that used on a Suppressive Person  and  lets  HGC  sort  it  out.  Get  that
difference-it's "with the same admin policy  procedure  as"  not  "the  same
as".

    For treating a person "the same as" a Suppressive Person when he or  she
is not only adds to the confusion. One  treats  a  real  Suppressive  Person
pretty rough. One has to handle the bank.

    As to (2) here is the real test and the  only  valid  test:  Does  their
history of routine auditing reveal any gains?

    If the answer is NO then there is your Suppressive Person, loud and very
    unclear!

    That is the test.

    There are several ways of detecting. When fair  auditors  or  good  ones
have had to vary routine procedure or do unusual things on this case  in  an
effort to make it gain, when there are lots of notes from Ds  of  P  in  the
folder saying do this-do that-you know that this case was trouble.

    This means it was one of three things: 1. a potential trouble source  2.
a person with a big withhold 3. a Suppressive Person.

    If despite all that trouble and care, the case did not  gain-or  if  the
case simply didn't gain  despite  auditing  no  matter  how  many  years  or
intensives, then you've caught your Suppressive Person.

    That's the boy. Or the girl.

    This case performs continual calculating covert hostile acts damaging to
others. This case puts the enturbulence  and  upset  into  the  environment,
breaks the chairs,

54

messes up the rugs and spoils the traffic flow with."goofs" done
intentionally.

    One should lock criminals out of the environment if one wants security.
But one first has to locate the criminal. Don't lock everybody out because
you can't find the criminal.

    The cyclic case (gains and collapses routinely) is connected to a
Suppressive Person. We have policy on that.

    The case that continually pleads "hold my hand I am so ARC broken" is
just somebody with a big withhold, not an ARC Break.

    The Suppressive Person just gets no-case-gain on routine student
    auditing.

    This person is actively suppressing Scientology. If such will sit still
and pretend to be audited the suppression is by hidden hostile acts which
include:

    I . Chopping up auditors;
    2.      Pretending withholds which are actually criticisms;
    3.      Giving out "data" about their past lives and/or whole track
        that really holds such subjects up to scorn and makes people who do
        remember wince;
    4.      Chopping up orgs;
    S.      Alter-ising technology to mess it up;
    6.      Spreading rumours about prominent persons in Scientology;
    7.      Attributing Scientology to other sources;
    8.      Criticizing auditors as a group;
    9.      Rolling up Dev-T, off policy, off origin, off line;

    10.     Giving fragmentary or generalized reports about entheta that
        cave people in-and isn't actual;
    11.     Refusing to repair ARC Breaks;
    12.     Engaging in discreditable sexual acts (also true of potential
    trouble sources);
    13.     Reporting a session good when the pc went bad;
    14.     Reporting a session bad when the pe went up in tone;
    15.     Snapping terminals with lecturers and executives to make
        critical remarks or spread ARC Break type "news" to them;
    16.     Failing to relay comm or report;
    17.     Making an org go to pieces (note one uses "making" not
    "letting");
    18.    Committing small criminal acts around the org;
    19.    Making "mistakes" which get their seniors in trouble;
    20.     Refusing to abide by policy;
    21.     Non-compliance with instructions;
    22.     Alter-is of instructions or orders so that the programme fouls
    up;
    23.     Hiding data that is vital to prevent upsets;
    24.     Altering orders to make a senior look bad;
    25.     Organizing revolts or mass protest meetings;
    26~     Snarling about Justice.

    And so on. One does not use the catalogue, however, one only uses this
one fact-no case gain by routine auditing over a longish period.

    This is the fellow that makes life,miscrable for the rest of us. This is
the one who overworks executives. This is the auditor killer. This is the
course enturbulator or pc killer.

    There's the cancer. Burn it out.

    In short, you begin to see that it's this one who is the only one who
    makes harsh
discipline seem necessary. The rest of the staff suffers when one or two of
these is
present.    1

                               55

  ' One hears a whine about "process didn't work" or  sees  an  alter-is  of
tech. Go look. You'll find it now and then leads  to  a  Suppressive  Person
inside or outside the org.

    Now that one knows who it is, one can handle it.

    But more than that, I can now crack this case!

    The technology is useful in all cases, of course. But only this , cracks
the "no-gain-case".

    The person is in a mad, howling situation  of  some  yesteryear  and  is
'1andling W' by committing overt acts today. 1 say condition  of  yesteryear
but the case thinks it's today.

    Yes, you're right. They are nuts. The spin bins are full of either  them
or their victims. There's no other real psycho in a spin bin!

    What? That means we've cracked insanity itself? That's right.  And  it's
given us the key to the Suppressive Person and his  or  her  effect  on  the
environment. This is the multitude  of  "types"  of  insanity  of  the  19th
century psychiatrist. All  in  one.  Schizophrenia,  paranoia,  fancy  names
galore. Only one other type exists-the person  the  Suppressive  Person  got
"at". 'Phis is the "manic-depressive" a type who is up one day and down  the
next. This is the Potential Trouble Source gone mad.  But  these  are  in  a
minority in the spin bin, usually put there by Suppressive Persons  and  not
crazy at all! The real mad ones are the Suppressive Persons.  They  are  the
only psychos.

    Over simplification? No indeed. I can prove it! We could empty the  spin
bins now. If we want to. But we have better uses for technology than  saving
a lot of Suppressive Persons who themselves act only to scuttle the rest  of
us.

    You see, when they get down to  no-case-gain  where  a  routine  process
won't bite, they can no longer as-is their daily life so it  all  starts  to
stack up into a horror. They "solve" this horror by continuous  covert  acts
against their surroundings and associates. After a  while  the  covert  ones
don't seem to hold off the fancied "horror" and they commit  some  senseless
violence in broad daylight-or collapse-and so they  can  get  identified  as
insane and are lugged off to the spin bin.
    Anybody can "get mad" and bust a few chairs when  a  Suppressive  Person
goes too far. But there's traceable sense to it. Getting mad doesn't make  a
madman. It's damaging actions  that  have  no  sensible  detectable  reasons
that's the trail of madness.  Any  thetan  can  get  angry.  Only  a  madman
damages without reason.

    All actions have their lower scale discreditable mockery. The difference
is, does one get over his anger? The no-case-gain of  course  can't.  He  or
she stays misemotional and adds each new burst to the fire.  It  never  gets
less. It grows. And a long way from all  Suppressive  Persons  are  violent.
They are more likely to look resentful.

    A Suppressive Person  can  get  to  one  solid  dispassionate  state  of
damaging things. Here is the accident prone, the  home  wrecker,  the  group
wrecker. ,

    Now here one must realize something. The Suppressive Person finds outlet
for his or her  unexpressed  rage  by  carefully  needling  those  they  are
connected with into howling anger.

    You see the people around them get dragged into this long gone  incident
by mistaken identity. And it is a maddening situation to be continually mis-
ldentified, accused, worked on, doubled crossed. For one is  not  the  being
the Suppressive Person supposes. The Suppressive Person's  world  is  Pretty
hard to live around. And even  ordinarily  cheerful  people  often  blow  up
under the strain.

    So be careful who you call the Suppressive Person. The person  connected
with a Suppressive Person is liable to be only visible rage in sight!

    You have some experience of this-the  mousey  little  woman  who  rarely
changes expression and is so righteous connected to  somebody  who  now  and
then goes into a frenzy.

56

    How to tell them apart? Easy! Just ask this question:

    Which gets a case gain easily?

    Well, it's even simpler than that! Put the two on an E-Meter.  Don't  do
anything but read the dial and needle. The  Suppressive  one  has  the  high
stuck T.A. The other has a lower T.A. Simple?

    Not all Suppressive Persons have high T.A.  The  T.A.  can  be  anywhere
especially very low (1.0). But the needle is weird. It is stuck tight or  it
RSes without reason (the pc wearing no rings to cause an RS).

    Suppressive Persons also can have the "dead" thetan clear read!

    You see people around a Suppressive Person Q and A  and  disperse.  They
seek to "get even" with the Suppressive Person and often  exhibit  the  same
symptoms temporarily.

    Sometimes two Suppressive Persons  are  found  together.  So  one  can't
always say which is the Suppressive Person in a pair. The usual  combination
is the Suppressive Person and the Potential Trouble Source.

    However you don't need to guess about it or observe their conduct.

    For this poor soul can no longer as-is easily. Too many overts. Too many
withholds. Stuck in an incident that they call "present  time".  Handling  a
problem that does not exist. Supposing those around  are  the  personnel  in
their own delirium.

    They look all right. They sound reasonable. They are often  clever.  But
they are solid poison. They cant as-is  anything.  Day  by  day  their  pile
grows. Day by day their new overts and  withholds  pin  them  down  tighter.
They aren't here. But they sure can wreck the place.

    There is the true psycho.

    And he or she is dying before your very eyes. Kind of horrible.

    The  resolution  of  the  case  is  a  clever  application  of  problems
processes, never olw. What was the condition? How did you handle it? is  the
key type of process.

    1 don't know what the percentage of these are in a society. 1 know  only
that they made up about 10% of any  group  so  fat  observed.  The  data  is
obscured by the fact that they ARC Break others and make them  misemotional-
thus one of them seems to be, by contagion, half a dozen such.

    Therefore simple inspection of conduct does not reveal  the  Suppressive
Person. Only a case folder puts the seal  on  it.  No-Case-Gain  by  routine
processes.

    However this test too may soon become untrustworthy for now we can crack
them by a special approach. However we will  also  generally  use  the  same
approach on routine cases as it makes cases go upward fast and we may  catch
the Suppressive Person accidentally and cure him or her before we are  aware
of it.

    And that would be wonderful.

    But still we'll have such on our lines in Justice matters from  now  on.
So it's good to know all  about  them,  how  they  are  identified,  how  to
handle.

    HCO must handle such cases as per the HCO Justice Codes  on  Suppressive
Acts when they blow Scientology or seek to suppress Scientologists or  orgs.
One should study up on these.

    The Academy should be careful of this and report them  to  HCO  promptly
(as they  would  potential  trouble  sources  or  withholds  that  won't  be
delivered). The Academy must not fool about with Suppressive  Persons.  It's
a sure way to deteriorate a course and cave in students.

57

                             POLICY

    When an Academy finds it has a Potential Trouble  Source,  a  "withholdy
case that ARC Breaks easfiy" or a Suppressive Person enrolled  on  a  course
or a blow the Academy must call for HCO Department of Inspection &  Reports,
Justice section. This can be any HCO personnel available, even the HCO Sec.

    The HCO representative must wear some readily identified HCO symbol  and
must take a report sheet with a carbon copy on a clip board.

    HCO must have present other staff adequate to handle possible physical
    violence.

    The student, if still present,  must  be  taken  to  a  place  where  an
interview will not stop or enturbulate a class, by Tech Division  personnel.
This can  be  any  Tech  Division  office,  empty  auditing  room  or  empty
classroom. The point is to localize the commotion and not stir up the  whole
Tech Division.

    If Tech Division personnel is  not  available  HCO  can  recruit  "other
staff" anywhere by simply saying "HCO requires you"  and  taking  them  into
the interview place.

    HCO has a report sheet for such matters, original and one copy for
    Justice files.

    The HCO representative calls for the student's folder and looks it  over
quickly for TA action. If there is none (less than 10 divs/sess) that's  it.
It is marked on the report sheet, "No TA  action  in  auditing"  or  "Little
TA". HCO is not interested in what processes were run. Or why  there  is  no
TA. If the course requires no meters the folder is  inspected  for  alter-is
(which denotes a rough pc) or no case changes.

    If there are no TA notations in the folder HCO should put the person  on
a meter, making sure  the  person  is  not  wearing  a  ring.  One  asks  no
questions, merely reads the TA position  and  notes  the  needle  and  marks
these in the report sheet. The Tone Arm will be very high (5  or  above)  or
very low (2 or less) or dead thetan (2 or 3) and  the  needle  would  be  an
occasional RS or stuck or sticky if the  person  is  a  Suppressive  Person.
This is noted in the report sheet.

    If the folder or the student in question says he has had  no  case  gain
this is again confirming of a Suppressive Person.

    If two of these three  points  (folder,  meter,  statement)  indicate  a
Suppressive Person, HCO is looking for two possible students when so  called
in-the one who caused the  upset  and  that  student's  coach  or  student's
auditor. There very likely may be a Suppressive Person on  the  course  that
is not this student. Therefore one looks for that one too, the second one.

    If a bit of questioning seems to reveal that the student's  auditor  was
responsible, test that student too, and enter it  on  a  second  HCO  report
form. And order the other one to auditing at the student's own expense.

    In short be alert. There's been an upset. There  may  be  other  persons
about who caused it. Don't just concentrate  on  the  student.  There  is  a
condition on the course that causes upsets. That is really all one knows.

    When one walks in on it, find out why and what.

    If the HCO tests indicate  some  doubt  about  either  student  being  a
Suppressive Person, HCO asks  about  a  possible  withhold  and  enters  any
result on the sheet and sends the students and sheet separately to the  Tech
Division, Dept of Estimation. The procedure is the same  for  a  Suppressive
Person but is "a withholdy pc who ARC Breaks easily" or simply "a  withholdy
pc" if no ARC Breaks are noted. "Auditing recommended".

    But there is a third category for  which  HCO  is  very  alert  in  this
interview. And that is the POTENTIAL TROUBLE SOURCE.

    For this person may only be audited further if he or she disconnects  or
handles the Suppressive Person or group to which he or she is connected  and
can't be sent to the HGC or back to the course either until  the  status  is
cleared up.

ss

    if this seems the case, there is no point in continuing  the  person  in
the Tech Division and HCO takes over fully, applying the policy  related  to
Potential Trouble Sources.

    This type of case will probably not be dangerous but quite co-operative,
and probably dazed by having to do something about his situation. He or  she
has been hammered with invalidation by  a  Suppressive  Person  and  may  be
rather wobbly but if the Justice steps are taken  exactly  on  policy  there
should be no trouble. HCO can take a Potential Trouble Source (but  never  a
Suppressive Person) out of the Tech Division premises and back  to  14CO  to
complete such briefing. Remember, it is all  one  to  us  if  the  Potential
Trouble Source handles it or not. Until  it's  handled  or  disconnected  we
don't want it around as it's just more trouble and the person will  cave  in
if audited under those conditions (connected  to  a  Suppressive  Person  or
group).

    A Suppressive Person found in an Academy is ordered  to  HGC  processing
always. And always-at his or her own expense.

      If the Suppressive Person won't buy auditing, or co-operate, HCO
follows steps A
      to E in policy on Suppressive Persons in the Justice Codes; HCO may
be assisted in this
by Tech personnel.     I

    The point is, the situation must be handled fully there  and  then.  The
student buys his auditing or gets A to E. There is  no  "We'll  put  you  on
probation in the course and if . . ." because I've not  found  it  to  work.
Auditing or Suppressive Person A to E. Or both.

                       THE BLOWN STUDENT

    The student however may have blown off  the  premises  or  he  has  gone
entirely. On a minor, momentary blow, where all it took  was  the  student's
auditor and a few words to get the student back, the matter is  not  a  real
blow.

    But where the student leaves the premises in a blow or doesn't  turn  up
for class, the Tech Division must  send  an  Instructor  and  the  student's
auditor  over  to  HCO  Department  of  Inspection  and  Reports.   An   HCO
representative should go with them at once to pick up the student.

    The student is brought back with as little public commotion as  possible
and the procedure of HCO checkout, etc is followed as above.

                       THE GONE STUDENT

    Where the student can't be gotten back (or in all such cases)  the  real
cause may be a Suppressive Person  in  the  Course  itself,  not  the  blown
student or the upset student.

    If the Suppressive Person is  on  the  course  (and  is  not  the  blown
student) HCO will want to know this. In all such cases the  one  who  caused
the environment may not be the culprit.

    The HCO representative calls for the blown  student's  case  folder  and
looks for TA. If there is  none  or  for  some  reason  the  student  wasn't
audited, or if no meters were used on that course, HCO  seeks  to  find  out
what the case's responses were to processing.

    If the case seemed to change or improve yet the  student  is  gone,  HCO
looks over the blown student's ex-auditor  for  suppressive  characteristics
such as  satisfaction  the  pe  blew,  critical  statements  about  tech  or
instructors, case rough or difficult, lies  about  the  circumstances,  etc,
and if such signs are present, HCO orders the blown student's ex-auditor  to
the HGC at the student's own expense.

    If this interview with the blown student's auditor seems to  indicate  a
Suppressive Person beyond any doubt HCO orders the student  to  the  HGC  at
the student's own expense.

    The blown student's course auditor will not be found  usually  to  be  a
Potential Trouble Source as these are  seldom  bad  or  rough  auditors,  so
questions about this possibility don't really apply.

59

    But if this student (the blown student's auditor) is  Suppressive,  it's
HGC or A to E. If the student gives on A to E he or she may be  returned  to
course or to the HGC as HCO deems best.

    In all such cases where a Suppressive Person is  found,  watch  out  for
legal  repercussions  by  having  reliable  witnesses  present  during  such
negotiations or upsets and take liberal notes for possible Comm Ev. This  is
why there also must be an HCO representative handling it.

    If there is no agreement to be audited and the student who is  found  to
be a Suppressive Person will not respond to A  to  E  (because  student  has
blown and can't be  found  or  because  the  student  flatly  refuses),  the
student is considered terminated.

    A waiver or quit claim is given or sent the student stating:

                                             Date Place

            I     having refused to abide by the Codes of
        (name and place of org) do hereby waive any further rights I may
        have as a Scientologist and in return for my course fee of
            .......... I do hereby quit any claim I may have on (name of
        org) or any Scientologist personnel or any person or group or
        organization of Scientology.

                                             Signed

        2 Witnesses

    Only when this is signed the student may have his course  fee  returned,
but no other fees as he accepted that service.

    The ex-student should realize this makes him Fair Game and  outside  our
Justice Codes. He may not have recourse  of  any  kind  beyond  refund.  And
after signing can only return to Scientology as per policy on Fair Game.

    The HGC audits such a Suppressive Person sent to it on special processes
specially issued by HCO B for Suppressive Persons. It  will  be  found  that
adherence to these policies will make Academics very calm.

    Note: Nothing in this policy letter waives  or  sets  aside  any  policy
concerning the auditing of known institutional  cases  in  an  HGC.  Persons
with histories of institutionalized insanity may not be audited in HGC.

L. RON HUBBARD

P.S. If you've wondered if you are a Suppressive Person while reading this-
you aren't! A Suppressive Person never does wonder, not for a moment! THEY
KNOW THEY'RE SANE!

LRH:wmc.cden Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

CANCELLATION OF FAIR GAME: The practice of declaring people FAIR GAME will
cease. FAIR GAME may not appear on any Ethics Order. it causes bad public
relations. This P/L does not cancel any policy on the treatment or handling
of an SP. (From HCO P/L 21 October 1968, Volume 1, page 489.]

                               60

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 APRIL 1965
Rernimeo    Issue 11
All instructors' Hats
HCO Personnel Hats     DIVISION 4
HGC Auditors' Hats     TECHNICAL
Sthil Executives
Sthil Instructors      IES RELATION TO HCO JUSTICE
Stbil Staff Auditors ACADEM
      STUDENT TRAINING
      THE NO-GAIN-CASE STUDENT

    Instructors MUST be alert for no-case-change cases  on  course  and  for
"Withholdy pes who ARC Break easily", "blowy students" and "unstable  gains"
cases.

    Even indifferent auditing on oven a haphazard course causes good case
    gains.

    The minority group of no-case-change  in  routine  course  auditing  and
"withholdy" is very minor. These categories contain  all  the  students  who
disturb your course, are insolent to instructors, rant against rules, etc.

    You are under no orders from me that you must please them  but  you  are
under orders to report such cases to HCO.

    YOU ONLY USE DIFFICULT CASE OR STUDENT IN THE ACADEMY AS AN INDICATOR OF
SOMETHING WORSE. You aren't a staff auditor  but  an  Instructor.  You  want
proper auditor and case gain of course, and you'll get  it  (providing  when
some student says IT didn't work you find out exactly what the  student  did
that didn't work and you'll find it was never what was ordered).

    However, on cases that are very difficult,  watch  it!  These  difficult
cases are more than cases. They mean trouble for you from that  student  and
for your class in ways you wouldn't look for.  By  concentrating  on  "tough
cases" you miss the fact that you have a whole class to handle. If you  want
it handled, look rather at what these tough  cases  do  to  your  class  and
handle the "tough case" in a way to protect your course, not to  make  their
cases move.

    IN AN ACADEMY, DON'T TRY TO HANDLE YOUR COURSE ENVIRONMENT WITH  STUDENT
AUDITING!

    Handle your course environment with good data, good  SC  and  discipline
and HCO Justice machinery.

    Your students now have their old course regulations suspended.  Instead,
the  Justice  Codes  are  in.  The  students  are  Scientologists.  Becoming
students gives them no new rights.  And  it  doesn't  remove  their  Justice
rights either.

    I've been through all you go through and  1  have  found,  by  comparing
conduct on a course to conduct in the field afterwards, that  the  turbulent
student is a pc, not a student. He or she makes trouble. On the  course  and
afterwards.

    The total symptom that alerts you to such a person is "tough case".

    This is very easy to notice. Just look over the student case folders and
note that one or another student doesn't seem to get going. Note the  folder
you have to work on. That's it. That's your  trouble  spot  on  the  course.
DON'T judge students by conduct" or speed of study. Judge  on  "tough  case"
only.

    Routine auditing is good unless it's been alter-ised. Routine  processes
work on good people.

    The no-case-gain case makes you hunt for magical processes  and  fatally
leads to alter-is. Now hear this:

61

    THE PROCESSES YOU HAVE,  EVEN  WHEN  ONLY  FAIR,  ARE  BETTER  THAN  THE
PROCESSES THAT WILL BE DREAMED UP BY STUDENTS OR ANYONE AROUND YOUR COURSE.

    The processes you use, if altered to "fit" some tough case will cease to
work on standard cases when so altered.

    The "tough case" (who is also the difficult student) is the sole  reason
one has an urge to alter a process.

    You must be sure to push routine processes done routinely. When you  see
a process being altered look for a "tough case" in the  pc  or  the  student
and call HCO promptly if you find the poor TA type  case,  the  "no  change"
response to routine processes.

    Your approach is to run the standard processes in the right grade in the
right sequence. That's all you teach students to do and it's all you  do  in
case supervision.

    When these "don't work"  even  when  you  force  them  to  be  correctly
applied, you have a tough case there. Don't louse up Scientology  technology
to handle a "tough case". You don't have to invent  the  processes  for  it.
They already exist in the HGC. When you see alter-is,  look  for  the  tough
case and let HCO take it from there. We are, after all  a  team,  and  as  a
team we can handle our environment.

    Your job is just teach and get run the processes of  the  grade  in  the
right sequence. Your job is to teach students to do just that. Your  job  is
to force the student to run the process that should be run and run it  right
and to correct any alter-is savagely.

    Never let some student tell you "it didn't work" without at once plowing
in there to look. You will find only one of two things wrong:

 1.    Your student erred in the wording, sequence or application of the
    process through lack of study or

2.    Either the student auditor or the student pc is a "tough case".

    Don't let anybody try to vary a process to fit a case. If  you  do  your
indicator is obscured in letting anybody fool about in  "trying  to  make  a
process work" or trying to get inventive just to crack a "tough case".

    The majority of  your  course  trouble  and  the  tendency  to  alter-is
material comes from trying to force a "tough case" to get gains. Should  you
alter or advise alteration of a process you are letting our  side  down.  It
leads you into teaching students to alter-is and there goes the balloon.  It
means they won't be able to run standard stuff successfully. And that  means
(let's be brutal) they will miss, by non-standard auditing, on 90% of  their
cases, the good people. They will slant all Scientology toward one  nut  and
we'll be a failed mess like psychiatry with our clinics full of  psychiatric
cases not people.

    The HGC (and perhaps one  course  level)  is  taught  to  handle  "tough
cases". The processes for them are standard, too. You  must  hold  the  line
and answer a student's "didn't work" with "Exactly what  didn't  work?"  and
"Exactly what did you do?" and you'll find they didn't  do  it,  or  it's  a
tough case. Either way follow policy.

    YOU MUST REPORT A TOUGH CASE TO HCO AT ONCE.

    For there sits a Justice matter, not an Academy problem. It's not your
    hat.

    You see the no-gain-case, the "withholdy case that ARC  Breaks  easily",
"the blowy student", "unstable gain student" and your tendency may be to  do
something original or give the student some different  process.  If  you  do
you are madly off-policy.  In  the  ordinary  Academy  Course  you  are  not
teaching a "tough case" course. You  are  teaching  a  nice  fast,  workable
course  for  decent  average  cases.  Your  majority  is  composed  of  good
students. They deserve your time.

    So this makes the "tough case" student the odd man (or woman) out.  They
make a lot Of commotion so one may think they are "everybody" on  a  course.
They're not. They are seldom higher than 10%. So you risk the  90%  of  your
course and all Scientology just to handle 10%.

62

    Could I point out that the Protestant idea of recovering at any expense
    and
considering very valuable any sheep who strayed, was batty.  How  about  the
whole flock? Leave them to the wolves while  one  ran  off  after  one?  No,
please don't go the route by doing that. It's pretty awful.

    No, this "tough case" is for the HGC and HCO. And I'd darn  well  rather
you didn~t give the person the technology  before  he  straightens  out  -as
he'll hurt people with it.

    Such "tough cases" are possible to salvage. They're just cases.  But  it
takes an HGC to run them and it takes HCO to hold them still so  they'll  be
audited. Remember, we're a team. HCO and HGC are part  of  the  team.  Don't
steal their hats.

    The "tough case" is judged only on the basis of case gain or lack of
    it.

    The Academy does NOT send students  to  the  HGC  for  "slow  study"  or
dullness or any other reason except "tough case". That's  firm  policy.  The
"tough case" is the only one you send.

    There are 3 categories of these "tough cases".

    I . The Roller Coaster Case.

        The Potential Trouble Source. A suppressive person is on  the  other
side of tl-ds one. The case will get a gain and slump, get a gain and  slump
over and over. It isn't a "manic-depressive" as the old 19th Century psycho-
analyst thought. It's a guy whose marital partner or family  is  going  into
fits over this person's  connection  with  Scientology.  This  is  purely  a
Justice matter and belongs to HCO. He either disconnects or acts  to  settle
his or her situation. No halfway measures. But you can't do much about  that
in an Academy. If you did you'd leave your class to the wolves. Get  on-line
and route this mysterious fellow who can't get a gain without losing it  the
next day or week over to HCO with a "Please investigate. Possible  Potential
Trouble Source." Don't even bother to question the student.  HCO  will  find
out. It's also illegal to audit them so HCO won't even route to the HGC  but
will act as per policy on such.

    Always err on the side of sending HCO too many students rather than risk
keeping one who is a liability to us all. But never  send  merely  a  course
"cut-up" or a lazy student  whose  case  runs  well.  This  policy  is  only
faintly discipline. It is  actually  excellent  technology  to  a  recurring
course problem.

    2.     The Witbboldy Case.

        The withholdy case is  routinely  ARC  Breaking  and  having  to  be
patched up, commonly blows, has  to  have  lots  of  hand-holding.  As  your
course possibly isn't at that level it is too  much  to  handle  anyway  and
you're not equipped to handle. But  even  if  your  course  is  equipped  to
handle the right action is again HCO. Report this student to  HCO  with  the
label "Withholdy case that ARC Breaks easily" or "Blow type case".  And  get
HCO over to the Academy. HCO may route to HGC at the student's  own  expense
or get two tough staff members to stand by while the withholds are  explored
on a meter in case this is a real Justice  case  or  just  a  student  lunch
thief. The reason  for  all  that  weird  behaviour  is  always  a  withhold
condition. You can't be bothered. HCO, however,  is  interested  in  the  NO
REPORT aspect of such a case. This person hasn't told all that's  sure.  HCO
can send to HGC or refund or even Comm Ev.

     3.     The Suppressive Person.

        The suppressive person does turn up to get  trained.  And  when  you
train them (a) their case doesn't change, (b) they cheer when  their  course
pe loses and gloom when their course pe wins and (c) they chatter about  the
horrors of discipline and seek to lead student squirreling or revolt.  Their
dream is a society wherein the criminal may do anything he  pleases  without
any faintest restraint. We sometimes get loaded  up  with  these  characters
but they run about 1 or 2  in  80  students  usually.  This  person  has  no
faintest chance of making it unless handled for what he  or  she  is  in  an
HGC. And if you train such you lend  our  name  to  all  the  chicanery  and
injury they do with our tech and protect them with  our  name.  You've  seen
this case in another guise of squirrelingchatter-chatter about  phoney  past
lives when they  were  Cleopatra  and  so  on  invalidating  others'  actual
memories, talking only whole track to raw meat. You've seen this  one.  It's
suppression pure and simple and they know it! And  they  don't  ever  get  a
case change and their ARC Breaks don't heal, etc. etc. etc! The secret  here
is

0

63

CONTINUOUS OVERTS which are then withheld. The technical fact  is  they  are
quite gone and are SOLVING A PERSONAL BUT LONG GONE  PROBLEM  BY  CONTINUOUS
OVERTS. One can actually handle them if one knows this seemingly tiny  fact.
One finds of course the PTP, not the overts.  For  one  has  about  as  much
chance pulling this fellow's overts as moving the Earth  by  pulling  weeds.
The suppressive acts this person does are solutions to solve some long  long
ago problem in which the pc is stuck. To an HGC this is  finding  conditions
of environment the pc has had and discovering how he or  she  handled  them.
But this is HCO-HGC business. The longer you wait to notify  HCO,  the  more
harm will be done and HCO will get  inquisitive  as  to  why  there  was  no
report from you on  this.  For  here  is  the  auditor  heart  breaker,  the
natterer, the rumour factory, the 1. 1 and the  course  and  group  wrecker.
Here's "Whee,  kill  everybody!"  in  person.  Here  also  is  the  possible
government agent, the  AMA  BMA  stooge.  Here  is  the  guy  who  plans  to
"squirrel" and "grab Scientology". Here is the boy. Or  here  is  the  girl.
But here is also a thetan buried in the mud. And if you let this  person  go
without attention he or she will soon become ill or die-or worse  will  mess
up or kill others. This person is the only real psycho. And if you  let  him
drift he'll soon wind up in the brain surgeon's suppressive hands.  So  it's
nothing to overlook. People who have to solve  their  problems  by  shooting
the rest of us down are what made life such a hell  in  this  Universe.  You
have your hands on the implanter, the warmonger,  the  wrecker.  But  still,
this is what's left of a human being and he or  she  can  be  salvaged.  But
only in an HGC, not a course. Please! Here also is the criminal or  the  sex
crazy guy or the pervert who just had to break old Rule 25 (the  old  no-sex
Academy rule). People who are sex crazy are over their heads in a  collapsed
bank that they've collapsed themselves with  overts.  Let's  be  real.  This
person throws people back in twice as fast as we can pull them out!  So  why
arm him with tech. Put on your label when you send for  HCO  "No-Case-Change
despite good tries with the routine processes taught  on  this  course  that
was closely supervised in correct application". Let HCO take it from  there.
It's not Academy business.

    Your routine procedure on any of the 3 types of case is:

    1 . Call HCO Department of Inspection and Reports;

    2.      Minimize disturbance,

    3.      Hold the student in an empty classroom or auditing room;

    4.      Stand by to help if things get rough;

    5.      Help HCO complete its report;

    6.      Let HCO (and probably HGC) take over from there and get back to
        your students.

    If you're going to grow and get your own case changes and  have  a  good
time instructing you'll read this very,  very  carefully  and  put  it  very
briskly into practice.

    At first you may not agree that you should be so sharp. It may be a blow
to feeling you can crack all cases. You probably can.  But  man,  that's  an
HGC hat. What are you doing wearing it as an Instructor? By all means  crack
the routine cases. But the tough ones? That's HCO and HGC.

    The bigger we get, the easier all this will be.

    But now let's make a start in teaching courses that are fun for  all  by
giving the deep six to those who want a mess.

    Okay?

    Well, do it, do it, do it.

                                              L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright@ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

64

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 APRIL 1965

Rernimeo    ETHICS
All Tech Div HATS
Students    TRAINING AND PROCESSING
preclears   REGULATIONS
All Qual Div HATS      TECH DIVISION, QUAL DIVISION
                      TECHNICAL DISCIPLINE
                      STUDENTS' QUESTIONS
              (effective on the Posting of the 1965 Org Board)

1.    The only answers permitted to a student's demand for verbal technical
    data or unusual solutions are
    "The material is in (HCOB, Pol Letter or tape)."
    "What does your material state?"
    "What word did you miss in the (Bulletin, Pol Ltr or tape)T'
    and (for requests for unusual auditing solutions)
    "What did you actually do?"

    Any other answer by Technical  Secretaries,  Ds  of  T,  Instructors  or
    course personnel is a misdemeanour.

2.    Any instructor teaching or advising any method not contained in HCOBs
    or on tapes, or slighting existing HCOBs, Policy Letters or tapes may be
    charged with a crime.
3.    Any Instructor in any way obscuring the source of technology by
    wrongly attributing it may be found guilty of a false report.

                    STAFF AUDITORS'ACTIONS

4.    Any staff auditor who runs any process on any org pc that is not
    given in grade and level HCOBs may be charged by the Tech See or D of P
    with a misdemeanour.

5.    Any alteration or non-standard rendition of a process is a
misdemeanour.

6.    Any staff auditor running a pc above the pc's grade  instead  of  for
    the next grade, or running processes out of sequence in a grade  may  be
    charged with a misdemeanour.

7.    Any staff auditor reporting falsely verbally or in writing, on an
    auditor's report may be charged with a crime.

8.    Any staff auditor turning in an illegible report may be charged with
    a no report which is a misdemeanour.

9.    Any staff auditor attesting falsely to TA or falsely reporting the
    flattening of a process may be charged with a misdemeanour.

 10.   Any staff auditor who receives orders to run an illegal process  must
    report the matter at once to 11C0 Ethics or Saint Hill, requesting  that
    the person so advising be charged with endangering the  staff  auditor's
    job and repute.

                      STUDENT REGULATIONS

 11.   Former regulations for students are abolished.

 12.   Students are covered as Scientologists by the HCO Ethics Codes and
 may request
       recourse from injustice and have the same privileges as ally field
 Scientologist.

 13.   Tech Secs, Ds of T, Supervisors and Instructors as well as
 Qualifications Division

65

    personnel  may  request  a  Court  of  Ethics  from  the  Department  of
    Inspection and Reports  for  any  student  they  find  it  necessary  to
    discipline under the HCO Ethics Codes such discipline being in lieu of a
    Committee of Evidence. However the student may request  a  Committee  of
    Evidence instead if he or she feels a wrong is being done.

14.    Any  student  knowingly  altering  technology,  applying   processes
    improperly or using technology illegally  on  HGC  pcs,  on  lower  unit
    students  or  the  public  while  a  student  may  be  charged  with   a
    misdemeanour.

15.   A  student  damaging  another  by  wilful  application  of  incorrect
    technology may be charged by his Instructors with a Crime and a Court of
    Ethics action must be requested by his Instructors.

16.   A student falsely enrolling may be charged by the org with a crime.

17.   Blowing a course is handled under Suppressive Acts. If so charged the
    student may  have  recourse  if  applied  for  before  60  days  to  the
    Department of Inspection and Reports Ethics Section.

                     PRECLEAR REGULATIONS

18.   Preelears are covered by HCO Ethics Codes.

19.   A preclear may have recourse when feeling unjustly wronged by
    applying to the Ethics Section of the Department of Inspection and
    Reports of the org.

20.   A preclear refusing to answer an auditing question may be charged by
    the staff auditor with a "no report" and taken before a Court of Ethics
    at once.

21.   An HGC or  staff  preclear  must  report  flagrant  breaches  of  the
    Auditor's Code to the Ethics Section of the Org, but if  the  report  is
    false beyond reasonable  doubt  the  preclear  may  be  charged  with  a
    Suppressive Act.

22.   A student preclear or HGC preclear blowing an erg  without  reporting
    to the Tech See, D of P or the Ethics Section first  and  who  will  not
    permit any auditor to handle the matter at the erg  where  the  auditing
    occurred must be fully investigated at any cost by HCO in the  pc's  own
    area. The auditing session must be  fully  investigated  by  the  Ethics
    Section and if any Auditor's Code breaks are found to have  occurred  in
    that auditing the auditor may be brought before a Court of  Ethics.  The
    entire matter and its final results must be reported to  the  Office  of
    LRH at Sain~ Hill.

23.   Charges against HGC or student preclears may also be made by the Tech
    See, the Qualifications See, Ds of T, Ds of P, Instructors and staff
    auditors.

                     QUALIFICATIONS DIVISION

24.   Any person undergoing Review is subject to the same actions as in the
    HGC or Academy and any personnel  of  the  Qualifications  Division  may
    charge students and pes under the Ethics Codes and bring them  before  a
    Court of Ethics.

25.   Persons charged by Qualifications Division personnel may request
    recourse if wronged.

26.   The  Qualifications  Division  may  request  a  Court  of  Ethics  on
    Technical Division personnel, preclears and students for false  reports,
    false attestations and no reports as well as other Ethics  matters.  And
    the Technical Division personnel may on their part request  a  Court  of
    Ethics on Qualifications Division personnel, students or preclears.

    This policy letter does not change any HCO  Codes  of  Ethics  but  only
augments them for the purposes of assisting peaceful and effective  training
and processing with the exact technology issued.

LRH:wmc.eden     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyrighto 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard      [Amended by HCO P/L 27 October 1970, Issue II,
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    The Course Supervisor, in the 1970 Year Book.]

                               66

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinsfead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 APRIL 1965
                                  Issue 11

Remimeo

TECH & QUA L DIVISIONS

TECHNICAL PERSONNEL

    The first call on all Certified Auditors belongs to  the  Technical  and
Qualifications Divisions.

    Certified Auditors are primarily assigned to  these  Divisions  and  are
then additionally assigned to other posts.

    At times of Technical and Qualifications  overload,  certified  auditors
may be called upon to take up their technical duties no  matter  what  other
Division they may be in; exempting only Executive  Secretaries,  Secretaries
and Directors of Departments who have  the  staff  status  number  of  their
post.

                             SKILL

    The relative technical skill required of technical personnel is as
    follows:

        1.  Review Case Cracking Unit

        2.  Review Cramming Unit

        3.  Academy

       4.  HGC

        5.  Qualifications Division personnel

        6.  Technical Division personnel.

    The Director of Processing should, in choosing between two personnel, be
the better auditor than the Director of Training,  but  both  should  be  of
high skilL

    A Qualifications Secretary must, to be other than a Deputy, have  higher
certificates, grades and status than other personnel in  the  Qualifications
Division and must have been trained as a Review  Case  cracking  auditor  in
the Saint Hill Department. of Review.

    The Technical Secretary must have certificates, grades and. staff status
number senior to or equal to any  auditor  in  the  Technical  Division  and
must, to have other than Deputy status, have  been  interned  in  the  Saint
Hill HGC.

                         INTER-DIVISION

    Inside any Division (but not from one  Division  to  another)  Technical
personnel may be shifted  without  it  being  called  a  transfer  from  one
department to  another  or  one  unit  or  section  to  another  within  the
Division. This is true of all Divisions.

    In Technical and Qualifications Divisions such shifts of post are often
    valuable in
affording a change and gaining experience and understanding.
LRH:wmc.rd
Copyright@ 1965        L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
      67

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 APRIL 1965
                                  Issue III
                                  [Excerptl
Remimeo
                             ETHICS

                             REVIEW
                  (Correction to HCO Pol Ltr 24 April 1965
                        and additional Ethics data) ,

    As per HCO Pol Ltr of 28 April 1965, and others of later date, orders to
auditing or training may not be made as a sentence  or  used  in  an  Ethics
Court or by a Comm Ev  or  any  other  reason.  Auditing  and  training  are
awards.

    A student who is disruptive of  discipline  and  acts  contrary  to  the
Ethics Codes may not be ordered to Review by the D of P, D of  T  or  Ethics
personnel or other persons in an org.
                    ORDERING STUDENTS & PCs

    Tech and Qualifications personnel, particularly the Tech  See  and  Qual
See and D of Estimations, the D of P and D of T, D of Exams and D of  Review
and D of Certs may order students or pcs to Review or to course  or  to  HGC
or anywhere in and around these two  Divisions  without  any  Ethics  action
being implied. It is just normal, done to get students and pes on  the  road
to higher levels.

    Ethics actions may only suspend training or deny auditing.

    Therefore, a student ordered to Ethics for discipline who does not  then
give adequate promise and example of good behaviour and compliance  must  be
thoroughly investigated even to his or her own area  and  in  the  meanwhile
may not be trained or processed.
    The student, however, may not  be  dismissed  or  expelled  unless  full
Ethics actions and procedures have been undertaken.
    All sentences carrying a denial of training or processing must  carry  a
means of the right to be trained or processed being restored in a  specified
time or under specified conditions.
                    STUDENTS AND PCs & ETHICS

    The routine action of Ethics is to request a  reappraisal  of  behaviour
and a signed promise of good behaviour for a specified time. If the  student
or pe refuses  to  so  promise,  then  the  next  action  of  Ethics  is  an
investigation of the student's course or  pe's  processing  behaviour.  When
then confronted with the data, if the  student  still  refuses  to  promise,
Ethics undertakes a full investigation in the student's or  pe's  own  area.
If the student or pe still refuses to co-operate, the student goes before  a
Court of Ethics which may pass sentence.

                           RECOURSE

    Only after sentence has been passed by a legal body such as a  Court  of
Ethics or Committee of Evidence or after an illegal disciplinary action  may
a student or pe ask for a recourse.
    Normally before asking for recourse a student or pe petitions the Office
of L. Ron Hubbard if unwilling to accept the discipline  but  this  must  be
done at once.

    If the petition is unfavourably acted upon, the student or  pc  may  ask
for recourse.
    Recourse must be requested of the Convening  Authority  that  had  local
jurisdiction over the student or pe and  may  not  be  requested  of  higher
authority. A request to higher  authority  than  the  Ethics  activity  that
passed sentence is a petition, not recourse.

LRH:jw.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (~) 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard      [Note: A complete copy of this Policy Letter can be
found in
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Volume 1, pages 395--398.1

                                68

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Rernimeo    HCO POLICY LETTER OF I JULY 1965
Tech Div Hats
Qual Div Hats    TECH DIVISION
Ethics Hats QUAL DIVISION
Executive Hats   ETHICS CHITS

    This is a VERY important policy. When it is neglected the org will  soon
experience a technical dropped statistic and lose income and personnel.

    The most attacked area of an org is its Tech and Qual personnel as these
produce  the  effective  results  which  make  Scientology  seem  deadly  to
Suppressives.

    The Suppressive is TERRIFIED of anyone getting better or  more  powerful
as he is dramatizing some long gone (but to him it is right now)  combat  or
vengeance. He or she confuses the old enemies with anyone  about  and  looks
on anyone who tries to help as an  insidious  villain  who  will  strengthen
these "enemies".

    Thus Tech and Qual personnel are peculiarly liable to covert, off  line,
off policy annoyances which in time turn them into PTSs.  Their  cases  will
Roller Coaster and they begin to go off line,  off  policy  and  off  origin
(see Dev-T Pol Ltrs) themselves.

    This results in a technical breakdown and an apparency  of  busyness  in
these divisions which does not in fact produce anything, being Dev-T.

    The policy then is: NO TECH OR QUAL PERSONNEL MAY  OMIT  GIVING  ETHICS
CHITS TO ETHICS ON ANY INCIDENT OR  ACTION  COVERED  IN  THE  DEV-T  POLICY
LETTERS OR WHICH INDICATES SP OR PTS ACTIVITY.

    This means they may not "be decent about it" or "reasonable" and so
    refrain.

    This means they must know their Ethics and Dev-T Pol Ltrs.

    This means they may not themselves act like Ethics Officers or steal the
Ethics hat.
    It means that they must chit students who  bring  a  body  and  ask  for
unusual solutions; they must chit all discourteous conduct; they  must  chit
all Roller Coaster cases; they must chit all Suppressive  actions  observed;
they must chit snide comments; they must chit  alter-is  and  entheta;  they
must chit  derogatory  remarks;  they  must  chit  all  Dev-T.  Anything  in
violation of Ethics or Dev-T Pol Ltrs must be reported.

    Ethics will find then that only two or three people in those  areas  are
causing all the upset. This fact routinely stuns  Tech  and  Qual  personnel
when it is called to their attention-that  only  two  or  three  are  making
their lives miserable.

    Ethics, seeing tech statistics drop, must investigate all this and  WHEN
ETHICS FINDS the Qual and Tech personnel have not  been  handing  in  Ethics
chits, the Ethics  Officer  must  report  them  to  the  HCO  Exec  Sec  for
disciplinary action.

                    NON ENTURBULATION ORDER
    What to do with the 2 or 3 students or pcs causing trouble?
    Ethics issues a Non Enturbulation Order. This states that those named in
it (the SPs and PTSs  who  are  students  or  preclears)  are  forbidden  to
enturbulate  others  and  if  one  more  report   is   received   of   their
enturbulating anyone, an SP order will be issued forthwith.
    This will hold them in line until tech can be  gotten  in  on  them  and
takes them off the back of Tech and Qual personnel.

                         NOT THEORETICAL
    This is not a theoretical situation or policy.  It  is  issued  directly
after seeing tech results go down, Tech and Qual cases  Roller  Coaster  and
results drop.
    Ethics found that the entire situation came about through no chits  from
Tech and Qual personnel  about  troublesome  people  which  resulted  in  no
restraint and a collapse of Divisions 4 and 5 Comm lines and results.
    When Tech and Qual personnel try to take the law into their  own  hands,
or ignore issuing Ethics chits, chaos results, not case gains.
    Keep Tech Results UP.

 LRH:mh.cden           L. RON HUBBARD
 Copyright (D 1965
 by L. Ron Hubbard     69
 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                 HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 JULY 1965
Gen Non Rernimeo

                 ASSIGNMENT OF TECH PERSONNEL

    The Director of Review has first,  immediate  and  urgent  call  on  all
auditors not on duty due to the reason of their pcs  being  in  Review.  Any
waiting list has first call on auditors whose pcs have just been completed.

    If there is no waiting list, such auditors are also on call to Review.

    If there is no call by  the  Director  of  Review,  first  call  on  the
auditors is by the Director of Tech Service (Dept 10).

    If the Director of Tech Service has no use for them, the third  priority
on idle auditors is Dir Comm for Expediters.

                      COURSE SUPERVISORS

    First call on Course Supervisors who have no students or  whose  classes
have been combined so as to leave them with no  students  is  the  D  of  P.
Second call is Academy Admin and third call is  Dir  Comm  and  nothing  may
interrupt any of these priorities.

LRH:mh.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I JULY 1965
                    Amends and cancels HCO Policy Letter
                               of 5 July 1965
Gen Non Rernimeo

                 ASSIGNMENT OF TECH PERSONNEL

                            QUAL DIV

    Auditors are fully assigned by name to the Qual  Div.  The  practice  of
borrowing auditors from the Tech Div confuses the lines.

    Assign enough auditors to Review to take care of the work. If it is  too
consistently an overload, assign additional auditors,  but  on  a  permanent
org board basis, not a daily borrowing.

                            TECH DIV

    First call on the auditors of the HGC who are not working is the Dir  of
Tech Service (Dept 10).

    If the Director of Tech Service has no use for them, the second priority
on idle auditors is Dir Comm for Expediters.

                       COURSE SUPERVISORS

    First call on Course Supervisors who have no students or  whose  classes
have been combined so as to leave them with no  students  is  the  D  of  P.
Second call is Academy Admin and third call is  Dir  Comm  and  nothing  may
interrupt any of these priorities.

LRH:ml.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

70

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 JULY 1965
Remimeo
All Tech Hats    Tech Div
AJI Qual Hats    Qual Div

RELEASES, POLICY ON

    Every HGC auditor and executive and every person in the Qual Division
    must be
checked out on the following materials rapidly as soon as put on staff.

    The final result of lower level auditing is Release.

    If an auditor cannot detect it and if executives do not know what to do
    with it,
FANTASTIC ERRORS WILL OCCUR THAT WILL ARC BREAK PCS WITH THE
ORG.

    This is the major area of technical goofs-messing up Releases.

    If an auditor does not recognize floating needles and TA position even
    at Level 0,
he or she will miss the point where the pc goes Release and will continue
to audit the
pc.

                 CLEAR PHENOMENA ON THE METER

Books

I . E-Meter Essentials, pages 17 and 18, paragraphs 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45,
46 and 47.

HCO Policy Letters

I . Meter Checks-2 April 1965, paragraph entitled "Release Check".

SEC EDs
I . SEC ED 65 INT, 29 June 1965, Org Boom in Releases,

HCO Executive Letters
I . Data on Releases, 6 July 1965, page 2, number 7.
2.    Former Release Programme, 5 July 1965, page 2, paragraph 2,

Ae Auditor
I . The Auditor, 8, page 3, column 1, paragraph 5.

HCO Bulletins

1.    Model Session Revised, 3 July 1965, "Release Reached", paragraph 2.

                      RELEASES, VITAL DATA

HCO Policy Letters
1.    Power Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
April 1965
2.    Release Award . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
May 1965
3.    Releases, Vital Data . . .  . . . . . . . . . 10 May 1965
4.    Power Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
May 1965
5.    Memorandum of Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 May 1965
6.    6 Power Processes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
June 1965
7.    Releases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6 July 1965
8.    Release Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
July 1965

                               71

SEC EL)s

I . 47 INT
2. 50 INT
3. 51 INT
4. 58 INT
5. 59 INT
6. 64 INT
7. 65 INT

HCO Executive Letters

      1.    The Future Programme  3 May 1965
2.    Saint Hill Courses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
May 1965
3. Data on BPC and Releases  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 June
1965
4.    Snap and Pop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
June 1965
      5.    More Data on Release  29 June 1965
      6.    Data on Releases      6 July 1965

Auditor 8

1.    Article, "The Road to Clea?'.

Classification, Gradation and Awareness Chart

1 . Chart
2.    HCO Policy Letter, Classification, Gradation and Awareness Chart, 5
May 1965.

                TECHNICAL MATERIALS OF RELEASE

HCO Bulletins

I . Clear and OT Behaviour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 June
1965
2.    Releases, Different Kinds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
June 1965
      3.    Release Rehabilitation of Former Releases
            and Thetan Exterior .       30 June 1965
      4.    Model Session Revised       3 July 1965
      5.    States of Being Attained by Processing       12 July 1965

HCO Policy Letters

1.    HGC PC Review Auditing Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 June
1965

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd
Copyright (D 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

72

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 JULY 1965
Gen Non Rernimeo TECH DIV

                          & REGISTRAR

                            TESTING

    All psychology type testing is herewith abandoned  on  HGC  and  Academy
lines (not public lines).

    This means the OCA, APA, IQ and tests of any other description.

    The reasons are as follows:

    I . Testing makes registration lines hard to manage.
    2. Tests test only what a person knew and do not  test  an  increase  of
awareness. They changed because of  valence  changes.  Releasing  has  shown
they do not test increased capacity  to  learn  or  live  or  the  pc's  new
potential but only test the pe's data awareness, all  of  which  comes  from
the pe's past. A person knows only what  he  knew.  Releasing  and  Clearing
give back the ability to observe, know and act. Any data returned to the  pe
was data he knew before and was  occluded.  But  this  doesn't  show  up  on
psychology type tests.

    3. Different tests would be required to demonstrate what increase the pc
has had. The old type test, measuring  valence  shifts,  invalidate  a  pc's
gains. He feels good, is alert and aware. The test only tests what he  knew.
Therefore until new tests are developed that do show the  current  state  of
the pe, the old type tests will not be used. Example -  A  Released  OT  can
tell you a great deal of newly  observed  data  but,  tested  on  psychology
tests can only say what he knew about life and cannot tell you what  he  now
knows because he is just now knowing it. Not having seen a baby since  going
Released OT, he can only answer how he knew he reacted  to  babies.  How  he
reacts now to babies is unknown to him since there are no babies  around  to
react to.

    4. The tests can be thrown by certain processes almost any way you  wish
in very short times. IQ can be raised giddily by rehabilitating the  ability
to withhold (DC HGC used this during an ACC with phenomenal  results  in  IQ
gain). You can shift valences on a pc almost at will with "Where would  ....
~ . . be safe?" and other processes. But when you clean up  the  pe  himself
you have what he knew or how he reacted and this is not  yet  known  at  the
time tests are given after processing. Pes are more apt to  know  what  they
don't know in an increased awareness, coming  off  the  manic  of  pretended
knowing or false data.

    5.      Modern processing by grades is not clued by any test we use. We
once had to have tests to tell us what to run. We now have advanced too far
to need the data.

                      ALLOWED USE OF TESTS

    Tests may be used as a Public Service, on Introductory Evening Lectures,
by Field Staff Members or in any way as a purely promotional  item  to  give
people a reality on their cases to invite auditing.

    Once they have bought training or processing the tests have no further
    value.

                     PRESERVATION OF TESTS

    All test files in an org must be carefully preserved. They  are  a  gold
mine of Research and Promotional material and are extremely valuable.

                     NO TESTS TO SAINT HILL

    No further copies of pe tests or graphs need be sent to Saint Hill.

    Auditor-Pc attestation forms (LRH Daily Report)  and  Certs  and  Awards
copies are sent instead as described in Policy Letters.

LRH:mh.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               73

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 JULY 1965

Rernimeo
Tech Hats
Qual Hats

             Tech Div
             Qual Div

RELEASE DECLARATION RESTRICTIONS
       HEALING AMENDMENTS

    The following three policies emerged from a Comm Ev conducted  at  Saint
Hill 23 July 1965.

                       RELEASE RESTRICTED

    No person who is dependent for his or her livelihood upon a  Suppressive
Person or Group, may be awarded any Release  award  declaration  or  pin  as
such a person is not released in his environment.

    No Person who is dependent for his or her livelihood  upon  compensation
being paid for physical or mental disability, may  be  awarded  any  Release
award declaration or pin as there is too much vested interest  in  remaining
disabled.

                        HEALING AMENDED

    All students of any course are debarred from  visiting  any  medical  or
healing practitioner unless they are given an  Ethics  clearance  first  and
all possibility of 11 roller-coaster" (sudden case decline) has been  looked
into and any suppressives or bad auditing precisely isolated. The  exception
is an emergency involving severe injury or infectious disease, but  in  this
case the student must be cleared by Ethics to be permitted  back  on  course
or even in the org. This includes all accidents.

    Course Supervisors are subject to Comm Ev in  not  so  routing  students
requesting to see a doctor.

    All students must have permission to see  a  medical  doctor  except  in
cases of severe emergency.

                                              L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.bp.eden Copyright @1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

74

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF I SEPTEMBER 1965
                                  Issue IV
Gen Non Rernimeo
                     SOME TECH DIV POLICIES
                    (Preserved policy from former Policy
                     Letters which have been cancelled)

                    LEGAL ASPECTS OF SIGN UPS

    No persons may be admitted to an Academy or  HGC  who  have  not  signed
waivers (release forms) of the old type.
    All such waivers must include a statement that the person  is  there  on
his or her own determinism and that  the  person  has  no  record  of  being
committed in an institution or has a criminal record for felony.

    Persons with such commitments or records should be referred to  a  field
auditor  near  their  home  and  refused  training  or  processing  at   the
organization.

    Persons suspected of purely medical illness  should  be  referred  to  a
doctor for competent treatment if such a doctor or treatment exists.

    Minors must have their parents or guardians sign the waiver and any note
for time payments.
    Known trouble sources as per recent HCO  Policy  Letter,  all  of  which
remains in force, should be required to straighten  up  their  lives  before
enrolling or signing up for processing or should be forthrightly refused.

    Anyone objecting to an E-Meter check should be refused entrance.

    Thus by keeping the legal aspects straight you will be able to help  the
many and not be messed up by a few. For a very few  such.people  (21  to  be
exact) were the sole sources of grief in the 1950 boom.
    To have a boom, you have to keep your nose clean legally or you  can  be
stopped by the enturbulence generated, both in the org and the public.  Such
enturbulence is all that shortens your lines or overworks staff.

            HUSBAND-WIFE TEAMS ENTERING ACADEMIES

    Husband-Wife teams should not be  forbidden.  But  in  all  cases  where
husband and wife are trained to co-audit each other  they  must  mail  their
auditors' reports routinely to the D of P for which they will be  charged  a
nominal but real fee for case supervision.
    Professional auditors or co-auditors who use auditing in or  out  of  an
Academy to estrange husbands and wives are subject to a Court of  Ethics  at
their nearest HCO on  any  2nd  Dynamic  misconduct  complaint  from  either
party, husband or wife, and a penalty up to suspension  of  certificate  may
be sentenced the offender if proven guilty.
    During training it is against policy to team husbands and wives together
for practice drills even when they will be co-auditing after leaving class,

    Where possible husbands and wives should, however, be persuaded to bring
another couple to be trained rather than co-audit and it should be  arranged
that the wife audits the other wife and the husband the other husband  after
training. In this case it is all right to team them  in  any  pairing  under
training for drills.

                          SCHOLARSHIPS

    No scholarships are now allowed.

                   COURSE FEES STANDARDIZED

    Any course taught in a continental zone  must  conform  to  that  zone's
course fees, and it must be approved by Saint Hill and not altered.

                        OUTSIDE COURSES

    As present day level courses require a full Tech Division  plus  a  full
Qualifications Division plus an Ethics Officer, no Academy  courses  may  be
given outside Academy premises.

                               75

                     PE COURSES (BS COURSE)

    PE Courses will still be taught by field auditors and franchise holders,
which  is  the  BS  Course.  They  result  in  a   BEGINNING   SCIENTOLOGIST
certificate.

                           STUDENTS

    A course completion is a check sheet not a time period or a
    classification.
    It is now a crime to run a course without a check sheet or to  change  a
check sheet on a student after it's issued~ A different check sheet  can  be
issued to the next student that enrolls on that very same course.  But  once
issued, the same one is completed for a course  completion  of  that  course
and the student gets his certificate for the Level when it is and  can  take
his exam for class. There are 2 check sheets actually-Theory and  Practical.
Both  should  be  complete  before  you  let  a  student  go  to  the   next
certificate.

                          COURSE TIMES

    All courses in all orgs enroll any time of any day. No  special  courses
for certain dates will  be  tolerated  in  any  org.  Magazines  should  say
"Enrolls any time" after every course in every Academy Ad. If you don't  you
go mad trying to get pcs every  week  for  ad  money  and  wind  up  with  a
psychiatric ward for an HGC. The check sheet system used now at  Saint  Hill
for levels fits every course nicely and requires no "every 4  weeks".  Saint
Hill enrolls all week long! Further, Supervisors  in  Scientology  must  not
personally lecture students on technology.  If  you  want  a  current  check
sheet for a level write your comm-member (HCO Pol Ltr of 13 March  1965)  at
Saint Hill.

                           "CLEARS"

    Sell Release with confidence. Only squirrelling on levels and rough  ARC
Break handling can prevent it. The total rundown of  processes  is  easy  to
groove in in an HGC and should be adhered to violently if you  want  to  get
results and releases. It's no myth now.
                       RELEASED STUDENTS
    Students who are releases have to do all the  required  auditing  as  an
auditor. And get it passed. Release is an honorary, not a  technical  award.
But a truly floating needle release may not be further  audited  except  for
Power Processes. A student doesn't know more about Scientology just  because
he's released. He just learns faster. So the released student  must  do  all
his auditing on pcs, subjective and objective. If you  don't  have  any  raw
meat for a student to do all his levels on, make the  student  scrounge  his
own pcs off the street or city dump. Remember, don't panic  on  release.  It
means the student like any other student must  do  all  his  required  check
sheets and go on up, level by level just like every other student.

                         PLEDGING CODES

    Applications for certificate must be made by every student. This  should
give how they want their name on the certificate, address, and  the  routing
of the student out of the org, CF routing and all that.
    This application must also carry a pledge  stating  that  the  applicant
subscribes to and promises to uphold the  Auditor's  Code,  the  Code  of  a
Scientologist and it must state he  is  informed  of  and  will  follow  the
policies relating to gradation and classification.

              CITY OFFICE AND CENTRAL ORG COURSES
    City Offices may teach BS, HAS and HQS Courses. Central Orgs teach these
and may teach Level courses according to their status of  org-these  courses
being HRS by Class 0 orgs, HTS by Class I orgs  (plus  the  HRS),  Class  11
orgs teach HRS, HTS and HCA, Class III orgs teach HRS, HTS, HCA and HPA.  In
1968 Central Orgs will also be given permission to teach HAA  if  they  have
attained Class IV status.

LRH:ml.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

IModified by HCO PIL 12 October 1972 Issue 1,  Sign-Up  Made  Simple,  which
was cancelled by HCO P/L 1 December 1972 Issue IX of the  same  title,  also
modifying the above policy letter, in the 1972 Year Book.1

                               76

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 SEPTEMBER 1965
                                  Issue 11

Saint Hill issue only

STUDENT AND PC REPORTS

    The Saint Hill Technical Division  regularly  receives  student  and  pc
reports from its junior orgs. These should be checked over by  Tech  as  per
usual Pol and then sent to Central Files. Central Files DOES NOT file  them.
The Central Files Officer only checks them against CF to  be  sure  we  have
their addresses. He then sends the preclear reports to the Dept  of  Success
which files them by area. Both student reports and HGC reports are  both  so
filed.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rnl.kd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 DECEMBER 1965
                          [Amended 16 January 1970)

E-METERS ALLOWED

    The Listing E-Meter and Mark V are the only meters allowed for use in
the Dept of Processing, Dept of Training, and the Qualifications Division.

This was announced in Auditor 10 and now becomes policy. ,

    Further, students in training must have their own E-Meter. This policy
must be enforced if you expect to turn out auditors who can audit.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rnl.rd Copyright @1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

77

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF I FEBRUARY 1966
Gen Non-Remimeo  Issue III
Applies to
Saint Hill HGC CURE
info other orgs  INTERNE TRAINING AND STAFF AUDITORS
                    (Results from Comm Ev I Feb 66 and my
                            studies of situation)

    Interne and  staff  auditor  and  course  supervisor  training  and  the
training of Tech Division executives and  any  and  all  staff  training  of
whatever  kind  is  transferred  herewith  to  the  Qualifications  Division
Department of Review. (This does not include staff members  taking  standard
courses in the Tech Div at night.)

    The severe drop in the Tech Division's HGC completion  statistics  which
began on 17 Nov 65 and reached bottom 14 Dee 65 and which did  not  properly
recover had only one large change connected with it:  HGC  Interne  training
was transferred from the Qual Division to the Tech Division.
    Mending a statistic fall consists of locating the change  that  preceded
it and undoing that change.
    This has been done in this Policy Letter by returning  Interne  training
and staff auditor training back to Qual.
    The Committee of Evidence of I Feb 66 revealed that the then Director of
Processing did not believe it possible to alter or change a statistic,  that
one could only explain and  justify  one.  It  is  possible  also  that  the
feeling that one could not change a case , was forced on staff  auditors  at
that time. On this possibility, anyone taking charge of  interne  and  staff
auditor training should stress the truth that an auditor  can  change  cases
and can change them as fast as his auditing is smooth  and  by-the-book.  An
auditor gets completions in exact ratio to the  letter  perfectness  of  his
auditing  and  his  adherence  to  the  exact  technology  we  now  have  in
Scientology.
    The Qual Sec need not necessarily change Interne Supervisors or times of
training unless he sees fit. It is pointed out that he is  held  responsible
for the quality of HGC auditor performance and technical knowledge  and  how
he achieves this is up to him.
    The Director of  Processing  is  held  responsible  for  the  amount  of
auditing time put in on pes. Should results not  occur  by  reason  of  poor
auditor performance on the advice of the Case  Supervisor  he  should  order
the auditor to Qual. And if the results are not  forthcoming  by  reason  of
non-compliance with  the  Case  Supervisor's  orders  he  should  order  the
auditor to Ethics for a hearing.
    If an auditor auditing in and for the HGC receives an order from  the  D
of P or the Case Supervisor that is non-standard  or  is  an  extra-ordinary
solution he must file a job endangerment chit with Ethics at  once  and  may
not execute the instruction.

    The principal duties of the D of  P  are  to  get  auditors  putting  in
auditing time and getting lots of  pes  done  and  interview  pes  to  check
flatness or unflatness of processes. Checking must be done  with  a  minimum
of waiting time by the auditor and pc.  The  D  of  P  does  not  check  out
release grade attainments as this is done  by  the  Qual  Examiner  and  any
double examination (by both D of P and Qual Examiner)  must  be  held  to  a
minimum.
    The D of P also musters his auditors  before  the  morning  session  and
before the afternoon session and hands out folders at  these  times  with  a
minimum of session time loss.
    The Case Supervisor does the  folders.  The  Case  Supervisor  does  not
interview cases  but  runs  them  by  the  book  and  folder.  When  a  Case
Supervisor interviews cases or discusses them with the D of P or auditor  it
has been found that only then do errors  creep  in  and  hold  up  progress.
Therefore the Case Supervisor and D of P must not occupy the same office.
    The Case Supervisor may not take technical orders from the D of  P.  The
Case Supervisor is under the Tech Sec, not the D of P.
    The D of P looks after staff auditors and Internes as Org personnel  and
is their immediate superior.
    The D  of  P  is  responsible  for  staff  auditor  procurement  without
absolving HCO's personnel officer from it.

                               78

     That auditors are on the job on time and are putt ing in their session
  time and their conduct and their actions as staff members are all  in  the
  province of the D of P.
     The Qual  Div's  Dir  Rev  may  remove  an  auditor  from  the  active
  processing list if he believes that auditor is  not  sufficiently  trained
  but if so must either take action to
  further train or inform the Qual See the auditor may not be permitted to
  audit, the
I     Qual See informing the HCO Area See to transfer the person or
  dismiss. Before the D of P can assign an auditor to audit he must have an
  ok chit from Dir Rev.

     The Leading  Auditor  idea  may  be  preserved  or  discarded  at  the
  discretion of the D of P.
     The D of P assigns auditors to specific cases. This is  done  by  Tech
  Services in actual fact but only after consultation with  or  approval  of
  the D of P.
     The Case Supervisor may order a staff auditor to review for clumsiness
  or to Ethics for non-compliance but must do so through the D of P on whose
  actual authority it is done.
     The daily summary of results by the HGC is compiled by the Case
     Supervisor and
  promptly posted on a public board. Auditors sent to Ethics or  Review  and
  pcs sent to Ethics or Review are noted by name on this board.

                      TABLE OF RESPONSIBILITY
               FOR HGC STAFF AUDITORS AND INTERNES

  Org Exec See   -     Full responsibility for quantity and quality of
  service.
  Qual See  -    Training arrangements for all Tech Personnel and Internes.
                      Satisfied pes.
  Dir Exams -    Authority to Declare.
  Dir Rev   -    OK to Audit chits, repair of goofs. Actual training.
                      Satisfied pes.
  Dir Certs & Awards - Declares pe awards.
  Chaplain  -    Port of refuge for pcs and auditors when all 6se fails.
  Tech See  -    Completion Statistic of the Tech Div, Executive Personnel
            appointments, general adherence to plan and design.
  D of P    -    Staff Auditors and Internes as Staff Members, pe auditor
            assignment, auditing quarters state of and assignment,
            Ethics and Review routing authority, auditor procurement,
            pe procurement, checkouts for flatness of processes, head
            of Dept.
  Case Supervisor            All Case Folders, results on cases, indicating
  auditors and
            pcs to Review or Ethics or Declare, posting results,
            adherence to proper technology.
  HCO Area See   -     Taking effective action on down graphs that don't
  recover
                      at once.
  Ethics Officer -     All Ethics actions referred or found necessary.
  Personnel Officer    -     Staff Auditor Procurement.
  Dir Registration     -     New Internes.

     I wish to point out that these were  more  or  less  the  arrangements
  which existed prior to the slump in November, and which were in force when
  I was Case Supervisor.
      1, as Exec Dir SH, hold the Org Exec See SH and through her the Tech
      See SH
  and Qual See SH responsible for seeing that these orders and  arrangements
  are carried out exactly for only these will cure the HGC slump.  And  they
  will cure it only if exactly performed.

    Note: This instance of a slumped statistic  brings  to  view  a  curious
phenomenon I noted while studying it. Apparently  there  is  a  natural  law
that "where interdependence  does  not  exist,  a  slump  may  occur".  This
applies to life, but it apparently is vital to an org. Where a  function  of
an org does not have lines across two  or  more  portions  of  an  org,  the
function may slump.
    In this case the action of auditing and responsibility  for  results  as
earlier organized crossed Tech, Qual and HCO, 3 divisions. When Interne  and
staff auditor training was dropped into Tech along with  the  auditing  also
the tension went out of the line and the statistic slumped.

                               79

    If this law is so, then any function of an org that is not dependent  on
2 or more portions of the org may slump. And on checking  up  I  have  found
that only those functions at Saint Hill which do not have lines into two  or
more divisions are already slumped.

    Thus a  possible  principle  of  organization  exists-that  a  line,  to
function, must cross divisions. A staff member, being a  terminal  must  not
cross divisions. But lines of functions must.

    This is only a comment but is curious enough to be remarked.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF I FEBRUARY 1966
Remimeo
            Tech Div
            Qual Div

          STAFF AUDITOR AND SUPERVISOR PROCUREMENT

    The Director of Processing is responsible for procuring qualified staff
auditors, regardless of any action by Dept 1, Div 1.

    This has always been the case and always will be.

    The Director of Training is responsible for procuring Academy or College
Supervisors regardless of any action by Dept I Div 1.

    Neither of these policies absolves Dept I Div I from the procurement of
staff Auditors and Supervisors.

                     QUAL DIV TRAINS STAFF

    The Qualifications Division trains staff Auditors, Internes,
Supervisors, Ds of T, Ds of P and Tech Sees.

    No other division than Qualifications may train staff.

    Note: A recent slump in Tech statistics at Saint Hill followed at once
in a shift of training of Internes from Qual to Tech Divisions.

    Note: A slump in HGC completions was traced to the Tech See and D of P
taking no interest or action in procuring HGC Auditors.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                                80

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 FEBRUARY 1966
P,emimeo    Issue 11
Tech Hats
Qual Hats
Ethics Hats TECH RECOVERY

    My study of a Nov 1965 plummeting  HGC  Completion  statistic  indicates
certain policies are necessary in all HGCs and Qual Divisions.

    The following errors were found:

    I . The HGC ceased to look for former release grades to rehabilitate and
ignored opportunities to do so on the basis that "outer orgs  have  rehabbed
them all already". This came out in the Comin Ev held on a D of  P  of  that
period. Of course, if the HGC failed to rehab  earlier  grades  (or  earlier
life overruns) it could achieve no later  grades  or  Grade  V.  This  alone
would have ended completions promptly  on  all  grades  and  wiped  out  the
graph.

    2. Invalidation of the appearance of a free needle and invalidating  any
auditor who "thought he saw one". This wiped  out  all  release  attainments
and made for total overrun of all pcs of all grades. This error existed  for
15 years so it is not surprising that it got back in again.

    3. Whenever an overrun occurred, "rehabilitation  of  it"  was  done  by
running different new processes instead of  standard  rehab  routine  as  in
HCOBs, i.e. Doing ARC Break, PTPs, Rudiments, anything but a real  rehab  of
that process that was overrun.

    4. Abandonment of standard tech in favour of unusual solutions. This  is
always present when a collapse of Tech occurs.

    S. One SP was found in the middle of all this but  after  his  departure
the statistic did not recover so one  can  assume  another  SP  was  in  the
middle of it still or that the HGC remained PTS  and  didn't  separate  from
the SP found because he was so convincing, so reasonable and  so  persuasive
as to why a Tech statistic must remain down.

    It is interesting that (1) above-ceasing to rehab lower grades-would  be
absolutely fatal to any upper grades. Therefore this becomes policy:

    NO UPPER GRADE OF RELEASE MAY BE BEGUN NEWLY ON A  PC  UNTIL  ALL  LOWER
GRADES ARE FULLY REHABBED TO FREE NEEDLE. THIS APPLIES TO ALL  GRADES  0  TO
VII.

    Regarding (2)-Invalidation of what a free  needle  is-and  thus  running
past all free needles, let it be noted that this is an Auditor's Code Break-
continuing a process that has ceased to produce change and  is  therefore  a
crime. This was wrong too long to be allowed to go wrong again. Thus we  get
the policy:

    AN AUDITOR WHO HAS BEEN FOUND  TO  HAVE  OVERRUN  A  FREE  NEEDLE  ON  A
PRECLEAR MUST BE GIVEN AN ETHICS CHIT; AND IF THE ACTION  IS  SEVERAL  TIMES
REPEATED, ETHICS MUST ORDER A FULL REVIEW OF THE  AUDITOR'S  CASE  INCLUDING
AN EYESIGHT TEST AND CONDUCT A THOROUGH ETHICS INVESTIGATION AND HEARING.

    Note that a Mark V Meter run with too high a sensitivity doesnot give  a
marked change when a needle floats. Thus  sensitivity  must  be  reduced  in
ordinary running and increased only to get in rudiments. Then a free  needle
becomes more visible. A Mark V cranked up to 128 sensitivity  looks  like  a
floating needle all the time at a casual glance on most pcs.  Sensitivity  5
is ample.

    Also, meters go out of 5,000 ohm calibration and don't read on the M and
F "Clear" reads and change of electrodes can change M and F "Clear" reads.

    A free needle, if a process is overrun  vanishes  with  just  one  extra
command so an auditor must be aleyt.
    Please also note that this has been part of the Auditor's Code for ages-
running past a flat point of a process has been forbidden  since  the  first
formulations of the, Auditor's Code.

81

    Regarding (3)- Rehabilitation by  using  other  processes-the  HCOBs  on
rehabs are very explicit. To run another process would clobber the pc.  Thus
we get the policy:

    REHABILITATIONS MUST BE DONE  BY  REHABILITATING  THE  PC  ONLY  ON  THE
PROCESS OVERRUN AND ONLY BY STANDARD HCOBS ON REHAB PROCEDURE.

    Re (4)-Unusual solutions-we get the policy:

    ANY  AUDITOR  ACCEPTING  AN  UNUSUAL  SOLUTION  WITHOUT  FILING  A   JOB
ENDANGERMENT CHIT OR FOUND USING AN UNUSUAL SOLUTION MUST BE CHARGED WITH  A
CRIME AND GIVEN AN ETHICS HEARING. FAILING TO  REPORT  AN  UNUSUAL  SOLUTION
ADVISED OR USED IS ALSO SO HANDLED. AN UNUSUAL SOLUTION IS  ONE  EVOLVED  TO
REMEDY AN ABUSE OF EXISTING TECHNOLOGY.

    On (5)-Statistic failing  to  recover  after  an  SP  is  spotted  in  a
department gives us the 2 policies:

    WHENEVER AN SP IS DISCOVERED AND DECLARED IN  AN  ORGANIZATION  ALL  HIS
ASSOCIATES IN THAT PORTION OF THE ORG MUST BE CHECKED OUT FOR OR GIVEN AN  S
& D.

                              and

    WHEN AN SP IS DISCOVERED IN AN ORGANIZATION, IS DISMISSED OR REMOVED AND
THE STATISTIC DOES NOT RECOVER, ANOTHER SP MUST BE LOOKED FOR.

    It is noted that the general condition of the  Completion  Statistic  of
Dee 65 to Jan 66 could be attributed to the above gross errors.
    It is now certain that (1) Rehabilitation of earlier  grades,  (2)  Free
Needle and (3) Rehabilitation by standard practice are  primary  targets  in
our technology  for  anyone  seeking  to  mess  it  up  and  that  unwitting
tampering with these three things and lack of HCO Enforcement on  them  will
reduce HGC statistics and prevent their recovery.

    Of  course  one  could  also  go  mad  in  the  opposite   direction-(I)
rehabilitate earlier grades endlessly on a pe regardless of how  many  times
a free needle had been obtained, (2) call any loosening up  of  a  needle  a
free needle and (3) refuse to even 2-way comm with a  pc  under  repair  for
overrun for fear it violates standard procedure for rehab.
    The middle course is the correct course in this case. Relax and just  be
very sure the pe has been properly rehabbed to free needle on each grade  up
to the one one is going to start by demanding the  awards  of  release  that
were granted  and  if  these  weren't  ever  awarded,  then  do  the  rehabs
necessary grade by grade. The only sticky point in this is that if a pe  had
ever been run on a higher grade without rehab of a  lower,  one  must  rehab
"from the top down" at  times,  tackling  the  highest  overrun  first,  but
nevertheless doing all of them that were by-passed eventually.
    The way to reco.-nize a free needle is watch for one.  When  it  happens
you will see one. Then you will never afterwards wonder. The  free  needles.
available on a case can all be swallowed  up  by  a  failure  to  rehab  all
grades ever by-passed or overrun. If no free needles show up on  a  case  at
all then partially rehab any grade available for rehab back and forth  until
one has one of them go free needle  and  then  get  a  free  needle  on  the
remainder. Life can also be an overrun and a pc never audited  will  respond
to a rehab of "somethirug overdone". This doesn't mean the pc  went  release
before Scientology-it
          7
means that purpose overrun then jams-rehab of  life  situations  of  overrun
consists of hitting the purpose that was overrun and when this is  hit,  the
pc goes release in PT and was not a release in the past. An  example  is  an
overrun located in 20 AD when the person, alert to Christianity  decided  to
be good, made it and then overran it for 1945 years. When  the  purpose  was
found (to be good) and dated and the overrun spotted the needle  went  free.
Rough auditing, bad TRs, "letting the pc Itsa",  etc  can  swallow  up  free
needles. Also a totally ARC Broke meter that won't  read  at  all  with  bad
indicators all over the place won't record a read, looks  sometimes  like  a
floating needle, the difference being the pc has total bad  indicators-sour,
mean, sad, etc. A free needle occurs most often after a  big  cognition  and
the unskilled auditor looks at the pe who is being  bright  and  interesting
and just doesn't see the needle float, asks  more  questions  and  overruns,
and the free needle vanishes-when a pc is cogniting, look at the  meter  not
the pe. And the instant the TA starts up and the needle goes sticky  suspect
an overrun and check.

                               82

    As for doing something else rather than Standard  Procedure  for  rehab,
plain ignorance can cause it.  The  auditor's  desire  to  help  the  pc  if
unaccompanied by solid tech background leads to wild efforts, new  processes
and anything but cool standard procedure.

    When the person checking out pcs is also the  case  supervisor,  unusual
solutions creep in. The most errors I've seen  made  by  a  Case  Supervisor
were made after he had seen the pc or talked with the  auditor.  Cases  have
to be run by report only and  auditors  have  to  be  supervised  and  their
sessions listened to by somebody else besides the Case Supervisor.  Tech  is
Tech. There is such a thing as Standard Tech. Pc wild tales and hollow  eyes
and auditor hobbyhorses have-to be kept off Case Supervisor lines. So  there
must be a person who checks  out  pes  and  supervises  auditors  and  their
auditing performance but  who  never  opens  his  or  her  face  to  suggest
instructions about the pc and only writes down that the auditor is rough  or
the process is flat or the process is overrun. The Case Supervisor lives  in
an Ivory  tower.  Sounds  strange  but  unless  it's  done  that  way,  wild
departures from Standard Rehab Procedure and from Standard Tech  in  general
will  occur.  Hell,  all  psychiatry  went  down  that  drain-the  desperate
patient,  the  desperate  measures.  Squiiielling  stems   from   the   Case
Supervisor being the auditor supervisor and the pe interviewer. Oil,  water,
being in two divisions, Commies and  Fascists,  dogs  and  cats  won't  mix.
Neither will the personal  contacter  of  auditors  and  pes  and  the  Case
Supervisor ever  successfully  stay  crossed.  The  individual  practitioner
breaks down only  because  he  does  both  auditing  and  Case  Supervision.
Auditing is an organization action which is why today we  have  Field  Staff
Members and HGCs.

    Additional notes of things  discovered  in  the  investigation  of  the
 plummeted statistic on Completions were:

    1.     Auditors rabbiting out of uncertainty and so stumbling past End
        Phenomena and floating needles.

    2.     Case Supervisor getting auditors to ask leading questions on Pr
        Pr 2-"Ask the pe if he is interested in Medical Practices".

    3.     D of P: "Find out what the needle is floating on".

    4.     Case Supervisor: Told auditor that a floating needle was not the
        End Phenomenon of a Process in which "the TA had to be run out".
     5.     Lack of knowledge and understanding of the  Technology  and  not
        knowing the difference between such things as  Anaten,  Secondaries
        and Engrams by Case Supervisor, D of P, and so confusing auditors.

    Of course the one thing one can't technically overcome is an SP  keeping
an area messed up. His case doesn't improve because of  his  intentions  and
overts and fear of people getting better or being bigger than  he.  When  an
SP dominates an area, only Ethics actions can handle.

    The primary indicator of the presence of an SP in an org is a plummeting
statistic immediately after he starts handling a portion of it.

    Indifferent leadership, even inaction can't drive a statistic down. Only
active suppression can.

    So watch the statistics and don't get reasonable when they fall.  Either
outside the org suppression has been brought down on  that  portion  of  the
org, making it PTS or there is  an  SP  there.  The  final  answer  is  what
happened just before the statistic fell. If a new appointment was  made  and
it fell, unappoint it fast. If nothing cures the down statistic find the  SP
or handle the PTS situation because one or the other are there.

    Completions stayed down for IS  years.  Then  we  found  auditors  never
noticed free needles. Now for Heaven's sakes, 15  years  was  enough.  Don't
repeat the error!

    It does work you know.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRH:ml.rd
Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

83

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill.Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 MARCH 1966

Remimeo
All Sen Staff

Tech & Qual

HGC CURE (Continued)

    Long after I thought the final findings were all in in  the  Nov-Dec  65
HGC Completion Slump, another really gross HGC error showed up.

    Training of HGC auditors was shifted from Qual to Tech Div  just  before
the fantastic  down  curve.  This  change  was  known  and  caused  a  heavy
investigation of the HGC.

    But this datum was not disclosed until later:

    STAR-RATED  CHECK  OUTS  ON  INTERNES  AND  AUDITORS  DESPITE   EXPLICIT
INSTRUCTIONS WERE  DROPPED  THE  MOMENT  THE  TRANSFER  FROM  QUAL  TO  TECH
OCCURRED.

    The newer auditors began to audit with no real data.

    Thus we find the SP discovered in that investigation  had  discovered  a
thorough way to  depress  a  statistic-you  didn't  require  check  outs  on
processes.

    This gives us another vital datum-

    IF YOU DO NOT REQUIRE HGC AUDITORS AND INTERNES TO CHECK OUT  STAR-RATED
ON THEIR MATERIALS BEFORE THEY AUDIT HGC PCS THE COMPLETION  STATISTIC  WILL
GO TO ZERO. It did at once.

    I think lack of this one datum has been holding back all the  statistics
in any org that has not recovered.

    Lack of star-rates on staff auditors and  internes  has  been  found  to
crash an HGC and deliver no service.

    Remedy it at once on all staff auditors, internes and supervisors.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

84

            HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
            Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
            HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 MARCH 1966
Remirneo    Issue 11
Ali Tech &
      Qual Hats  Tech & Qual
Students
Solo Audit Course
Interne Course   URGENT
      Cleafing Course

      STAR RATES ON TECH AND QUAL STAFF
      Effective on Receipt

ETHICS NOTE ALL ORGS - It is a High Crime not to have this Policy
continually in effect after I June 66 as it has been found to suppress orgs
when not kept in effect and to crash HGCs.

    All HCO Bs and Tech Info and Advices of the following courses are STAR
RATED and the student may not begin to audit until they have all been
passed with Star-Rated type check outs with no comm lag,

           INTERNE COURSE (Power Process and HGC Staff Auditors)

           CLEARING COURSE (but not the platens)

    All vital data required for auditing at Level VI must be checked out,
Star-Rated on the following Course:

           SOLO AUDIT COURSE

    All HGC and Qual Auditors and Internes must pass in all Scientology Orgs
star-rated all HCO Bs directly concerned with all the Level Processes they
will use on pcs, Rehabs, S & D and various Review actions and the Pol Ltr$
governing the HGC and Review and any relation to Ethics before being
permitted to audit an HGC pc in any HGC anywhere or to audit in Review.

    Note:- The above data applies to all orgs when they teach the listed
courses and applies to all HGCs at once.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

85

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MARCH 1966
Remimeo
Exec Secs Hats   Exec - HCO - Tech - Qual
ES Comm Qual Hat Ethics
HCO See Hat
Dir I & R Hat    URGENT
Ethics Hat
Tech & Qual Hats
LRH Comm Hat     HIGH CRIME
      Effective I June 1966

    In any instance of a heavily failing statistic in  Tech  or  Qual  or  a
chronically low statistic in Tech or Qual in an org or in any org which  has
chronically low statistics in all divisions:

    The Ethics Officer must look for this  policy  violation  which  is  the
highest crime in Tech and Qual:

    TOLERATING THE ABSENCE OF, OR NOT INSISTING UPON STAR-RATED  CHECK  OUTS
ON ALL PROCESSES AND THEIR  IMMEDIATE  TECHNOLOGY  AND  ON  RELEVANT  POLICY
LETTERS ON HGC INTERNES OR STAFF AUDITORS IN THE TECH DIV OR STAFF  AUDITORS
OR INTERNES IN THE QUAL DIV FOR THE LEVELS AND ACTIONS THEY WILL USE  BEFORE
PERMITTING THEM TO AUDIT ORG PCS AND ON SUPERVISORS IN  TECH  AND  QUAL  WHO
INSTRUCT OR EXAMINE OR FAILING TO INSIST  UPON  THIS  POLICY  OR  PREVENTING
THIS POLICY FROM GOING INTO EFFECT OR MINIMIZING THE CHECK OUTS OR LISTS.

    If an Ethics Officer or any person in HCO Dept  3  discovers  this  high
crime to exist he must report it at once to the HCO Area Secretary.

    The HCO Area Secretary must at once order a thorough investigation  into
any and all persons who might have instigated this  high  crime  and  report
the matter to the HCO Exec Sec.

    The HCO Exec See must then convene a  Committee  of  Evidence  with  the
persons accused as interested parties  and  must  locate  amongst  them  the
suppressive or suppressives by the "reasonableness" of their defence,  state
of case and other signs.

    The Committee of Evidence must declare the located S.P.  suppressive  by
HCO Ethics Order and dismiss.

    If any Ethics Officer, Director of I & R or HCO Area Secretary fails  to
obtain co-operation by superiors in carrying out this Policy Letter  quickly
then he or she must inform the LRH Communicator.

    The LRH Communicator must then cable full particulars to Worldwide.

    The  Worldwide  AdCouncil  must  then  carry  out  this  policy   letter
expeditiously and at any cost.

    If the HCO personnel making this discovery cannot obtain action  in  any
other way he or she must go outside the org and cable LRH Comm  WW  and  his
actions and costs in so cabling will be reimbursed on claim to  WW  and  his
post will be fully protected.

86

    If the AdCouncil WW suspects this policy not to be in full force in  any
org despite assurances an HCO WW personnel must  be  sent  to  that  org  to
investigate and may be deputized to remove either or both Exec Secs of  that
org by Comm Ev on the spot or at WW.

    It has been discovered that failure to check out, Star Rated,  the  Tech
and Qual HCO Bs applying to levels being audited or taught or  examined  and
their processes and the data used in Review and  relevant  policy  on  those
using the material in orgs  results  in  a  crashed  Division  4  completion
statistic, crashed income and low statistics throughout and  a  failing  org
and was the reason through 1965 for struggling  orgs-the  public  would  not
pay more for service than it was worth to them and  with  this  policy  out,
the service was not worth very much.

    It has been found that a suppressive person will discourage  this  check
out policy as one of his first actions.

    This policy applies whether an auditor has been trained or not with star-
rated check outs. Staff  and  Review  auditor  and  Supervisor  are  special
technical status grades and one cannot consider this double training.

    "Star-Rated"  means  =  100  percent  letter  perfect  in  knowing   and
understanding, demonstrating and being able  to  repeat  back  the  material
with no comm lag,

    Org Exec Sec Communicator. for Qual WW is the final  authority  for  any
check  sheets  on  this  matter  and  is  responsible  for   preparing   and
standardizing them from time to. time. But the lack of a  check  sheet  from
ES Comm Qual WW does not set aside any provision or penalty of  this  policy
letter.

    This policy letter is issued in the complete knowledge that the  absence
of this policy in full effect is the primary reason  for  orgs  not  growing
and is based on actual experience.

    The only higher crime I could think of would be to pretend  to  have  an
org but have no technical personnel on  staff  in  Tech  or  Qual.  That  is
suppressive also and will crash an org. Handle it similarly to the above.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Added to by HCO P/L 21,  November  1971,  Scientology  Courses  Examination
Policy, Volume 5-page 139, which made it firm policy that  anyone  examining
a student for certification on  any  Scientology  Course,  including  Admin,
must have first star-rated related Policies, HCO Bs or other  issues  before
writing or grading exams. I

(Note: In the original issue of this Policy Letter the  words  "THE  ABSENCE
OF" in the first line of the 3rd  paragraph  were  omitted.  However,  in  a
poster issued by Flag in 1971 quoting  this  Capitalized  paragraph  of  the
"High Crime" P/L, these words  were  included,  and  accordingly  have  been
added in this printing. - Ed.)

                               87

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 JULY 1966

Remimeo

TECH vs QUAL

    The general rule is laid down that, except  for  Declaration  of  Grade,
Certificate or Class, Tech shall attempt to handle all it can on  all  cases
and students and only when Tech  personnel  consider  it  hopeless  (or  the
student or pc is ready for Declare, Cert or Grade) shall the student  or  pc
be sent to Qual.

    "Review flat" is not now to be considered mandatory. The  pc  previously
has been sent to the D of P and then to Qual to verify  that  a  flat  point
has been reached. This routing is ended. If the auditor or Case  Supervisor,
either one, wants a check for the flatness of a process, only  then  is  the
pc sent to the D of P (not to Qual also). If the flatness indicates a  grade
has been attained the usual action is just send from auditor to examiner  in
Qual.

    To routinely and always send a pc for a flatness  of  process  check  is
actually a violation of the Fast Flow Management System.  It  checks  things
which may be all right.

    Review, when it finds a rehab incomplete, should quickly  route  the  pe
back to Tech. As a general rule, only when Tech is utterly at  a  loss  does
Review take over and audit the pc.

    The Case Supervisor  should  keep  and  post  HGC  auditor  "statistics"
announcing goofs and wins. The Case Supervisor must require a retrain of  an
HGC auditor whenever a pc winds up being audited in Review.  I  always  send
the auditor to Interne Training for retrain whenever I have to send a pe  to
Review.

    Processing today is very simple but very exact. The data is  all  there.
That's the only data. Don't add any. Just do what the HCOBs say.  There  are
no exceptional cases.

    HGC auditors who over-run just don't know what a free  needle  is.  They
should ask a Clear to hold the cans so they can see one.

    When you check for flatness on a process gone to  free  needle  you  may
overr un it. For the auditor, the D of P and  the  Examiner  and  Review  to
check, each one, for flatness, will goof up a flat point every time.

    For the Case Supervisor to neglect ordering retraining of  his  auditors
when he finds pcs not doing well is a grave omission.

    For Tech not to carry on trying and limply turn all bits and pieces over
to Qual is to train Tech into weakness.

    Two rules:

    In Tech, when all else fails, then hand it over to Review.

    In any difficulty, when all else fails, do what Ron says.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:lb-r.cden Copyright (D 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

89

 HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I AUGUST 1967

Remimeo

BPI   SECOND DYNAMIC RULES

    It has never been any part  of  my  plans  to  regulate  or  attempt  to
regulate the private lives of individuals.

    Whenever this has occurred it has not resulted in any improved
    condition.

    All I have been interested in, so far as Scientology law was  concerned,
was in removing retarding elements or practices from the  path  of  progress
toward freedom.

    Man is aberrated. Otherwise we would not be here. He is hard  to  rescue
as he has been carefully "trained" to do himself harm.

    I have no concern about the second dynamic activities of  Scientologists
save only where they bring suffering to others and  so  impede  our  forward
progress.

    Therefore ALL FORMER RULES, REGULATIONS AND  POLICIES  RELATING  TO  THE
SECOND DYNAMIC ACTIVITIES OF STUDENTS, PRECLEARS, STAFF  AND  SCIENTOLOGISTS
ARE CANCELLED.

    In their place, any husband, wife  or  individual  whose  processing  or
training has been impeded or interrupted  beyond  any  reasonable  doubt  by
second dynamic activities on the  part  of  staff  or  associates  or  their
husband or wife may have recourse to the CHAPLAIN'S COURT,  Division  6,  of
any Scientology organization, and any case heard, if  it  be  proven  beyond
reasonable  doubt  that,  without  provocation,  a  person's   training   or
processing has been impeded by the irregular second dynamic actions  of  the
defendant, a fine of not less than E 1000 sterling  or  greater  than  L5000
sterling shall be awarded the plaintiff and until paid, the defendant  shall
have no further training or processing.

    This policy is not retroactive (occurrences before this date may not be
    tried).

    No Ethics order shall be issued by reason of second dynamic  activities.
All  Ethics  orders  now  in  force  relating  to  the  second  dynamic  are
cancelled.

    No staff member may be punished, transferred  or  dismissed  because  of
second dynamic activities.

    No student or preclear may be suspended or dismissed because  of  second
dynamic activities.

    Nothing in this policy letter lays aside our  actual  knowledge  of  the
consequences of second dynamic  overts  against  husbands  and  wives  being
processed or the degree to which training or processing can be  impeded  for
someone because of another's acts.

    We are also aware that those org staffs which are  over  active  on  the
second dynamic seldom prosper.

    We also retain any and all technology relating to the second dynamic.

One of Man's primary areas of aberration is the second dynamic.

Processing, not discipline, is the only thing which eradicates aberration
of such

depth.

L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:jp.cden Copyright @ 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

89

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 SEPTEMBER 1967

Rernimeo All Tech & Qual Staff Ethics

CONFIDENTIAL DATA

I     No Ethics Chit written by anyone should contain data which is
    classified as confidential.

2-    Such material so classified is contained in Power Processes, Clearing
    Course and Advanced Courses.

Qual Sec    -    Helen Pollen
HCO Area See     -     Irene Dunleavy
Exec Council SH  -     J.J. Delance
      -     Joan McNocher
      -     Ken Urquhart
Exec Council WW  -     Tony Dunleavy
      -     Eunice Ford
      -     Ken Delderfield
Guardian Comm WW - Corrie Ellis

                                           Mary Sue Hubbard

LRH:jp.cden The Guardian WW
Copyright Q 1967 for
by L Ron Hubbard L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIO
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinst

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 N(

Remirneo
Info Int E/0 WW
Local E/Os
Info Int SPEOWW  OUT TECH

    ANY AND ALL published mimeoed out tech processes or "recommendations" or
"interpretations" not written or signed  by  myself  must  be  sent  to  the
International Ethics Officer at WW with any information on their  authorship
or origination so that Conditions may be  assigned  and  broad  cancellation
can be issued by the International Ethics Officer.

    The reason for this is the discovery of a process on page one of the Org
Exec Course checksheet of 21 Sept 67 which would ruin  any  student's  case,
his interest in admin and which would deter enrolment.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:jp.eden Copyright (D 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

90

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 31 MAY 1968
                       (Reissued from Flag Order 800)

Remimeo

SCIENTOLOGY TECHNOLOGY

    There is one Tech and that is Standard Tech.

    Unfortunately there is other Tech around. This other Tech is a
Liability. Other Tech is defined as any tech which is not-standard Tech.

    Let's start punching this hard.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
LRH-.sb.js.rd    Founder
Copyright @ 1968
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 AUGUST 1968

Remimeo All Franchise and Orgs Division 6 Hats

DISSEMINATION

    A PC RARELY DISSEMINATES. ONLY AN AUDITOR DISSEMINATES.

    We know this from experience.

    Thus an Org which makes more pcs than auditors will tend to collapse.

    Also an Org which makes only pes will collapse.

    So always make an equal number of auditors and pcs or more auditors than
    pcs.

    This will ensure dissemination to the field as the auditor will
understand what he is disseminating and will therefore be successful.

                                             Public Aide

                                             for
LRH:ei.Td   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1968 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               91

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 OCTOBER 1968
                       (Cancels HCO PL 20 March 1964)

Remimeo

TECHNICAL REPORTS

    The Class VIII's have been assigned to Orgs to ensure that Standard Tech
goes in and stays in. They are responsible for ensuring that all  cases  are
properly supervised.

    Orgs with Class VIII auditors do not send copies of auditing reports  to
LRH or WW. Orgs without Class VIII's continue to send them to LRH  via  Tech
See WW.

    Orgs with Class VIII's should send in a  weekly  report  regarding  Tech
results, and the  Org  LRH  Comm  should  randomly  select  reports  of  one
preclear being audited in Tech and in Qual  to  send  to  Tech  See  WW  for
inspection.

    All Academy Student reports shall be addressed by  the  student  to  LRH
personally and sent via Tech See WW. Such  reports  shall  be  on  a  weekly
basis.

                                Tech See WW        Mark Jones
                                Qual See WW        Mark Jones
                                HCO Area See WW    Edith Hoyseth
                                Ad Council WW      Rodger Wright
                                        Chairman
                                LRH Comm WW        Rodger Wright
                                D/Guardian WW      Jane Kember
                                Guardian WW        Mary Sue Hubbard
                                  for
      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:ei.rd   Founder
Copyright 1968
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 NOVEMBER 1968

Remimeo

SENIOR POLICY

We always deliver what we promise.

L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:ei.rd Copyright @ 1968 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

92

                                               NOT HCO   POLICY LETTER
                                               CORRECT   COLOUR FLASH
                                                   BLUE ON WHITE

UIV
EXECUTIVE DIRECTIVE FROM L. RON HUBBARD

FO
LRH ED 81INT     Date 20 January 1969

   A VITAL TARGET

Trained Auditor Programme

    It is vital that we step up auditor training in all orgs.

    The VITAL target is

    TO HAVE TRAINED AUDITORS IN PLENTY IN ORGS AND FIELD.

    My data is that we must have specialized in preclears for quite a while,
that staff training as auditors went  out  and  that  we  began  to  develop
backlogs of pcs.

    Backlogs of pcs must be avoided.

    Trained auditors by far make the better executives. Thus staff  auditors
get promoted to execs and the staff auditor vacancies aren't filled.

    We used to allow for this. Many Academy graduates came on staff as staff
auditors routinely. HGC auditors then got promoted to executives.

    Staff training programmes permitted staffs to get to be trained auditors
on a part time schedule.

    In London we used to hire typists and clerks from employment agencies. A
large percentage of  them,  with  no  urging  at  all,  saved  up  and  took
advantage of their 50% staff discount and got their HPA, then came  back  on
as staff auditors and went on to other staff posts. Either training got  too
long or too involved or the route got barriered.

    In any event each org should take responsibility for getting  the  route
unplugged. People who came on staff came from the public  as  just-a-job  or
from the Scientology field, got trained, became staff auditors, etc.

    I know in orgs where I have worked I usually had to unblock hiring.  For
some reason I had to do it. All sorts of barriers got put up to  people  who
wanted on staff. I used to hear of people and by pass and  get  them  to  be
put on.

    Also, I used to order a sign in PE to get PE attendees to join staff and
a sign in the Academy to get graduates to join staff. This was SOP.

    When an org is signing up more pcs than students it will go broke or be
    poor.

    The 50% scholarship offer (50% of fees) mailed out used to work well. It
could be mailed to  FSMs  to  hand  out  to  prospective  students.  If  the
scholarship only applied from Dianetics to  HPA  and  not  to  segments,  it
would boom training.

    Some orgs just plain try to be clinics. The  public  loves  to  take  no
responsibility and be given it all as pes. When they get to Solo  and  above
they wish to hell they had become real auditors.

    You can jam the training line by making an Academy Course  long  and  as
heavy as anSHSBC.

    The REAL design of training (if anybody would really do it this way) is:

    Dianetics: Fast Course on Technique. Slide by on philosophic data.

93

    Academy: Fast Courses on Technique. Learn all the motions.

    SHSBC: A course taking in ALL the data, philosophic, with  polishing  of
Technique.

    Class VIII: Sharp rapid STANDARDIZATION of auditing and case supervising
with 100% gains.

    When you try to standardize Class VIII style  the  Dianetic  course,  or
SHSBC, the Academy courses, you slow people down to nowhere.

    Now that we have Ethics in  and  VIlls  in  every  org  WE  CAN  RESTORE
ATTESTATION. When we knocked it off we also knocked down  our  stats.  Ron's
Journal 1968 will RESTORE ATTESTATION  OF  GRADES  AND  CLASSES.  This  will
speed up training again and raise stats. It works only if  you  keep  Ethics
in.

    This is my immediate contribution to MORE AUDITORS.

    After all, early auditors weren't all that well  trained.  And  training
parallels the progress time track of the subject!

    BUT as we EXPAND  we  will  CONTINUALLY  FACE  THE  PROBLEM  OF  AUDITOR
SHORTAGE.

    Therefore YOU make a contribution on your end of it by making the  lines
open. Post staff procurement signs. Get staff trained up. Get the public  to
get trained.

    Executives who aren't trained auditors have the highest  mortality  rate
as executives. How can anyone really guide a  Scientology  org  who  doesn't
know the subject.

    So let's keep this Target up there as a big Target:

        TO HAVE TRAINED AUDITORS IN PLENTY IN ORGS AND FIELD.

    Train staffs is part of the Target.

    Sign up more students than pes is part of it.

    Push Training in Promotion is part of it.

    We used to tell people that training as an auditor made one more able to
handle life and his fellows.  It  didn't  mean  one  became  a  professional
auditor and hung out a shingle. We better hit this campaign again.

    Anyway, it's a key Target, a big one. It is a Vital Target, what we have
to do to make things go at all.

13j,
                                  L. RON HUBBARD
      Founder
4

94

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 JANUARY 1969
                                  Issue 11

Rernimeo

MAINTAINING STANDARD TECH

    Although by Ron's words Sea Org Missions  will  bepolicing  the  correct
exact application of standard technology, a safeguard against  violation  of
the standard of financial nature is hereby established.

    This has been done to increase organisational  awareness  that  standard
tech is not solely the responsibility of the auditor  and  case  supervisor.
They need  to  be  backed  in  their  efforts  by  the  full  organisational
structure and the members this comprises.

    STANDARD TECH IS CORRECT EXACT DUPLICATION OF SOURCE IN APPLICATION  AND
IS ACCOMPLISHED BY COMPLETE ORGANISATIONAL ENDEAVOUR.

    Each org member is to some extent responsible for the technology Ron
    gave us.

    As from the day of this policy letter every  Org  employing  Class  VIII
technical staff, is going to be fined the sum of S 1000.00 for  every  GROSS
goof which  was  found  allowed  to  slide  by  unhandled.  The  keyword  is
UNHANDLED. Goofs, although they shouldn't occur may  sometimes  happen,  but
standard tech resolves all cases including goofs. However a case allowed  to
leave the Org attested to as complete, with unharldled out tech on the  case
is not merely a goof but a false report.

    In such cases, were they ever to occur, a fine will be  levied,  payable
AT ONCE to the Sea Org. Arid this money is  payable  out  of  the  Financial
Planning allocation. So it will really be in all members' interest that  out
tech does not occur, and in the event of it ever happening  to  take  strong
action against the sinning party.

    Tech is veTy very simple, but also very very accurate since  the  advent
of VIII. Tech is tech, it is IN or it isn't.

    RON'S TECH IS STANDARD TECH AND HAS No VARIA13LES OR ARBITRARIES. IT  IS
RIGHT OR IT IS WRONG WITHOUT ANY SHADES OR GRADIENT IN BETWEEN. And that  is
that.

    As Standard Tech is IN and winning it is not expected that any fine will
ever have to be levied, and none will be retroactively. But they will be  in
any case found in future where violation is found unhandled.

    Ron gave us standard tech, you apply it and we will police it. And so
    we'll all
grow stronger.

      Lt. O.J. Roos
      Flag C/S
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:OJR.Idm.ei.rd      Founder
Copyright (D 1969
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

95

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 OCTOBER 1969

Rernimeo Tech & Qual Personnel

TECHNICAL DIVISIONS - PROMOTION AND RESPONSIBILITY

             (Originally issued as ED 318 INT)

 I .   All Personnel of Tech Divisions are reminded that it has long been a
   function of this Division to promote itself.

2.    Foremost and most obvious is the old dictum, that when  Tech  is  in,
   bodies will come flooding in. Happy,  satisfied  preclears  and  students
   will not be quiet about Scientology wins. They will disseminate.  Keeping
   the Promotional Points for their Departments in an  alert  and  realistic
   way will do the rest.

3.    Letters of Procurement by the Departments of Processing and  Training
   are very effective. Personnel of Tech do not sit back and  expect  Dissem
   to bring in all the students and  preclears.  They  get  busy  themselves
   writing, telephoning, scheduling and Tech Services always  gets  advanced
   bookings in earlier. And they demand that Dissem get their enrolments up.

4.    Directors of Processing get busy keeping  Auditor  Procurement  going
   and work with Qual to get Training Programmes in for  already  Classified
   Auditors in the Org and in the  area.  And  they  demand  that  Personnel
   Procurement bring in auditors and  train  and  recruit  auditors  in  the
   Academy. NO HGC SHOULD EVER BE SHORT HANDED FOR AUDITORS. Policy  clearly
   allows for any qualified auditor in the Org to  be  used  when  necessary
   (P/L 28th April, 1965  "Technical  Personnel").  But  with  good  Auditor
   promotion and training this need not become necessary.

S.     Tech  Personnel,  including  Supervisors  and  Auditors  take   full
   responsibility to see that they themselves keep trained and  checked  out
   on all necessary material for their departments. They don't wait for Qual
   to remind them or for Ethics to take action first. They  make  sure  that
   Qual does train them and that there is no violation of High Crimes Policy
   of star rated checkouts (P/L 8th March, 1966 "High Crime").

6.    Tech Services Personnel  do  not  wait  until  Auditors  or  Students
   complain about lack of material-or wait for Boards of Investigation to do
   their job. They make certain that materials  are  provided  and  in  good
   condition. They keep materials supplied to Auditors and Students and make
   certain that lines and routing is properly done. They are there  to  give
   swift happy-making service to Technical.

7.    Technical Personnel do not natter, complain  or  go  into  apathy  if
   their Pcs and Students are "held up too long in Qualifications". They see
   to it that HCO and Ethics speeds routing.

8.    Technical Personnel do not sit and hope that Public Divs will arrange
   Public Lectures, HAS or other beginning Courses which  will  feed  people
   into the Technical Division. The Technical Secretary has materials  ready
   and personnel prepared to give these courses.

9.    Technical Personnel realize that they are turning out the PRODUCT of
the

96

   Organization-completed students and preclears who will bring about
   changed conditions on this planet, and that is what the Organization is
   all about.

10.   So Technical Division Personnel do not sit around and wait for the
    rest of the organization to do the job. They keep busy doing their own
    actions, keeping their Promotional Points in, and keeping Technical in
    on themselves .... and demand that the rest of the Organization help
    keep them supplied.

      Hana Eltringham.
      Deputy Commodore Flotilla
Rosalie Vesper - HCO Area See WW
David Dunlop           -     Dep Qual See WW
                 Ad Council WW
Anne Tampion           -     HCO Exec See WW
Allan Ferguson         -     Org Exec See WW
Tom Morgan       -     Public Exec See WW
Rodger Wright          -     LRH Comm WW
Leif Windle      -     Policy Review Section WW
Jane Kember      -     The Guardian WW
      for
           L. RON HUBBARD
           Founder

LRH:HE:ei.rd Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

97

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 15 NOVEMBER 1969
                                  Issue 11

Remimeo
Cl Vill Checksheet
Dianetics Checksheet
Qual See Hat
Tech See Hat
C/S Hat

RIGHTS AND DUTIES

    The following Rights and Duties are to be posted in the  staff  area  of
every Qual Division and Tech Division, where they will  be  frequently  seen
by auditors and technical personnel.

    They are to be printed green on white in letters at least I  inch  high,
each on a separate card (4 total).

AN AUDITOR HAS THE DUTY:

TO KNOW AND ABIDE BY THE AUDITOR'S CODE

TO APPLY TECH EXACTLY AS PER HCOBS AND LRH TAPES

TO BE THOROUGHLY FAMILIAR WITH THE FOLDER OF ANY PC HE AUDITS

TO FOLLOW C/S INSTRUCTIONS EXACTLY IN SESSION

TO REFUSE TO AUDIT AN INCORRECT C/S

TO AUDIT ONLY THOSE MATERIALS ON WHICH HE HAS BEEN CHECKED OUTSTARRATE

TO BE FAMILIAR WITH AND APPLY ALL NEW TECHNICAL MATERIALS UP  TO  HIS  CLASS
LEVEL

AN AUDITOR HAS THE RIGHT:

NOT TO AUDIT A PRECLEAR HE DOES NOT WISH TO AUDIT

NOT TO AUDIT MORE THAN 5 HOURS PER DAY, 6 DAYS PER WEEK

TO REFUSE A C/S HE KNOWS TO BE INCORRECT

TO ASK TO BE REFERRED TO THE HCOB COVERING A  C/S  HE  IS  UNCERTAIN  OF  OR
FEELS IS INCORRECT

NOT TO BE PUNISHED FOR QUERYING A C/S WHETHER CORRECT OR NOT

TO HAVE PCS, AUDITING ROOMS, AND MATERIALS MADE AVAILABLE  TO  HIM  BY  TECH
SERVICES

98

A CASE SUPERVISOR HAS THE DUTY:

    TO REFUSE TO DISCUSS A CASE WITH EITHER THE AUDITOR OR THE PC

    TO REFRAIN FROM DISCUSSING OR MENTIONING DATA FROM PC FOLDERS SOCIALLY

    TO  CORRECT  HIS  AUDITORS'  APPLICATION  OF  TECH  POSITIVELY,  WITHOUT
    INVALIDATION

    TO ORDER THE AUDITOR TO CRAMMING OR RETRAINING FOR ANY FLUNKED SESSION

    TO MAINTAIN A STANDARD OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT

    TO C/S ALL FOLDERS DELIVERED TO HIM DAILY

A CASE SUPERVISOR HAS THE RIGHT:

TO HAVE HIS OWN OFFICE

TO HOLD NO OTHER POST

NEVER TO RUSH HIS OWN C/S ACTIONS

TO ACCEPT NO TECHNICAL ORDERS OR ADVICES OTHER THAN FROM LRH

TO DEMAND A HIGH ADMINISTRATIVE STANDARD OF THOSE WHO WORK ON HIS LINES

TO DEMAND THAT PCS DO NOT DISCUSS THEIR OWN CASES OR  OTHERWISE  VIOLATE  PC
RULES

TO ISSUE AND GET COMPLIANCE ON ANY ORDERS NECESSARY TO  THE  PERFORMANCE  OF
HIS DUTY AND TECHNICAL RESULTS

Lt. Nate Jessup, Chairman
Ens. Janet Guilford, Secretary  W/O  Bob  Guilford,  Member  Qual  Board  of
Investigation for
L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:NJ:JG:BG:nt.rd Copyright (D 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

99

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 FEBRUARY 1970

Remirneo
All Orgs
AOs
SHs
E/Os Hat
T/Sec Hat
PES Hat
Dir Success Hat
ARC Br Reg Hat
PRO Hat
PRO Crse checksheet    ETHICS

                       QUALITY OF SERVICE

    ARC Breaks bring about and restimulate a desire to get even.

    An ARC broken person attacks.

    Criminals, revolutionaries, great generals are  simply  dramatizing  the
effects of an ARC Break of long duration.

    Madmen seldom attack that which ARC broke them but choose wrong
    targets.

    Any and all attacks suffered by orgs are from ARC broken persons.

    Even when such persons were really ARC broken with some other  activity,
they instantaneously attack us.

    Most ARC breaks are caused by by~passed charge. This charge  is  usually
the restimulation of some earlier ARC break not caused by us.

    WITHHOLDS ARE ONE PRIMARY CAUSE OF BY-PASSED CHARGE.

    When persons are poorly processed or poorly trained they can restimulate
a great deal of by-passed charge.

    When  persons  are  permitted  to  take  higher  grades  without  really
attaining lower  grades,  by-passed  charge  is  inevitable;  hence  we  see
refunds, attacks and upsets in orgs and the field.

    The true cause of ARC Breaks of long duration which transfer  to  us  is
when we permit technical goofs.

    ETHICS exists primarily to see that people honestly  make  their  grades
and are trained as they should be and that no-one is  permitted  to  prevent
good auditing and good training or to enturbulate the org so that it  cannot
occur and to make sure the org is there to give service in volume.

    Ethics is not concerned with "acceptable social behaviour" only  insofar
as it impedes the training or processing of others.

    THEREFORE: Accepting for higher levels of processing  persons  who  have
not made their lower levels shall be classified as a crime.

    Processing persons at higher levels who have not made lower levels shall
be classified as a crime.

100

    Training persons at higher levels who  have  not  proven  themselves  as
competent Dianetic auditors shall be classified as a crime.

    Admitting a famous person or notable writer to higher  level  processing
who has not fully attained lower level processing shall be classified  as  a
HIGH CRIME. This applies in particular to Power and Clearing Courses.

    Administering  Power  to  anyone  who  has  not  had  Dianetic  Triples,
Scientology Triples and adequate gains or  who  needs  further  auditing  or
Review shall be deemed a crime.

    Permitting an ARC broken person to  leave  an  org  unhandled  shall  be
deemed for the last auditor to audit him and for the  PES  and  Director  of
Success a crime.

    Failure to strenuously act to clean up an "ARC broken  field"  shall  be
deemed a high crime for the Executive Council.

    ALL ETHICS OFFICERS are to regulate their  conduct  of  duty  so  as  to
safeguard good auditing and training in the organization  and  to  create  a
calm atmosphere where these can occur in volume.

    This Policy Letter has first  priority  and  claim  on  the  duties  and
attention of the Ethics Officer.

    In interpreting the above  in  technical  matters,  the  Ethics  Officer
should consult the opinion  of  competent  auditors  not  connected  to  any
charge in progress.

    Nothing in this Policy Letter shall prevent  Scientology  grades  before
Dianetic Grades,

    Nothing in this Policy Letter shall limit the amount of auditing that  a
person can be given at any one grade.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
                                             Founder

LRH:jz.ci.rd Copyright @ 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

101

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 MAY 1970

Remimeo

IMPORTANT

CUTATIVES

    In the period up to 1966 we were plagued by an occasional  obsessiveness
to ADD to any process or policy. Additives made things unworkable.

    After 1966 when I  left  the  post  of  Executive  Director  WW,  a  new
condition set in. Checksheets, processes, intensives,  grades  began  to  be
CUT DOWN.

    This we can dub a CUTATIVE impulse to coin a word.

    So persuasive were its advocates that even I was persuaded to  agree  to
some points of it so you need not feel bad if you were  gulled  into  buying
the idea of shortening things in order to produce a quicker result.

    No one really saw where the trend was going.

    In 1970 a survey I have just completed has shown that this effort was so
complete that the following had been broadly accomplished:

    A.      Training no longer included enough Scientology materials to make
        an effective Scientology auditor in many places.

    B.      Grades had been shortened from 50 hours 0 to IV to 2Y2, minutes.

    C.      The End Phenomena of grades and processes were discarded.

    The end result has been:

    I . Few skilled auditors.

    2.      Shrunken and struggling Scn orgs.

    3.      A field that is disappointed in results-for they think they have
        had grades and haven't,

    4.      People coming into Advanced Orgs to be cleared who have NO lower
        grades actually run and so they can't make any upper grades.

    In effect Scientology was thrown away. From total workability it was cut
down to occasional result.

    I saw the first impulse of this in an  executive  long  since  dismissed
from Saint  Hill  as  a  constant  overt  no-case  gain  case  who  agitated
constantly to remove tapes from the Saint Hill Course. As 90%  of  the  data
on the SHSBC is on tape I merely thought he had gone over to the  enemy  and
ignored him. Some others, however, had the same idea  and  started  labeling
basic books and bulletins "Mere Background Data" or  saying  "We  don't  use
that now" or "That's old and you only look at it  for  interest".  Thus  the
laws of listing and other phenomena were thrown away.

    Recently I found the reason Case Supervisors failed is  that  they  just
don't know "The Original Thesis" and "Evolution of a Science" or "Scn  3-80"
or "Scn 8-8008". WHEN I DEMANDED THEY STUDY THESE BOOKS THEY BECAME  CAPABLE
OF HANDLING CASES. They did not know what they  were  handling-the  mind-and
so

102

how could they be sensible in ordering what was to be run on a case?

    Back in 1950 we  used  to  have  a  small  bunch  of  goony  birds,  ex-
psychologists, ex-limatics.  They  were  constantly  demanding  a  2  second
action that totally  cleared  someone.  Behind  this  was  an  inability  to
concentrate attention or even to work. These were people striving for  total
effect instantly. Yet they couldn't run with reality on any process  heavier
than "How are you?" and they never saw a wall-they saw a mock up of it!

    So the impulse of DO IT  ALL  NOW  NOW  that  destroyed  any  sanity  of
psychiatry is always around.

    A student with a one item checksheet who does it in one  minute  is  the
ideal course to such.

    A preclear run for 21/2 minutes to total top  grades  becomes  an  ideal
auditing session to such.

    Such things just aren't real. And such unreality got into the lines  too
hard and is being escorted right back out right now.

    The following policies are in full force and are to be backed up fully.

    1 .     Course checksheets may not be cut, edited or reduced after a
        fully approved checksheet is issued for use on any course.

    2.      No grade may be awarded for which all processes  of  that  grade
        have not been run and where the end phenomena of that grade  is  not
        attested to singly and fully by the preclear before an examiner.

    3.      Anyone found relegating basic materials to unimportance by
        reason of age or volume is to lose his post and certificates.

    4.      Any statistic claimed which is achieved by downgrading materials
        or grades or falsely pretending an end phenomena has  been  achieved
        for pes or skill by auditors shall result in the  dismissal  of  the
        division head presenting it.

    5.      No suppressive person with a fat ethics file and no case gain
        may hold any executive position in a Scientology org.

    If you in any org or franchise are having any field or financial trouble
you need not look further than errors pointed out in this Policy Letter.

    "Dianetic Triples" awarded after 11/2  hours  of  processing,  "multiple
declares" after 10 minutes from 0 to IV, using checksheets  from  which  all
basic material has been cut, the failure to realize gains and abilities  and
success have to be worked for to be true, are at the bottom of  any  trouble
any org or franchise is having.

    Beginning with the Pol Ltr of 10 May 1970 a more honest era has began.

    Scramble around and put it right.

    Deliver Scientology not a Cutative.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:dz.nt.ka.aap Copyright @ 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

103

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               CORRECT   COLOUR FLASH
                                                   BLUE ON WHITE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTIVE FROM L. RON HUBBARD

LRH ED 107 INT [Excerpt]     3 June 1970

To: Class IV Orgs and Saint Hills for ACTION. AOs for Info.
From: Ron
Subject: ORDERS TO DIVISIONS FOR IMMEDIATE COMPLIANCE
      [ORDERS TO DIVISION IV-Excerpted]
Reference: LRH ED 104 INT Auditing Sales and Delivery Pgm No. 1,
      LRH ED 106 INT What Was Wrong

DIVISION IV

 1.   Assurne all technical actions in C/Sing, HGC and Dept of Training.

 2.   When a pc goes to Review Qual is credited with the time taken from the
    hours the pc bought.

 3.   Only send a pc to Review when the C/S gives up. Don't let Review give
    the major actions that belong to the HGC.

 4.   Get your Supervisors (a) interested in the students' progress and  (b)
    using two way comm (listen style) to speed up  the  students'  progress;
    (c) get in Learning Drills on slow students.

 5.   Get blown students back in and using (a), (b) and (c) in 4 above get
    them going again.

 6.   Come down hard on any SP giving out with Scn materials being "old"  or
    "not used now" or "background data" and any other  mechanism  to  impede
    its use. (Modern C/Ses are having to study  "The  Original  Thesis"  and
    other basic books to find out about the subject. The data is not old. It
    is basic.)

 7.   Completely throw out the idea that a fast result is a good  result  in
    auditing. Deliver auditing in  volume  as  per  the  'Trocesses  Taught"
    Column of the Class Chart. Do not skip any gradient going up in  C/Sing.
    Get him on TRs and repair the pc's life before  even  beginning  serious
    auditing. Do ALL the processes. To full End  Phenomena.  End  completely
    this brush off that is currently passing for tech.

 8.   Get studied all current HCO Bs and data on this program. Be sure you
    get HCO Bs now coming out that fill in these gaps to get Scientology
    back into its own.

 9.   Determine that students know their business and pes get full gains and
    get this being worked at hard through the division.

10.   Check this giddy impulse to do things so fast  they're  not  done  at
    all. Validate auditors who  do  a  thorough  job,  Supervisors  who  are
    interested in and work  with  students  to  push  them  through.  Preach
    attaining honest lasting results, real lower grades, real  understanding
    of the mind.

11.   Courses should be fast, auditing drawn out. This is the exact reverse
    to what has been happening. Slow courses and fast auditing  destroy  the
    subjects of Dianetics and Scientology. Fast courses and long long  hours
    of auditing are the route to real gains and solvency.

12.   Man up Division IV with competent auditors, supervisors, a good C/S,
    an able Tech Services and plan how to man it up in the future as it
    expands and carry on

104

   an orderly program of providing technical manpower for the Division, not
   depending on anyone else to do so.

13.   See that students do a lot of mutual auditing. Don't get  stumped  in
    finding things to audit on each other. Force them over  onto  the  Class
    Chart and every process known.

14,   Get the division traffic lines flowing smoothly.

15,   Handle backlogs by preaching training and getting more staff.

16.   Whenever a pc goes Exterior (or any in your folders  who  have)  have
    him called in for an Interiorization Rundown. Don't end off his auditing
    and  don't  audit  past  exterior  without  giving  the  Interiorization
    Rundown. This can be done at any stage of Dn  or  grade  processing  AND
    DOES NOT COUNT AS PART OF ANY GRADE.

17.   Get out of any rut that goes contrary to this program.

            L. RON HUBBARD
                  Founder
          8,
          It it

        IFO

LRH:dz,rd

105

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE Saint Hill Manor, East
                 Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 JUNE 1970

Remimeo
Applies to all         URGENTAND
SHs and
Academies        LWORTANT
HGCs
Franchises
            TECHNICAL DEGRADES
      (This PL and HCO PL Feb 7, 1965 must
      be made part of every study pack as the
      first items and must be listed on
      checksheets.)

    Any checksheet in use or in stock which  carries  on  it  any  degrading
statement must be destroyed and issued without qualifying statements.

    Example: Level 0 to IV Checksheets SH carry "A. Background Material-This
section is included as an historical background, but has much  interest  and
value to the student. Most of the processes are no longer used, having  been
replaced by more modern technology. The student is  only  required  to  read
this material and ensure he leaves no misunderstood."  This  heading  covers
such vital things as TRs, Op Pro by Dup! The statement is a falsehood.

    These checksheets were not approved by myself, all the material  of  the
Academy and SH courses IS in use.

    Such actions as this gave us "Quickie Grades", ARC Broke the  field  and
downgraded the Academy and SH Courses.

    A condition of TREASON or cancellation of certificates or dismissal  and
a full investigation of the background of any person found guilty,  will  be
activated in the case of anyone committing the following HIGH CRIMES.

    1.      Abbreviating an official Course in Dianetics and Scientology so
       as to lose the full theory processes and effectiveness of the
       subjects.

    2.      Adding comments to checksheets  or  instructions  labelling  any
       material "background" or "not used now"  or  "old"  or  any  similar
       action which will result in the  student  not  knowing,  using,  and
       applying the data in which he is being trained.

    3.      Employing after I Sept 1970 any checksheet for any course not
       authorized by myself and the SO Organizing Bureau Flag.

    4.      Failing to strike from any checksheet remaining in use meanwhile
       any such comments as "historical", "background", "not used",  "old",
       etc. or VERBALLY STATING IT TO STUDENTS.

    5.      Permitting a pc to attest to more than one grade at a time on
       the pe's own determinism without hint or evaluation.

    6.      Running only one process for a grade between 0 to IV.

    7.      Failing to use all processes for a level.

    8.      Boasting as to speed of delivery in a session, such as "I put in
       Grade Zero in 3 minutes." Etc.

106

    9.      Shortening. time of application of auditing for financial or
        labor saving considerations.

    10.     Acting  in  any  way  calculated  to  lose  the  technology  of
        Dianetics and Scientology to use or impede its use  or  shorten  its
        materials or its application.

    REASON: The effort to get students through courses and get pcs processed
in orgs was considered  best  handled  by  reducing  materials  or  deleting
processes from grades. The pressure exerted to speed up student  completions
and auditing completions was mistakenly answered by just not delivering.

    The correct way to speed up a student's progress is by using 2 way  comm
and applying the study materials to students.

    The best way to really handle pcs is to  ensure  they  make  each  level
fully before going on to the next and repairing them when they do not.

    The puzzle of the decline of the entire Scientology network in the  late
60s is entirely answered by the actions taken to shorten time in  study  and
in processing by deleting materials and actions.

    Reinstituting full use and delivery of Dianetics and Scientology is  the
answer to any recovery.

    The product of an org is well taught  students  and  thoroughly  audited
pcs. When the product vanishes, so does the org. The orgs must  survive  for
the sake of this planet.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:nt.rd Copyright @ 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

107

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 SEPTEMBER 1970
Remimeo
              (This paper issued at the beginning of Dianetics
                   is of considerable historical interest
                  ,,giving the basis of the Auditor's Code
                          and policy on psychotics)

                            INSTRUCTION PROTOCOL
                                  OFFICIAL

                          L. Ron Hubbard

     FOR STAFF ONLY - NOT FOR STUDENT OR GENERAL ISSUE
                                                 November 20, 1950

(This is the first  instruction  protocol  issued  over  my  signature.  Any
earlier material circulated was for the purpose of gaining data in order  to
prepare this protocol. LRH)

    Any school of mental. healing in the past has been  victimized  by  that
irrationality known as psychosis. Dianetics, no matter if it has the  answer
to psychosis, is yet victimized by its existence in the society.

    Psychotics, people with histories of known breaks, of suicide  attempts,
of homocidal tendencies, can yet be expected to  apply  for  instruction  in
dianetics.

    An adequate screen has been set up  to  inhibit  the  entrance  of  such
persons into training. A Minnesota Multiphasic, at least, must be  given  to
all applicants  for  certification  course  training.  This  very  far  from
guarantees insurance against  enrolling  a  psychotic.  Psychometry  is  not
accurate and varies from over-optimism to  overpessimism  about  psychotics.
Therefore, all psychometry must be tempered by common sense. Also,  it  must
be modified by what we know dianetics can readily do for people.

    A psychotic  discovered  by  screening  should  either  be  routed  into
processing (if the case is mild and non-suicidal) or rejected. At such  time
as the Foundations possess adequate and lawful housing  facilities  for  the
retention of psychotics, those who  might  have  been  turned  away  may  be
routed to the unit which has such facilities  in  its  charge.  Efforts  are
being  made,  and  others  should  be  made,  to  procure  such   sanitarium
facilities wherein psychotics may be dianetically processed.

    Once enrolled, the applicant, any applicant, should be regarded to  some
degree as a possible error in screening. A  definite  program  of  allowance
for possible screening errors must consistently be adhered to.

    Experience  has  demonstrated  that  psychotics  may  be  enrolled   and
successfully  released  and  trained.  The  strain  on  the  school  staffs,
however, has been great; and the cost of enrolling  a  psychotic  definitely
exceeds the amount he has paid for his course. In Los  Angeles,  in  August,
about thirty  percent  of  those  enrolled,  it  has  been  estimated,  were
incipient psychotics. Turmoil was occasioned by this, training  expense  was
raised well above training  income  in  each  case.  This  does  not  argue,
however, that the enrolling and training of psychotics is without danger.

    As an additional safeguard, the following observations should  be  taken
into account. Wherever any trouble has been had with a student in  training,
one of the following factors has been present.

    I . The student was run while tired or when lacking in proper food.

    2. The auditing the student received was bad, extremely bad.

108

    3.      The student had in his environ, while in training, an individual
       who definitely and demonstrably sought the  mental  failure  of  the
       student.

    4.      Too many auditors worked on the student.

    5.      Dianetics, in the hands of some students, was crossed with an
       older therapy.

    Directors of Training and  Team  Captains  should  do  all  possible  to
obviate the occurrence in training of any of the above five factors.

    All training programs should have  as  their  end  the  turning  out  of
certifiable students. This  means  that  the  student's  own  case  must  be
running well and that he must have  absorbed  maximal  dianetic  information
and acquired maximal skill.  Obviating  the  above  five  factors  pays  the
additional dividend of proofing the school  against  bogged-down  cases,  by
which is meant those cases, not psychotic, which  cease  to  run  well.  The
above five factors not only threaten the psychotic but  are  responsible  in
bogged-down cases. A bogged-down case does not find himself able  to  absorb
information or acquire skill and certainly cannot  be  said  to  be  running
well.

    To militate against the above five  factors,  to  prevent  any  untoward
incident should any psychotic  slip  through  screening  unobserved  and  to
prevent bogged-down cases, the following  program  is  the  official  school
program.

    The student is enrolled on a four weeks course basis. At the end of this
course, if certifiable by all criteria, the student  is  granted  a  limited
certificate, printed in  black  and  white,  on  which  the  words  LIMITED,
EXPIRES SIX MONTHS FROM DATE,  is  printed  boldly.  In  order  to  gain  an
unlimited certificate, then, the student  must,  after  graduation,  release
two persons, one of a mental condition and the other of  a  serious  chronic
somatic and must furnish to the Foundation incontrovertible evidence from  a
medical doctor and psychometrist that this has been accomplished.  When  the
Foundation receives such information and  such  incofitrovertible  evidence,
the Foundation then forwards an unlimited certificate to  the  student.  The
student need not again appear at the Foundation.  But  on  being  given  his
limited certificate, he is also given a written paper, stating exactly  what
he has to do to get his permanent certificate. The  research  division  will
furnish the protocol for this-as to what is acceptable  evidence;  and  this
protocol is based on what the research division can use  as  a  major  proof
case.

    The student, however, is given an alternative. He knows that it will  be
expensive for him to get examinations of patients and psychometry  on  them.
He may submit as one of his cases his own  intensive  run  of  a  Foundation
patient or applicant, the Foundation doing the medical examination  and  the
psychometry for him. The charge to the  student  is  on  the  basis  of  one
week's additional experience and instruction for  $75.00.  This  is  cheaper
than a case would cost him. He can actually stay for two weeks and get  both
his cases from Foundation applicants and patients at a cost  of  575,00  for
the additiorial-second-week. The advantage to him  is  additional  tips  and
instruction as he runs  his  first  independent  case  or  cases,  that  the
Foundation handles all examinations and that his permanent certification  is
thus speeded up. The Foundation advantage is that it has a better chance  to
observe prospective employees.

    By this means and others, the school then arranges for every  applicant,
within reason, to have a tlfirty-six hour run during his  first  week  by  a
student auditor in his fourth  or  fifth  week.  This  is  no  part  of  the
guarantee. It is simply done. Directors of  Training  can  then  assign  one
fairly reliable auditor to one incoming case and  so  obviate  some  of  the
above five factors.

    The protocol of training for a student is then as follows:

    1 . Entered after screening by psychometry and interview.

109

    2.      For the first week, a thirty-six hour intensive run and general
        indoctrination.

    3.      For the second week. Training in theory.

    4.      For the third week-training in practice, strongly supervised by
        team captain, given adequate examples of auditing.

    5.      For the fourth week~additional training in practice; or, if good
        enough, given a new enrollee for a thirty-six hour intensive.  (Does
        not count for permanent certification.)

    6.      For the fifth week, if enrolled-a thirty-six hour intensive on a
        chronic aberration case or any case.

    7.      For the sixth week, if enrolled-a thirty-six hour intensive on a
        chronic somatic case or any case.

    The student's own case may be more or less  neglected  after  his  first
week  of  intensive  running  immediately  after  enrollment.  If  the  case
requires further processing before limited certification can be  given,  the
student  can  make  his  own  arrangements.  He  is  there  to  be  trained,
basically, not to be processed. Special arrangements for processing  to  the
end of being certified can be made by the Registrar.

    This protocol has been developed after consultation with the  Foundation
Registrar at Elizabeth, the Director of  Training  at  Elizabeth,  and  upon
observations made during the past  five  months.  If  followed  closely,  it
should adequately proof the schools against having  psychotic  breaks  occur
in them and against cases bogging down.  Further,  it  should  heighten  the
percentile of students certified.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:ddb.rr.rd Copyright (D 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

110

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 OCTOBER 1968

Auditor 43 Class VIII All Auditors

THE AUDITOR'S CODE
      AD 18

In celebration of the 100% gains attainable by Standard Tech.

I hereby promise as an auditor to follow the Auditor's Code.

1.    1 promise not to evaluate for the preclear or tell him what he should
    think about his case in session.

2.    1 promise not to invalidate the preclear's case or gains in or out of
session.

3.    1 promise to administer only Standard Tech to a preclear in the
standard way.

4.    1 promise to keep all auditing appointments once made.

5.    1 promise not to process a preclear who has not had sufficient rest
    and who is physically tired.

6.    1 promise not to process a preclear who is improperly fed or hungry.

7.    1 promise not to permit a frequent change of auditors.

8.    1 promise not to sympathize with a preclear but to be effective.

9.    1 promise not to let the preclear end session on his own determinism
    but to finish off those cycles I have begun.

10.   1 promise never to walk off from a preclear in session.

11.   1 promise never to get angry with a preclear in session.

12.   1 promise to run every major case action to a floating needle.

13.   1 promise never to run any one action beyond its floating needle.

14.   1 promise to grant beingness to the preclear in session.

15.   1 promise not to mix the processes of Scientology with other
    practices except when the preclear is physically ill and only medical
    means will serve.

16.   1 promise to maintain Communication with the preclear and not to cut
    his comm or permit him to overrun in session.

17.   1 promise not to enter comments, expressions or enturbulence into a
    session that distract a preclear from his case.

18.   1 promise to continue to give the preclear the process or auditing
    command when needed in the session.

19.   1 promise not to let a preclear run a wrongly understood command.

20.   1 promise not to explain, justify or make excuses in session for any
    auditor mistakes whether real or imagined.

21.   1 promise to estimate the current case state of a  preclear  only  by
    Standard Case Supervision data  and  not  to  diverge  because  of  some
    imagined difference in the case.

22.   1 promise never to use the secrets of a preclear divulged in session
    for punishment or personal gain.

23.   1 promise to see that any fee received for processing is refunded  if
    the preclear is dissatisfied and demands it within  three  months  after
    the processing, the only condition  being  that  he  may  not  again  be
    processed or trained.

24.   1 promise not to advocate Scientology only to cure illness or only to
    treat the insane, knowing well it was intended for spiritual gain.

25.   1  promise  to  cooperate  fully  with  the  legal  organisations  of
    Dianetics and Scientology as developed by L. Ron Hubbard in safeguarding
    the ethical use and practice of the subject according to the  basics  of
    Standard Tech.

26.   1 promise to refuse to permit any being to be physically injured,
    violently damaged operated on or killed in the name of "mental
    treatment".

27.   1 promise not to permit sexual liberties or violation of the mentally
unsound.

28.   1 promise to refuse to admit to the ranks of practitioners any being
who is insane.

Auditor

Date

Witness     Place

L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:jp.ei.rd Copyright (c) 1968 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Note: No& 26, 27 and 28 have been added per HCO PL 2 November 1968.

112

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 APRIL 1970
                                  Issue Il
                  (Formerly issued as FO 2175, 8 Nov 1969)

Rernimeo Tech Services Hat 4th Mate's Hat Tech Sec Qual Sec Hats AOsSHs

TECH SERVICES

    THE PURPOSE OF TECH SERVICES IS  TO  GET  AUDITORS,  PCS  AND  MATERIALS
TOGETHER AND IN AN AUDITING ROOM ON SCHEDULE SO THAT AUDITING CAN OCCUR  AND
WITH MINIMAL LOSS OF THE AUDITOR'S TIME.

    How to get this done is modified by the situation of quarters.

    Normally there is a board showing auditors pcs room assignments.

    There is a layout of auditing and report forms, ball points, paperclips,
staplers, an in and out shelf area big enough to hold big auditing folders.

    The comm baskets of the auditors are usually also there.

    There is a notice board for pcs for their letters or notices to them  or
individual messages.

    There is a room plot so those in use can be indicated.

    There is a waiting room for the pcs.

    There are desks or tables for auditors to complete their  reports,  when
the auditing day has ended.

    There is a comm system handy.

    There is a set of file cabinets where folders are kept.

    There is administrative neatness and facilities to accomplish the
    purposes.

    There is a system for collecting the pes for the auditors.

    If Tech Services is done and arranged well Auditor waiting time is zero.
The pes ARE COLLECTED UP BY TECH SERVICES never by Auditors.

    Tech Services tries to prevent any long wait by pes and gets them in  at
the last moment, but not so late that the auditor waits.

    AN AUDITOR'S TIME IS GOLD. He never has to chase up pcs or materials  or
a newly charged meter. And he never should find his pc has  not  had  enough
food or rest to be audited, thus wasting the auditor's time. This is all  up
to Tech Services, however it is done.

113

    In a big org Tech and Qual each have a competent Tech Services, the Qual
one being the smaller.

    In Sen orgs Tech Services also arranges housing, has pcs met, and
generally operates as the pe host while in the org.

    Also in a Scn org Tech Services does all the student housing, handling,
folders, records and admin such as logs and roll books. One tries to keep
students and pcs separated.

    Tech Services is a busy place. As well as being efficient it is also
    friendly.

    The capability of Tech Services can make or break the reputation of an
    org.

    Undermanning Tech Services can be a very serious mistake. At a SH it is
also served by tech-qual pages and HCO Couriers. The routing to Registrar
after services from C&A to Registrar by a page can mean up to 50% more
income or re-sign ups and if omitted loses the org many customers.

    Tech Services is an important post. Exactly how it is done is qualified
by how it is done best for that org and area but ALL its functions must be
done.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:nt.cden Copyright Q 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

114

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                              WASHINGTON, D.C.

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF S SEPTEMBER 1957

                            TESTING

    The department of Testing administers tests to precleaTs  and,  students
every Saturday at 12:4S p.m., sharp and every Monday at 9:00  a.m.,  and  at
5:00 p.m. At these exact times, the door of the testing room is locked,  and
timed tests are administered immediately. ,
    The Registrar signs up preclears on Saturday and sends them for  testing
that day at 12:4S p.m.  New  students  are  also  tested  at  that  time  on
Saturday.

      The Registrar signs up pre , clears and students before 9:00 a.m. on
Mondays.
Students are then directed to the Comm Course instructor, who sends them
for testing
at 5:00 p.m. Preclears registered before 9:00 a.m. are sent to the testing
room. After
testing the Examiner sends them to the Director of Processing. Preclears
not registered
by 9:00 a.m. are sent for testing. After testing the Examiner sends them to
the
Registrar. The Registrar then signs them up and directs them to the
Director of
Processing.
    Any preclears who are late for the Monday morning testing period will be
tested at 5:00 p.m., that day.
    HGC auditors are available every Saturday afternoon and  Monday  morning
to  score  the  tests.  The  Examiner  supplies  scoring  materials  to  the
auditors.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                                   NOT GREEN ON WHITE
             SECRETARIAL OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Assn Sec    HASI-LONDON
cc: Hats
    Dir Pro & Reg      November 23, 1958
    Dir of Processing
    Dir Admin
    Processing Admin
      SCIENTOMETRIC TESTING

    All  testing  comes  under  heading  of  Processing  Administrator   who
administers tests and keeps files. He is assisted by  specifically  assigned
staff auditors during peak loads.
    All to~sts are to be separated out of CF  and  one  copy  of  a  profile
giving earliest and latest OCA and IQ results only are left  in  files.  All
actual papers and original graphs are filed in test files where they can  be
easily  viewed  by  staff  auditors  processing  pcs  and  by  Director   of
Processing doing clearing estimates on pcs who  have  been  in  before.  All
report sheets on pcs, case analysis sheets, etc, are filed under  pc's  name
in test files. All record sheets showing what auditor processed what pc  and
when are also kept so individual  auditors'  results  can  be  read  in  the
files.
    One copy of the original profiles on every staff member are kept in  the
Business Personnel files but the original is kept in test files.
    Test files are open to and used by the Executive  Director,  Association
Secretary,  Director  of  Processing,  Director  of  Training,  Director  of
Promotion   and    Registration,    Training    Administrator,    Processing
Administrator and staff auditors and instructors. They are of great  use  in
bettering cases, instructing and registering pes. They  are  also  of  great
use to HCO Research, to whom they really belong. Therefore it  is  paramount
that they be complete and accurate. Money can be spent putting  these  files
in order and keeping  them  in  order  independent  of  the  time  of  staff
auditors or the Processing Administrator.
    The effective date of this project is the date of this order.

      L. RON HUBBARD
      Executive Director
LRH:mp.rd  HASI

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 APRIL 1959

           (CONVERT)

ADDITIONAL STAFF AUDITORS

    In order to procure enough auditors for the HGC  and  to  conserve  unit
pay, the following system may be used:

    All auditors on administrative posts  excepting  only  department  heads
shall be listed in order in such a way as to avoid consecutive listing  from
one department.

    Thereafter, this rotating list shall serve as an "on call" list for
    staff auditor duty.

    All short term pcs, so far as feasible, shall be assigned  against  list
and long term pcs shall be assigned to regular staff auditors.
    Example:     Smith, HPA CF Clerk
      Jones, BScn Tr Admin
      Brown, HCA Letter Registrar
      Peters, HPA Address files,
      etc, down through all Admin staff.

    An extra staff auditor is needed one Monday. Smith is assigned to the pe
that week.

    The following Monday a staff auditor is needed. Jones (whose name  comes
next) is assigned.

    A month later another extra staff auditor is needed, Brown is  assigned,
since Smith and Jones have already done theirs.

    When the end of the list is reached, it is started  at  the  top  again.
Then two or three extra auditors are needed, two  or  three  are  pulled  at
once.

    The Admin staff person doing extra auditing spends all the time left  in
his working after auditing, at his own job, trying to keep it caught up.

    I have seen so many staff posts stay vacant  a  week  or  three  without
bringing the Org to harm that this plan seems feasible.

    Town auditors should be used, when used, mainly on evening and weekend
    pes.

    This plan also has the virtue of keeping auditors on Admin  from  losing
out and getting rusty.

LRH:mp.gh.rd     L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 JUNE 1959
CONVERT TO A
SEC ED

                         STUDENT FILES

    All Student Files are kept at the HASI to which they belong.

    A master list of certified Student Files from each individual HASI is to
be compiled and sent to HCO WW to hold. Any additions to  this  list  should
be submitted monthly.

      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:gh.rd

                               116

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 NOVEMBER 1960

All Cen Orgs

PC SCHEDULING

    The time a pc can be audited is decided finally by HGC only.

    Prom Reg has no force to commit HGC to any auditing schedule. Prom Reg
should be pleasant about it and "be sure that HGC can arrange it but that
it is up to the D of P".

    HGC must arrange matters as well as possible to suit the pc and must get
the auditing done but may persuade, without creating an ARC break.

    Prom Reg is not a scheduling agency, as this is a technical function.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:aec.is.bp.eden Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 JANUARY 1961

HCO Secs Ds of P

CASE FILES

It is vital that the HGC retain a case file for every case it ever
processes.

    This specifically includes staff members.

    All auditor's reports, assessments and notes and recommendations
concerning a case, including staff cases, must be part of this file.

    This file must be available to staff auditors processing the preclear.

    Anything an auditor knows about a case, as a general, summary, should be
put in the pc's file for future reference, especially at the end of an
intensive.

L~ RON HUBBARD

LRH.js.eden Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

117

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 MARCH 1961
                                  Issue 11

Cen Orgs
FIC0 Sees
Assn Secs
D of P
HGC Admin
Staff Auditors

  HGC ADMfN PARTIAL HAT
STAFF AUDITOR ASSIGNMENT

    A regular staff auditor should deliver a minimum of 25 hours per week of
auditing.

    Pc assignments must be such as to minimize auditor change from intensive
to intensive.

    Auditor change must be minimized on staff member intensives.

    HGC Admin is responsible for the economy of auditor  auditing  time  and
minimum change of auditors on pc.

    One or two staff auditors, depending on staff size, must  be  constantly
assigned to auditing staff. They may not be shifted to outside  pcs  "in  an
emergency".

    Staff auditing paid for by staff member units must be  delivered  during
business hours and may not be delivered at  night.  The  only  exception  is
staff auditing for staff auditors (see Staff Intensive HCO Policy Letter).

    Persons ordered to auditing, if remaining on staff, not paying  for  the
auditing, should be audited at night by part  time  staff  auditors  or  for
extra pay for a staff auditor.

    25 hour intensives should be delivered in one week. It  is  economically
poor for the pc if a 25 hour intensive is stretched over more than one  week
due to PTP, etc.

    The Interview section's Registrar or Consultant may not assign  auditing
hours to a pc, agree to pc's hours proposals or  suggest  auditing  periods.
This is only for HGC Admin to do.

    All Auditor-pc-room-time assignments are done  by  HGC  Admin.  This  is
often a neat problem. It must be consistently well  solved.  All  such  data
for all intensives should be posted on a blackboard.

    Pes may not be postponed for lack of auditors.

    Spare HGC auditors are employed by HGC and  trained  by  HGC  and  given
Admin, preferably procurement, posts in the Org until needed. The  posts  of
ARC Break Registrar, Asst Letter Registrar,  CF  Assistant,  Asst  Assn  See
Sec, HCO Files, HCO Asst  Area  See  for  hat  assembly  and  redoing,  Asst
Accounts to get files up or statements  straight,  are  all  spare  jobs  at
which a spare staff auditor may be employed to the benefit of all.  This  is
the way one takes up HGC ebb and flow of pcs. The person  is  still  a  full
time staff auditor and aside from training  or  conference  period  is  left
entirely under the other dept heads for the Admin  work.  This  is  also  an
excellent way to give a staff auditor  who  has  been  auditing  many,  many
weeks straight, a "breather".

    A spare staff auditor may not be employed on key posts  in  other  depts
where his or her sudden absence would disrupt lines.

118

    Assignment of spare staff auditors is up to the Assn See.

    It is easy to reduce units by having many staff auditors delivering  few
auditing hours per week because of stupid scheduling. It is more  economical
to have one or two spare staff auditors working in Admin as above.

    It is not economical on the pc or the Org to  deliver  auditing  at  the
rate of 3 or 5 hours a week to a pc. If the Org has several such  pes,  give
them all to one permanent auditor and fit them in as  the  pes  can  handle,
but also as HGC can handle.

    Classes of staff auditors break down as follows:

    Regular Staff Auditor-Giving 25 hours per week every week to one pc a
    week.

    Staff Staff Auditors-Giving two 121/2 hour  intensives  per  auditor  to
staff members in working hours. If there are two, divide the staff  in  half
and schedule each half in  rotation  under  one;  auditor  so  there  is  no
auditor change.

    Irregular Schedule Staff Auditor-Audits all irregularly scheduled pes.

    Part time Staff Auditor-Audits for Org evenings or week ends.

    Temporary Staff Auditor-Comes into Org once in a while to give  full  or
part time auditing for HGC.

    Spare Staff Auditor-Works in non-key Org posts to help  procure  or  get
the work up to date but is trained and conferenced.

    A Regular Staff Auditor can be a spare staff auditor. But no other  type
listed above can be combined by policy stated herein.

    Every auditor in the HGC must be  given  classification  as  above.  For
scheduling, the letters representing the above classes should be added to  a
staff auditor's name in HGC Admin.

    In  reporting  staff  auditors  in  the   weekly   report,   the   above
classifications must be used.

    Staff auditor assignment is important. It is done by HGC Admin.  It  can
be done so badly that 33 Auditors on HGC staff can deliver only f 170  worth
of auditing a week! It has just been done in an Org. Classify your  auditors
and avoid such a mess.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH.jl.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

119

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 AUGUST 1962

Central Orgs

BODY ROUTER HAT

    This hat is in use in Washington DC, where it has been found useful. It
    can be
used in other Orgs as a model hat.
PURPOSE: TO CREATE AND MAINTAIN GOOD 8-C BETWEEN TECHNICAL
AND PrR & R.
MondayDuties: Be in Reception at 8.OOA.M.

    Preclear: (new)
    I.      Take preclear from Reg over to HGC Admin for case assessment.

    2.      Return pc to Reg for re-signup.

    3.      Take pc to Testing.

    Students:

    I Take Student from Reg to Testing.

    2.      Take Student from testing to D of T's office.

    StaffApplicant:

    I . Take person from Reception to Testing.
    2.      Take person from Testing back to Reception.
    3.      Take person to Area Sec for SEC Check.
    4. Take person to Org Sec for interview. FridayDuties: Be in Reception
at 1.00 P.M.

    Preclear:

    1.      Greet the preclear, have him or her wait in reception for the
    Ruds Check.
    2.      Hand him or her over to D of P.
    3.      Take the preclear over to testing.
    4.      If ending take preclear to Reception for D of P end Interview.

    Student: (Beginning)

    1.      Take student from Reg to Testing.
    2.      Take student from Testing to D of T's office.

    Student: (Ending)

    1.      Take student to Testing.
    2.      Take student to HGC Admin's Office for Interview.
    3.      Take student to Reception and make appointment for him or her
    with Reg.

    Staff Application:

    Same as Mondays.

    THIS POST IS HELD BY TWO PERSONS-ONE IN RECEPTION AND ONE IN TESTING.
THEIR GENERAL PURPOSE IS TO 8-C ANYBODY FROM RECEPTION TO ANY DEPARTMENT
HEAD AND BACK WHILE ON POST. AT PRESENT IT IS DONE BY'1`WO STAFF AUDITORS
PART TIME.

LRH:jw.cden Issued by: Peter Hemery
Copyright Q 1962       HCO Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard            for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          L. RON HUBBARD

120

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 APRIL 1963

Sthil

HAT OF COURSE ADMINISTRATOR

    The Course Administrator for the  Saint  Hill  Special  Briefing  Course
promotes interest in the  Course,  answers  enquiries,  books  in  students,
acquires accommodation for them and supervises their arrival.

    Students may expect assistance over such matters as permits, renewal  of
passports or any of the manifold problems attendant on arrival in a  strange
country.

    If students have time and wish to make any explorations of  the  UK  the
Course Administrator will answer any enquiries regarding  such  matters  but
will not make travelling arrangements of any kind.

    The cycle of action for entrance and exit of students on the Saint  Hill
Special Briefing Course begins and ends with the Course Administrator.

    The Course Administrator is also available for help during  the  Course.
Put a note on the Comm lines for an appointment. There is a  terminal  here-
it's up to students to make use of this communication line.

    The Course Administrator is the terminal for the outside world, so  make
use of this communication line.

    Thank you.

Issued by:. Mary Long
      Course Administrator HCO WW
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.aap Copyright @ 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: Text of above is sarne as 25 April 1962 except for addition of
paragraphs 4 and 5.1

121

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Remirneo    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 MAY 1965
Registrar HAT    TECHNICAL & QUA LIFICA TIONS
Tech See HAT     DIVISIONS
Qual See HAT
Org See HAT DIVISION 4 - 5
Dir Accts HAT    URGENT
Cashier's HAT
      AUDITING FEES
      PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT OF PRECLEARS
      SCALE OF PREFERENCE

    There is a definite and positive Scale of Preference for  accepting  and
scheduling preclears (including students sent to  Review)  for  auditing  in
the HGC and in the Case Cracking Section of the Department of Review.
    Last on the list is any person  who  seeks  auditing  as  a  favour  "to
demonstrate to others what it  can  do"  or  "because  of  importance  as  a
person". The auditing of someone  just  because  the  result  would  "prove"
something or other or because the  person  has  money  or  power  and  might
donate, by firm policy since 1950,  has  been  relegated  to  the  "circular
file" (the.waste basket). Giving auditing away  to  such  persons  or  their
friends  or  children  or  psychotic  brother  in  the  asylum  is  in  fact
forbidden. Giving preference in scheduling  to  such  persons  is  governed,
when for pay, entirely by the Scale of Preference. Such  bids  are  a  snare
and a delusion; it sounds good; it doesn't  work  out.  Mr.  Big  takes  his
place in line with Mr. Little, and the Scale of Preference alone applies.

    The person who has to be audited AT ONCE for desperate reasons  is  also
governed only by the Scale of Preference.
    The person who will only be audited by a certain or special  auditor  is
also governed entirely by the Scale of Preference (See A).

                      SCALE OF PREFERENCE

    Assignment of Auditor and Preferential Scheduling is governed as
    follows:
    A.      Best Available Auditors, earliest possible commencement;
       Pcs Paying full rate Cash in Advance with  the  longest  consecutive
       auditing period purchased. Where two pcs have to be  chosen  between
       for the best auditor, the one who has purchased the most auditing in
       consecutive periods is  given  the  best  auditor  at  the  earliest
       moment. (It is obvious that to get a special auditor one should  pay
       full public rate in cash even when entitled  to  Professional  Rate.
       Otherwise there may be no pc requested auditor  assignments.  Buying
       additional auditing or offering a specified donation in addition  to
       the full rate as per A  can  also  influence  the  assignment  of  a
       requested auditor. The auditor does not have to accept.)
    B.      Skilled auditor (but not specially requested auditor), early
    commencement;
       Full rate pes whose credit has proven excellent and prompt  by  past
       experience.
    C.      Good auditor, early commencement;
       Pcs paying cash in advance professional rate.
    D.      Auditor staff available scheduling;
       Full public rate pcs with 50% deposit and unknown or not established
       credit.
    E.      Interne Auditor and any scheduling convenient to org;
       Full public rate pcs requiring up to 75% credit, credit unknown.
    F.      Any Interne Auditor, and any scheduling convenient to org;
       Professional rate requiring credit.
    G.      Any student, any scheduling convenient to org;
       Total credit at any rate, credit unknown.
    H.      Students who need practice,  cases  not  supervised  except  for
        student check  sheet  in  Examinations,  scheduled  randomly  or  by
        waiting list, charity or pcs on full credit of a pcs unknown nature.

122

    In scheduling there is also the problem of matching Interne Auditors  in
pairs so they can crack their own cases.

    This is normally done by Case Parity. Cases more or  less  the  same  in
state of case should be matched up.

    Auditors who goof seriously in handling specially assigned processes  in
HGCs or Case Cracking Sections and are removed from active auditing  because
of it as dangerous, are normally paired with the last  one  who  goofed  and
they are assigned as aco-audit team and they are permitted to slug  it  out,
getting a better reality on goofs and their cases in shape as well. This  is
not disciplinary assignment. It is prevention  of  case  damage  to  others,
both by giving them a reality and by advancing their  cases.  Their  folders
are carefully watched by auditing supervisors for false entries on  auditing
reports.

    The whole theory of the above is not Cash. it will be found  that  those
who will pay were the most able to begin with and have  the  greatest  value
to others. Their worth as persons is  greater.  Thus  good,  swift  auditing
brings up even this value.

    1 have never thanked myself  for  giving  any  concessions  on  fees  or
scheduling not based on the above. I can say with  complete  case  histories
that giving free service to those who demanded it or  sought  it  has  never
resulted in any useful gain for Scientology. On the  contrary  some  of  our
biggest headaches administrationally come from those who continually  sought
free courses and free auditing.

    In the case of award auditing or training it is a different matter. Here
it was worked for and deserved before  the  fact.  The  Registrar  is  never
faced with such persons as awards are given staff and staff has staff  staff
auditors.

    The "the world owes me a living" preclear (or student)  is  a  candidate
for the Better Dead Club. There were two branches of this Club, by the  way-
Better Dead for their own sakes and Better Dead  for  the  sake  of  others.
Demands by individuals for free service on any pretext  should  be  given  a
light, airy laugh. It doesn't do  anybody  any  good,  often  not  even  the
person who received it.

    Real charity cases who never pay are actually hard to find.  In  Charity
Auditing one must always give them a chance to pay.

    A Registrar's matter of fact  attitude  about  paying  for  auditing  or
training is a valuable asset. Giving the person  a  problem  about  how  and
what they'll pay is poor Registraring. Don't make them choose  about  paying
in full or not paying in full. Just tell them "Go to the Accounts  Cashier".
An evil laugh when they advance the  idea  of  some  tiny  down  payment  on
auditing and a remark, 'Yell, that would put you on  the  waiting  list  and
give you a new student," might be very effective.

    Printing up the above preference scale for presentation to falterers  on
payment might be effective..

    Accounts must always give Scheduling Personnel a copy of the invoice.

    Accounts must mark the Invoice clearly as per the above preference
    scale.

    Scheduling may only be done by scheduling personnel and must be done  in
accordance with the above Scale of Preference, and the prospective  preclear
already in the office (not on promotion lines) should be informed  that  the
above scale exists.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.rd Copyright (D 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

123

                       HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE -
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 NOVEMBER 1965

Gen Non-Rernimeo Tech See Qual See

PC SCHEDULING

    When a low priority pe has reached the point of being scheduled and  has
started his auditing, the HGC Admin cannot and must not then take that  pe's
auditor away and put the pc back  on  the  waiting  list  because  a  higher
priority pc comes in.

    The low priority pcs are only subject to losing their place in line pHor
to their actually being started.

    To take a pc off auditing once they've started and give their auditor to
someone else (sometimes, several times during that  pc's  power  processing)
is a breach of the Auditor's Code  and  as  such,  creates  upsets  and  ARC
Breaks, besides making a mess of
scheduling.
LRH:ml.rd
Copyright (~) 1965     L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 JUNE 1966

Remirneo Tech See Qual Execs All Students

KEEP ACADEMY CHECK SHEETS UP-TO-DATE

    Any new HCO Bulletins which  are  issued  and  which  are  needed  on  a
particular level must be added to the Check Sheets for  that  level,  before
the student receives the check sheet.

    The purpose of this policy letter is that of ensuring that students  are
trained in the latest materials pertinent to that level.

    It is the responsibility of the Technical Secretary and the Director  of
Training to see that this is done.

    The Qualifications Secretary  and  the  Director  of  Examinations  must
likewise see that examinations cover the  new  data  as  it  is  issued  and
correctly examine students on the required material who have had such  added
to their check sheet.

    This Policy Letter does not modify existing policy that  a  student  may
not have items added to a check  sheet  on  which  he  has  already  started
working.

LRH:lb-r.cden    L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

124

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I MAY 1969
Remimeo

         STANDARD ADMIN FOR TRAINING AND TECH SERVICES

    Just as the Supervisor is there to communicate the course  materials  to
the student and to see that they are fully understood,  the  Administrator's
function of service to students is equally important.

    The Administrator must  see  the  data  on  the  course  being  held  is
available and in sufficient quantity and quality.

                      MASTER CHECKSHEETS

    Master Checksheets with the relevant alterations and  corrections  where
necessary, and additions to the cheeksheet prior to reissue, should be  kept
up to date and fully available for the new student to the course.

    In this way the
        1 . List of Data being studied is made known
        2.  Any typographical errors corrected and available
        3.  Any, data issued since the last checksheet printed is made
        4.  Any data issued since the last checksheet printed OK'd before
           added to the checksheet.

    Once a student has been issued a  checksheet,  that  checksheet  is  not
added to. The cheeksheets in stock and the master checksheet  are  added  to
and kept up to date.

    Where stocks are down or much  new  data  is  issued  the  Administrator
originates a request for the course checksheets to be  updated  and  so  the
checksheet remains in PT.

                            LOGGING

    The material of the courses especially  Scientology  Technical  material
and even more so the Advanced Courses (CL VI and above) must be  kept  in  a
safe place.

    Each pack or book must be logged out. A record of this is kept. It is
    always kept.
    The actual method of recording can vary but a system of who has got what
MUST be made.
    In the Sea Org a $10 deposit slip is signed. No money is handed over and
if the pack is mislaid or lost $10 is to be paid.

    An example of a card in use,

            PACK       COURSE
            STUDENT'S NAME   OUT        IN
                              TIME      DATE TIME DATE

    They can be printed or mimeoed or written up by hand.

    The Pack No. and Course and Level can be entered.

    So the following takes place:-
        1.  Student wants a pack
       2.  It is signed for on the correct card
       3.  Time OUT entered
       4.  Time IN entered
        5.  Dates entered.
    ,k track must be kept of the materials including Books and tapes.

LRH:SB:an.ei.rd  Written by W/O James Byrne
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder
                               125

                HU13BARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 MAY 1969
Rernimeo
Dian Checksheet
Div 1
            DIANETIC CERTIFICATES

    A sign must be posted near the Registrar area and on the Student
Bulletin Board in any org or groups teaching Dianetics.

   ENROLLMENT ON A DIANETICS COURSE DOES NOT GUARANTEE A CERTIFICATE,
   ONLY EXCELLENT MARKS AND WELL DONE SESSIONS QUALIFY THE STUDENT.

LRH:an.ei.kd.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1969 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

      NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
      CORRECT COLOUR FLASH
      RED ON WHITE

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Rernimeo    HCO BULLETIN OF I I JUNE 1969
Dian Course
Super Checksheet
Dissern Sees
Tech Secs
Qual Secs
      MATERIALS, SCARCITY OF

    A hidden outness and training slower downer is materials, scarcity of.

    A whole course can be wrecked by lack of study materials.

    Speed of Training was a major 1969 breakthrough. It takes only  2  weeks
to a month to make a competent Dianetic auditor  using  Standard  Dianetics.
This can be greatly retarded by study material scarcity.

    The best way to handle this is to have plenty of study packs, books and
    clay.

    Another way to handle it is to break the checksheet down into  parts  A,
B, C and D and issue different sections of it to  a  broad  new  course.  It
does not greatly matter which one the student does first.

    Material scarcity tends to equalize itself when a course  enrolls  every
day. You gradually get a spread out of materials.

    In past years study  materials  have  been  a  continuing  problem.  All
possible is being done to make this easier.  But  as  Dianetics  expands  it
will probably never cease to be a problem. It  is  a  point  which  requires
thought and attention on the part of every group,  org,  Course  Supervisors
and Administrators.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:Idm.ei.rd Copyright@ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

126

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 JULY AD 19
Remirneo
Dianetic
Checksheet
Class VIII
Checksheet
Case Supervisors
Dir Tech Services
Ds of P
Ds of T     AUDITOR ASSIGNMENT
                            POLICIES

    One used to hear auditors complain, "Scientologists are harder to  audit
than new pcs". We know the answer to this now. It is Auditor Speed. When  an
auditor complains of this, he is revealing that he is a slow auditor.

    Dianetics and Scientology (demonstrated by carefully  Controlled  tests)
greatly speed up reaction time. They also increase IQ rapidly and  were  the
reason colleges came off their "IQs never change".

    As a person is audited he becomes quicker mentally. Also he becomes less
comm4aggy. Also he is more familiar with technology and his own case and  is
less afraid of himself and his "bank".

    In assigning auditors to pcs if you do not pay attention  to  comparable
grade levels between auditors and ocs you will have failed sessions.

    Therefore it is policy not to assign an auditor whose grade and class is
less than that of the pc.

    Further, a good auditor deserves a good auditor. To assign a new student
to audit a skilled and  practised  veteran  auditor  of  excellent  auditing
record is suppressive. The new student or now  graduate  would  probably  be
intimidated just at the thought of auditing someone who is far more  expert-
this would magnify his flubs and comm-lags.

    Therefore it is policy to assign only good proven auditors to good
    auditors.

    It is a suppressive act to assign a new or poor auditor  to  an  auditor
who has proven he can attain uniformly good results.

    Slow auditors will be found successful auditing slow auditors.

    This does not excuse not drilling slow  auditors  up  to  becoming  fast
precision auditors.

    Good auditors are valuable. They should be  safeguarded,  given  favours
and even pampered.

    Slow auditors should be drilled and given  slow  (new)  pcs  only  until
their own case gain brings them, with their drills,  higher  case  gain  and
thus higher speed.

LRH:cs.ei.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
CopyrightQ 1969  Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

127

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 JULY 1969

Rernimeo
Dian Supvr Course
All Supervisors' Courses
All Course S
and Course  n Hats

COURSE ADMINISTRATION
      ROLL BOOK

    Every Dianetics and Scientology Course has a course ROLL BOOK.

    The purpose of the ROLL BOOK is to provide a permanent record of all who
enrolled on the course and whether or not they graduated.

    The Roll Book must be a thick hard cover foolscap size and well bound
    book.

    On the inside first page is printed clearly-

        Course name Date book started Name of Org, Center or Group Date book
        completed.

    Inside,  the  double  pages  are  divided  into  vertical   columns   of
appropriate widths as follows:

        Student's full name Permanent address Local Address and Phone number
        Date started on course Invoice number Date course completed and two
        columns to note retraining
           -dates started and completed.

    In this book every student is logged, by the Course Administrator,  when
he joins the course, and  every  student  is  logged  off  the  course  upon
completion.

    This book is used for roll call but only in so much as to  compile  from
it the muster sheet, which is not a part of this book.

    When the Roll Book is full, or at the end of the Course in the case of a
non-continuing  course,  it  is  sent  immediately  in  an  Org  to  Dir  of
Inspections and Reports to be filed in VALUABLE DOCUMENTS files in  Dept  3.
Thereafter it remains in the charge of VAL DOCS IN CHARGE. In  a  Center  or
Group the completed Roll Book is securely kept by the Leader of  the  Center
or Group. If the group is disbanded or ceases to operate, their  Roll  Books
are forwarded to the nearest org.

    Dir of I & R in an Org should from time to time inspect the  Roll  Books
in use on courses and ensure that they are being  kept  in  accordance  with
this Policy Letter, and that all completed ones have been turneq in.

    The Course Roll Book is the ONLY record of  course  attendance  an  Org,
Center or Group has. The full application of this Policy Letter will  ensure
that the record is
permanent.

      Ens. Tony Dunleavy
LRH:TD:cs.ei.rd  Planning & Training Aide
Copyright (R) 19 69    for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

128

FOUNDING CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY

FOUNDING CHURCH POLICY LETTER OF 13 MAY 1957

cc: Registrar
Dir/Training
Dir/Processing
Org Secty
Treasurer
Accountant
File
 I

FINANCIAL ENROLLMENT PROCEDURE

    The Registrar enrolls the student or preclear, fills  out  proper  forms
such as enrollment, release and note.

    The Registrar accepts the money from the student or preclear  and  takes
it at once to the Accountant.

    The Accountant invoices the payment.

    The Accountant writes any additional note payment on the invoice but not
in the column of figures.

    This entry says "Payments due so and so to such and such an amount  such
and such dates."

    The Accountant gives the Registrar the White and a yellow copy.

    The Registrar takes the white and yellow copy back to  her  office.  She
gives both to the student or preclear.

    The Registrar enters the person in a running record of  enrollment  with
name, home address, local address and classification (student or pc).

    The student or preclear keeps the white as his own receipt.

    The student or preclear gives the Dir of Training or Dir  of  Processing
the yellow when he reports.

    From these yellows only when received from the student or preclear,  the
Dir of Training and Dir of Processing makes up his financial report.

    No further information will be furnished  Dir  of  Training  or  Dir  of
Processing by accountant.

    The Registrar makes up no report sheet.

    The Founding Church invoices no  books  or  materials.  Therefore,  only
student and preclear fees and  note  payments,  donations,  ordinations  and
loans are invoiced by the Founding Church.

    The Accountant invoices all note payments. The Registrar  does  not  but
can receive these and take them at once to Accountant.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:md.rd
May 13, 1957

129

                                . NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                  ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                        BLUE ON GOLD
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTIVE OF 6 MAY 1958

MODIFIED PROCEDURE FOR SIGNING UP

    PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS & PCS

1.    Student/pc applicant interviewed by Registrar first.

2.    Student/pc applicant interviewed by Dir Training/Processing.

3.    Director T/P indicate  on  acceptance  form  exact  number  of  hours
    processing/  training  course  for  which  they  accept  applicant.   If
    unacceptable (as per  HASI  Pol  Ltr  8  February  1958)  this  must  be
    specified.

4.    Applicant returns to Registrar who then signs him  up  for  indicated
    number  of  hours  processing/indicated  course;  takes  cash,  etc.  If
    applicant hasn't "time" he can sign up anyway even if he doesn't pay.

5.    Applicant reports to auditor/classroom as per published schedules.

    Our criteria is not the amount of money or "time" the applicant has: our
criteria is: "Will this person become Clear in ....  weeks?"  or  "Wgl  this
person become a good auditor?" The amount of cash the applicant has on  hand
is secondary in importance to these vital criteria. If he is cleared  or/and
becomes a good auditor the financial problem will be solved by  him  without
great difficulty in due course.

Assoc Sec per LRH instructions

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH BLUE ON GOLD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

   HCO BULLETIN OF 9 MAY 1958

WHO SHOULD TAKE WHICH CLASS

    The Dir Training should never instruct the advanced Academy class,
because of the amount of administrative work he has to do. Director
Training preferably teaches Comm Course. The Academy Senior Instructor
should handle the advanced class and so no admin work. His job is making
sure the student is an auditor at course end. The Academy Administrator
should be the Upper Indoc Instructor.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH: rs.rd

130

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East drinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 AUGUST AD9
                                  [Excerpt]

CenOCon

PROMOTIONAL FUNCTIONS OF THE ACADEMY

    The first function of the Academy is to have a  good  Academy  run  with
tough 8C. For years it has  been  observed  that  a  fine  tautly  scheduled
Academy  that  puts  students  over  the   jumps   and   makes   them   into
uncompromising zealots for the right way of  doing  things  always  attracts
new students. A bad Academy is always badly attended. The grapevine here  is
so apparent that one only need look at Academy attendance  to  know  Academy
quality. This is the first line of Academy promotion.  The  second  line  of
promotion in the Academy is using  old  students  to  get  new  students  by
letters and programs. Amongst these programs is the Extension Course.

LRH:brb.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1959
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Excerpted from HCO P/L 26 August  AD9,  Promotional  Functions  of  Various
Depts. A complete copy is in Volume 7, page 135.]

                                               NOT   HCO    POLICY    LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                                     GREEN ON GOLD
                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO BULLETIN OF 16 OCTOBER 1959
CenOCon

                  HANDLING STUDENTS' AND AUDITORS' REPORTS
              (Cancels all previous directives on this subject)

    Directors of Training are not to abbreviate their students'  reports  in
any way. They are to send the full reports by surface mail to Ron  at  Saint
Hill, and these will be returned.

    Anything startling or dangerous that shows training improvement or decay
should be briefed by the HCO Area Secretary in the Training Digest, so  that
it can be handled speedily.

    All HCO Communicators are required  to  make  sure  that  the  students'
reports are sent by surface mail  and  not  by  airmail.  They  are  further
requested to see that the students write legibly.  If  they  do  not,  issue
them infraction theses. Also see that they use flimsy paper to save bulk.

    All Directors of Processing are to see that their auditors  use  airmail
weight paper for their reports.  Because  of  the  weight,  money  is  being
wasted on airmail goods.

LRH:NW:dd.rd
Copyright@ 1959  HCO Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

131

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 OCTOBER 1959

CenOCon

ACADEMY TRAINING

    No student should ever be refused training. Processing can be
recommended, but not insisted upon as a pre-requisite to training.

    If a student is in bad shape, he'll never get passed off the HPA Comm
Course and, of course, extra weeks cost more (E7.1 0.0 per week in Sterling
areas).

    Students can always be recommended by the Director of Training to come
off course and get processing in the HGC. But, never put a STOP on the line
before a student has tried, that is, begun the course.

    A potential student is reaching.

LRH.-js.eden     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1959      Executive Director
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 JULY 1960

CenOCon

TRAINING APPLICANTS

    It sometimes happens that an application for training is received from a
person who is known to have a criminal record, or who would not be able to
pass a security test, or who for some other reason would not be eligible to
receive a certificate.

    In such cases, the person may be accepted for training, but he must be
warned beforehand that no certificate will be issued if a security check
cannot be passed. This, of course, is true of all Academy applicants.

                                             Peter Hemery
                                             HCO Secretary WW

LRH:j&cden  for
Copyright @ 1960 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

132

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 AUGUST 1960

Fran Hldrs Ds of T Registrars Assn Secs HCO Secs

TRAINING RESTRICTIONS

    For the first time in our history, I  am  placing  restrictions  on  the
acceptance of students for training in Dianetics and Scientology.

    It is important that these restrictions be placed in effect and kept in
    effect.

    We are becoming too successful to take stupid risks as an organization.

    Several recent instances in various parts of the world  showed  that  we
were accepting security risks for training. In most cases our  people  stood
around all sweetness and light and wouldn't believe as usual  but  in  these
cases they suddenly alerted to the fantastic  liability  of  standing  by  a
security risk.

    Therefore, no student may be accepted for training by  the  Director  of
Training until he has been given a solid  security  check  by  the  D  of  T
personally. If the student fails to pass the test he is to be  sent  to  the
HGC for processing using the money deposited  for  training.  When  entirely
cleared he may then be accepted for training and, only then. Thus he is  not
refused training. But he may not be trained before he is cleared if he is  a
security risk.

    State of case shall be used for rejection only when it is such  that  he
or she is impossible to security check  by  reason  of  a  stalled  or  wild
needle that will not register.

    These three reasons only may be used for rejection in addition to the
    above.

    1.      Has a criminal record;
    2.      Is studying Scientology to procure data or evidence for another
        organization; and
    3.      Is a member of a subversive organization that might use
        Scientology to overthrow a government by force.

    See that we get careful about this now.

    Validation seals may not be  placed  on  existing  certificates  without
security checking for above.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:js.cden Copyright (D 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

133

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 31 JANUARY 1961

Ds of T
HCO Secs

ACADEMY METERS

The Academy rates no meters for student issue.

    As they can't possibly audit well after course without a meter they
should be encouraged to buy their own before course.

SALES POLICY

    HASI sells all meters sold on HP terms (time payment). HCO makes all
full cash sales with discounts as allowable.

LRH:js.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1961
by L Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 NOVEMBER 1961
      Issue 11
Gen Non-    (Reissued 3 March 1967)
Rernirneo
Tech Hats
Qual Hats
Keeper of the
Seals and
Signature   TRAINING QUALITY

    It becomes fantastically, screamingly apparent that we must not ever
turn out or let go a bad auditor, poorly trained.

    Accordingly put permanent signs where D of T and Dir of Exams can see
    them in
their offices as follows:

EVERY TIME YOU TURN OUT A BAD AUDITOR YOU MAKE ENEMIES
FOR SCIENTOLOGY.

INCOMPETENT AUDITORS ARE A MAJOR SOURCE OF OUR
TROUBLES.

LRH:jp.eden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1967      Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

134

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO Area Secs    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 DECEMBER 1961
Org Sees
Ds of T
CenOCon     DIRECTOR OF TRAINING - WEEKLY REPORT FORM

    Effective inimediately-Directors of Training  are  required  to  make  a
weekly report on a form to be mimeoed in blue or black ink on flimsy  quarto
white paper, as follows: (Use this form routinely)

                    ACADEMY OF SCIENTOLOGY

                            LONDON (or name of your Orga)

              DIRECTOR OF TRAINING WEEKLY REPORT
                  WEEK ENDING-

NUMBER OF UNIT 1 STUDENTS ON COURSE DURING WEEK

NUMBER OF UNIT 2 STUDENTS ON COURSE DURING WEEK

NUMBER OF EVENING HPA/I-ICS STUDENTS ON COURSE DURING WEEK

NUMBER OF WEEKEND STUDENTS ON COURSE DURING WEEK

NUMBER OF I-ICSIB.Scri STUDENTS ON COURSE DURING WEEK

TOTAL NUMBER OF STUDENTS ON ALL COURSES DURING WEEK

NUMBER OF STUDENTS GRADUATED DURING WEEK: HPAiHCA-HCSJB.Sen

NAMES OFNEW STUDENTS:

DIRECTOR OF TRAININGS REPORT.- (On progress of classes)

COMMENT OR REPORT ON INSTRUCTORS AND ON ANY NEW REQUIRED MATERIAL  BEING  TA
UGHT

DATE: SIGNED:    DofT

    This  form  to  be  sent  on  Wednesday  of  each  week  together   with
Instructors' and Students' reports for the same  period,  to  HCO  Technical
Secretary WW at Saint Hill. The D of T's report must be stapled I st in  the
package, with Instructors' reports and finally  Students'  reports  in  that
order.

    Students' auditing reports are to be kept by the  Organisation  and  are
not to be sent to Saint Hill.

   . Students' reports will be kept at Saint Hill for at least 6 months  and
then returned to the Organisation concerned for  filing  in  each  student's
folder.

    The Director of Training  is  responsible  for  seeing  that  all  these
reports are done, collected together and forwarded correctly  each  week  to
HCO WW at Saint Hill.

LRH:EW:esc.rd    Issued by:  HCO Technical Secretary WW
Copyright @ 1961       for
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          L. RON HUBBARD

05

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 DECEMBER 1961

CenOCon

EXTENSION COURSE COMPLETION

    Students who finish the Extension Course should be sent a letter or
document, signed by the Director of Training, stating that they have
graduated from the course.

    This will give the students a more definite end of cycle and sense of
accomplishment.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:esc.rd Copyright (B 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 MAY 1962

Central Orgs
Academies

HPA/HCA TRAINING

    HPA/HCA students, or auditors doing HPA/HCA  retread,  are  expected  to
graduate after a period of 16 weeks  or  48  weekends  (proportionately  for
night HPA/HCA courses).

    The  Director  of  Training  will  frequently  re-direct  the  student's
attention to the course requirements, and instruct him if necessary:

    (a)     To have auditing at the HGC.

    (b)     To brush up and/or study  data  or  background  in  Scientology,
        attend PE course, Anatomy of Human Mind course and the Co-audit, and
        read books or listen to tapes before resuming course.

    (c)     To handle his problems if any need handling, before returning to
    the course.

    If the student cannot complete the course by  graduating  after  the  16
weeks or 48 weekends, he will be allowed to complete it at  the  cost  of  f
10. 10.0 for each additional week, or three  weekends  (proportionately  for
night HPA/HCA, proportionate cost in other currencies).

LRH:cw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

136

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 OCTOBER 1962

HCO Secs HCO Board of Review Central Orgs

PREPARATION OF HPA/HCA CERTIFICATES

    No HPA/HCA graduate should be considered released from the Academy until
he has fully completed Course requirements and he has passed  his  Oral  and
Written  examinations  and  has  satisfactorily  completed  his  Certificate
Application Form. Delays in completing these  last  three  items  should  be
minimal.

    Providing  his  Course  fees  have  been  fully  paid,  or  satisfactory
arrangements have been made for completing payment, on the day  that  he  is
released from the Academy the new Graduate  is  to  be  handed  his  HPA/HCA
certificate.

    Therefore, instead of waiting until Course completion for preparation of
certificates as previously, on date of  commencement  of  HPA/HCA  Course  a
despatch is written by the Director of Training to the HCO Board  of  Review
giving the full names of the new students who have commenced on Course.

      HCO Board of Review will then proceed immediately with the
preparation of
these certificates. This follows the normal procedure except that after I
have signed
them and sent them back, they are placed in the Valuable Documents Safe and
remain
there until date of issuance. They are NOT to be embosse ' d with the HASI
Seal until
the date on which the certificates are actually handed to the new
graduates.

Delays in certificate issuance are to be obviated completely.

LRH:gl.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinsfead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 APRIL 1963

CenOCon

DIRECTOR OF TRAINING WEEKLY STUDENT INTERVIEWS

    The old policy of.the Director of Training having  a  brief  end-of-week
interview with each student  on  Course  in  the  Academy  is  herewith  re-
introduced.

    Progress in training that week should be the keynote of these interviews
(not case).

LRH:gl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

137

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 AUGUST 1963

HCO Sees
Assoc/Org Sea
Tech Dirs
D/T Hat

"PLANTS" IN ACADEMIES - INTRODUCTION OF "FORM" 5B

    In times  of  expansion  it  is  to  be  expected  that  occasionally  a
government "plant" or active commie will endeavour to gain access  into  the
Org. The Academy is the easiest point of entry for a stay of a  little  time
for such undesirables. For example, a wave of suppositional reports of  this
occurred after the recent FDA attack in Washington DC.  If  they  were  true
then it was an affront to Scientology, quite apart from anything else.

    However, such an attempt can be regarded, comparatively,  as  a  rarity.
Nevertheless, Directors of Training should have some easy  foolproof  method
to pick off such and satisfy  themselves  that  no  students  are  in  their
Academies for anything other than what the students stated they  were  there
for, i.e. to receive training and graduate.

    The D/T normally interviews all new students before they enter on course
in his Academy, and this stage would be a convenient point in which to  have
a fast check.

    Accordingly, during the brief duration of this interview, the D/T should
place the student on the E-Meter whidh is set, at high sensitivity, and  ask
with ARC this question: "Are you here for any other purpose  than  what  you
say/state?" This question may need clearing with student but it should  take
only a very brief time to clear and clean. Variations of this  question  may
be used, but this type question designed as a fast  check  question  on  new
students will be referred to henceforth as a Form 5B.

    The D/T is merely to be satisfied that the new student being interviewed
by him is not a "plant". Then, having cleared the question, and the  D/T  is
satisfied the student is bona fide, the  D/T  can  then  brief  the  student
crisply for starting course, etc, and  bring  the  interview  quickly  to  a
close.

    Remember, the question is designed to  pick  up  "plants"  and  such  an
attempt will be very rare but nevertheless may occur from time to  time.  In
the event of the D/T having some doubt on the person  being  interviewed  by
him, he should refer the person to the Technical Director immediately for  a
further check.

    The totality of the duration of the D/T inter-view need not be more than
10  minutes  in  its  entirety.  Judgement  is  required  by  the   D/T   in
administering this "filter point" in that it is not intended  to  act  as  a
complete embargo on all and every student whether bona  fide  or  otherwise.
The chances of the latter being attempted are slim but this Form  5B  should
now handle such an attempt smoothly.

                                Issued by:   Peter Hemery
                                  HCO Sec WW
                                  for
                                  L. RON HUBBARD
                                Authorized by:     L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.rd Copyright (D 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

138

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 25 SEPTEMBER 1963

CenOCon

RIGHT TO REFUSE HPA/HCA STUDENT APPLICATION

    The Director of Training has the right to refuse a Student's application
for HPA/HCA training in the Academy, if the Student:

    I . Cannot pass the 5B check (see HCO Pol Ltr of August 8, 1963).

    2.      Cannot pass the 5A Security Check.

    3.      Has a chronic body condition for which he is under medical care
        and/or taking drugs (see HCO Pol Ltr of May 4, 1960).

    4.      Will not agree to abide by all Course rules.

    If criminal past, or blackmailable activities come to light  on  the  5A
check, the person may sometimes "pass", but dubious cases  may  be  referred
to the Assoc Sec and HCO Sec, who may decide each case on its own merits.

    If a prospective student obviously needs auditing or would be better off
for some auditing first, he should be  advised  to  obtain  auditing  before
going on course.

LRH:dr.bp.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 DECEMBER 1964

General
Non-Rernimeo

          RE: OIC DATA
                (In line with the Scientology boom as planned
                     in HCO Pol Ltr of December 3, 1964)

    Even though the PE Course as such may cease in many Orgs, the vital post
of Dir  PE  is  maintained.  In  line  with  the  purpose  of  the  PE  Dept
("Producing new Scientologists") the Dir PE is  still  responsible  for  HAS
procurement-and for getting new bodies into the Org. This  also  means  that
the number of students on the HAS  Course  will  still  be  shown  under  PE
Column on OIC cables-and not under the Academy.

    Total number of students on all the higher level Courses, HQS, HCA,  HPA
and HCS, will, of course, still be given in the Academy Column.

    In this way the Dir PE is responsible for'getting the students on to the
HAS Course, while the Dir of Training is responsible  for  running  such  an
excellent HAS Course that the students would want to go on  to  the  HQS-and
then HCA and then ... etc, etc.

    Since HAS will  be  a  paid-for  Course,  it  is  okay  to  include  all
interviews and sign-ups for HAS Course under  the  Reg-Interviews  and  Reg-
signups Columns.

LRH:jw.rd
Copyright @ 1964 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

139

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 SEPTEMBER 1965

Gen Non-Rernimeo Dir Inspec & Rpts DofT Tech Sec Org Exec Sec HCO Area Sec
HCO Exec Sec

                           E-METERS AND BOOKS FOR
                              ACADEMY STUDENTS

    There is a policy for Academies that each student own his  own  E-Meter.
This is true for any level Academy Course.

    It's up to the D of T to make sure his students own their own meters and
are using E-Meters as per policy.

                          TEXTBOOKS

    An Org Tech Div or any other part of the organization may not provide  a
library as a substitute for students buying their own textbooks. In any non-
state supported grade school and in any college or university  students  are
expected to buy their own textbooks for their courses. They  are  told  what
to buy before starting the course and do so. Don't violate this custom.

    Also, students will do better  if  they  own  their  own  textbooks  as,
naturally, they will need them for reference.

    Any Scientology book on a check sheet must be bought by the student  for
that course. This is true of Foundation courses also.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

140

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 15 SEPTEMBER 1967
Remimeo Tech Div Qual Div

                     THE SUPERVISOR'S CODE
               (extracted.from the ACC Manual published 1957)
                          Revised 15 September 1967

    The Supervisor's Code has been developed over many years' experience  in
training. It has been found that any time a  Supervisor  broke  one  of  the
rules, to any degree, the course and training activities failed to  function
properly.

    Teaching Scientology is a  very  precise  job,  and  a  Supervisor  must
maintain the precision at all times to render the services he should to  the
students entrusted to his care.

    A Supervisor cannot hope to gain  the  respect  or  willingness  of  the
student to be taught by him sitting  there,  spouting  words  and  being  an
"authority" on the  subject.  He  must  know  his  subject  and  follow  the
Supervisor's Code to the letter. It isn't a hard code to follow, and  it  is
a very practical one. If you feel you cannot honestly follow all of it,  you
should receive more training, and, maybe,  more  processing  until  you  can
make the code your own before attempting to train students in Scientology.

    We have had the rules of the game of Scientology a long time, and now we
have the rules of the game called training. Have fun!

 I .  The Supervisor must never neglect an opportunity to direct a student
    to the actual source of Scientology data.

 2.   The Supervisor should invalidate a student's mistake ruthlessly and
    use good ARC while doing it.

 3.   The Supervisor should remain in good ARC with his students at all
    times while they are performing training activities.

 4.   The Supervisor at all times must have a high tolerance  of  stupidity
    in his students, and must be willing to repeat any datum not understood
    as many times as necessary for the student to  understand  and  acquire
    reality on the datum.

 5.   The Supervisor does not have a "case" in his relationship with his
    students, nor discuss or talk about his personal problems to the
    students.

 6.   The Supervisor will, at all times, be a source point of good control
    and direction to his students.

 7.   The Supervisor will be able to correlate any part of Scientology to
    any other part and to livingness over the 8 dynamics.

 8.   The Supervisor should be able  to  answer  any  questions  concerning
    Scientology by directing the student to the actual source of the  data.
    If a Supervisor cannot answer a particular question, he  should  always
    say so, and the  Supervisor  should  always  find  the  answer  to  the
    question from the source, and tell the student where the answer  is  to
    be found.

 9.   The Supervisor should never lie to, deceive, or misdirect a student
    concerning Scientology. He shall be honest,at all times about it with a
    student.

 10. The Supervisor must bean accomplished auditor.

141

11.   The Supervisor should always set a good example to his students: such
    as giving good demonstrations, being on time, and dressing neatly.

12.   The Supervisor should at all times be perfectly willing and able to
    do anything he tells his students to do.

13.   The Supervisor must not become emotionally involved with students of
    either sex while they are under his or her training.

14.   When a Supervisor makes any mistake, he is to inform the student that
    he has made one, and rectify it immediately.  This  datum  embraces  all
    phases in training demonstrations, lectures,, and processing, etc. He is
    never to hide the fact that he made the mistake.

15.   The Supervisor should never neglect to give praise to his students
when due.

16.   The Supervisor to some degree should be pan-determined about the
    Supervisorstudent relationship.

17,   When a Supervisor lets a student control, give orders to,  or  handle
    the Supervisor in any way, for the purpose  of  demonstration  or  other
    training purposes, the Supervisor should always  put  the  student  back
    under his control.

18.   The Supervisor will at all times observe the Auditor's Code during
    sessions, and the Code of a Scientologist at all times.

19.   The Supervisor will never give a student opinions  about  Scientology
    without labelling them thoroughly as such; otherwise, he  is  to  direct
    only to tested and proven data concerning Scientology.

20.   The Supervisor shall never use a student for his own personal gain.

21.   The Supervisor will be a stable terminal, point the way to stable
    data, be certain, but not dogmatic or dictatorial, toward his students.

22.   The Supervisor will keep himself at all times informed  of  the  most
    recent Scientology data and procedures, and communicate this information
    to his students.

I agree to follow and obey the foregoing code.

Signed:

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:jp.cden Copyright Q 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

142

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 DECEMBER AD 12
Rernimeo    (Reissued as amended
Tech Sec Hat     7 September 1967)
D of T Hat
Supervisor Hat
      SUPERVISOR'S STABLE DATA

    In addition to the Supervisor's Code (old Instructor's Code), there is a
primary stable datum about all supervision:

    Get the student to accomplish auditing the preclear  and  then  get  the
student to accomplish it with better form, speed and accuracy.

    A Supervisor must never lo se sight of the PURPOSE of auditing. Auditing
is for the preclear, is intended to improve the  preclear's  case.  Auditing
is not just a matter of good form.

    The reason some students do not accomplish auditing is that they  become
so oriented on form alone that they forget the purpose of the form.

    Good auditing form and correct sessioning obtains many times the  result
of bad form and incorrect sessioning. But total form and  no  effort  to  do
something for the pc results in no auditing.

    The result comes before the form in importance. Because students may use
this idea to excuse lack of form, Q and A-ing, and to  squirrel  with  their
processes, the stable datum becomes unpopular with supervisors.

    A student should first be held responsible  for  the  state  of  the  pc
during and after sessions and made to know that as an auditor  he  is  there
to get a fast, good result. The student should then be taught  that  he  can
get a better, faster result with better form. After that the student  should
be taught that Scientology results are only obtained by  correct  and  exact
duplication of Scientology processes, not by off beat variations.

    The student wants to know how to do this  or  that.  Refer  him  to  his
materials on how to do the most fundamental actions, but MAKE HIM OR HER  DO
IT. And keep up a running refrain that you want results,  results,  results,
on his pc.

    The student will  be  all  thumbs  and  faint.  The  Supervisor  may  be
horrified by the goofs.  But  don't  bother  with  the  goofs.  Just  demand
results on the pc, results on the pc, results on the pc.

    This action by the Supervisor will teach the  student  (a)  that  he  or
she.is supposed to get results in auditing  and  (b)  that  results  can  be
obtained and (c) that he or she sure needs better skill.

    So the first address in training is to teach those above three things
    (a), (b) and (c).

    You can't teach a student who doesn't realize that  results  in  the  pc
depend on the auditor and  auditing  and  that  results  are  expected  from
auditing; who believes results can't be obtained from auditing or  wants  to
prove auditing doesn't work; arid who  doesn't  yet  know  that  he  or  she
doesn't know. These are the barriers to training and a good auditor.

    The gradient approach to the mind is  vital.  Clearing  will  not  occur
without it. But the gradient approach to  auditing  can  be  overdone  to  a
point where the student completely loses sight of why he is auditing.

143

1 .   First and foremost the auditor accomplishes something for the pc and
    without that there is neither sense nor purpose to auditing;

2.    Excellent form accomplishes more for the pc faster; and

3.    Exact duplication of processes alone returns standard high level
    results on all pcs.

The student thrown in over his head learns:

A.    Results in the pc depend on the auditor and auditing and that results
    are expected from auditing;

B.    That results can be obtained in auditing and the better the form and
    duplication, the better the results and

C.    That the student has more to learn about auditing and that the
    student doesn't yet know.

Therefore the Supervisor must teach the student:

(a)   That he or she is supposed to get results in auditing;

(b)   That Scientology can obtain results; and

(c)   That better form and duplication obtain better faster results.

    I dare say many students learn things just because they are told to and
find no relationship between form, duplication and the preclear. Let them
fall on their heads and yet obtain results and this attitude will change-
and you'll save us a lot of off beat nonsense and case failures in orgs and
the field.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:dr.jp.cden Copyright @ 1962, 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

144

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH NOT GREEN ON WHITE

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS
                 WASHINGTON

                  HCO BULLETIN OF 5 MARCH
HCO London
Steves
LRH, Jr
Sue
Barrett
Marcia
MarilYn
Julia
Leigh
Ken S.      STUDENT REPORTS

    The routing of Student Reports is as follows:

    1.      Student to Instructor
    2. Instructor to Director of Training
    3. Director of Training to Ron
    4.      Ron to Central Files.

    This will be  followed  in  Washington  and  London  alike-so  that  the
Student's Report will ultimately find its way to his own folder  in  Central
Files. (HCO Washington will send London Student Reports back to  London  for
their Central Files.)

    This will give everyone concerned a chance to see  how  the  student  is
progressing; such information can also be useful in  auditing  the  student.
Ron likes to see these reports so that he  can  tell  how  the  classes  are
going. After he has seen them, they will be sent to Central Files.

Mildred Deen
HCO Secretary, Washington

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                                 NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                                 WASHINGTON

              HCO TRAINING BULLETIN OF 17 MAY 1957
cc: Dir of Training
      Dir of Processing
      Comm Course Instructor
      Night HCA Instructor
      Org Secretary
      HCO Board of Review
      Registrar
      PE Found Instructor
      Bulletin Board
      HCO London-for
      distribution there
            DEFINITIONS

    A CONSULTANT is an instructor who is on duty sporadically or from time
to time but not routinely in any one place.

    AN INSTRUCTOR is one who has regular classes and who is assigned to
places at specific times.

    A COACH is a student who is standing in the role of "pc?'.

LRH:md.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
5-17-57

145

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
   NOT GREEN ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                                 WASHINGTON

  HCO BULLETIN OF 24 MAY 1957

STABLE DATA FOR INSTRUCTORS

    I . Keep students busy at all times. Do not  let  them  have  unassigned
work while at the Academy.

    2. The Director of Training is not the Director of Processing. If  after
the student intensive and a week's Comm Course a student's case  is  not  in
condition so the student can be trained, the Director  of  Training  or  the
Instructor should send the student to the Registrar and should  not  attempt
a patch-up by another student. When the  Director  of  Training  constitutes
himself the Director of Processing  he  not  only  denies  the  organization
income but most usually continues the agony of the student and does not  get
training done.

    3.      Answer the student's questions.

    4. The stability of the Director of Training and his Instructors depends
upon the apparency of their agreement with me on what should be trained  and
how it should be trained. When they innovate in disagreement with  organized
schedules they lower the appearance  of  stability  and  deprive  themselves
usually of fhe cooperation of students.

    5. It is not the place of the Director of Training or an  Instructor  to
defend  the  organization,  LRH,  or  the  past  track  of   Dianetics   and
Scientology. Any  new  subject  combating  vested  interests  develops  some
randomity. Rather than defend against critical attacks  by  students  it  is
much more productive to look over the student's case with an eye to  sending
him to the Registrar.

    6. The Director of Training  and  his  Instructors  are  there  to  give
service. Service is always harder to give on  an  individualized  basis  and
easier to give on a wide group basis. However, we are  training  individuals
and even though it is difficult, service must be given.

    7. On the head of the Director of Training and his Instructors rests any
future failure the student may have  in  processing  preclears.  Quality  of
training is to the level of Staff Auditor HGC.

             IF A STUDENT CANNO T BE TR USTED UPON GRAD VA TION
             WITH AN HGC PRECLEAR, HE SHO ULD NOT BE GRADVA TED
                                OR CERTIFIED.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:md.rd 5-24-57

146

                                 NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR
                                 FLASH NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                             ~ WASHINGTON, D.C.

HCO TRAINING BULLETIN OF 15 JULY 1957

    Our first lesson in training from the 18th ACC is that the only error a
Scientology instructor can make is in the direction of softness.

    The one unit in the 3 ACC units now going through that

        I . Had a student leave,

       2. Didn't gain or learn were handled by poor 8c on instructor's
part.

    Scientology training Stable Datum:

    When in doubt, handle student with much stricter positive placement and
direction.
LRH:md.rd
7-15-57     L. RON HUBBARD

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH BLUE ON GOLD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

HCO BULLETIN OF 4 SEPTEMBER 1957,

STABLE DATA FOR INSTRUCTORS

 1.   Instructors must know and use the Instructor's Code to the letter.
   There must be no violation of this Code permitted by the Dir Training.

 2.   Grant Beingness to the students at all times. An Instructor must be
    willing for a coach to "instruct" without resenting a "valence theft".

 3.   Insist that coaches give the student auditors wins; have coaches push
   the student auditor to a better willingness and ability, and chop bank,
   not thetan.

 4.   Have coaches coach with precision, and  have  them  tell  the  student
    auditor when he has done something  well.  Instruct  them  to  tell  the
    student auditor what he is doing right as  well  as  what  he  is  doing
    wrong.

 5.   See that the coaches coach with Purpose, Reality, Intention, and to
 Win.

 6.   Instruct coach to maintain his control when student  auditor  gets  in
    "hot water", adding more ARC to help him through it, while at  the  same
    time banging away at the same  level.  Make  the  coach  who  caused  it
    retrieve any student who blows.

 7.   An Instructor's sole purpose is not to make a student blow. The main
   goal of an Instructor is to make a better auditor. This then must apply
   to coaches.

 8.   Always answer your students' questions as per the  Instructor's  Code.
    An Instructor should not withhold communication from students  when  the
    student needs communication.

 9.   Run good 8-C on students with lots of ARC. Stress good 8-C more than
 ARC.

10.   The most important thing an Instructor should do is to  make  a  good
    auditor out of every student. This means making good coaches. This means
    wins. This means beingness. As ye teach 'em, so shall they audit.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rs.rd

147

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I
              (Issued at Washington)

ORGANIZATION POLICY LETTER OF 25 JANUARY AD8

All Staff
Field Offices

INEPT STUDENTS

    Datum:  Tests of clearing through training have resulted in the
           conclusion that there is no substitute for processing, even
           training.

    When a student, after a week's comm course, shows clearly (a) he has  no
reality on Scientology or (b) he has no wish to  make  people  better,  only
worse, the responsibility of the Comm  Course  Instructor  and  the  Dir  of
Training is to send the student to HGC at his own cost for processing.

    Otherwise  the  student  will  enturbulate  the  class  and  impede  the
instructors and come out wrong-way to, wasting seven weeks of  inability  to
learn. The faster route is auditing.

    If such a thing is to be done, midway in the Comm Course  it  should  be
known and the Comm Course Instructor should  invest  the  remainder  of  the
week in convincing  the  student  of  the  realities  that  could  exist  in
Scientology.

    The student if he refuses processing is told he  may  continue  training
but it is doubtful if he will ever be given his certificate.

    A special student rate may be arranged by Registrar at her discretion.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rs.rd

148

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH NOT
                                               GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                        HCO BULLETIN OF 2 APRIL 1958
                            Issued at Washington
All staff
Field Offices
      ARC IN COMM COURSE

    There are two types of Auditing. Both include control. They  are  called
"Formal Auditing" and "Tone 40 Auditing".

    The first is control by ARC. The second is control by direct Tone 40
    command.

    The first, Control by ARC, is taught in Comm Course. The second, Control
by Tone 40, is taught in Upper Indoc.

    The two are never mixed in teaching. Tone 40 is never taught in  a  Comm
Course and is noteven permitted. ARC is not taught in Upper Indoc.

    The most widespread weakness in  auditors  prior  to  this  date  is  an
inability to use step one of Clear  Procedure  (Participation  by  the  pc).
This is only good ARC in the Training Drills of Comm  Course.  Auditors  are
now too prone to let CCH Ob Help do the work. Auditors fail to make  the  pc
feel they are interested inthe pc when they handle him with poor ARC.
    We care nothing about ARC in Upper Indoc. We want command, we want  Tone
40. We do not even handle pc origins in Upper Indoc.

    Students must understand that there are  two  types  of  auditing.  They
should realize that Tone 40 is for the unconscious,  the  psycho,  the  non-
communicative, the electric shock case pc. The student should  realize  that
ARC formal auditing is not chatty or yap-yap,  but  it  is  itself.  It  has
warmth, humanity, understanding and interest in it.

    Academy Dir of Tr, Comm Course and Upper Indoc Instructors  should  keep
this in their hats as  needful  technical  data,  since  we  must  turn  out
auditors capable of handling pcs with ARC.

LRH:bt.rs.cden.rd      LRH
Copyright @ 1958
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                                                   NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                                   ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                                   NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        LONDON (Issued at Washington)

                  HCO BULLETIN OF 23 APRIL 1958
To: All Staff for info
ALL Instructor Hats
B. Board
Field Offices

To: All Training Activities

     VITAL TRAINING DATA FOR TRAINING HATS AND REGISTRAR

    Students in the Academy are, auditors. They are not preclears.  Emphasis
is on auditors, not pcs.

    The goal of the Academy is to produce auditors of such quality that we
would be willing to hire them in the HGC. We don't graduate those we
wouldn't.

    Training staff can refuse a student at any time on grounds of inadequate
financial arrangements. In which event the student applicant is returned to
Registrar.

    The Academy is not a clinic and concerns about cases belong to the HGC
and are so referred.

LRH:bt.rs.rd     LRH

149

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                  NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                      London (Issued at Washington DC)

HCO 13ULLETIN OF 29 SEPTEMBER 1958

I ea. staff member
All Technical Hats
Field Offices

                             VITAL TRAINING DATA
              (This Bulletin Changes the Character of Training)

    No instructor can train a student unless  he  follows  the  Instructor's
Code. This code is learned by heart by an instructor, not read.

    Wherever we are making poor auditors, we have confused the role  of  the
Academy with that of the HGC. The HGC processes, the Academy trains only.

    Tell every student, tell every class of students, tell every instructor
    many times,

    THERE ARE ONLY AUDITORS AT THE ACADEMY. THERE ARE NO CASES.

    Every time you as an instructor get interested in  the  student's  case,
you make him put up his engrams for your  inspection.  Every  time  you  get
interested in his auditing skill only you make him  put  up  auditing  skill
for your interest.

    From this date:

    UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES MAY AN ACADEMY  TAKE  UP  THE  PERSONAL  OR  CASE
    PROBLEMS OF A STUDENT.

    We've got 2,500,000,000 preclears. We can somehow control ourselves long
enough to make a few auditors.

    They are made by direct, blunt instruction, the tougher the better. They
are unmade by a lot of super saccharine sympathy about their poor,  hopeless
little cases.

    So let's go, training units. No  more  clinics  where  there  should  be
schools. You'll have nothing but  cases  forever  if  you  don't  make  some
auditors!

    The week's intensive  formerly  offered  with  courses  is  turned  over
herewith to HGCs. No further clinics  as  such  may  be  run  by  Academies.
Auditing may occur in Academies but there may not be  preclear  conferences,
general or private, about the students' own cases. This works a hardship  on
HGCs to some degree but HGCs occasionally are victimized by having to  train
late students who were not trained but only processed  through  to  HCA/HPA.
Thus an HGC has an interest in training quality.

    Hereinafter all processing for keeps will be done in  the  HGC  and  all
training will be done in the Academy.

    There is a standard toward which a student is trained. It  includes  two
disciplines. Formal Auditing and Tone 40 Auditing. Formal is taught in  Comm
Course, Tone 40 in Upper Indoc. Students must  know  their  codes  and  must
know how to follow them-no evaluation no invalidation.

    All of Dianetics, the Anatomy branch of Scientology must be taught.

    The six simple types of processing are taught.

    The axioms are taught.

    Anatomy of the mind is taught, not just a lot of  figure-figure  theory.
The student gets there by finding he  can  confront  in  a  preclear  locks,
secondaries, engrams, chains, time  track,  circuits,  machinery,  valences,
the parts of livingness.

    Manifestations of phenomena are taught, overt-act  motivator  sequences,
problems, computations, cognitions, comm lags,  introversion,  extroversion,
exteriorization, A-R-C.

    Scales are taught-ARC  Scale,  Effect  Scale.  The  Academies  must  now
undertake 3 separate courses and adhere to each.

    If an instructor won't confront students he starts a big  theory  course
that avoids all anatomy, takes up the personal  problems  of  the  students,
excuses every failure to teach by saying it was student case. If  case  gets
in the road send the student to the HGC to  pay  for  auditing  or  not.  If
theory gets in the road of training auditors, teach anatomy only.

150

    Let's go on this.

    1 am instructing all HCO Boards of Review to examine completely  on  the
above outlined items only and to flunk hard any  student  who  doesn't  know
his subject. We care little for the synopses and the  paper  work.  We  want
auditors who know their business, not a lot of squirrels.

    A pc gets well in direct ratio to his ability to confront the anatomy of
life, the anatomy of mind and the physical universe.

    How do you suppose you'll ever get any  auditing  done  if  the  student
can't confront, via a pc  yet,  life,  the  anatomy  of  the  mind  and  the
physical universe. It's easier for a student to confront than a preclear  to
confront.

    I've got a big idea for training: to wit: Let's deliver the goods!

LRH:md.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
rs:3,10.58

            NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
            ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
            NOT GREEN ON WHITE
      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1
      HCO BULLETIN OF 4 MAY 1959

HOW TO WRITE A CURRICULUM

1.    Establish personality of person present. (Create their beingness on
    course.) Course creates a beingnessl not imparts data.

2.    Demonstrate how to create this beingness.

3.    Establish communication by teaching the language of the subject.

4.    Exemplify the communication symbols with demonstrations of ridiculous
errors.

    When established teach

1.    Each word and its definition that is used in the practice. Underline
strange words.

2.    Diagnosis. You must recognize ("Conditions we are seeking to change")
    i.e. Obnosis.

3.    System of classification.

4.    Means of changing each class or type of child, and maintenance of
    state. Subject matter: "Prevention of worsening".

    Practice
      Demonstration
      Doingness

    Note.   Person who is willing to be the person who sees.
      Person who sees.
      Person who discusses.
      Person who can do something.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mp.rd

151

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 NOVEMBER 1961

HCO Secs Assoc Secs Ds of T

TRAINING COURSE RULES AND REGULATIONS

    All Scientology Academies and Courses are required, forthwith, to  adopt
these rules and regulations:-

 I .  Do not consume any alcoholic beverage during Class days or on the day
    before a Class day.

 2.   Do not consume, or  have  administered  to  yourself,  or  any  other
    student,  any  drugs,  antibiotics,  barbiturates,   opiates,   aspirin,
    sedatives, hypnotics or medical stimulants,  for  the  duration  of  the
    Course, without the express approval of the Director of Training,

 3.   Do not give any processing to ANYONE without the express permission
    of the Director of Training.

 4.   Do not receive ANY processing from ANYONE under any circumstances
    without the express permission of the Director of Training.

 S.   Do not engage in any 'Self-Processing' under any circumstances during
    the Course at any time.

 6.   Do not receive any 'treatment', 'guidance', or 'help' from anyone in
    the 'healing arts', i.e., Physician, Dentist, etc., without the consent
    of the Director of Training.

 7.   Follow exactly ALL instructions given by your Instructor and the
    Director of Training.

 8.   Adhere completely to the Code of a Scientologist for the duration of
 the Course.

 9.   Follow the Auditor's Code during all sessions when being the Auditor.

10.   Be on time, and follow all Schedules exactly.

11.   Get sufficient food. Eat Breakfast BEFORE Class and morning sessions.
    Get sufficient sleep.

12.   When being a Preclear, be one, not a student or auditor.  When  being
    an Auditor, be an auditor, not a student or preclear. When in  class  or
    lectures, be a Student, not an auditor or preclear.

13.   Get off all your known withholds. Know that you have  definitely  and
    absolutely NO hope  of  case-advancement  unless  you  get  these  known
    withholds off to your auditor.

14.   Follow ALL auditing directions given you on your auditing-report
    forms for your preclear.

15.   Follow technical procedure as outlined on the Course exactly and
precisely.

16.   Be honest at all times on your auditing-report forms.  Stating  every
    process run, Tone Arm changes and times, Sensitivity setting, cognitions
    of your preclear and any  changes  of  physical  appearance,  reactions,
    communication level, or anything else that you observe in your preclear.

17.   Place all reports on your sessions as auditor in the folder  of  your
    preclear after each session, and place the folder  then  in  the  basket
    marked for such. Never place a folder after a  session  is  over  in  an
    inappropriate basket.

18.   No student may read his/her own case-report folder or that of another
    student, unless he/she is auditing that student.

19.   If you don't know something or are confused about course-data, ask an
    Instructor or send a despatch to the Director of Training.  Do  NOT  ask
    other students as this creates progressively worsening errors in data.

                               152

20.   Do notleave any papers, food or personal articles in your despatch
    baskets. These baskets are for preclear report folders or despatches
    only.

21.    The  basket  marked  "Student  In"   is   the   basket   where   all
    communications, bulletins or mail to students are placed.  Always  check
    this basket daily to see if you have received any communications.

21    Study and work during your class-periods. You have a lot to get
    checked out on in order to get a Course Completion. You can't afford to
    waste time.

23.   Auditors and preclears are not allowed to smoke during sessions, at
    any time. Smoke only during a break.

24.   Do not engage in any rite, ceremony, practice, exercise,  meditation,
    diet,  food  therapy,  or  any  similar  occult,  mystical,   religious,
    naturopathic, homeopathic or chiropractic treatment or any other healing
    or mental therapy while on Course without the express permission of  the
    Director of Training.

25.   Do not discuss your case-or that of any other  student-your  auditor,
    your  Instructors,  your  classmates,  L.  Ron   Hubbard,   Organisation
    personnel or the Organisation with anyone.

26.   Do not engage in any sexual relationships of any nature or kind  with
    any classmate who is not your legal spouse. You are here  to  learn  and
    get as close to Clear as possible, not to  run  continual  Present  Time
    Problems.

27.   Weekly reports are required from each student; these reports MUST  be
    placed in the  appropriate  basket  each  Monday  morning  by  full-time
    students, on Monday evening  by  evening-course  students  and  Saturday
    morning (for previous weekend) by weekend-students. These weekly reports
    must be  written  on  WHITE  QUARTO  FLIMSY  PAPER,  and  shall  contain
    approximately 250 words written under the following  headings:  "What  I
    have learned", "What I have observed", "What I have liked most", lWhat I
    have disliked most", "Comments and Suggestions",
      "Number of weeks on Course" and "Instructor:       Each heading to be
    clearly indicated and underlined. The report must be headed with the
    student's
    full name-top left corner, title of Course (e.g., Evening HPA, Unit 2,
    Retread) in
    centre of page, and, in the top right corner, the location E.G.,
    London,
      with-below this-the date as "Week-Ended      If it is not practicable
    to type this report, it must be written very legibly-in block letters if
    necessary,
    and if the writing is not legible it will be given back to the student
    to be
    re-written.

28.   The above rules and regulations are inflexible, and are to be
    followed by all students during the Course. There will be no exceptions.

29.   Any infraction against the  above  regulations  will  result  in  the
    student being required to write a paper of 200  words  getting  off  his
    overts and withholds against  any  and  all  students,  Instructors  and
    personnel connected with the Course.

N.B. Extra rules for local conditions may be added but  NONE  of  the  above
may be deleted.

Issued by:  HCO Technical Secretary WW
      for
      MARY SUE HUBBARD
      HCO Training Supervisor WW

LRH:jw.oden Copyright Q 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

153

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 DECEMBER 1961

HCO Area Sea
Org Secs
Ds of T
Instructors
Cenocon

INSTRUCTORS' WEEKLY REPORT FORM

    Effective immediately, ACADEMY Instructors are required to make a weekly
report on a form to be mimeoed in blue or black ink on white quarto flimsy
paper as follows:

                    ACADEMY OF SCIENTOLOGY

                            LONDON (or Name of your Org)

                  JjNSTR UCTORS WEEKL Y REPOR T

INSTRUCTOR FOR (e.g. UNIT I - WEEKEND HPA)   WEEK ENDING

                       NUMBER OF NEW STUDENTS ON COURSE-

                       NUMBER OF OLD STUDENTS ON COURSE

                              TOTAL IN CLASS

NAMES OFSTUDENTS: (State which are new, retread, etc)

PROGRESS OF CLASS: (Individually -briefly -and collectively)

DATE  SIGNED

INSTRUCTOR

    This form to be sent on the Wednesday of each week (with D of T's and
Students' reports), to HCO Technical Secretary WW at Saint Hill.

LRH:EW:imj.rd
Copyright @) 1961      Issued by: HCO Technical Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard            for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          L. RON HUBBARD

154

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 DECEMBER 1961
 (Amended and Reissued on 23 October 1967)

Remimeo

STUDENTS'WEEKLY REPORTS TO RON

    All Scientology students are to make a weekly report (monthly for
Foundation students) on the following form:

TO LRH      ACADEMY OF SCIENTOLOGY

                           (Name of Org)

                    STUDENTS WEEKLY REPORT

STUDENT'S NAME   WEEK ENDING

TITLE OF COURSE

WHATIRAVE LEARNED

WHA T I HA VE OBSER VED

WHA T I LIKED MOST

WHA T I DISLIKED MOST

SUGGESTIONS AND COMMENTS

LENGTH OF TIME ON COURSE

SUPERVISOR COMMENTS

    These forms are to be forwarded to LRH via the International Technical
Officer WW. They should be done on airmail paper.. Any report illegibly
written should not be forwarded,but should be handled as a NO REPORT to
Ethics.

      Org Exec See WW
      Mary Sue Hubbard
LRH:jp.rd   The Guardian WW
Copyright @ 1967 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Note: The original 8 Dec '61 issue contained a similar form and differed
only slightly in instructions for use and routing. A 23 Oct '63 issue was
identical to the above. 8 Dec '61 was added to by HCO P/L 9 May 1962 on
page 158, and was later amended and replaced by HCO P/L 18 March 1971,
Students' Weekly Reports to Ron, in the 1971 Year Book.]

                              155

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 JANUARY 1962
   (Reissued as amended on 21 June 1967)

Remimeo
Tech Hats
Qual Hats
HCO Hats

HCO STANDING ORDER NO. 5
       STUDENTS

    All students formally enrolled into any Academy of Scientology shall  be
thoroughly trained.

    The standard of the lowest professional certificate shall be such as  to
permit immediate and unashamed use of  the  student  on  graduation  in  any
Hubbard Guidance Centre.

    The only lasting overt that can be done with Scientology is to  fail  to
disseminate it well and accurately. This includes student training.

    Students must be trained to expect and  achieve  spectaculai  processing
results early in training.

    Students must be oriented during training into caring for the  cases  of
their preclears.

    In event of a  poor  or  difficult  student,  it  must  be  demanded  by
Supervisors that the matter be remedied by Review or Ethics.

    Students must be trained to resolve their problems with Scientology.

    Students must be trained to audit regardless of their own  restimulation
or cases. When auditing, auditors do not have cases.

    Students must not  be  permitted  to  sag  or  slack  or  fall  away  in
attendance and this can be done because all such  attitudes  result  from  a
student's failure to obtain a reality early in training.

    We must  train  new  Scientologists  so  that  we  can  have  pride  and
confidence in them as Scientologgists, not  from  an  examination  of  their
record but from the sole fact that th6y have been Academy trained.

    Students and Supervisors alike should fully understand that  neither  we
nor this universe can afford to waste even one potential auditor.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
                                             Founder

LRH:sf.jp.cden Copyright @ 1962, 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

156

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 APRIL 1962

Sthil
Academies

TRAINING COURSE REGULATIONS
      (ADDED)

    In schoolrooms, lecture rooms or auditing rooms in any Scientology
Course neither cigars nor pipes may be smoked. Only cigarettes of a usual
tobacco may be smoked, and these with due regard for the possible
objections of other students.

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 APRIL 1962

CenCCon Academies Courses

                     REGULATIONS, ACADEMIES AND COURSES
                Add to training regulations for all Courses,
            Academies and the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course.

    If it be discovered, by whatever means, that a student is  not  studying
tapes and bulletins  for  examination  but  is  studying  instead  only  the
answers to examination  questions,  however  procured,  then  the  tape  and
bulletin section of the check sheet of that student shall be  destroyed  and
the student shall be required to begin the entire tape  and  bulletin  study
anew without credit for any he has done.

    In comment,  the  responsibility  of  all  instructors  is  to  graduate
students who have accurate knowledge of the  subject.  Studying  examination
questions only defeats this and will find the student  some  day  completely
adrift in his handling of a preclear,

    The first date after which this regulation shall be in effect  shall  be
20 April 1962 and only offences committed after that date shall  cause  this
regulation to go into effect against a student,

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

157

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 MAY 1962

Central Orgs D of Ts

ADDITION TO STUDENTS' WEEKLY REPORT
(Adds to HCO Policy Letter of 8 December 19 6 1, Students' Weekly Reports)

    In order for HCO WW to see the actual progress of students, the
following is to be added to the Students' Weekly Report below the title of
INSTRUCTOR:

Check outs: Flunks:    Passes:

LRH:jw.rd   Issued by: Philip D. Quirino
Copyright g 1962       Acting Tech See WW
by L. Ron Hubbard            for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 MAY 1962

Central Orgs Academies

TAPE EXAMINATIONS

    In examining students on tapes, do not demand actual wording. Demand an
answer that clearly shows that the student has heard and understood the
tape and can apply the knowledge.

    If the student is in doubt about the answer, flunk. If the examiner is
in doubt make the student amplify.

    Asking for verbatim wording drives students to copying Tapes verbatim
and causes them to scant understanding.

LRH:jw.eden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

158

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 MAY 1962
Franchise
Central Orgs
Tech Depts  IMPORTANT
Post Conspicuously
in Training 0 ce TRAINING DRILLS
and on Student Board   MUST BE CORRECT

    TRs which give an incorrect impression of how auditing is done  may  not
be taught.
    All TRs must contain the correct data of auditing.
    THIS IS VITAL. There. have been two broad instances where  TRs  gave  an
impetus to improper auditing which all but crippled the forward  advance  of
Scientology.
    These were:
    Upper Indoc TRs which caused students to conceive that the CCHs were run
without 2 way comm and with a militant,  even  vicious  attitude.  (See  HCO
Bulletins of April 5 and 12, 1962.)

    E-Meter Needle drills which caused the student  to  believe  that  every
action of the  needle  was  a  read  and  prevented  three-quarters  of  all
Scientologists from ever getting rudiments in  or  questions  cleared,  (see
HCO Bulletin of May 25, 1962 and 2 Saint Hill Lectures of May 24, 1962).

    In the matter of the CCHs, we were deprived of  their  full  use  for  5
years and extended the time in processing 25 times  more  than  should  have
been consumed for any result. This  came  from  TRs  6-9  which  are  hereby
scrapped.

    In the matter of the E-Meter it is probable that all  auditing  failures
and widely extended false ideas that Scientology did not work stem from  the
improper conception of what action of the needle one cleaned up.  This  came
from needle reading TRS where instructors had  students  calling  off  every
activity of the needle as a read, whereas only  the  needle  action  at  the
exact end of the question was used by the  auditor.  Auditors  have  thought
all needle actions were reads and tried to  clean  off  all  needle  actions
except, in some cases, the end actions. This defeated the  meter  completely
and upset every case on which  it  was  practised.  This  accounts  for  all
auditing failures in the past two years.
    CCHs must be taught exactly as they are used in session,  complete  with
two way comm-and no comm system added, please.

    E-Meter drills must be used which stress only meaningful and significant
instant reads coming at the end of the full question.

    Other actions of the needle may be shown to a student only if  they  are
properly called prior and latent reads,  or  meaningless  action.  From  his
earliest training on meters the student must be trained to consider  a  read
only what he would take up in session and clear or use, and must  be  taught
that mere actions of the needle are neglected except  in  steering  the  pe,
fishing or compartmenting questions.

    ONLY TEACH PROPER USE. ONLY  USE  TRS  WHICH  EXACTLY  PARALLEL  USE  OF
SCIENTOLOGY IN SESSION AND DO NOT,GIVE AN IMPRESSION THAT SOMETHING ELSE  IS
USED.
    I have seen clearly that Scientology's effectiveness could be  destroyed
by teaching via TRs which can be interpreted by a  student  as  the  way  to
audit when in fact one does not audit that way or use the data in auditing.

    There are many valuable TRs. There will be many more valuable  TRs.  But
an invalid TR is one which gives a wrong impression of auditing. These  must
be kept out of all training.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRH:gl.cden
Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

159

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIO
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinste
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 A
CenOCon
Dir Mat
D of T      URGENT

                         TRAINING AIDS

    Due to the great success and revelatory nature of the  TV  Demonstration
set up at Saint Hill, a smaller edition of  this  training  aid  is  ordered
installed in every Central Organization.

    The set up consists of one TV Camera, one TV set  (21  or  23  inch),  a
microphone, an amplifier and the required cable,

    The TV camera (such as the Grundig) is equipt with a four inch lens.  It
is mounted in a corner high and to  the  right  behind  the  auditor  (about
seven feet from the floor). An E-Meter,  erected  on  its  tipped  back,  is
placed firmly in a bed in the centre of a table. The face of the E-Meter  is
then perpendicular to the camera.

    The Auditor sits at the  table,  the  camera  "looking  over  his  right
shoulder" at the E-Meter.
    The preclear sits at the table across from the Auditor in the usual
    position.

    The microphone is placed under the "tent" made by the E-Meter.

    There is no picture made of Auditor and preclear, only a picture of the
    E-Meter.

    The set up is placed in any oversize auditing room in the org and  usual
auditing can go on in that room when the set up is not  in  use,  or  it  is
placed at a separate table, otherwise unused, in the D of P's office.

    The TV picture of the meter and the sound from the amplifier are led  by
cables to the front of the usual assembly hall of the organization.

    The TV set is placed on a very high stand so as to give everyone in  the
room an unobstructed view of the screen.

    The sound is connected to the speakers in the set itself,  there  is  no
separate speaker.
    This is used for demonstrations by  Sthil  graduates,  and  for  student
demonstrations to reveal to all their skill in meter reading or lack  of  it
in an actual session.

    No session before an audience is valid or natural and  this  arrangement
gives privacy for the,session but full display of the two  important  points
of a session-sound and meter. It will be a shock to both Ds of P and  Ds  of
T to see what is passing for meter reading, and a  great  help  in  training
HGC Auditors and students.

    The TV picture  of  the  meter  crowds  in  only  part  of  the  TA  and
sensitivity knob and all but a bit of the right side of the meter dial.  The
meter must fill the screen.

    The cost will be under E500 or $1200. The reward in technical cannot  be
measured. A second camera and TV set which gives a side view of auditor  and
pc is nice but is optional.

    Use electronic friends of the org or commercial firms  to  install.  But
make it a neat compact,  trouble  free  installation  with  no  loose  wires
about.

    An intercomm phone from assembly room to auditing room is nice to have.

    Do it sooner.

                                            L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: This Policy Letter was reissued on 27 October  1969  with  the  added
title RE-INTRODUCED FOR DIANETTCS BY ORDER OF LRH.]

                               160

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 DECEMBER AD 12

Sthil Instructors Only Central Orgs HCO See, Assoc Sec D of T and
Instructors

INSTRUCTORS' STABLE DATA

    In addition to the Instructor's Code, there is a  primary  stable  datum
about all instruction:

    Get the Student to accomplish auditing the preclear  and  then  get  the
student to accomplish it with better form, speed and accuracy.

    An Instructor must never lose sight of the PURPOSE of auditing. Auditing
is for the preclear, is intended to improve the  preclear's  case.  Auditing
is not just a matter of good form.

    The reason some students do not accomplish auditing is that they  become
so oriented on form alone that they forget the purpose of the form.

    Good auditing form and correct sessioning obtains many times the  result
of bad form and incorrect sessioning. But total form and  no  effort  to  do
something for the pc results in no auditing.

    The result comes before the form in importance. Because students may use
this idea to excuse lack of form, Q and A-ing, and to  squirrel  with  their
processes, the stable datum becomes unpopular with instructors.

    A student should first be held responsible  for  the  state  of  the  pc
during and after sessions and made to know that as an auditor  he  is  there
to get a fast, good result. The student should then be taught  that  he  can
get a better, faster result with better form. After that the student  should
be taught that Scientology results are only obtained by  correct  and  exact
duplication of Scientology processes, not by off beat variations.

    This matter comes to the fore with Routines such  as  2-12,  a  Problems
Intensive, Prepchecking, Routine 3-21, 3GAXX and other  powerful  processes.
All these are powerhouses when done for the  benefit  of  the  preclear  and
with perfect form and duplication of data.

    However, R2-12 has the peculiar ability to  produce-  results  with  the
crudest of auditing. If you  find  anything  that  reads  on,  a  meter  and
represent it the pc feels miles better. So here is a procedure  that.can  be
done by a very green auditor and yet will produce an  increased  reality  on
Sclentology in the pc. Thus the Instructor's Stable Datum above can be  used
with telling effect.

                 HOW TO GET THE BEST OUT OF 2-12

    The student is just thrown into the  snake-pit..He  is  told  to  get  a
result on the pc, not look pretty.  The  student  is  only  told  to  GET  A
RESULT.

    There are no cheek sheets, pre-training, briefing,  anything.  Give  the
student a meter, the Bulletins, LIST ONE, a  pen  and  paper  and  DEMAND  A
RESULT.

    A session is started by saying "Start of Session" and stopped by  saying
"End of Session". Nothing else.

    The student wants to know how to do  this  or  that.  Tell  him  or  her
briefly and individually how to do the most fundamental  actions,  but  MAKE
HIM OR HER DO IT. And keep up a  running  refrain  that  you  want  results,
results, results, on that pc.

    The student will be all thumbs and faint. The Instructor may be
    horrified by the

161

goofs. But don't bother with the goofs.  Just  demand  results  on  the  pc,
results on the pc, results on the pc.

    This action by the Instructor will teach the student (a) that he or  she
is supposed to get results in auditing and (b) that results can be  obtained
and (c) that he or she sure needs better skill.

    So the first address to 2-12 in training is to teach those  above  three
things (a), (b) and (c).

    You can't teach a student who doesn't realize that  results  in  the  pc
depend on the auditor and  auditing  and  that  results  are  expected  from
auditing;  who  believes  results  can't  be  obtained  from   auditing   or
Rockslammerlike wants to prove auditing doesn't work; and  who  doesn't  yet
know that he or she doesn't know. These are the barriers to training  and  a
good auditor.

    The gradient approach to the mind is  vital.  Clearing  will  not  occur
without it. But the gradient approach to  auditing  can  be  overdone  to  a
point where the student completely loses sight of why he is auditing.

    The advent of R2-12 gives us a chance to break away from  too  gentle  a
gradient and pound home the simple governing  principles  of  auditing,  and
enter into an era of training in  which  swift  students  are  not  retarded
unduly by slow students and all students learn at once the most  fundamental
lessons of auditing:

    1 .     First and foremost the auditor accomplishes something for the pc
       and without that there is neither sense, nor purpose to auditing;

    2.      Excellent form accomplishes more for the pc faster; and

    3.      Exact duplication of processes alone returns standard high level
       results on all pes.

    The student thrown in over his head learns:

    A.      Results in the pc depend on the auditor and auditing and that
       results are expected from auditing;

    B.      That results can be obtained in auditing and the better the form
       and duplication, the better the results; and

    C.      That the student has more to learn about auditing and that the
       student does n't yet know,

    Therefore the Instructor must teach the student:

    (a)     That he or she is supposed to get results in auditing;

    (b)     That Scientology can obtain results; and

    (c)     That better form and duplication obtain better faster results.

    1 dare say many students learn things just because they are told to  and
find no relationship between form, duplication and the  preclear.  Let  them
fall on their heads and yet obtain results and this  attitude  will  change-
and you'll save us a lot of off beat nonsense and case failures in orgs  and
the field.

    R2-12 done before it is trained makes  the  student  aware  of  lots  of
things and additionally puts the student in shape to learn. The cheek  sheet
in 2-12 comes after doing it. It will be  wanted  then.  And  in  all  other
types of process it then will be possible to do the cheek sheet  before  the
student does  the  process-the  student  will  have  seen  the  vital  facts
contained in (a), (b) and (c) for himself.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

162

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 FEBRUARY 1963
Academies
Sthil Students   HOW TO EXAMINE

                     THEORY EXAMINATIONS

    The two most serious causes of students or  staff  failing  to  pass  or
being unwilling to take Bulletin Checks are:

           1.    RS-ing on List One; and
           2.    Capricious Examination

    V Unit cares for the one. A study and practice  of  this  Policy  Letter
should care for the other.

    The important points of a Bulletin, Tape or Policy Letter are:

    1.      The specific rules, axioms, maxims or stable data;

    2.      The doingness details, exactly how is it done; and

    3.      The theory of why it is done.

    All else is unnecessary. All you have to demand is the above.  They  are
given in order of importance. (1) The rules, axioms, maxims or  stable  data
must be known exactly verbatim and the student must be able  to  show  their
meaning is also known to him or her.

    (2) The doingness must be, exactly known as to sequence and actions  but
not verbatim (in the same words as the text).

    (3) The theory must be known as a line  of  reasoning,  reasons  why  or
historical background and with accuracy, but not verbatim.

    The date of the lecture or bulletin or letter is relatively  unimportant
and other details of like nature should never be asked for.

    If a student or Staff Member is ever going to apply the data, then above
(1) must be down cold, (2) must be able to be experienced and  (3)  must  be
appreciated.

    Asking for anything else is to rebuff interest and  give  a  feeling  of
failure to the person being examined.

    An examiner should examine with fiendish exactness on (1)  alertness  on
(2) and seeing if the student understands (3). An  examiner  should  not  go
beyond these points, asking for what  person  was  mentioned,  who  did  the
test, what is the copyright date, what are the first words, etc.

    Graduation from courses must be speeded up. And at the  same  time,  the
data,  the  important  data  must  be  known  and  understood.  Good,  sound
examination is the answer here. Irrelevant examination questions  only  slow
the student and extend the course.

    Be as tough as you please, but only on (1), (2) and (3) above.

LRH:dr.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
tRevised and replaced by HCO PIL 4 March 1971 Issue 11, How   to do Theory
Checkouts and
Examinations, in the 1971 Year Book.]

                               163

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

               HCO POLICY LETTER OF 15 MARCH AD 13
Sthil
Students
Info Central Orgs
Academies
      CHECK SHEET RATING SYSTEM

    A system of rating of material will hereafter be employed in all  Theory
and Practical Examinations in all Scientology training activities.

    Bulletins, tapes and Drills will be assigned each one a rating as
    follows:

1.    STAR RATING. Passing Grade 100% on extensive verbal examination
    and/or inspection.

2.    75 RATING. Passing Grade 75% on simple written examination of which
    True and False questions can comprise 75% or more of the questions
    asked.

3.    ZERO RATING. Passed by proof  of  having  read  or  listened  to  the
    material (such as notes or a general verbal  statement  of  the  subject
    which assures the Theory Examiner that the material has been covered).

                     STAR RATING MATERIAL

    THEORY: Bulletins and tapes of material vitally necessary in making  the
currently used processes work, Auditor's Code, Axioms, etc.

    PRACTICAL: TRO, 1, 2, 3, 4, Anti Q and A, Meter Reading, Session Script,
    etc.

                       75 RATING MATERIAL

    THEORY: Basic Theory Bulletins and Tapes.

    PRACTICAL: None.

                     ZERO RATING MATERIAL

    THEORY: Texts of Scientology, background material, older  processes  not
now in use, etc.

    PRACTICAL: All remaining drills (passed by student on  the  evidence  of
another student).

    It is hoped that this system will speed training and ease its burden on
    students and
instructors.
LRH:dr.rd
Copyright (j) 1963     L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF IS MAY 1963
CenOCon

                        INSTRUCTOR HATS

Theory Examiner  -     Purpose:   To ensure students know their theory.
Practical Examiner     -     Purpose:   To ensure students can apply their
                 theory in a practical manner.
Auditing Supervisor    -     Purpose:   To ensure students can audit.
LRH:gl.rd
Copyright (~) 1963                      L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               164

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 SEPTEMBER AD 13
Central Orgs
Academies   SCIENTOLOGYFIVE
                    SCIENTOLOGY INSTRUCTORS

    The following is a guide to Scientology Instructors:

        1.  Scientology is a heuristic science.

        2.  The data has been discovered and assembled by L. Ron Hubbard.

        3.  The data has been amply covered and explained by L.R.H. in
           lectures and bulletins and books.
        4.  Training Drills have been devised and/or approved by L.R.H. and
           are more than adequate.

        S.  Auditing Routines, Processes and Procedures have also been
           prepared by L.R.H. and they are fully comprehensive and up-to-
           date.

        6.  The curriculum for any course has been carefully designed and/or
           approved by L.R.H.

    It should therefore be apparent that it is unnecessary for an instructor
to explain data, training drills or procedures  either  in  long  individual
talks or in 'lectures' to groups of students.

    The job of an instructor is restricted to  and  his  efforts  should  be
concentrated on checking to see that a student knows his data,  can  do  his
TRs and  can  follow  auditing  procedure.  This  is  done  by  testing  and
observation. If a student flunks a test  he  is  directed  to  study  and/or
practise the material some more. If instructor finds from  observation  that
student does not know his data or is not practising it  correctly  then  the
student is directed to study and/or practise accordingly. An  instructor  is
not a coach.
    Within the foregoing is the student who asks questions.  This  shows  he
does not know his data or  training  drill.  The  answer  to  the  student's
question is contained in the published data so all an instructor has  to  do
is to refer the student to the book chapter, bulletin or tape that  contains
the data. Instructor should avoid giving direct answers  for  at  least  two
reasons.
    I . To encourage student to find out for himself.

    2.      To obviate the possibility of an instructor giving his
        interpretation of data which may be an alter-is of the correct data.
    Instructors should set a good example to students by handling them  with
good ARC. Emphasis should be put on the following. Tell student "You can  do
it". Don't tell them they have done wrong but point out  that  they  haven't
properly understood the data and  direct  them  to  the  data  they  haven't
understood. When a student has done a good job or is making  good  progress,
tell him. Don't give a student continuous losses, try  to  find  something,,
however small, that lie has done right and point this out to him.

    At all times an instructor should present an unruffled demeanour  and  a
clean and tidy appearance.
    An instructor maintains 8C with ARC not with the overbearing  discipline
of a sergeant-major. He calls the roll, directs students  where  to  go  and
arranges schedules. He infracts infringement of course rules  and  students'
failure to follow instructions.

    Students who are constantly failing in their  studies  are  missing  out
somewhere in their basic data so they need to be  directed  to  study  basic
material.

    Remember that you are training auditors, one day you  may  need  one  of
them to audit you so make sure they know their data and can use it.

LRH:dr.rd  Written & Issued by: Reg Sharpe
Copyright@ 1963  Course Secretary, SHSBC
by L. Ron Hubbard      for L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Authorized by:  L. RON HUBBARD

 [Cancelled by HCO P/L 27 October 1970 Issue 11, ne Course Supervisor, in
 the 1970 Year Book.]

                               165

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 SEPTEMBER 1963

Tech Dirs D of Ts Academy Instructors Academy Students SHSBC Instructors
SHSBC Students

           URGENT

COURSE RULES AND REGULATIONS

    Ron wants to re-write the Rules and Regulations  applicable  to  Courses
throughout Scientology. The purpose of  the  rules  and  regulations  is  to
enable training in Scientology to be unhindered as far as  possible  by  the
untoward behaviour of students and instructors  and  by  the  state  of  the
quarters where the instruction  takes  place.  He  therefore  requires  that
every Academy Staff Member and every student at present  on  Course  (SHS13C
included) send in suggested rules under the headings below so  that  a  code
of regulations can be drawn up.

Instructors please write:

1 .   Rules they consider necessary for students to abide by in order to
    make instruction and admin easier.

2.    Rules they would like instructors to abide by.

3.    Rules they would like to see in force regarding the quarters
    (premises and contents) where the Course is run.

    At least three suggestions are required under each of the three
    headings.

Students please write:

1.    Rules they would like their fellow students to abide by.

2.    Rules they would like instructors to abide by.

3.    Rules they would like to see in force regarding the quarters
    (premises and contents) where the Course is run.

    At least twelve suggestions required under each heading.

    HCO Secs are to arrange for suggestions to be written on the reverse  of
a copy of this letter by every staff member and student, and sent to  me  in
bulk within seven days of receipt of this letter by the HCO See.

    Existing rules may be used as a guide.

Issued by:  Reg Sharpe
      Course Secretary SHSBC
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD

Authorized by: L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright Q 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

166

COURSE RULES AND REGULATIONS

NAME:       DATE:

State whether student or
Staff position held

ACADEMY:

List at least 12 (or 3 for Staff Members) suggested Rules for Students on
Course.

List at least 12 (or 3 for Staff Members) suggested Rules for Instructors
on Course.

List at least 12 (or 3 for Staff Members) suggested Rules for quarters
(premises and contents) of the Course.

Write legibly. If there is not enough room on this form use another sheet
of paper with your name on it and pin it securely to this form.

167

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 25 SEPTEMBER 1963

Sthil

HATS OF STUDENT INSTRUCTORS FOR SHSBC

Hat of Student Instructor Supervisor

1.    To see that the Student Instructors know and carry out the procedures
in:

        (a) Auditing Section

        (b) Practical Section

        (c) Theory Section

2.    To act as terminal for the Student Instructors and should necessity
    arise re-arrange the weekly schedule.

3.    To see that the Student Instructors are on post on time.

4.    To see that the Student Instructors keep up their own Theory and
    Practical Cheek Sheets and weekly TR drills.

5.    To arrange ARC break assessments and to supervise same.

                             Student Instructors
                           Auditing Section Duties

    The purpose of student instructors in the Auditing Section is to  assist
the Auditing Supervisor with direct  personal  observation  and  control  of
individual auditing sessions.

    In order to accomplish the above student instructors have the following
    duties:

I     Know in detail all the auditing activities permitted in the section
assigned.

2.    Ensure that the sessions in the assigned unit are started  and  ended
    on time, are properly located and all pes and auditors are  present.  Be
    sure that the auditing schedule is being followed.

3.    Check all sessions to see if  auditors  are  following  the  D  of  P
    instructions in the folder and/or the correct auditing procedure of that
    unit and reporting any digression to the instructor of  that  unit.  The
    evening student instructor may  give  a  note  to  the  student  auditor
    pointing out the error and must state the error on  his  report  to  the
    auditing supervisor. No other action may be taken.

4.    Report Gross Auditing Errors to the instructor in charge of the unit.
    Evening instructors note them in their nightly report  to  the  auditing
    supervisor. Gross auditing errors are:

        I . Can't read meter.
        2.  Don't know procedure.
        3.  Can't complete auditing cycle.
        4.  Can't complete auditing cycle repetitively.
        5.  Doesn't pull missed W/Hs.
        6.  Can't handle an ARC break.
        7.  Can't handle a PTP or put pe into session.
        8.  Chronic cutting of pe's itsa line.

5.    Write up informative, helpful pink sheets covering  the  whole  unit.
    Each auditor should receive at least  one  pink  sheet  per  week.  Turn
    completed pink sheets over to the instructor in charge of that unit  for
    issuing.

168

6.    Write up infractions for lateness, rule breakage, refusal to obey
    instructions, etc, and turn them over to the instructor in charge of
    that unit for issue.

7.    Morning student instructors report to the  instructor  in  charge  of
    that unit immediately and  evening  student  instructors  send  a  daily
    written report to the  Auditing  Supervisor  on  all  of  the  following
    conditions:

        I . Failure to follow auditing directions.
        2.  Lack of TA action.
        3.  No auditing being done.
        4.  Any session not going smoothly. (Pc nattery and ARC breaky with
           no resolution of the causes,)
        5.  Any suppression of data with regard to the session activity on
           the auditing report.
        6.  Any case that looks like blowing.
        7.  Any excellent auditing.
        S.  All student auditing enquiries are handled by saying, "Do what
           you are going to do", and write up an infraction for
           unauthorised break.

    The auditing section gives the students the reality that they  will  get
results by first applying the basic fundamentals and  then  following  exact
procedure. The student auditor can do it.

    The student instructor helps them by getting them  to  do  it.  Get  the
student to apply the basic fundamentals and exact procedure  and  they  will
get results.

                                           Auditing Supervisor

                      Procedure for Student Instructors
                               Theory Section

    All the Theory Section student instructors are examiners. Their  job  is
to make sure the student knows and understands the  correct  data  contained
in the theory material listed on the check sheet.

 1.   The first thing a new student instructor does in the  Theory  Section
    is study and get checked out on HCO Policy Letter of February 14,  1963-
    "How to Examine, Theory Examinatione', and HCO Policy  Letter  of  March
    15, AD 13-"Check Sheet Rating System".

 2.   The student instructor then gets a sheet of goldenrod paper, a master
    check sheet and a testing location from the Theory Supervisor. Put  your
    name and the date at the top of the goldenrod paper and use it to record
    the flunks and passes for each student tested. During a lull  period  in
    the testing and about 10 minutes before the end of the  assigned  period
    stop your testing and record the flunks and passes on the Master  Roster
    and our copy of the student check sheet.

 3.   At the time of the check out record  the  results  on  the  goldenrod
    sheet, sign, date and record pass or flunk on the student's copy of  the
    bulletin. Sign your full surname on both check sheets.  Never  use  your
    initials.

 4.   Record in the master roster in the column designated Flunk or Pass  a
    slash mark for every pass or flunk a student has been  given.  The  5th
    slash mark is made through the previous 4 making a definite group of 5,
    In the Pass columns the I st 10 passes go in the Ist pass  column,  the
    2nd 10 passes in the 2nd pass column, etc.

 5.   Never leave the Theory Section until all passes and flunks are  fully
    recorded on the master roster and our  copies  of  the  student's  check
    sheet, the master roster and check sheet binder is never to  be  touched
    unless you are on duty as a student instructor. No check outs are to  be
    given except when you are on duty as a student instructor.

 6.   When a student passes a bulletin say "Pass". When a student flunks a
    bulletin say "Flunk".

 7.   If you ask a general question, be willing to get a general answer. If
    you want a specific answer, ask for it specifically.

169

 8.   Only ask enough questions to be certain that the student knows the
    correct data contained on the bulletin. This may be as few as one
    question or as many as 50.

 9.   An examiner's job is to determine whether the student knows the data
    or not. If the student does, he passes. If the student doesn't, he
    flunks.

10.   Ask direct, straight-forward questions. and keep accurate up-to-date
    records, and the students will work hard and continue winning with their
    theory.

                                           Theory Section Supervisor

                             Practical

    A Student Instructor:-

1     Calls roll promptly at 1.0 pm and 3.0 pm each day and at 4.55 pm on
Mondays. A
    "That's W' is given at 2.50 pm and 4.45 pm each day and at 6.0 pm on
    Mondays.

2.    Reports any student not present at roll call to the Training Office
    if the Practical Supervisor is not present. The student must be found.

3.    Sees that students are paired up immediately after roll call. If  one
    student is left over it must  be  reported  at  once  to  the  Practical
    Supervisor or to the Training Office. Another student must then be  sent
    over from Theory or that student goes to Theory and comes over the  next
    period.

4.    Infractions. See Auditing Section Infractions.

5.    Files all new pink sheets in the green folders. Files  all  completed
    pink sheets in green folders and puts an X through the carbon duplicates
    already in the green folders.  These  are  then  put  in  the  Practical
    Supervisor~s top basket. This is done every day immediately after No.  3
    has been done.

6.    On Monday, student  instructor  chooses  two  chair  monitors,  whose
    duties are to place in Chapel at 4.45 pm  on  Tuesdays,  Wednesdays  and
    Thursdays, approximately 9 chairs in 9 rows leaving a gangway  down  the
    middle, 4 chairs on the left, 5 chairs on the right  (looking  downwards
    towards  the  blackboard).  If  television,  the   chairs   are   placed
    accordingly.

7.    At the beginning of each period, goes round to each couple and marks
    in any check outs the student has completed since the last practical
    period.

8.    Knows exactly how each drill is run, and when not checking a  student
    out, is constantly moving from couple to couple seeing that  the  drills
    are being run properly and correcting any errors.

                                           Practical Supervisor

                                Authorized by: L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright (D 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

170

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                   Saint Hill Manor,East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 SEPTEMBER 1963
sthil

                     TRAINING TECHNOLOGY

                           PINK SHEETS

    All the study in the world isn't going to make an auditor. Learning  the
data and the theory  of  auditing  is  vitally  important.  Perfecting  your
practical drills is  essential.  However,  the  final  test  lies  with  the
question, "Are you getting results with your Pc?" Whether  you  are  getting
results or not is totally dependent on  whether  or  not  you  are  actually
applying the data and  theory  you  have  learned,  and  are  utilizing  the
practical skills you have developed.

    The bridge between the learning of data  and  development  of  practical
skills and their actual application in the auditing session can be  mightily
bolstered by the Pink Sheet system of Auditing Supervision.

                    HOW TO ISSUE PINK SHEETS

1.    Put two sheets of pink foolscap size paper on a clipboard with a
carbon between.

2.    At the top of the sheet write the name of the student auditor being
    observed, the date and the name of the observer.

3.    Head a wide  column  on  the  right  hand  side  of  the  sheet  with
    "Observations", a narrow column to the left of centre with  "Theory  and
    Practical Assignment" and two more narrow columns on the left hand  side
    with "Coach" and "Instructor".

4.    Take the above with your ball point into the vicinity of the auditing
    session to be observed, close enough to hear and see what  is  going  on
    without intruding in the session.

5.    Write in the wide column labelled "Observations" exactly what is
    happening in the session.

    This is very difficult to do for most people, (especially for someone at
    the case
    level of "only able to confront own evaluations"). Do not look for
    auditing
    errors. Just look and record what is happening. Do not write in
    evaluation. Do not
    write in invalidation ' s. Do not attempt to correct or teach in the
    "Observations"
    columns. Simply observe the session and record what is happening.

6.    After you have filled one or more pages of the "Observations" column,
    now is the time to evaluate;. Study what you have observed taking  place
    in the session and see if anything actually diverges  from  the  correct
    theory and practice of auditing.

7.    Write in the column headed "Theory and Practical Assignment" the date
    and title of the exact bulletin or tape containing the correct  data  or
    the title of the exact practical drill  which  will  correct  the  error
    recorded in the "Observations" column.

    If the session observed was a complete  shambles,  it  means  that  some
    basic, basic fundamental of auditing is absent in the student  auditor's
    repertory. Don't overload the student with tons  of  drills  and  theory
    assignments. Look over your "Observations" column carefully and it  will
    suddenly dawn on you that this student hasn't a clue about the  auditing
    cycle or doesn't note the difference between the needle and  the  TA  on
    the meter. If you still can't find the main difficulty, you  can  always
    sit the student down and ask something like "What happens when  you  sit
    down in front of a PCV', or "What's the meter for?" You'll be  surprised
    with some of the answers you'll get.

171

    On the other hand you might find that you'll fill up a couple  of  pages
    of pink sheet without recording any errors. The auditor didn't happen to
    goof. That's fine-send it to him without any assignment. It  will  still
    help him.

8.    Send the top copy of the Pink Sheet  to  the  student  and  file  the
    carbon copy in the student's Pink Sheet folder. When the  completed  top
    copy is returned by the student,  with  all  the  necessary  signatures,
    throw away the carbon copy and replace it with the completed top copy.

                      PINK SHEET EXAMPLES

    I The following would be a poor Pink Sheet:

    Theory & Practical Assignments.-    Observations:
    TRO     Poor TRO
    Meter Reading Auditor can't read the meter
    Tape of Sep 18 '62 Aud Cycle  Lousy handling of auditing cycle

    In the above example the observer has evaluated, invalidated, only  made
general comments. The above may all be true but the student auditor  is  not
helped by them, and the assignments don't pinpoint his major difficulty.

    2.      The following would be a helpful pink sheet:

    Theory & Practical Assignments:           Observations:
      Auditor leaning on table toying with the
      TA and pen. Running "Since the last
    TR-3    time 1 audited you" + buttons. Called a
      speeded rise on "Careful of" clean. On
    Tape of Sep 18 '62 "F to W' pc said "I don't think that
    Aud Cycle     answered the question". Aud: "OK. I'll
      check it on the meter". TA blew down
      to clear read on "F to R". And went on
      to clean "Invalidate".

    In the above example the observer states exactly what  is  happening  in
the auditing session. The majority of observations noted show  an  inability
to  complete  an  Auditing  Cycle.  (Even  the  Missed  Meter  read  was  an
incomplete cycle.) The student is  therefore  assigned  material  that  will
help him learn and apply the auditing cycle. There may be other things  that
can help him like TR-0 or Meter Drills. However adding  these  to  the  Pink
Sheet will only disperse his attention which should be applied  to  learning
and using the Auditing Cycle.

                      COACHING PINK SHEETS

    Pink Sheets should be coached in both Practical and  Theory.  The  coach
first reviews the observations thoroughly with the  student  and  goes  over
and over the bulletin or drill with the student until the  correct  data  is
completely learned  and  understood  or  until  the  student  can  perfectly
execute the drill.

    Once this is done, the coach signs  his  name  opposite  the  assignment
notation on the Pink Sheet in the coach's column. The student is then  ready
to have a test on the assigned material.

                    CHECKING OUT PINK SHEETS

    In checking out the assigned material on the student's Pink  Sheet,  the
instructor should carefully go over the "Observations" with the student  and
have the student spot the  specific  errors  he  has  made,  then  have  the
student give the correct data from the assigned bulletin or tape or show  by
doing the practical drill that he  has  now  mastered  the  skill  that  was
poorly applied in the auditing session.

172

    The whole bulletin or drill should be reviewed  by  the  instructor  but
specific attention should be paid to points that the  student  was  observed
to be weak in applying to his auditing. Be doubly strict on these points  to
be sure the student doesn't continue to  make  the  same  errors  again  and
again. If each Pink  Sheet  thoroughly  corrects  only  one  gross  auditing
error, really knocks it out, the student's  auditing  ability  will  improve
markedly in a very short time.

                          CONCLUSIONS

    Pink Sheets are never used as punishment or to make the  student  wrong.
They are used to improve  the  student's  auditing  ability  by  having  him
thoroughly learn data and practical skills he is weak in.

    A student's weakness in data and skills often will not show up under the
normal conditions of theory and practical testing but they  will  stick  out
like a sore thumb when he has to apply them in an actual  auditing  session.
Therefore, a Pink Sheet Assignment does not mean  that  the  student  hasn't
learned the material if he has already passed it in Theory or Practical.  It
does mean that he hasn't learned it WELL ENOUGH  to  utilize  it  under  the
duress of an actual auditing session.

    If a student has gone a whole week without receiving a  Pink  Sheet,  he
should start screaming. If his auditing is not being observed and  his  weak
points picked lip, how does he expect to improve? So, make a fuss,  Student,
if you are not receiving Pink Sheets. And, Instructors,  keep  a  tabulation
of when a student is issued a Pink Sheet so that you  are  sure  to  observe
each student at least once a week.

      Issued by: Fred Hare
LRH:jw.aap       Auditing Supervisor SHSBC
Copyright @ 1963       for
by L. Ron Hubbard            L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Authorized by:   L. RON HUBBARD

[Amended by HCO P/L 26  December  1970  (reissued  &  corrected  26  January
1971), Pink Sheets, which was later cancelled by a 9 January  1973  revision
of the above policy, HCO P/L 27 September  1963R,  Training  Technology-Pink
Sheets, in the Year Books.]

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 OCTOBER 1963
Central Orgs
Academics

                      STUDENT ARC BREAKS

    Just as a pe cannot be audited over a severe ARC  break,  so  a  student
cannot make good progress if he or she has an  ARC  break  with  the  Course
and/or Instructors.

    All students should be made aware of this and told that if they have  an
ARC break they should take it up with the instructors in question or  the  D
of T or (in the case of SHSBC) the Course Secretary.

    The Instructor, D of T or Course Secretary should try to clear the break
with straightforward two-way comm and if this  does  not  work  the  Student
should be given an ARC break assessment by a senior student.

    It is the responsibility of all Students and Instructors to see that any
Student who is nursing an ARC break and not  doing  anything  about  it,  is
handled as above-quickly.

                                Issued by:    Reg Sharpe
LRH:dr.rd   Course Secretary SHSBC
Copyright 0 1963       for
by L. Ron Hubbard            L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Authorized by:   L. RON HUBBARD

                              173

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

All Course Staffs      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 APRIL 1964
Tech Sees Hats   (Reissued as amended on 23 June 1967)
Qual Sees Hats
Ds of T Hats
Academy Staff Hats     SCIENTOLOGY COURSES

    There are three zones of responsibility in course management. These are:

    I . Providing valuable subject materials;

    2.      Organizing and rodifying those materials so that they are highly
        effective and comprehensible; and

    3.      Supervising the student in those materials to a point of high
        comprehension and competency.

    In Scientology (1) has been done, fully and completely. There are now no
gaps or unanswered questions.

    In  (2)  the  very  best  of  Scientology  has  been  selected  out  for
supervision and is being written in such a way as to minimize any  confusion
and maximize the communication and practice of the data.

    In (3) we have our largest potential randomity.  And  it  is  this  with
which this Policy Letter is concerned. The Supervision of the student  is  a
personalized matter. Students require answers to  their  own  questions  and
clarification of their own understandings. The burden of this falls  on  the
Supervisor.

    In auditing it has taken us a long time to learn that there are  no  bad
preclears. There are only auditor errors.

    We have now learned a similar thing about Supervising. There are no slow
students. There are only slow Supervisors.

    The length of time a student is on a course is a  direct  index  of  the
quality of Supervision on that course.

    A fast course is well supervised. A slow course is poorly supervised.

    A bad course gets bad enrolments. A good course gets good enrolments. If
enrolment is down, the course is a  poor  course.  That  has  been  observed
continually in Academies for years and has no  variations.  If  you  want  a
full course, provide a well-supervised course.

    If course enrolments are down, don't ponder beyond this how  to  improve
the course. And you'll win if you improve the course.

    This is a brick wall datum: a poor course will become an empty course.

    The speed with which a student can go through a course depends  only  on
(1), (2) and particularly (3) above. It does not depend on the student.

    Don't blame students. Look at (1), (2) and (3) above.

    There are no slow students. There is only slow supervision.

    The future of ScientologY courses depends on getting the student rapidly
through the course and graduating him or her at a good level of competence.

                               174

    Scientology course futures do not depend on lowered rates.

    You are already selling pearls for pennies.

    Just make sure you are selling pearls.
    I have taken care of (1). (2) is very thoroughly in hand. (3) is up to
    you.

    A fast course is a well supervised course.  A  full  course  is  a  well
supervised, fast course.

    That's all the mystery there is in it.

LRH:jwjp.rd
Copyright @ 1964, 1967 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard      Founder
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: 23 June 1967  differs  from  the  original  10  April  1964  in  that
"Instructing" has been changed to "Supervising" throughout.]

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 MAY 1964
Sthil Students
CenOCon
Academies   THEORY TESTING
                              EXPIRATION DATES
                    (Applies to all Bulletin, tape exams
                             except zero rating)

    In theory testing. the slow down comes in part from making  the  student
pass a test on the entire bulletin even though  he  or  she  did  not  flunk
until the last paragraph.  Retesting  the  entire  bulletin  is  both  time-
wasting and exasperating.

    Therefore bulletin and tape tests  are  given  an  Expiration  Date.  If
retaken in one week, the  only  part  examined  is  from  the  area  flunked
onward. If, however, the bulletin or tape is retaken after a period  of  one
week the entire material is retested.
    The Examiner, when a student flunks, marks  the  student's  bulletin  or
tape notes with an initial and a date just  above  the  area  of  the  first
flunk. The Examiner may go a question or two above the question  flunked  to
enter the date and initial. No other record is made.

    If the student is re-examined on a date  before  the  date  marked  plus
seven (within one week) the Examiner only asks questions from the date  mark
onward.

    It does not matter how many  flunks  are  given  or  how  many  weeks  a
bulletin or tape exam is extended  so  long  as  no  period  of  seven  days
elapses between tests. If such a period does elapse (date written + 7  days)
only then does the whole material get examined.

    The reason for this Expiration Date is this:  students  are  often  very
poor administrators. They take a bulletin or tape, study it  and  flunk  it,
throw it aside and take up another one. Finally they have gone  through  all
the course materials in this fashion and have nothing on their check  sheets
and nothing but failure in their  studies.  By  introducing  the  Expiration
Date they are persuaded to complete that which they begin.

    As students have to go to the end of the examination line, popping  back
in for the next bit a  minute  later  is  unworkable.  Further  an  Examiner
seeing that a student is trying to pass an  examination  with  one  question
passed at a time can  always  exercise  his  right  to  assure  himself  the
student knows the materials by a spot examination of
the whole bulletin or tape before granting a pass.
LRH:jw.cden.rd
Copyright @ 1964       L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
      175

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 SEPTEMBER 1964
                         (Reissued on 21 July 1967)

Remimeo
Franchise
All Students
Tech Divs
Dist Divs

UNDERSTANDING AND TAPE LECTURES

    When tapes are played to students (either in groups or individually) the
students should be told to make notes of any word  or  phrase  they  do  not
understand so that they can refer to the Scientology dictionary,  a  general
dictionary, or their technical materials for explanation.

    The Supervisor should give a brief explanation if the word or phrase  is
at a higher level of training than the student is learning or refer  student
to the detailed definition to be found in publications if it is at the  same
or lower level.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH.jw.jp.eden Copyright @ 1964, 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: In the 21 July 1967 reissue, "Instructor" has been changed to
"Supervisor". The original issue referred the student to the Instructor for
an explanation instead of to the materials.]

                               176

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 SEPTEMBER 1964
Remimeo
Sthil Instructors
HCO Hat Cheek on INSTRUCTION & EXAMINATION:
all Acad Instructors   RAISING THE STANDARD OF

    The basic reason students remain  long  on  courses  sterns  from  inept
criticism by instructors regarding what is required.

    There is a technology of criticism of art, expressed beautifully in  the
Encyclopaedia published by Focal Press.

    In this article it stresses that a critic who is also an  expert  artist
tends  to  introduce  unfairly  his  own   perfectionism   (and   bias   and
frustrations) into his criticism.

    We suffer amazingly from this in all our courses. I had  not  previously
spotted it because I don't demand a student at lower levels produce  results
found only in higher levels.

    You can carelessly sum this up by "letting the student have wins" but if
you do you'll miss the whole point.

    Example: A student up for a pass on his Itsa is flunked  because  he  or
she couldn't acknowledge.

    But a student at the Itsa level hasn't been taught to acknowledge.

    This student hasn't even read the data on acknowledgement.

    So the student can't pass Itsa level and so never does get to the  level
where acknowledgement is taught-and if he does, really never passed, in  his
own mind, Itsa and so hasn't advanced.

    And we catch all our students this way and they don't therefore learn.

    How is this done? How could this be?

    The instructor is an expert auditor. That's as it should be. But  as  an
expert auditor, bad  execution  of  a  level  above  where  the  student  is
studying, pains the  instructor.  So  he  flunks  the  student  because  the
auditing looks bad.

    But look here. The student wasn't being checked out as  an  aultor.  The
student was only being checked out on Itsa,

    Further, the action of auditing as a whole is so easy to  an  instructor
who is an expert auditor that he fails to take it apart for instruction.

    If 1 say the following, it will look ridiculous and you'll get the point
better: The student is up to pass TRO. The Instructor  on  check  out  looks
the student over and says "You flunked the test." The  student  says  "Why?"
The Instructor says "You didn't take the Class VI actions to  clear  the  pc
of all his GPMs." All right, we can all see that that would  be  silly.  But
Instructors do just that daily, though on a narrower band.

    The Instructor puts in additives. As an expert auditor it seems  natural
to him to say "You flunked your test on Itsa because you never  acknowledged
the pc." You get the point. This really is as crazy wide as  the  ridiculous
example above. What does Ack have to do with Itsa? Nothing!

    Because the Instructor is an expert auditor, auditing has ceased to have
parts and is all one chunk. Okay. A good auditor regards it  that  way.  But
the poor student can't grasp any of the pieces because the  whole  chunk  is
being demanded.

    What's Itsa? It's Listen. Can the student listen? Okay,  he  can  listen
but the expert says, "He didn't get 15 divisions of TA  per  hour."  On  the
what? "On the meter of course." What meter? That's  Level  II  and  Itsa  is
Level 0. "Yes," the expert protests, "but the pc  didn't  get  any  better!"
Okay, so what pc is supposed to get better at Level 0. If they  do  it's  an
accident, usually. Now does this student pass? "No! He can't  even  look  at
the pc!" Well, that's TRO of  Level  1.  "But  he's  got  to  look  like  an
auditor!" How can he? An auditor has to get through  a  comm  course  before
you can really call

177

      him that. "Okay, I'll drop my standards      the expert begins. Hell
no, expert.
You better pick up your standards for each Level and for each small part of
auditing.

    What's it say at Level 0? 'It says 'Listen'." Okay, then, damn it,  when
the student is able to sit and listen and not shut a pc down with  yak,  the
student passes. "And the meter?" You better not let me  catch  you  teaching
meters at Level 0.

    And so it goes right on up through the Levels and the bits within the
    Levels.

    By making Itsa mysterious and tough, by adding big new standards  to  it
like TA and Ack you only succeed in never teaching the student Itsa!  So  he
goes on up and at Level IV audits like a bum.  Can't  control  a  pc.  Can't
meter, nothing.

    So the expert tries to make a student do Class VI auditing the first day
and the student is never trained to do any auditing at Level 0.

    This nonsense repeated at Level 1 (by adding a meter, by purist flunking
"because the pc couldn't handle an ARC Break") and repeated again  at  Level
11 ("because the pc
      couldn't assess") and at Level Ill     etc. etc.

    Well, if you add things all the time out of sequence and  demand  things
the student has not yet reached the student winds up in a ball of  confusion
like the cat getting into the yarn.

    So we're not instructing. We're preventing a clear view of the parts  of
auditing by adding  higher  level  standards  and  actions  to  lower  level
activities.

    This consumes time. It makes a mess.

    The new HCA always tries to teach his group a whole HCA course his first
evening home. Well, that's no reason seasoned veterans have to do it in  our
courses.

    If you never let a student learn Level 0 because he's flunked unless  he
does Level VI first, people will stay on courses forever and we'll  have  no
auditors.

    Instructors must teach not out of their own expertise  but  out  of  the
text book expected actions in the Level the student is being trained in.  To
go above that level like assessment in Level II or Ack and meters  at  Level
0 is to deny the student any clean view of what he's expected to do. And  if
he never learns the parts, he'll never do the whole.

    And that's all that's wrong with our instruction or our instructors.  As
expert auditors they cease to view the part the student must know as  itself
and do not train and pass the student upon it.

    Instead they confuse the student by demanding more than the part being
    learned.

    Instruction is done on a gradient scale. Learn each part well by itself.
And only then can assembly of parts occur into what we want-a  well  trained
student.

    This is not lowering any standards. It's raising them on all training.

                         Bulletin Check Outs

    The other side of the picture, theory, suffers because of a  habit.  The
habit is all one's years of formal  schooling  where  this  mistake  is  the
whole way of life.

    If the student knows the words, the theory instructor assumes he knows
    the tune.

    It will never do a student any good at  all  to  know  some  facts.  The
student is expected only to use facts.

    It is so easy to confront thought and so hard to  confront  action  that
the Instructor often complacently lets the student mouth  words  ideas  that
mean nothing to the student.

    ALL THEORY CHECK CUTS MUST CONSULT THE STUDENT'S UNDERSTANDING.

    If they don't, they're useless and will ARC Break the student
    eventually.

    Course natter stems entirely from  the  students'  non-comprehension  of
words and data.

178

    While this can be cured by auditing, why audit it all the time when you
can 1 1 1 prevent it in the first place by adequate theory check-out?

    There are two phenomena here.

                         First Phenomenon

    When a student misses understanding a word, the section right after that
word is a, blank in his memory. You can always trace back to the  word  just
before the blank, get it understood and find miraculously  that  the  former
blank area is not now blank in the bulletin. The above is pure magic.

                        Second Phenomenon

    The second phenomenon is the overt cycle which follows  a  misunderstood
word. When a word is  not  grasped,  the  student  then  goes  into  a  non-
comprehension (blankness) of things immediately after. This is  followed  by
the student's solution for the blank condition which is to individuate  from
it-separate self from it. Now being something else than the blank area,  the
student commits overts against the  more  general  area.  These  overts,  of
course, are followed by restraining himself  from  committing  overts.  This
pulls flows toward the person and makes the person  crave  motivators.  This
is followed by  various  mental  and  physical  conditions  and  by  various
complaints, fault-finding  and  look-what-you-did-to-me.  This  justifies  a
departure, a blow.

    But the system of education, frowning on blows as it  does,  causes  the
student to really withdraw self from the  study  subject  (whatever  he  was
studying) and set up in its place a circuit which can receive and give  back
sentences and phrases.

    We now have "the quick student who somehow never applies what he
    learns".

    The specific phenomena then is that a student can study some  words  and
give them back and yet be no participant to the action. The student gets  A+
on exams but can't apply the data.

    The  thoroughly  dull  student  is  just  stuck  in  the  non-comprehend
blankness following some misunderstood word.

    The "very bright" student who yet can't use the data isn't there at all.
He has long since ceased to confront the subject matter or the subject.

    The cure for either of these conditions of "bright non-comprehension" or
"dull" is to find the missing word.

    But these conditions can be prevented by  not  letting  the  student  go
beyond the missed word without grasping its meaning. And that  is  the  duty
of the Theory Instructor.

                          Demonstration

    Giving a bulletin or tape check  by  seeing  if  it  can  be  quoted  or
paraphrased proves  exactly  nothing.  This  will  not  guarantee  that  the
student knows the data or can use or apply it nor even guarantees  that  the
student is there. Neither the "bright" student nor the "dull" student  (both
suffering from the same malady) will benefit from such an examination.

    So examining by seeing if somebody "knows" the text  and  can  quote  or
paraphrase it is completely false and must not be done.

    Correct examination is done only by making the person being tested
    answer

    (a)    The meanings of the words (re-defining the words used in his own
        words and demonstrating their use. in his own made up sentences),
        and

    (b)     Demonstrating how the data is used.

    The examiner need not do a Clay Table audit just to  get  a  student  to
pass. But the examiner can ask what the words mean.  And  the  examiner  can
ask for examples of action or application.

    "What is this HCO Bulletin's first section?" is about as dull as one can
    get. "What
      are the rules given about   V' is a question 1 would never bother to
ask. Neither of

179

these tell the examiner whether he has the bright non-applier  or  the  dull
student before him. Such questions just beg for natter and course blows.

    I would go over the first paragraph of any material I  was  examining  a
student on and pick out some uncommon words. I'd ask the student  to  define
each and demonstrate its use in a made  up  sentence  and  flunk  the  first
"Well .... er .... let me
      see   and that would be the end of that cheek out. 1 wouldn't pick
out only
Scientologese. I'd pick out words that weren't too ordinary such as
"benefit"
"permissive" "calculated" as well as "engram".

    Students 1 was personally examining would begin to get a hunted look and
carry dictionaries-BUT THEY WOULDN'T BEGIN TO NATTER OR GET  SICK  OR  BLOW.
AND THEY'D USE WHAT THEY LEARNED.

    Above all, 1 myself would be sure I knew what the words meant  before  1
started to examine.

    Dealing with new technology and the necessity to have things  named,  we
especially need to be alert.

    Before you curse our terms, remember that a lack of  terms  to  describe
phenomena can be twice as incomprehensible as having involved terms that  at
least can be understood eventually.

    We do awfully well, really, better than any other science or subject. We
lack a dictionary but we can remedy that.

    But to continue with how one should examine, when the  student  had  the
words, I'd demand the music. What tune do these words play?

    I'd say "All right, what  use  is  this  bulletin  (or  tape)  to  you?"
Questions like, "Now this rule here about not letting pes  cat  candy  while
being audited, how come  there'd  be  such  a  rule?"  And  if  the  student
couldn't imagine why, I'd go back to the words just ahead of that  rule  and
find the one he hadn't grasped.

    I'd ask "What are the commands of SCV'. And when the student gave  them,
I'd still have the task of satisfying myself  that  the  student  understood
why those were the commands. I'd ask "How come?" after  he'd  given  me  the
commands. Or "What are you going to do with these?" "Audit a pc  with  them"
he might say. I'd say, "Well, why these commands?"

    But if the student wasn't up to the point of study where knowing why  he
used those commands was not part of his materials, 1 wouldn't ask.  For  all
the data about not examining above level applies  very  severely  to  Theory
Cheek out as well as to Practical and general Instruction.

    I might also have a Clay Table beside my examiner's desk (and  certainly
would have if 1 were an HCO  hat  checker,  to  which  all  this  data  also
applies) and use it to have students show me they knew the words and ideas.

    Theory often says "Well, they take care of all that in Practical." Oh no
they don't. When you have a Theory Section  that  believes  that,  Practical
can't function at all.

    Practical goes through the simple motions. Theory covers  why  one  goes
through the motions.

    1 don't think 1 have to beat this to death for you.

    You've got it.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.cden Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Modified by HCO PIL 4 October 1964 (reissued 21 May 1967), Theory Check-
out Data, page 181.1

                              180

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 OCTOBER 1964
Remimeo     Reissued on 21 May 1967
All Staff
All Students
Tech Hats
Qual Hats   THEORY CHECK-OUT DATA
      (Modifies HCO Pol Ltr of Sept 24, '64)

    In checking out technical materials on students or staff,  it  has  been
found that the new system as per HCO Pol Ltr of Sept 24, '64 is too  lengthy
if the whole bulletin is covered.

    Therefore the system given in Sept 24,'64 Pol Ltr is to be used as
    follows:

1 . Do not use the old method of covering each bit combined with the new
method.

2.    Use only the new method.

3.    Spot check the words and materials, do not try to cover it all.  This
    is done the same way a final examination is given  in  schools:  only  a
    part of the material is covered by examination,  assuming  that  if  the
    student has this right the student knows all of it.

4.    Flunk on comm lag in attempts to answer. If the student "er  ....  ah
    .... well. .. " flunk it as it certainly isn't known well enough to use.
    (Doesn't include stammerers.)

5.    Never keep on examining a bulletin after a student has missed.

6.    Consider all materials star rated or not rated. Skip 75%'s. In  other
    words, the check-out must have been 100% right answers for a  pass.  75%
    is not a pass. When you consider a bulletin or tape too unimportant  for
    a 100% pass, just require evidence that  it  has  been  read  and  don't
    examine it at all. In other words, on those you check out, require  100%
    and on less important material don't examine, merely require evidence of
    having read.

                       THE "BRIGHT" ONES

    You will find that often you have very glib students you won't  be  able
to find any fault in who yet won't be able to apply or  use  the  data  they
are passing. This student is discussed as the "bright student" in  the  Sept
24, '64 Pol Ltr.

    Demonstration is the key here. The moment you ask this type  of  student
to demonstrate a rule or theory with his hands or the paper  clips  on  your
desk this glibness will shatter.

    The reason for this is that in memorizing words or  ideas,  the  student
can still hold the position that it has nothing to do with him  or  her.  It
is a total  circuit  action.  Therefore,  very  glib.  The  moment  you  say
"Demonstrate- that word or idea  or  principle,  the  student  has  to  have
something to do with it. And shatters.

    One student passed "Itsa" in theory with flying colours every time  even
on cross-cheek type questions, yet had never been known to listen. When  the
theory instructor said, "Demonstrate what a student  would  have  to  do  to
pass Itsa," the whole subject blew up. "There's too many  ways  to  do  Itsa
auditing!" the student said. Yet on the bulletin it  merely  said  "Listen".
That given as a glib answer was all right. But  "demonstration"  brought  to
light that this student hadn't a clue about listening to a pc. If he had  to
demonstrate it, the non-participation of the student in the material he  was
studying came to light.

    Don't get the idea that Demonstra tion is a Practical  Section.  action.
Practical gives the drills. These demonstrations in Theory aren't drills.

    Clay Table isn~t used to any extent  by  a  Theory  Examiner.  Hands,  a
diagram, paper clips, these are usually quite enough!

181

                       COACHING IN THEORY

    There is Theory Coaching as well as Practical Coaching.

    Coaching Theory means getting a student to define all  the  words,  give
all the rules, demonstrate things in the bulletin with his hands or bits  of
things, and also may include doing Clay  Table  Definitions  of  Scientology
terms.

    That's all Theory  Coaching.  It  compares  to  coaching  on  drills  in
Practical. But it is done on Bulletins, tapes and policy letters  which  are
to be examined in the future. Coaching is not examining.  The  examiner  who
coaches instead of examining will stall the progress of the whole class.

    The usual Supervisor action would be to have any student who  is  having
any trouble or is slow or glib team up with another  student  of  comparable
difficulties and have them turn about with each other with Theory  Coaching,
similar to Practical coaching in drills.

    Then when they have a bulletin, tape or policy letter coached, they have
a check-out. The check-out is a spot check-out as above, a  few  definitions
or rules and some demonstration of them.

                          DICTIONARIES

    Dictionaries should be available to students in  Theory  and  should  be
used in  Theory  Examination  as  well,  preferably  the  same  publication.
Dictionaries don't always agree with each other.

    No Supervisor should try to define English language words out of his own
head when correcting a student  as  it  leads  to  too  many  arguments.  On
English words, open a dictionary.

    A Scientology dictionary is available.

    Remember that with Courses becoming briefer in duration, the  number  of
bulletins and tapes which the student must know on  a  Star-Rated  basis  is
also less.

    General written examination for classification, however, remains  on  an
85% pass basis.

    Be sure that students who get low marks constantly are also handled  in
Review, preferably by definitions of words they haven't understood in  some
former subject. Scientology is never the cause of  consistent  dullness  or
glibness.

    Processing of this nature can be on an Itsa basis. It does not have  to
be Clay Table. Just finding the prior subject by discussion and  discussing
its words usually blows the  condition.  I've  seen  it  change  the  whole
attitude of a person in just 5 or 10 minutes of auditing on a  "locate  the
subject and word" basis.

    Therefore, definitions exist at Levels 0 and I, but not with Clay  Table
or assessment, only by Itsa. You'd be surprised how well it  works  and  how
fast. "Subjects .you didn't like",  "words  you  haven't  grasped"  are  the
discussion question.

    The subject of "wrong definitions cause stupidity or circuits,  followed
by overts and motivators", is not easy  to  get  across  because  it  is  so
general amongst Mankind. There is a possibility that past  lives  themselves
are wiped out by changing language, whether it is  the  same  language  that
changes through the years or shifting nationality. But however that may  be,
don't be discouraged at the  difficulties  you  may  have  in  getting  this
principle understood and used in Scientology departments-the person you
are trying to convince has definitions out somewhere also!
LRH:jwjp.rd
Copyright @ 1967 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard      Founder
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

182

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 FEBRUARY 1965
Sthil instructors
Sthil Students
                       COURSE CHECK OUTS
                         TWIN-CHECKING

    Hereafter the existing theory coaching policy of 1964 will be  amplified
as follows~

    Students, being formed into coaudit teams, turnabout, will also do their
theory check outs in pairs.

    An Instructor, in doing a theory check out will have both students, that
are listed as Coauditors in the Auditing  Assignment  Sheet,  appear  before
him when either one requires a check  out  and  will  then  check  out  both
students on the same bulletin.

    The Instructor will ask the students alternately his  questions  and  if
either student flunks, both flunk the  test.  This  system  is  called  Twin
Checking.

    It is extremely important  that  the  flunk  be  given  quickly  by  the
Instructor after a short comm lag on the student's part. No coaxing  by  the
Instructor is permitted. Reason? If the  Instructor  lets  one  of  the  two
students flounder about, the other student will try to prompt  and,  at  the
very least, the other student is put on a withhold  of  the  data  his  twin
cannot answer and he can. Therefore the system will prove unworkable if  the
flunk is not given quickly after the er-ah-hm of one  student  indicates  he
doesn't know.

    On being flunked, the students should then retire to their places in the
classroom and coach each other, as covered in  1964  Policy  Letters,  until
they feel they can pass,

    They will be examined from just above the point of  the  flunk  if  done
within a week. However, in case  the  team  has  been  split  up,  all  such
partial pass notes on the materials of both expire. This is easy  to  detect
without any admin overload, as both their mimeos will have the  Instructor's
initials at the same spot with the same date. When dates don't  compare,  it
is a matter for single examination.

    Single student exam in theory takes place whenever one  student  already
has a pass (as from a former period or team) and the other doesn't.

    However, single passing done because the student's twin is sick  or  has
blown will work the evil of paying a student to ARC break  in  auditing  his
slower twin so as to get single passing  going  rather  than  be  forced  to
coach or audit  the  other  to  make  the  slower  one  quicker.  Therefore,
students whose mate has blown or has become ill just aren't single  checked.
Checkouts on Theory await the return of  the  other.  Also  one  mustn't  be
quick to re-assign a broken up coaudit team.  And  one  changes  teams  only
when the student goes up to the next unit when it would be a good  thing  to
re-shuffle anyway.

    Single student examination cannot be done when only one  student  has  a
partial pass and the other doesn't.

    In making partial passes, the Instructor always marks both the students'
mimeos. And in starting from  a  point  again,  checks  both  the  students'
materials to see if the partial pass  dates  and  initials  agree.  If  they
don't, he dismisses one of the students  back  to  study  and  examines  the
other and gives both a pink sheet for making the error.

    The Twin Checking system presupposes students coaudit in pairs.

    Practical coaching  should  never  be  by  the  pair  who  are  assigned
coauditors. Otherwise the check out system is the same as for theory.

    Practical check outs will also be done in pairs and Twin Checking  used.
This  means  practical  coaching  teams  must  remain  stably  assigned   as
different from auditing
assignments.
LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright 0 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

               HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 MARCH AD 15
Remimeo     (Reissued on 13 September 1967)
Academies Students
Saint Hill Courses
Tech Sec's Hat
Qual Sec's Hat
Dir of Exams' Hat
Student Examiner's Hat
Dir of Review Hat
Cramming Officer's Hat TRAINING DEPT - DIV IV
Supervisor's Hat DEPT OF EXAMS - DIV V

             All student examiners are to be star checked on this.

FURTHER MATERIAL ON STUDY - EXAMINATIONS

    Progress in study can be inhibited through the usage of a poor system of
examination. By asking of questions irrelevant to the material  covered  and
by failing to ensure that  the  student  is  fully  aware  of  exactly  what
question is flunked, the student can be  given  sufficient  losses  to  slow
down his rate of learning and to cause ARC breaks.

    A misunderstanding comes about in the first instance purely on the basis
that the student understood  that  he  was  studying  a  given  subject.  An
irrelevant question asked by an examiner indicates to the student that  such
an understanding was false  or  that  no  basic  agreement  existed  on  the
subject in the first place. An example of this would be to ask a student  of
a French  language  course  to  give  the  main  historic  dates  and  their
significance to Eighteenth Century France. The  original  understanding  was
that the student was learning to speak and read French,  not  to  learn  the
history of France.

    In Scientology an example of an irrelevant question would be to ask  the
student to give the distribution of a bulletin.  The  understanding  of  the
student  is  that  he  is  there  to  learn  Scientology,  its  theory   and
application, not to learn  the  internal  administration  of  organizational
communication lines. A further example would be to ask a Level 11 student  a
question concerning data and material covered in Level IV.

    Frequently enough a Supervisor has to cope with a student who  has  come
into Scientology to study the law of Karma or to  study  sociology  or  some
other previous mis~conception without adding to the difficulties  by  asking
irrelevant questions. Knowing what we now know about  study  we  can  handle
earlier misconceptions, but a Supervisor must never  ask  a  question  of  a
student which is irrelevant to the subject or level. We  must  ourselves  be
careful not to add to student confusion. Therefore, any Supervisor  tendency
to ask irrelevant questions must be firmly restrained.

    In the second instance of the unknown question, a student can be given a
verbal question on which he is flunked. In most cases the student  will  not
be able to remember the question asked as he would not have  flunked  it  in
the first case if he had not  already  failed  to  understand  the  material
covered by the question.  Failure  to  remember  the  question  asked  or  a
Supervisor's refusal to give him the question asked reacts upon the  student
as an  unanswered  question,  and  therefore  an  uncompleted  communication
cycle, but also as an unknown question. The student will ARC break. You  can
easily demonstrate this by mumbling a question which is not clear enough  to
be understood and then insist upon an answer. You will soon  enough  have  a
very upset person on your hands.

    This is what happens when a student is asked a  question,  flunked,  and
then not given to clearly understand the question asked. Therefore  Ron  now
requires that any examiner must always write  down  verbal  questions  asked
before asking them,  and  when  a  student  flunks,  hand  him  the  written
question which he flunked. The student will then be able  to  know  what  he
didn't know and be able to look up the material and

                               184

clear up what it was that he had not understood. Further, this  will  enable
him to complete the communication cycle.

    If tape examinations  are  addressed  to  a  class  as  a  whole,  these
questions must  be  posted  and  the  examination  papers  returned  to  the
student. The student can then see what  it  was  that  he  missed  and  what
question was missed.

    Many people have had experience of  such  poor  systems  of  examination
which failed to follow the above. It is common practice in universities  not
only not to give students the questions asked,  but  also  never  to  return
examination papers. Most frequently all the university student is  given  is
a grade. If that grade is not 100%, then the student  never  knows  what  it
was he didn't know and so can not look it up to know it. This leaves him  in
the uncertain condition  of  insecurity  about  his  data  on  a  particular
subject. And if the student flunks the subject and has  to  re-take  it,  he
cannot comfortably study the subject because the whole of  the  subject  has
now become a complete mystery to him. Thus, the subject is set up as an  ARC
Break.

    Universities probably do this to be sure that their examinations do  not
get out to students, but then one can only state that this  is  laziness  or
lack of ability on the part of professors to think of  different  questions,
or perhaps even a professor's own  lack  of  understanding  of  his  subject
sufficient to enable him to be able to think of enough questions to ask.  It
also could be that there is a complete lack of worthwhile material  in  more
primitive subjects than Scientology on which  to  ask  questions,  in  which
case it should never have been part of  the  curriculum.  (Freudians  mainly
examine  on  the  dates  of  Freud's  papers  for  their  qualification   of
psychiatrists!)

    The administration of a proper system of examination is quite simple:-

I .   Tape examinations or examination  questions  given  verbally  to  the
    class as a whole must be written down before being  asked  and  Must  be
    posted on a bulletin board afterwards and all examination papers must be
    returned to the students.

2.    Verbal questions asked of individual students must be noted down in a
    book like an invoice book with tear-out sheets and  a  piece  of  carbon
    paper. Such books are easily procured from stationers as they  are  used
    in most stores. The student is given the yellow copy  of  the  questions
    with the flunked question plainly marked. The white copy  is  placed  in
    the examiner's folder for the bulletin, tape or material.

    In this fashion we will be able to collect good questions to  be  asked;
to notice fundamental areas of mis-understanding individual  students  have;
and  to  note  any  areas  of  mis-understanding  which  are  broadly   mis-
understood. We can, therefore, see where the individual student  needs  help
and see where it is necessary to elaborate more fully, on certain  technical
data in order to make it more broadly comprehensible.

    Supervisors and examiners doing this will then be  contributing  to  the
more rapid progress of individual students and to students in general.

    The same principles apply to the Department of Examinations and any
    other
student examinations given.

      Mary Sue Hubbard
LRH:ml.jp.rd     The Guardian WW
Copyright @ 1965, 1967 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

(Note: In the original 1965 issue, the last two  lines  given  here  were  a
footnote added by LRH and read "HCO BOARD OF  REVIEW.  The  same  principles
apply to HOO Board of Review Examinations and examiners."
This 1967 issue changed "Instructor" to "Supervisor" throughout.]

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 APRIL AD 15

Rernimeo
Sthil Students
Franchise

THE "HIDDEN DATA LINE'

    Some students have believed there was a "hidden data line"  of  tech  in
Scientology, a line on which Scientology tech was given out by  me  but  not
made known to students.

    This started me looking. For there is no such line.

    I wondered if it was a "missed withhold of nothing". There can be one of
these, you know. There is nothing there, yet the auditor  tries  to  get  it
and the pc ARC Breaks. This is "cleaning a clean" with an E-Meter.

    One pc I cleaned up very nicely had been harassed for  years  about  "an
incident that happened when she was five". A lot  of  people  had  tried  to
"get it". The pe was in a pitiful  condition.  I  found  there  was  nothing
there. No incident at all! The meter read came from the charge  on  previous
auditing. I think probably she must have sneezed or her  finger  slipped  on
the cans when first asked about "an incident when you were five".

    An auditor who "sees a read" when there is no  charge  makes  a  "missed
withhold of nothing".

    This is the other side of the ARC Break-the  gone  something,  the  non-
existence of something. No food. No money. These things ARC Break people.

    So it is with a "missed withhold of nothing".

    Take Johannesburg. Some years ago the field there was upset by 3  rabble
rousers who alleged all manner of r
                     ,Jd things about the Scientology org there.  They  held
wild field meetings and all that. uth was these  three  people  had  done  a
vicious thing and screamed to high heaven when I sought to query them.

    They made a "missed withhold of nothing" in  the  field  in  that  area!
There was exactly nothing wrong with Scientology  there  or  us.  There  was
something wrong with those three people. They had  been  stealing  from  the
org.

    The field kept looking for what was wrong with the org  or  us.  Nothing
was. So it couldn't be cleaned up because there was nothing to clean.  There
were three thieves who had run off with org property and  defied  orders  to
give it back. How this made something wrong with us is quite a puzzle.  They
are still "cleaning up this ARC  Break"  in  Johannesburg!  For  it  is  not
cleanable, not being there to be  cleaned!  Unless  you  realize  there  was
nothing there at all! It's a missed withhold of nothing. The basic  org  and
staff and we at Saint Hill were just doing our jobs in ordinary routine!

    Governments looking for evil in Scientology orgs will go mad  (I  trust)
as they are seeking a non-existent thing. They are easily  defeated  because
their statements are so crazy even their own legal systems  can't  help  but
see it. So it's easily won.

    The only person who goes mad on a missed  withhold  of  nothing  is  the
person who thinks there is something there that isn't.

    So it is with the "hidden data line" students sometimes feel must exist
    on courses.

    There is no line.

    But in this case there is an apparency of a line.

    When instructors or seniors give out alter-ised  technology  or  unusual
solutions, the student feels they must have some  inside  track,  some  data
line the student doesn't have.

    The student looks for it and starts alter-ising in his  turn  pretending
to have it when they become instructors.

                               186

    It's a missed withhold of nothing.

    The whole of technology is released in  HCO  Bulletins  and  HCO  Policy
Letters and tapes I do and release.

    I don't tell people anything in some private way, not even instructors.

    For instance, all the instructors I taught to handle R6 we taught by  my
lecturing or writing bulletins for them. Every one of these  tapes  is  used
to teach GPM data and handling to students on the Saint Hill Course.

    Any new data I have given on it has been given to all these people.

    The instructor then knows only to the degree he has studied and used the
very same HCOBs and HCO Pol Ltrs and tapes the student is now using.

    There is no "hidden data line". To believe there is makes an ARC Break.

    The apparency is somebody's pretence to know from me more than is on the
tapes and  in  books  and  mimeos,  or,  brutally,  somebody's  alter-is  of
materials. This looks like a "hidden data line". It surely isn't.

    All the lower level materials are in the HCOBs, Pol Ltrs or on tapes.

    All the GPM materials released are here waiting for the student when  he
reaches that level.

    One could say there was one if one was way off the main data  line.  But
it sure isn't hidden. It's on courses and in orgs.

    I laughed one time at the top flight US Government White House entrusted
psychologist. He looked over some startling IQ changes, said  such  a  thing
would revolutionize psychology overnight if known and added "no  wonder  you
keep your technology secret!"

    That is very funny when you look at how hard you and I work to  make  it
known to all!

    The data line isn't hidden. It's there for anyone to have. There's  lots
of it is possibly a source of trouble in  releasing  it.  But  it's  all  on
courses in Academies or Saint Hill. You could have. a copy of everything  in
the tape library if you wanted. It might cost a lot, but you could have it.

    There is no hidden data line.

    There's a lot of data I haven't had time to write down and put on a line
for sheer press of time. But I work hard to do it.

    But even my closest staff and communicators  when  it  hears  of  a  new
process or plan from me verbally, sees it in an HCOB or HCO Pol  Ltr  a  few
days later.

    Don't for heaven's sake mistake alter-is by somebody as evidence of a
    hidden line.

    In Scientology we say "If it isn't written it isn't true". That  applies
to orders. Somebody says "Ron said to . . ." and  on  a  veteran  staff  you
hear the rejoinder "Let's see it". I've had raw meat walk into  an  org  and
say "Ron said I was to have 25 hours of auditing". And in the raw meat  days
of orgs, they sometimes were given it. So we have learned the  hard  way-"If
it isn't written it wasn't said".

    And that applies to anybody's orders, not just mine.

    And on tech and policy, it's equally true. If it isn't in an HCOB or  an
HCO Pol Ltr or recorded on a tape in my voice, it isn't tech or policy.

    Next time you hear a pretended order or a squirrel process attributed to
me, say "If it isn't written or recorded it isn't true".

    And watch how tech results soar then in that area.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright (Z) 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

187

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Remimeo     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 APRIL AD 15
Sthil Students   Issue 11
Franchise
Former Sthil Grads     TECH & Q UAL DIVISION POLICY
Tech Sec HAT
. of T HAT  DRILLS, ALLOWED
. of Exam HAT    (Dir of Exams must check out this Pol Ltr
. of Review HAT  on the above Hats and put on their Status
      Check Sheet for Directors)

    The only allowed Practical drills on any Scientology Course including PE
    are:

        1.  Modified Comm Course for PE.

        2.  Original Comm Course TRs 0-4.

        3.  Original Upper Indoc TRs.

        4.  E-Meter Drills contained in Book of E-Meter Drills.

        5.  Dissemination Drills when I write and release them.

    NO other practical drills of any kind will be permitted.

    Other  Practical  Drills  are  abolished.  Reasons:  They  consume  time
uselessly, suppress actual processes and mess up data and cases. I  did  not
develop or authorize these drills and have now seen that they  teach  alter-
is of easy processes. They are not needed. They make poor auditors.  I  have
just reviewed this  matter  thoroughly  and  have  traced  several  training
failures to these Wild cat Drills. Further, I traced  several  failed  cases
on course to them.

    Somewhere along the line somebody went mad inventing "drills" and "TRs".

    If this is permitted to continue, we will no longer turn out good
    auditors.

    The standard drills as listed above have proven sufficient for years.

                       LEGAL CHECK SHEETS

    A check sheet is only legal if approved by the Office of  LRH  Technical
Section Saint Hill.

                       CHECK SHEET POLICY

    A check sheet may not be changed once it is placed in a student's  hands
for that course.

    It may be changed before being handed to the  next  student  who  enters
that course but not changed on who has it.

    The certificate  and  Classification  are  based  on  the  materials  in
existence at the time the certificate was studied for and granted,

    If a student was never classed, a student must now  be  classed  on  the
lower classifications before obtaining a higher one.

    To get over knotty classification exam problems where a student is being
classed for a class higher than studied for after training  at  that  higher
level, a Summary Classification Exam may be given  covering  the  essentials
of auditing as they have existed  for  many  years.  If  passed,  all  lower
classes are granted.

    However a student not holding non-honorary classification on entering
    Saint Hill

188

must study for his lower  classes  as  they  currently  exist  before  being
trained at an upper level. The reason for this is entirely  sensible-such  a
student would fail at the higher level if studied at once and only  it  were
studied. We don't want him to fail.

    Grade Certificates obtained in Org HGCs are now honoured at Saint  Hill.
In cases which have pined poorly, however, I exercise the right to have  run
very low level (sub zero) processes that get the  case  moving  well  before
returning to upper grades. This again is sensible.

    The adjustment of cases and classes is temporary and comes from settling
down new materials into place. Saint Hill is always considerably  ahead,  in
tech and when all lower levels are released in full and have been  practised
and taught in orgs for a year or two, Saint Hill  will  no  longer  have  to
"cope" in order to get maximum auditor skill from training or  maximum  case
gain in pes. After all, we started making Saint Hill auditors for orgs  only
a few years ago!

    Taking unlawful items off a student's check sheet is not illegal.

    To mark out legal check outs on a check sheet (cross them off) when  not
actually checked out is illegal.

    Running a "course"  with  no  check  sheet  is  illegal.  A  Scientology
Courseis defined as "Progress through a check sheet".

    Checking out any materials on anyone without giving a  preserved  credit
for eventual check sheet is illegal.

                        HAT CHECK SHEETS

    Anyone HAT checked or bulletin or Pol Ltr checked on a staff MUST now be
given credit for anything checked out on them.

    While STATUS CHECK SHEETS are still in process of formation and org data
and hat materials is still being released for orgs,  a  record  of  anything
checked out on a staff member must be kept.

    There will be several of these STATUS CHECK SHEETS. They have numbers.

    While the material is still being issued, the org hat checker must  have
a file with staff members' names in it and must record on a sheet  of  paper
for that staff member each HCO Bulletin, Policy Letter or tape  checked  out
on that staff member.

    Later when the STATUS CHECK SHEETS are released, the already checked out
items on that staff member's rough  sheet  are  to  be  transferred  to  the
proper STATUS CHECK SHEET and sets of these new check  sheets  will  replace
the original rough check sheet in the same file. "Status" is  covered  in  a
HCO Pol Ltr of similar data, "PERSONNEL".

    Still later there will be actual hat BOOKS for  each  Division  and  the
materials required for "status" will be in them. Until then we  will  use  a
rough system. The same material with perhaps some number changes will be  in
the HAT BOOKS.

    The policy is: NO staff member in ANY org may be HAT CHECKED without its
being recorded on a rough sheet in a staff member file and credited to  that
staff member!

                           NO REPORT

    An illegible auditor's report is classed as a no-report and an illegible
case folder is classed as a "no case folder".

LRHJw.rd    L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (B 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

189

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 MAY 1965
                                  Issue 11

Gen Non Remimeo
Tech See Hat

SUPERVISORS

    The title Instructor is changed herewith to Supervisor.

    "Instructor" is a MISNOMER in Scientology. They don't  instruct  anyone.
They actually  should  only  supervise  the  student  to  make  sure  he  is
instructed by HCO Bs, tapes and books, and be sure he does his drills.

    The use of "instructor" gives a tendency to alter-is tech which alter-is
of tech is now the only thing that can prevent case gains.

    An "Instructor" who thinks he is Instructing will be able to handle only
about 115  the  number  of  students  he  could  handle  if  he  supervised.
Therefore it will cost you valuable personnel to use the  term  "Instructor"
or let training personnel even get the idea they are instructing.

    Supervisors just call rolls and make sure the proper  operation  of  the
course takes place and that the students are orderly and on  schedule.  They
even make better auditors out of the students than instructors would.

    At Saint Hill we have for many years had Theory  Supervisors,  Practical
Supervisors, etc. The title Course Supervisor has  been  the  title  of  the
Saint Hill Special Briefing Course head since it began.

    Therefore all instructors or Chief Instructors in the world are promoted
to Supervisors, Theory Supervisors and Practical Supervisors.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.kd Copyright (D 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Amended by HCO P/L 27 October 1970 Issue II, The Course Supervisor, in the
1970 Year Book.]

190

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 MAY 1965
Remirneo    TECH DIV
      QUAL DIV
      URGENT
      CCHs
                    (Cancels HCO Pol Ltr 15 May 62)

    The CCHs are PROCESSES. They are not drills.

    HCO Pol Ltr of 15 May 1962 (replacing 2 Nov 61 HCO Pol Ltr) was  written
by staff. It is CANCELLED. Processes are  not  drills.  Nobody  may  convert
hereafter a process to a drill.

    The Upper Indoc TRs are the drills that teach the CCHs.

    The CCHs are then run on pcs.

    S-C-S processes may not be drills.

    Processes are done on pcs.

    Drills are done by students to accustom them to the actions that will be
necessary in doing processes.

    Upper Indoc contains TRs 5 to 9. These are done as  the  ONLY  practical
actions leading to the student being able to run the  processes  called  the
CCHs.

    To use a PROCESS as a DRILL leaves it unflat on students and is  one  of
the many reasons why auditing has been taken out of Academies,

    During the past few years, unbeknownst to me, a whole sphere  of  action
built up which made students drill processes. I  swear,  there  has  been  a
"practical drill" made out of half the processes we have.

    These were all abolished as DRILLS in HCO Pol Ltr 16 April AD 15.

    Drills are just actions the student has to become familiar  with  before
doing processes. The actual process is NEVER used as a drill. Because it  is
left unflat. A drill takes the action the auditor  will  use  when  doing  a
process and gets him familiar with it.
That's all.
LRH:mh.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

               HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 AUGUST 1965
Gen Non-Rernitneo      Issue III
      DELETION OF TR 5

    As TR 5 is a process, it is to be dropped as a part  of  the  TRs.  This
Policy Letter cancels any reference to TR 5 in any former Policy Letter.

    The Comm Course TRs are TRs 0 - 4. The Upper Indoc TRs are TRs 6 - 9.

    Delete TR 5 from any Check Sheet.

LRH:ml.rd
Copyright Q 1965       L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
      191

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 AUGUST 1965

Sthil Foundation
      Students

    SCIENTOLOGY TRAINING
       TWIN CHECKOUTS

                    (Excerpts from HCO Policy Letters of
                    4 October 1964 and 24 September 1964
                                 rewritten)

    In Scientology training we use a  system  called  TWIN  CHECKOUTS.  Each
student is assigned a "twin" to work with. The student studies his  assigned
material and is sometimes coached over the rough spots  by  his  twin.  When
the student knows the material, he is then given a checkout by his twin.  If
he flunks, he returns to study and when ready gets a new checkout.  When  he
passes, the twin signs the assignment sheet certifying that he  has  grasped
it. The assignment sheet is turned in to the Course Supervisor  at  the  end
of the period.

                        BAD STUDY HABITS

    Earlier forms of education suffer because of a habit. The habit  is  all
one's years of formal schooling where this  mistake  is  the  whole  way  of
life.

    If the student knows the words, the teacher assumes he knows the tune.

    It will never do a student any good at  all  to  know  some  facts.  The
student is expected only to use facts.

    It is so easy to confront thought and so hard to  confront  action  that
the teacher often complacently lets the student mouth words and  ideas  that
mean nothing to the student.

    ALL THEORY CHECKOUTS MUST CONSULT THE STUDENT'S UNDERSTANDING.

    If they don't, they're useless and will upset the student eventually.

    Course difficulties stem entirely from the  students'  non-comprehension
of words and data.

    While this can be cured by auditing, why audit it all the time when  you
can prevent it in the first place by adequate theory checkout?

    There are two phenomena here.

                       FIRST PHENOMENON

    When a student misses understanding a word, the section right after that
word is a blank in his memory. You can always trace back to  the  word  just
before the blank, get it understood and find miraculously  that  the  former
blank area is not now blank in the text. The above is pure magic.

                      SECONDPHENOMENON

    The second  phenomenon  occurs  after  the  student  has  gone  by  many
misunderstood words. He begins to dislike the subject  being  studied,  more
and more. This is followed by various mental and physical conditions and  by
various  complaints,   fault-finding   and   look-what-you-did-to-me.   This
justifies a departure, a blow, from the subject being studied.

    But the system of education, frowning on blows as it  does,  causes  the
student to really withdraw self from the  study  subject  (whatever  he  was
studying) and set up in its place a circuit which can receive and give  back
sentences and phrases.

    We now have "the quick student who somehow never applies what he
    learns".

    The specific phenomena then is that a student can study some  words  and
give them back and yet be no participant to the action. The student gets  A+
on exams but can't apply the data.

192

    Demonstration is the key here. The moment you ask this type  of  student
to demonstrate a rule or theory with his hands or the paper  clips  on  your
desk this glibness will shatter.

    The reason for this is that in memorizing words or  ideas,  the  student
can still hold the position that it has nothing to do with him  or  her.  It
is a total  circuit  action.  Therefore,  very  glib.  The  moment  you  say
"Demonstrate" that word or idea  or  principle,  the  student  has  to  have
something to do with it. And shatters.

    The  thoroughly  dull  student  is  just  stuck  in  the  non-comprehend
blankness following some misunderstood word.

    The "very bright" student who yet can't use the data isn't there at all.
He has long since ceased to confront the subject matter or the subject.

    The cure for either of these conditions of "bright non-comprehension" or
"dull" is to find the missing word.

    But these conditions can be prevented by  not  letting  the  student  go
beyond the missed word without grasping its meaning. And that  is  the  duty
of the twin.

                      COACHING IN THEORY

    Coaching Theory means getting a student to define all  the  words,  give
all the rules, demonstrate things in the text with  his  hands  or  bits  of
things, and also may include doing Definitions of Scientology terms.

    The usual Course Supervisor action would be to have any student  who  is
having any trouble or is slow or glib team up  with  a  twin  of  comparable
difficulties and have them turn about with each other with Theory Coaching.

    Then when they have a text assignment coached, they give  their  twin  a
checkout. The checkout is a spot checkout, a few definitions  or  rules  and
some demonstration of them.

                        DEMONSTRATION

    Giving a text assignment  check  by  seeing  if  it  can  be  quoted  or
paraphrased proves exactly  nothing.  This  will  not  giiarantee  that  the
student knows the data or can use or apply it nor even guarantees  that  the
student is there. Neither the "bright" student nor the "dull" student  (both
suffering from the same malady) will benefit from such an examination.

    So examining by seeing if somebody "knows" the text  and  can  quote  or
paraphrase it is completely false and must not be done.

    Correct examination is done only by making the person being tested
    answer

    (a)     The meanings of the words (re-defining the words used in his own
        words and demonstrating their use in his own made up sentences), and

    (b)     Demonstrating how the data is used.

    The twin can ask what the words mean. And the twin can ask for  examples
of action or application.

    "What is the first paragraph?" is about as dull as one can get. "What
    are the rules
      given about      ?" is a question I would never bother to ask.
Neither of these tell
the twin whether he has the bright non-applier or the dull student before
him. Such
questions just beg for natter and course blows.

    I would go over the first paragraph of any material I  was  examining  a
student on and pick out some uncommon words. I'd ask the student  to  define
each and demonstrate its use in a made  up  sentence  and  flunk  the  first
"Well .... er .... let me see. . . ." and that would  be  the  end  of  that
checkout. I wouldn't pick out only Scientologese. I'd pick  out  words  that
weren't too ordinary such as "benefit" "permissive" "calculated" as well  as
"engram".

    Students I was personally examining would begin to get a hunted look and
carry dictionaries-BUT THEY WOULDN'T BEGIN TO NATTER OR GET  SICK  OR  BLOW.
AND THEY'D USE WHAT THEY LEARNED.

193

    Above all, I myself would be sure I knew what the words meant  before  I
started to examine.

    Dealing with new technology and the necessity to have things  named,  we
especially need to be alert.

    Before you curse our terms, remember that a lack of  terms  to  describe
phenomena can be twice as incomprehensible as having involved terms that  at
least can be understood eventually.

    We do awfully well, really, better than any other science or subject. We
lack a dictionary but we can remedy that.

    But to continue with how one should examine, when the  student  had  the
words, I'd demand the music. What tune do these words play?

    I'd say "All right, what use is this text assignment to you?"  Questions
like, "Now this rule here about  not  letting  pcs  eat  candy  while  being
audited, how come there'd be such a  rule?"  And  if  the  student  couldn't
imagine why, I'd go back to the words just ahead of that rule and  find  the
one he hadn't grasped.

    I'd ask "What are the 3 parts of the ARC triangle?" And when the student
gave them, I'd still have the task of satisfying  myself  that  the  student
understood why those were the 3 parts. I'd ask "How come?" after he'd  given
them to me. Or "What are you going to do with these?"

    But if the student wasn't up to the point of study where knowing why  he
used the ARC triangle was not part of his materials,  I  wouldn't  ask.  For
all the data about not  examining  above  level  applies  very  severely  to
Theory Checkout as well as to Practical and general Instruction.

    I might also have a stack of paper clips and rubber bands and  use  them
to have students show me they knew the words and ideas.

    Theory often says "Well, they take care of all that in Practical." Oh no
they don't. When you have a Theory Section  that  believes  that,  Practical
can't function at all.

    Practical goes through the simple motions. Theory covers  why  one  goes
through the motions.

    I don't think I have to beat this to death for you.

    You've got it.

                          DICTIONARIES

    Dictionaries should be available to students in  Theory  and  should  be
used  in  Twin  Checkouts  as  well,  preferably   the   same   publication.
Dictionaries don't always agree with each other.

    No Twin should try to define English language words out of his own  head
when correcting a student as it leads to  too  many  arguments.  On  English
words, open a dictionary.

    A Scientology dictionary will be available in a few months from the date
of this bulletin as one is being rushed into publication.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

194

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 SEPTEMBER 1965
                                   Issue V

Rernimeo
Tech Div
Sthil Students

E-METER DRILLS

    Having the data that Out-technology is the result of a  lack  of  study,
drill and familiarity, it is imperative that meter drills be done well.

    As it is the Academy's purpose to train auditors, students must  do  the
required meter drills for each level and must not resort to  the  use  of  a
pen to represent the needle of an E-Meter.

    Irrespective of whether a student is or is not a Release, th ese  drills
must be done. If a student should have a coach  whose  needle  only  floats,
that student should request of the Supervisor another coach.

    The state of Release can always be rehabilitated, so the Academy  should
not be overly concerned with the protection of Releases. Studying  the  mind
and spirit of Man may be restimulative, but it is the only way  through  and
out.

    A real  Roller  Coaster  of  processing  results  is  never  because  of
restimulation  caused  by  training,  it  is  always  the  sole  result   of
association with a Suppressive Person.

    Don't back off in the training of auditors. Only a well trained  auditor
will eventually make it all the way to Clear.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.kd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

195

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 15 DECEMBER 1965

Remimeo Academy Students other than St Hill

         Tech Division-Qual Division

STUDENTS GUIDE TO ACCEPTABLE BEHAVIOUR

GENERAL

 I .  Adhere completely to the Code of a Scientologist for the duration of
    the course and behave in a manner becoming to a Scientologist at all
    times.

 2.   Get sufficient food and sleep. Always eat breakfast before class and
    morning sessions.

 3.   When being a preclear, be one, not a student or auditor.  When  being
    an auditor, be an Auditor, not a student or preclear. When in class  and
    lectures, be a student not an auditor or a preclear.

 4.   Get off all your known  withholds.  Know  definitely  that  you  have
    absolutely no hope for case  advancement  unless  you  get  these  known
    withholds off to your auditor. Any violation of rules must  be  reported
    by the auditor on the auditing report for the preclear so that they  are
    no  longer  withholds  from  L.  Ron  Hubbard,  Mary  Sue   Hubbard   or
    Supervisors.

 S.   If you don't know something or are confused about course data, ask  a
    Supervisor or send a despatch. Do not ask other students as this creates
    progressively worsening errors in data. Also dispatches from you  to  L.
    Ron Hubbard will be relayed if you place all such in the  basket  marked
    "Students Out".

 6.   Students may only use the coin box telephone during non class
 periods.

 7.   You must get the permission of the Office of L. Ron Hubbard to  leave
    course before you are allowed to leave. You won't be released  if  there
    is any doubt that  you  are  inadequate  technically  or  your  case  is
    considered in poor condition. Give an advanced warning as  to  when  you
    are leaving.

A VDITING

 8.   Do not consume any alcoholic beverage between 6 a.m. on Sundays and
    after class on Fridays.

 9.   Do not consume or have administered to yourself or any other  student
    any  drug,  antibiotics,  aspirin,  barbiturates,  opiates,   sedatives,
    hypnotics or medical stimulants for the duration of the  course  without
    the approval of the D of T.

10.   Do not give any processing to anyone under any circumstances without
    direct permission of the D of T. (Emergency assists excepted.)

11.   Do not receive any processing from anyone under any circumstances
    without the express permission of the D of T.

12.   Do not engage in any "self-processing" under any circumstances during
    the course at any time.

13.   Do not receive any treatment, guidance, or help from  anyone  in  the
    healing arts, i.e. physician, dentist, etc, without the consent of the D
    of T/Ethics Officer. (Emergency  treatment  when  the  D  of  T  is  not
    available is excepted.)

14.   Do not engage in any rite, ceremony, practice, exercise,  meditation,
    diet,  food  therapy  or  any  similar  occult,   mystical,   religious,
    naturopathic, homeopathic, chiropractic treatment or any  other  healing
    or mental therapy while on course without the express permission of  the
    D of T/Ethics Officer.

196

15.   Do not discuss  your  case,  your  Auditor,  your  Supervisors,  your
    classmates, L. Ron Hubbard, HCO WW personnel or HCO WW with anyone. Save
    your unkind or critical thoughts for your processing sessions or take up
    complaints with any supervisor.

16.   Do not engage in any sexual relationships of any nature or kind or
    get emotionally involved with any classmate who is not your legal
    spouse.

17.   Follow the Auditor's Code during all sessions when being the Auditor.

18.   Follow technical procedure as outlined on the course exactly and
precisely.

19.   Be honest at all times on your auditing report forms.  Stating  every
    process run, Tone Arm changes and times, sensitivity setting, cognitions
    of your preclear and any  changes  of  physical  appearance,  reactions,
    communication level, or otherwise what you observe in your preclear.

20.   Place all reports in the folder of your preclear after each session,
    turn into the Examiner for classification.

21.   Students must not read their own report folder or that of another
    student, unless he is auditing that student.

PREMISES

22.   Do not make any undue noise either indoors, or when leaving class.

23.   Use the correct entrances for entering and leaving the premises.

QUARTERS

24.   Do not put cigarettes out in plastic waste baskets or on the floors.

25.   Keep all your bulletins, supplies and personal possessions in the
    space allotted to you and keep your space neat and orderly.

26.   Students are allowed to smoke during breaks only and always outside
    any study or auditing quarters.

27.    The  basket  marked  "Student  In"   is   the   basket   where   all
    communications, bulletins or mail to students are placed.  Always  check
    this basket daily to see if you have received any communications.

28.   Report and turn in any damaged property or goods used on the Course.
    Protect and keep the premises in good condition.

29.   No food may be stored or eaten in the Classrooms at any time.

SCHEDULES

30.   Be on time for class and all assignments.

31.   Buy any books you need from the invoice clerk at appointed times.

32.   Follow all schedules exactly.

33.   Study and work during your class periods and over weekends. You  have
    a lot to get checked out on in order to get  a  course  completion.  You
    can't afford to waste time.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:emp.cden Copyright (g) 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

197

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Remimeo     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 OCTOBER 1966
Tech Hats   Issue IV
Qual Hats
Students    EYAMINATIONS

    A student must not discuss  any  examination  with  anyone  outside  the
Qualifications Division. To give examination information to  other  students
in order to assist them shows a misguided understanding of help.  A  student
should pass an examination on the basis that he does know and can apply  the
data, not on the basis that he knows and can pass the examination.  Only  by
being able to know and apply the data  can  a  student  be  an  accomplished
auditor at any Level.

    Therefore, students are not to discuss examinations with other  students
for whatever reason.
    Further, students who fail examinations or any question thereon are  not
to discuss such failure or reasons for  such  with  anyone  other  than  the
personnel of the Qualifications Division. This regulation includes not  only
other students, but Course Supervisors. Data as to examination  failures  is
supplied from the Qualifications Division to the Technical Division,  and  a
student, not  knowing  the  data  sufficiently  well,  can  cause  Dev-T  by
reporting false data to a Course Supervisor as to why  the  examination  was
failed.
    Any student who  feels  that  he  has  been  incorrectly  failed  on  an
examination can report the matter to Ethics. This is  the  proper  line  for
any complaint the student may have concerning an examination, if such  still
seems incorrect after taking it up with the
Qualifications Division.
LRH:rd
Copyright @ 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor,1 East Grinstead, Sussex

St Hill Only     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 DECEMBER 1966

All Staff

 Day and Fdn ROUTING AND HANDLING OF SHSBC, DIANETIC,
       SOLO V1 AND ACADEMY STUDENTS

    Any student on the Foundation  SHSBC,  Dianetic,  Solo  VI  and  Academy
Courses is first and foremost a student during the  Foundation  hours.  This
rule is true regardless of what other activities  they  undertake  on  their
own time.

                      ORDERS AND ROUTING

    Any orders or routings given to a student by another section of the  Org
which will interfere with course hours must be done via the  Tech  Director,
Training Officer and the Course Supervisor of  the  student  concerned.  The
sole intention of the latter is to prevent students from  disappearing  from
course into the HGC,  Review,  or  anywhere  else,  without  the  supervisor
having directly sent the student.
                                      Haskell Cooke      Org Sec F
                                      Frank Freedman     D/Qual F
                                      Julia Galpin D/HCO F
                                      Julia Galpin AC F
                                      Julia Galpin~      LRH Comm F
                                      Otto Roos    Ad Council SH
                                      Ken Delderfield    LRH Comm SH
                                      Pam Pearcy   Ad Council WW
                                      Philip Quirino     LRH Comm WW
                                      Sheena Fairchild   Guardian Comm WW
      Mary Sue Hubbard
LRH:jp.rd   The Guardian
Copyright@ 1966  for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

198

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 SEPTEMBER 1967

Remirneo
Academies
SHSBC

           STUDY

COMPLEXITY AND CONFRONTING

    In some researches I have been doing recently on the field of  study,  I
have found what appears to be the basic law on complexity.

    It is:

        THE DEGREE OF COMPLEXITY IS PROPORTIONAL TO THE DEGREE OF NON
        CONFRONT.

    Reversing this:

        THE DEGREE OF SIMPLICITY IS PROPORTIONAL TO THE DEGREE OF CONFRONT

                               and

        THE BASIS OF ABERRATION IS A NON-CONFRONT.

    To the degree that a being cannot confront lie enters substitutes which,
accumulating, bring about a complexity.

    I found this while examining the subject of NAVIGATION in order to teach
it and clarify it.

    I found  that  Man  had  based  the  subject  on  an  incorrect  primary
assumption. All subjects have as their basis a point  of  first  assumption.
In Man's technology this is usually weak and  non-factual  which  makes  his
technology very frail and limited. To reform a subject one has to find  this
primary assumption and improve it. This reforming of technical  subjects  is
of great interest to us because our subject  Scientology  is  advanced  even
beyond the space travel technologies of very high civilizations. Yet  it  is
flanked on all sides by Man's corny  antique  technology  in  the  field  of
physics, chemistry, "mathematics" and so on. This  tends  to  hold  us  back
somewhat. We strained his tech forward to get the E-Meter, the one thing  we
had to have.

    In Navigation, man bases the whole subject on the  assumption  that  one
can't confront where he came from or is going or where he is. It assumes  he
is lost,

    This is a basis assumption of non-confront. He can't directly see  where
he has been or where he is going at sea-it is so large-so he takes off  from
a point of no-confront in all his reasoning in the subject.

    Therefore he goes into a series of  symbols  and  begins  to  substitute
symbols for symbols. This winds him up in a mass of complexity.  One  spends
907o of his time in studying this subject trying to find  out  what  symbols
the symbols are meant to represent. He says in his texts "G.H.A." On  search
we find this means "Greenwich Hour Angle". On further search  we  find  this
means what angle some heavenly body  forms  when  related  to  Greenwich  as
Zero. On further search we find the idiocy that the navigator's clock  tells
angles in HOURS when all he needs is a clock face giving 360  degrees.  This
is of course complete nonsense. Why hours,  and  two  sets  of  12  at  that
(midnight to Noon and Noon to midnight) when what he is trying to  find  out
is how many degrees of time has passed.  He  refers  his  time  to  the  Sun
which, because of the rotations of earth  every  24  hours,  appears  at  an
increasing number of degrees from Greenwich England as the day advances.

    Because he starts from a no-confront of ship or plane position  he  then
carries no-confront through the whole subject. If a man  isn't  lost  as  he
begins to "navigate" he very often is when he finishes'

    Actually no ship or plane is ever lost as to position. One knows he is
    on Earth and

                               199

in what ocean and on what side of what ocean and the subject  really  should
be one which merely lets one CORRECT his position a bit.

    Man in  this  subject  of  navigation  even  scorns  direct  observation
(confront) and calls it "jackass navigation!"

    In actual  fact  real  navigation  is  the  science  of  recognition  of
positions and objects  and  estimation  of  relative  distances  and  angles
between them.

    The subject is made complex because it has become, in Man's  hands,  the
substitution of symbols for symbols all based  on  the  assumption  that  he
can't confront his departure, his current spot or his point of arrival.

    Out of this, with further study  in  other  fields,  I  found  that  any
complexity stemmed from an initial point of non-confront.

    This is why looking at or recognizing the source  of  an  aberration  in
processing "blows" it, makes it vanish.

    Mental mass accumulates in a vast complexity solely  because  one  would
not confront something. To take apart a problem requires only  to  establish
what one could not or would not confront.

    The basic thing man can't or won't confront is evil.

    These people who always rationalize  evil  behavior-"He  wasn't  feeling
well which is why he murdered the policeman", etc., can  be  counted  on  to
voice  some  theetie-weetie  (goodie-goodie)  justification  for  somebody's
thoroughly evil conduct. Mr. X wrecks a house and you remark on it and  Miss
Theetie Weetie will feel compelled to say, "Oh, Mr. X had a  poor  childhood
and he didn't mean any wrong . . . ." She  can't  confront  the  simple  but
evil fact that Mr. X is a complete dog. One feels  his  hair  stand  on  end
when Miss Theetie Weetie does this because one is observing a complete  non-
confront on the part of Miss Theetie Weetie. She is too unreal to  do  other
than make one feel he has had an ARC Break.

    One will also find that Miss Theetie Weetie  leads  a  horribly  complex
life-adjusting her thinking to agree with  "air  spirits"  and  leaving  her
family because there might be mice in the basement.

    When no-confront enters, a chain may be set  up  which  leads  to  total
complexity and total unreality.

    This, in a very complex form we call an "aberrated condition".

    People like that can't solve even rudimentary problems  and  act  in  an
aimless and confused way.

    To resolve their troubles requires more than education or discipline. It
requires processing.

    Some people are so "complex" that their full aberration does  fully  not
resolve until they attain a high level of OT.

    A large number of people de-aberrate just by the education contained  in
Scientology as they find in our subject the natural laws of life and  seeing
(confronting)  them,  "blow"  huge   holes   in   their   complexities   and
aberrations.

    Therefore the above laws are very important ones as  they  explain  what
aberration really is and why processing really works.

    Aberration is a chain of vias based on a primary non-confront.

    Processing is a series of methods arranged on an increasingly deep scale
of bringing  the  preclear  to  confront  the  no-confront  sources  of  his
aberrations and leading them to a simple, powerful, effective being.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:'jp.rd Copyright @ 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

200

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 OCTOBER 1967
            Issue VII
Remimeo
                                   ACADEMY
                                   ETHICS

ACADEMY CHECKSHEETS

SUPERVISOR CONDITIONS

    Academy cheek sheets should be designed to be covered in  one  week  for
Theory and one week for Practical for each level 0 to IV.

    If a student is more than 2 weeks on one of these Theory or one of these
Practical Courses then the Supervisor for that level, theory  or  practical,
is placed in Non Existence Condition.

    The secret in getting students through  is  keeping  Ethics  in  in  the
Academy. Time lost because the student is sent to Ethics or  Review  is  not
counted and is added to the 2 weeks allowed.

    The rest of the secret is to spot a slow  student  at  once  and  get  a
CORRECT Remedy A and Remedy B done on him,  in  Remedy  B  listing  for  and
finding the correct  troublesome  PT  subject  and  then  listing  that  for
similar past subjects being careful not to restrict  the  past  question  to
this life as it is almost always an earlier life. In Remedy  B  getting  the
correct item off each of the 2 lists  (the  PT  list  and  Past  list)  will
always dig any non-SP student out. In doing  Remedy  A  one  lists  for  the
misunderstood word and gets the correct one.

    A Supervisor can chit a Review Auditor for job  endangerment  if  Review
fails to straighten up the student or accumulates a backlog.

    Seniors who fail to assign non-existence to such  a  Supervisor  are  in
turn up the line so assigned.

    Academics tend to slow or stop students with SHSBC cheek lists or unreal
or altered training and so bar out  Scientologists.  We  don't  expect  that
much from Academy grads.

    On the Dianctics Course it should be 1 month of training. If  a  student
is in that course  more  than  2  months  the  Supervisor  goes  into  lion-
existence as above.

    In Evening Courses, one month for theory and  one  month  for  practical
should be the design. If a student  is  on  more  than  2  months  then  the
Supervisor goes into Non Existence.

    Supervisors so assigned non-existence get out  of  it  by  applying  the
formula and are upgraded when they have done so to Danger  until  they  have
applied that formula and so on back to Normal Operation or above.

    The Int Tech Officer WW is responsible for the shortness and adequacy of
these check sheets. Many have been done in the  past  and  there  is  little
tabour involved in
reissuing them.
LRH:jp.rd
Copyright & 1967 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard      Founder
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

201

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MARCH 1968

Remimeo

CHECKSHEETS

    ALL CHECKSHEETS FOR DIANETIC COURSES, ACADEMY COURSES, SHSBC AND
INTERNES MUST BE ORIGINATED AND PASSED ON BY WW BEFORE USE AND MUST BE
STANDARD WW TO COMPILE, ORIGINATE AND REGULATE ALL CHECK-SHEETS UP TO VII.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:jc.kd Copyright (D 1968 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 OCTOBER 1968

Remimeo
All staff
All students

COURSE COMPLETION
STUDENT INDICATORS

    When a student has finished a course, he should want the next course in
training. If not, out Tech or out Ethics or both. Just as a PC's good
indicators should be in wanting next level of auditing, so should a
student's good indicators be in wanting next level of training. If this is
not the case something missed by the supervisor or student or both the
supervisor and the student.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:nf.ei.rd Copyright @ 1968 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

202

I

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OF
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Su

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 OCTOBE
Remimeo
Supe"isors
D of Ts
Supervisor Hat   SUPERVISOR KNOW-HOW
Sy.e,rvisor
      cksheet    Running the Class

    To be an effective Supervisor one must know that there is Standard  Tech
and therefore that there is Standard Supervision,

    Tech is contained ONLY in HCOBs, tapes and books written and  issued  by
LRH. So is Standard Supervision.

    The Supervisor'sjob consists of

1.    Noting that the class members are present on time.

2.    Calling roll.

3.    Introduction of new students or those returning from the Examiner.

4.    R. Factor for new comers.

5.    Handling queries and/or questions regarding the course and its
running.

6.    Ensuring that space and equipment are available.

7.    Seeing that Tech Services personnel provide top service and no sloppy
    "help yourself to what ever you want".

8.    Seeing that breaks are started and completed promptly with Rollcall.

9.    Area must be neat and tidy at all times. Uniform chairs and tables
    used and squared away, excess student gear stowed elsewhere.

10.   A library containing all the books and pabs should be available
    should the bookstore run out of literature.

11,   Students do not arrive or leave on their own accord.

12.   They are not to interrupt each other at work and all questions should
    be directed to the Supervisor who will refer them to the material  which
    contains the information required.

13.   NEVER NEVER allow anyone to walk in and interrupt or address any
    student on course.

14.   The Supervisor is there and there on time.

 15.   The schedule runs exactly on time, never varying.

    As Supervisor it is your responsibility to  eradicate  any  barriers  or
hindrances  presented  which  distract  the  student  from  studying.   This
includes extra curricular
activities.
      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:ew.ei.rd     Founder
Copyright @ 1968
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               203

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 OCTOBER 1968
Rernimeo    Issue II
Supemisors
D of T's
Supervisor's Hat
Supervisor's Checksheet

                     SUPERVISOR KNOW-HOW

                        Handling the Student

    To be an on-the-ball Supervisor, one should be oneself fully trained  on
the level one is supervising. It is by far preferable to  be  a  Class  VIII
with a full grasp of Standard Tech.

    As Tech once whittled away across the planet and finally went  so  badly
out it had to be urgently rescued,  it  follows  that  out-supervision  must
have pioneered the route of out-tech. So it's no light  matter  not  knowing
one's business as  a  Supervisor  and  the  consequences  of  mis-  or  non-
application of study data.

    These must be known. As the student is a student, it  follows  there  is
some willingness to learn. This must be validated and  encouraged  including
by unmentioned wins as in TR 4.

    As he or she is there to study attention must be channeled and  kept  on
that vector and any side  tracks  knocked  out  and  eradicated  during  the
period set aside for study.

    Any difficulties arising (and there will be  in  the  course  of  study)
refer the student to materials just ahead. Locate, indicate and get  defined
the misunderstood.

    Handle any student having trouble with study by:

(a)   Getting hold of the material he is studying.
(b) Getting hold of the material he was studying. (0) Finding what  he  says
he has trouble with.
(d) Take up the area or material PRIOR to it and find what is  bugging  him.
(e) Remedy A and B handles this also.
(f)   Do not send a student to review unless he says he wants a review-then
    send him to the examiner.
(g)    If  the  student  doesn't  apply  this  data   on   dope   off   and
    misunderstoods, then a pink sheet on the HCOBs will  handle  that.  Clay
    Table Training HCOB 11. 10.67 is most beneficial when applied exactly.

    It sometimes appears that you have a different or difficult  student  on
your course.

    The same rules apply. Standard Tech is applicable and works on all
    cases.

    What you are doing and using is straightening their heads out. So  don't
desist. Keep at it until the guy gets the idea, does it himself  and  starts
cleaning up misunderstoods in the standard manner.

    He'll do it on his own and then on others.

L. RON HUBBARD Founder LRH:ew.ldm.rw.rd Copyright (D 1968 by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               204

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 OCTOBER 1968
                                  Issue III

Remirneo
Supervisors
D of Ts
Supervisor Hat
Supervisor Checksheet

SUPERVISOR KNOW-HOW

   R Factor to Students

    When a student has enrolled his last stop is at the supervisor's desk.

    An R Factor as follows should be made:

    Welcome the student to the course and tell him the name and level.  Give
him the time it starts and ends with break periods.

    Any business is to be conducted out of study hours and no random  breaks
are allowed.

    Inform him of the rules, setting up of chairs  and  tables,  where  clay
demo  table  is,  notice  board,  master   checksheet   and   additions   or
subtractions, points system and checkout system and how it operates.

    THEN send him off to tech services to get his materials; when he returns
say "Start".

    This action immediately establishes 8C for the student and he now  knows
who is in charge.

    All his queries and questions are to be referred to the  supervisor,  as
he must know it is the supervisor's job to refer students to where data  may
be found in the materials.

    It is not anybody's job and certainly not another student's
    responsibility to do so.

    Students are introduced at the beginning or end of a study period, not
    during.

    Students returning from the examiner are announced-the only  break.  The
response is inevitably enthusiastic and the  students  get  busily  back  to
work after such a success.

    Those from cramming or who have flunked are returned unannounced,

    On Friday nights the last half hour is  spent  on  graduation  when  top
students and those  who  have  certified  or  classified  or  graduated  are
announced. The graduate is usually allowed to address  the  group  and  this
would consist of the knowledge obtained from Scientology, what  a  wonderful
group of people to work with the group was, what next course or  study  will
be done, etc.

    End off with asking how they did. You might even  be  surprised  at  the
result of implementing a safe, stable  study  environment,  well  controlled
and done with Standard Supervision.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:Idm.rw.rd    Founder
Copyright (D 1968
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               205

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 OCTOBER 1968
                                  Issue IV

Remimeo
Supmisors
D of T's
Supmisor Hat
Supmisor Checksheet

SUPERVISOR KNOW-HOW

 Tips in Handling Students

    From time to time it will be  found  that  when  students  enroll  on  a
course, the question of misunderstoods  arises.  This  is  best  handled  by
getting the student to hunt up and define with the source of the  definition
(HCOB Date book name and page no.). This allows the  student  to  grasp  the
meaning of the words used in the study  of  Scientology.  Words  other  than
Scientology or Dianetic words are also clarified.

    A real stopper can be the words Scientology or  Dianetics.  Consult  the
student's understanding and not just accept what sounds  like  a  definition
of these two words.

      Simple points like "why is level 0 level 0?" can produce astonishing
resurgences in
study velocity.  I

    Using the questions "where were you  doing  well"  and  "where  did  you
notice you ceased doing well" zeroes in on the point or  word  or  principle
misunderstood and sometimes just the first question blows the lot.

    On many occasions it's the first word on the material or  the  title  of
the HCOB so even check these.

    Sometimes tracing back where or when the student heard of  Dianetics  or
Scientology blows the trouble.

    These points must be handled skillfully and rarely more than once on any
occasion. Take it lightly and let the student win.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
                                             Founder

LRH:ew.rw.rd Copyright @ 1968 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

206

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MAY 1969
                                   Issue I

Remimeo Supervisor's Course

HOW TO TEACH A COURSE

    Note: We learned these exact data the hard way over the years. An  empty
    class with no enrollees is traced always to violation of  these  points.
    People like it this way. It makes auditors. The moment you violate  this
    you have a clinic not a class and you wind up with no auditors trained.

    A Course should be taught very tough. The Supervisor's first premise  is
that a Student doesn't have a  case.  There  is  an  old  training  rule  in
Dianetics and Scientology-if a  mist  forms  on  a  mirror  held  up  to,the
student's mouth, he can carry on. Never  sympathise  with  a  student,  just
train him.

                        THREE VITAL DATA

    There  are  three  vital  data  which  make  the  difference  between  a
successful course and one which fails utterly. They are-

I . EXACT SCHEDULING.

2.    SUPERVISOR PRESENCE.

3.    SUPERVISOR REFUSAL TO ANSWER TECH QUESTIONS BUT ONLY REFERS THE
    STUDENT TO THE MATERIALS.

    Exact scheduling means just that. The course has a daily schedule, it
    is known to
each student, and it is adhered to exactly. The course commences e , ach
day and after
each break exactly on time, with a brisk, snappy rolicall. It is ended
exactly on time by
the Supervisor.

    The Supervisor must be present with the class at all times and ON  TIME.
Continuous inspection of what is going on, correction  by  referral  to  the
right bulletin, and just being  there  as  a  Supervisor  will  bring  about
trained students.

    The Supervisor should know the materials of the Course so well  that  he
can refer students quickly and easily to the relevant material,  when  asked
questions. When a student asks a question about a TR, this is answered  only
by reading the TR to the student from the Bulletin.

                     MISUNDERSTOOD WORDS

    Misunderstood words MUST be handled. HCO Policy Letter 26  August  1965,
HCO Bulletin of March 10, 1965 and the Study Tapes give  the  phenomena  and
its handling.

                                             Tony Dunleavy

LRH:TD:an.ei.rd  CS-2 Training Aide
Copyright Oc 1969      for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Amended by HCO P/L 27 October 1970 Issue 11, The Course Supervisor, in the
1970 Year Book.]

                              207

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MAY 1969
                                  Issue III

Remimeo Dianetic Supervisor's Course

ENTURBULATIVE STUDENTS

    The Supervisor on a  course  should  not  try  to  handle  enturbulative
students on a course. The vast majority of students are  willing,  eager  to
learn and just get on with it. Normal student difficulties  in  a  well  run
course are easily handled by misunderstood word technology.

    Send any enturbulative student either to Review (the Qual Examiner)  for
correction (but only if he says he wants a review) or to the Ethics  Officer
for ethics action. Note-the  policy  on  Ethics  handling  of  students  and
gradient of Ethics will be on the checksheet.

    They should be returned to you when properly straightened up.

    Failure to do this will invariably cause a complete disruption  of  your
course and you to fail as a Supervisor. Don't neglect it. Get them  off  the
course fast. Not to do so is to penalize the good students  without  helping
the enturbulative ones either. Omission of this  action  betrays  the  whole
class.

                                             Tony Dunleavy CS 2 - Training
                                             Aide for L. RON HUBBARD
                                             Founder

LRH:td.cs.an.ei.kd Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

208

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 MAY 1969

Remimeo
Dn Checksheet

COURSE ADMINISTRATION

    Usually,  particularly  with  a  large  class-more  than  18-the  Course
Supervisor should have a COURSE ADMINISTRATOR.

    The Course Administrator's purpose is TO HELP THE COURSE SUPERVISOR KEEP
ALL BODIES CORRECTLY ARRANGED PLACED  OR  ROUTED  AND  TO  KEEP  ALL  COURSE
MATERIALS FOLDERS  RECORDS  CHECKSHEETS  INVOICES  AND  DESPATCHES  HANDLED,
FILLED OUT AND PROPERLY FILED.

    The essence, whether we have an Administrator or not is to:

    Have adequate materials, packs, books and checksheets.

    Issue what is needed promptly.

    Demand what must be filled in promptly.

    File precisely.

    Keep the course comm lines (In and Out baskets) flowing.

    Don't tolerate lack of materials, books,  forms  or  make  the  students
"make do" with less than needed.

    Safeguard don't lose and keep neatly available all materials records and
admin items.

    The Invoice system of a course is an item that has to be kept in. If  in
an org you don't find it in, you force it in.

    The Course Supervisor receives a  copy  of  the  invoice  enrolling  the
student. This is the student's "pass" to enter the course. It means  he  has
paid and financial arrangements are finalized.

    Without this you don't let the applicant on the course.

    This saves several things and prevents heavy upsets.  You  can  actually
teach a whole course and then find suddenly it  wasn't  economical  for  the
org as the Registrative end of it which is not in  the  Course  Supervisor's
view, fell down and no money or little money was taken in.

    A student who isn't properly enrolled is a freeloader and has a withhold
that prevents gain. Also, you will find  that  those  who  don't  contribute
don't value the course and you get eriturbulation.

    The Course Supervisor works  hard,  he  suddenly  finds  he  can't  have
materials or facilities or promotion because it isn't  "economical".  If  he
has his invoices he KNOWS how  much  is  being  made  and  can  demand  some
portion of it to keep his course going or to get help for it.

    The Course Supervisor can and should reject an N/C (No  charge)  Invoice
or a "courtesy" invoice.

    If he gets an award invoice he must insist that the awarding org pay for
it even to himself.

    The "withhold from salary" invoices are often not deducted in  fact  and
by keeping track of these, the Course Supervisor can demand  evidence  these
sums have been paid in.

    Training makes the most profitable income of the org as it requires  the
least expenditure. An org can almost go  broke  doing  only  auditing.  It's
training  that  makes  income  for  use.  Auditing  absorbs  the  income  in
overhead. Yet training gets the  least  facilities  and  supplies  and  help
while being the most important income producer.

                               209

    Money made in training students must also cover supplies,  study  packs,
books, sufficient  help,  quarters,  uniforms  for  Course  personnel,  etc.
Course income should result in heavy expenditure on course promotion.

    This is the way Dianetics and Scientology will spread-through training.

    A tightly scheduled, smartly run course is always full.  It  goes  empty
the moment it goes slack. This is a startling fact. People detest (by  years
of experience in orgs) a sloppy, permissive, badly  disciplined  Course  run
with inadequate materials and supplies.

    You can say with certainty loud and clear that an empty course has  been
badly scheduled, the Supervisor not on deck on time, materials lacking.  The
moment these points get IN, the course fills up.

    Excellent, neat admin is all part of a well run  course.  Things  filed,
marked up, issued smoothly and promptly. Students routed quickly, gotten  in
action.

                      NOTHING BACKLOGGED

    That is the motto of a good course. Handle everything that comes up  NOW
and completely. Any backlog is death to smooth administration.

    Be precise and definite, don't fumble around.

    Absent students, late students, enturbulative  students,  you  turn  the
matter over to Ethics at once. If Ethics doesn't handle right now,  hit  the
Exec Council with "Where's Ethics?" You can't run a course and  be  the  E/O
of the org also!

    All this applies even to a Gung Ho group.

    Running a course is a GROUP action performed with at least a rudimentary
org pattern backing it up.

    A list of the current  course  materials  papers  and  files  should  be
furnished every Course Supervisor.

LRH:cs.an.ei.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1969 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 JULY 1969

(Cancels HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 JAN 1969)

Remimeo

FAST FLOW TRAINING

    Although Academy and Briefing Courses are taught on a fast flow basis
with no examinations, students must apply HCO P/L 26 Aug 65, "SCIENTOLOGY
TRAINING TWIN CHECKOUTS" on all star-rated materials of their level.

                                             W/O Ira Chaleff
LRH:IC:nt.ei.cden.rd   Chief Officer AO INT
Copyright (D 1969      for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Note: HCO PIL 28 January 1969 referred to above is in Volume 5, page 94.
HCO P/L 22 July 1969 has itself since been cancelled by HCO PIL 29 July
1972 Issue II, Fast Flow in Training, in the 1972 Year Book.]

                              210

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 JULY 1969
Rernimeo
Dian Course
All Courses WHAT IS A CHECKSHEET

    The "Cheeksheet" is a Scientology development in the field of study.

    A CHECKSHEET is a form which sets out the exact sequence of items to  be
studied or done by a student, in order, item by item, on a course. It  lists
ALL the materials of the course in order to be studied with a place for  the
student (or the person checking the student out in the case  of  a  Starrate
Checkout) to put his initial and the date as each item on the Checksheet  is
studied, performed or checked out.
    The Checksheet is the programme that the  student  follows  to  complete
that course.
    Every student is given a complete Checksheet at the start of  a  course.
It is not added to after he has started working on it. It is  in  its  final
form when it is handed to him.
    It may be added to for those who enroll later but is not added to during
the course.
    The data of the course are studied and its drills performed in the order
on the checksheet. The student does not "jump around" or study the  material
in some other order. The materials are set out  in  the  Checksheet  in  the
best order for study by the student so that he covers all  the  material  in
logical sequence.
    Further, following the exact order of the Checksheet has a  disciplinary
function which assists the student to study.
    The student's initial beside an item is an attestation that he knows  in
detail AND can apply the material contained in that bulletin, Policy  Letter
or tape, or that he has done and can do  that  drill.  The  initial  of  the
supervisor or another student against a Starrated item is an attestation  by
him that he has given the  student  a  Starrate  checkout  on  the  item  in
accordance with HCO Policy Letter of 14 May 1969  Issue  11  "How  to  do  a
Starrate Checkout" and that the student has passed.
    The Course Supervisor MUST inspect students' checksheets daily to ensure
that all students are following  the  Checksheet  in  its  correct  set  out
order, and that the student is making good progress through it.
    "Through a  Checksheet"  means  through  the  entire  checksheet-theory,
practical, all drills-and done in sequence.
    When a course consists  of  three  times  through  the  Checksheet,  the
student goes through three entire Checksheets once,  theory,  practical  and
all drills in sequence, completing that, and then goes  through  the  entire
next checksheet a second time, then goes through a third checksheet fully  a
third time. There is no difference in what is studied and how it is  studied
the second and third times  through-or  any  subsequent  times  through  the
Checksheet! It is done fully each  time-theory,  practical  and  all  drills
(including all study drills).

                          RETRAINING
    "Retraining" or "back to Course for retraining"  or  (per  step  [21  in
handling a student who fails to get a good result-HCOB 16 July 69, URGENT  -
IMPORTANT) "Send student back to training" means that the  student  is  sent
to Cramming to get straight exactly what is missed and then back  to  Course
and does THE ENTIRE COURSE AGAIN, three  times  through  the  cheeksheet  if
that is the course  (such  as  the  Dianetics  Course).  No  short  cuts  or
skimping is allowed on retraining, as a  student  who  fails  to  apply  one
aspect of the course had a misunderstood  which  would  have  prevented  him
from fully grasping and understanding the other material on  previous  times
through the Checksheet.  Also-NUMBER  OF  TIMES  OVER  THE  MATERIAL  EQUALS
CERTAINTY AND RESULTS (a major study datum which has been proven beyond  any
question in Dianetics and Scientology).
    It is illegal to run any Course on any subject without a checksheet in
    Dianetics
and Scientology.
            Ens. Tony Dunleavy
LRH:TD.Idm.ei.rd       Planning & Training Aide
Copyright @ 1969       for
by L. Ron Hubbard      211   L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          Founder

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 JULY 1969
                        (Cancels HCO P/L 24 May 1969
                               Progress Board)

Rernimeo
Dian Sup Crse
All Sup Crse
All Crse Sup &
Admin Hats

STUDENT PROGRESS BOARD

    Every Dianetics and Scientology Course must have a Student Progress
    Board.

    The purpose of the board  is  to  clearly  indicate  to  Supervisor  and
students the progress each student is making through the course, whether  he
or she is making expected progress and any students which  may  need  to  be
sent to Qual for correction such as Remedy B.

    The Board has a column for each major cycle of action of the course. For
the USDC this would be one for each time through theory and  practical,  one
for the pre-auditing exam, one for Auditing and  one  for  final  exam.  See
sample Student Progress Board below.

    Each student's name is written on a small card, stuck in the Board  with
a thumb tack, and moved along to the next column as the  student  progresses
through the course.

    If the student does not keep pace with expected completions, such as  he
falls a week behind, a red slash mark is put on his card. If  he  falls  two
weeks behind schedule a second slash mark is placed on his card.

    The Course  Administrator  keeps  the  Student  Progress  Board  and  is
responsible for its existence  and  condition.  The  Board  must  be  posted
conspicuously for all to see. THE BOARD MUST BE  KEPT  UP  TO  DATE  AT  ALL
TIMES.

    When a new student joins the course the Course Administrator immediately
writes the student's name on small card and pins it up in the first  column.
The Administrator moves the students' cards along as they  progress  through
the course and puts slashes on the cards  as  warranted.  The  Administrator
informs the Course Supervisor if the board is indicating a  student  is  not
making expected progress, but the Supervisor himself  must  also  frequently
check the Board and take any appropriate actions.

    Students undergoing retraining are on the Board with their  names  on  a
different coloured card, such as green for second time through  the  course,
blue for third time, red for fourth time, etc.

                         ADMIN BASKETS

    As a double check on student progress, a stack of eight baskets is used.
They are marked as follows: -

    I . One week.
    2.      Didn't complete materials in one week.
    3.      Two weeks.
    4.      Didn't complete materials in two weeks.
    5.      Three weeks.

212

                           STUDENT PROGRESS BOARD
                              (Name of Course)

     FIRST TIME  SECOND TIME      THIRD TIME EXAMS AND AUDITING

Theory      Practical  Theory     Practical  Theory      Practical  Pre-
Exam  AuditingFinal Exam

    6.      Didn't complete materials in three weeks.
    7.      Auditing and exams.
    8.      Didn't complete auditing or exam.

    Again students' names on cards are used, different colours for  retrain.
When a student has been on course for one  week,  the  Administrator  places
his card in the "one week" basket, or (if he didn't complete his  materials)
in the "Didn't complete materials in one week" basket.

    In the latter case, the student's card on  the  Progress  Board  is  red
slashed and the Supervisor notified so he can take appropriate action.

    The Course Administrator keeps these baskets always up to date.

                    RECORD OF SESSIONS GIVEN

    The Course folder Administrator  is  also  to  keep  a  posted  list  of
sessions given by students. Each session is graded Well  Done  or  Flunk  as
indicated by the Case Supervisor. The student too should keep this  form  as
a record which indicates he has complied with the auditing  requirements  of
the course.

    One sheet per auditor

STUDENT AUDITOR  DATE

                     AUDITING COMPLETIONS

DATE PCS AUDITED ALLOTTED    HRS  GAINS OR WELL DONE FLUNK
      SPACE AUDITED    MIRACLES

                                         Ens. Tony Dunleayy Planning and
                                         Training Aide for

LRH:TD:cs.ei.aap L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1969 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

214

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 NOVEMBER 1967
                     (Revised and Reissued 18 July 1970)

Student Hat
Remimeo

                                ALL STUDENTS
                                 ALL COURSES

OUT TECH

    If at any time a  supervisor  or  other  person  in  an  org  gives  you
interpretations of HCOBs, Policy Letters or tells you, "That's old. Read  it
but disregard it, that's just background data", or  gives  you  a  chit  for
following HCOBs or tapes or alters tech on you or personally  cancels  HCOBs
or Policy Letters without being able to show you an HCOB  or  Policy  Letter
that cancels it, YOU MUST REPORT THE MATTER  COMPLETE  WITH  NAMES  AND  ANY
WITNESSES ON DIRECT LINES TO THE INTERNATIONAL ETHICS OFFICER AT  WORLDWIDE.
IF THIS IS NOT IMMEDIATELY HANDLED, REPORT IN THE SAME WAY TO  YOUR  NEAREST
SEA ORG MAA.

    The only ways you can fail to get results on a pc are:

        1.  Not study your HCOBs and my books and tapes.

        2.  Not apply what you studied.

        3.  Follow "advice" contrary to what you find on HCOBs and Tapes.

        4.  Fail to obtain the HCOBs, books and tapes needed.

    There is no hidden data line.

    All of Dianetics and S~ientology works. Some of it works faster.

    The only real error auditors made over the years was to fail to  stop  a
process the moment they saw a floating needle.

    Recently the felony has been compounded by disclosure of the facts  that
data and tapes have been deleted from checksheets, data has been  "relegated
to background" and grades have  not  been  in  use  fully  to  complete  end
phenomena as per the Process column  on  the  Classification  and  Gradation
Chart. This caused an almost complete unMock of the subject and its  use.  I
am counting on you to see it is not allowed to happen EVER AGAIN.

    Any supervisor or executive who interprets, alters or  cancels  tech  is
liable to the assignment of a Condition of Enemy. All the data is  in  HCOBs
or Policy Letters or on tape.

    Failure to make this mimeo known to every student carries a S 10 fine
    for every
student from which it is withheld.

            L. RON HUBBARD
            Founder
LRH:sb.rd
Copyright@ 1967, 1970
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    [Note; The original issue appears in Volume 1, page
472.]

                               215

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 JULY 1970
      Issue III
Remimeo
All Orgs' ECs
Franchises
2nd Mate
Tech Sec    TECH RETREADS AND RETRAINING
Tech Trg I/C     (Amends HCO P/L 6 Dee '69 Issue V "Tech Retreads
Course Sup  and Retraining", which ordered a checksheet done three
      times through after a flubbed session or flunked exam)

    Retreading is different than retraining.

    RETREAD is brushing up one's study and knowledge and application of Tech
on the course one is re-doing. It is  a  commendable  action  on  one's  own
determinism.

    Any course already completed may be retreaded. The current checksheet of
that  course  is  done  once  through  starrates  starrated.  The  remaining
training requirements as given  in  HCO  Policy  Letter  of  10  July,  1970
"Training Requirements Eased" apply.

    RETRAINING is quite different in that where the student has  continually
flubbed sessions or Tech actions or flunked exams, it  is  assumed  he  does
not have a grasp of the data.

    The student is sent to or kept in the Department of Technical Correction
where the situations of the student's knowledge of and application  of  Tech
are established and the student is corrected with cramming and  auditing  as
necessary.

    It is then established whether or not the student is  retrained  on  the
checksheet just completed and any earlier checksheets  that  may  have  been
incompletely studied.

    A retrain is done in the Department of Training, Div IV,  for  Tech  Div
Courses or in the Staff Training Unit which is in  the  Staff  Training  and
Auditing  Section,  Department  of  Personnel  Enhancement,   Div   V,   for
Correction Div Courses.

    In retraining the student may be ordered to re-do the. full requirements
of the checksheets or the whole checksheet only  once  starrate  or  only  a
section of the checksheet  starrate,  depending  on  the  grossness  of  the
goofs.

    The Tech C/S, Tech Sec, D of T or any Course  Supervisor.  may  order  a
student directly to retrain on  the  checksheet  the  student  is  currently
studying if the student is found to be flubbing auditing or Tech actions.

    A Course Supervisor accepts a student for Retread or Retrain and ensures
that the student completes the checksheet in accordance with study data.

D/CS-5 for L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:JF:rr.rd Copyright@ 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

216

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 MARCH 1971

Course Super Cse Course Super Checksheets LRH,Comm to Enforce

WHAT IS A COURSE?

    In Scientology a course consists of a checksheet with  all  the  actions
and material listed on it and all the materials on the checksheet  available
in the same order.

    "Checksheet Material" means the policy letters, bulletins, tapes,  mimeo
issues, any reference book or any books mentioned.

    "Materials" also include clay, furniture, tape players, bulletin boards,
routing forms, supplies of pink  sheets,  roll  book,  student  files,  file
cabinets and any other items that will be needed.

    If you look this over carefully, it does not say, "materials  on  order"
or "except for those we haven't got" or "in different order". It means  what
it says exactly.

    If a student is to have auditing or word clearing rundowns  or  must  do
auditing those are under ACTIONS and appear on the checksheet.

    A course must have a supervisor. He may or may not  be  a  graduate  and
experienced practitioner of the course he is supervising but HE  MUST  BE  A
TRAINED COURSE SUPERVISOR.

      He is not expected to teach. He is expected to get the students
there, rolls called,
checkouts properly done, misunderstoods handled by finding what the student
doesn't
dig and getting the student to dig it. The supervisor who tells students
answers is a
waste of time , and a course destroyer as he enters out data into the scene
even if trained
and actually especially if trained in the subject. The Supervisor is NOT an
"instructor"
that's why he's called a "supervisor".

    A  Supervisor's  skill  is  in  spotting  dope-off,   glee   and   other
manifestations of misunderstoods, and getting it cleaned up, not in  knowing
the data so he can tell the student.

    A Supervisor should have an idea of what questions he will be asked  and
know where to direct the student for the answer.

    Student blows follow misunderstoods. A Supervisor who is  on  the  ball,
never has blows as he caught them before  they  happened  by  observing  the
student's misunderstanding before the student does and  getting  it  tracked
down by the student.

    It is the Supervisor's job to get the  student  through  the  checksheet
fully and swiftly with minimum lost time.

    The successful Supervisor is tough. He is not a kindly old  fumbler.  He
sets high point targets for each student for the day and  forces  it  to  be
met or else.

    The Supervisor is spending Supervisor Minutes. He has just  so  many  to
spend. He is spending student hours. He has just so many of these  to  spend
so he gets them spent wisely and saves any waste of them.

                               217

    A Supervisor in a course of any size has a Course Administrator who  has
very exact duties in keeping up Course Admin and  handing  out  and  getting
back materials and not losing any to damage or carelessness.

    If Paragraphs  One  to  Three  above  are  violated  it  is  the  Course
Administrator who is at fault. He must have  checksheets  and  the  matching
material in adequate quantity to serve the Course.  If  he  doesn't  he  has
telexes flying and mimeo sweating. The Course Admin is in charge of  routing
lines and proper send off and return of students to Cramming or Auditing  or
Ethics.

    The final and essential part of a course is students.

    If a course conforms with this P/L exactly with no quibbles,  is  tough,
precisely time scheduled and run hard, it will be a  full  expanding  course
and very successful. If it varies from this P/L it will stack up  bodies  in
the shop, get blows and incompetent graduates.

    The final valuable product of any course is graduates who can apply  the
material they studied successfully and be successful in the subject.

    This answers the question What is a Course? If any of these  points  are
opt it is NOT a Scientology Course and it will not be successful.

    Thus, the order "Put a Course there!" means this PIL infullforce.

    So here's the order, WHEN OFFERING TRAINING PUT A COURSE THERE.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:nt.rd Copyright@ 1971 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: The CONTENTS contain reference to a 26 January 1972 amendment of
this policy letter. This amendment was cancelled by LRH in HCO Policy
Letter of 16 March 1972 Issue V, What is a Course - High Crime,---asnot
written by myself and is a false daturn---. While the reference has been
left in the CONTENTS, the above text IS the original as written by LRH.

                               218

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1

copies to:  HASI POLICY LETTER OF 10 APRIL 1957
Executives
Treasurer
Bulletin Board
HCO Washington   STUDENT INTENSIVES

    A  student  intensive  and  8  weeks  of  training  (two  of  which  are
Indoctrination) are included in the course fee for HPA.

    This intensive on the student is done by a graduating HPA and serves  as
his final before full certification is granted.

    The Director of Training, not the Director of Processing, is responsible
for the fact of and the efficacy of this student intensive.

    Any further auditing desired by the student should be purchased from the
Registrar by the student possibly at  the  suggestion  of  the  Director  of
Processing or Indoctrination Instructor as indicated.

    These student intensives included in the course  are  not  done  by  the
processing department by paid staff auditors.

    The Treasurer has stated, on discovering that staff auditors were  being
used for this,  that  she  will  no  longer  pay  staff  auditors  for  such
intensives. When staff auditors are without pcs for the week they should  be
sent to CF and Procurement for full time procurement letters for the week.

LRH: rs.rd  L. RON HUBBARD

[Also issued as FCDC P/L 9 May 1957, same title.]

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 OCTOBER 1959

Convert to
Sec ED

PROCESSING OF ACADEMY STUDENTS

    Academy students may not receive outside auditing while enrolled in  the
Academy to the level of HPA or higher.

    Academy students  directed  by  the  Director  of  Training  to  receive
processing while enrolled under his instruction during  any  period  of  the
time while so enrolled, even when taking Academy training a few weeks  at  a
time, must receive their processing either in class from fellow students  or
from students under the direct supervision of Academy personnel or  from  an
HGC Auditor working only  for  the  WC.  Such  students  may  not  be  given
auditing off hours or on their own, time by staff auditors nor  instructors,
nor the Director of Training, but only as  an  assigned  and  duly  enrolled
intensive in the WC.

    The purpose of this Sec ED is to protect the student, the  Academy,  and
the HGC from various mishaps which  have  occurred  in  the  past  rendering
students liable to loss of training time because of  poor  and  unsupervised
auditing.

    Violation of this Sec ED  by  a  student  can  bringabout  at  the  most
dismissal from the Academy, and at the least a  delay  of  certification  of
one year, and for an instructor or other staff member for  auditing  such  a
student without proper registration, a loss of fifty percent  of  his  units
for six consecutive weeks.

LRH:js.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1959  Executive Director
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

219

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF IS NOVEMBER 1960
                            Re-issued from Sthil

STAFF CERTIFICATE REQUIREMENTS

    Any Staff Member who is not an HGC Auditor and who has case histories to
complete for certificate requirements, may do auditing in the HGC on a part-
time basis.

    If their results are good they may submit these to HCO Board of Review
as Case Histories.

    This eliminates the necessity of taking on an outside preclear for
certificate requirements.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:js.gh.rd Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 JANUARY 1962

Sthil

AUDITOR ASSIGNMENT

    It is course policy that students of comparable time length on course
shall audit one another and that students of incomparable time length shall
not.

    This permits progressive training skill to manifest and blunders to be
less apparent to the pc and more educational when made.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:sf.rd Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

(Note: For further data on the assignment of auditors see HCO B 22 July
1969 Auditing Speed.]

                              220

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 MAY 1965

Gen Non Rernimeo
D of T Hat

IMPORTANT EXPLANATION

AUDITING RESTRICTIONS

    The secret back of the No-Auditing Rule in  Academies  is  that  1  have
found the way to improve the average case quite well by study alone.

    In the Scale of Awareness Levels, it is AWARENESS  that  determines  the
level, NOT Conduct. Conduct is dramatization and above the awareness of  the
person.

    What can the person be aware of is the level determiner.

    Thus by study matched to levels (the scale up from -34) you can  improve
a case just by making the person study  the  materials  of  the  next  level
above where he is.

    Cases that don't so improve by study alone up to Grade IV would have  to
be processed and are too far down to be in an Academy anyway and  so  should
be processed up to Grade 0.

    The natterer and rumour monger is not up to RECOGNITION  as  he  or  she
hasn't a clue why we're here, much less what we're doing. They just  haven't
found the org or the auditor.  So  even  Academy  processing  won't  help-it
takes a pro.

    That's the riddle of why some students progress and some don't answered.

    Once a person has found the org and the auditor,  study  improves  cases
(level by level) more than Academy auditing would. Naturally HGC  or  Review
Auditing could do it easily by processing. But not student auditing student-
they are too aware the other one is a student, too  critical,  too  immersed
in the idea "it's all practice anyway," in Academy auditing.

    So if the student is quite batty (as per TA  tests)  he  won't  make  it
without expert pro auditing and if he isn't he will usually make  it  up  to
IV by study alone. So why audit in an Academy.

    Make future auditors instead.

    The Academy is no substitute for an HGC for processing. And the  HGC  is
no substitute for training. Get it?

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:wme.rd Copyright a 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

221

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 MAY AD IS
Remimeo
Academy Students
Sthil Students   URGENT
      TECHNICAL DIVISION
      DISTRIBUTION DIVISION
      FREE SCIENTOLOGY CENTRE

    Effective when ordered by the HCO Secretary in each  org,  depending  on
when the org is ready for it.

                    FREE SCIENTOLOGY CENTRE

    Organize a Free Scientology Centre in your Dept of Processing.  This  is
not the HGC. It is the student clinic. It  is  a  section  of  the  Dept  of
Processing.

    It is open evenings and weekends. It is run by students under org
    guidance.

    No fee may be charged.

    The org pays for and has  on  deck  evenings  and  week  ends  the  Free
Scientology Centre Registrar.

    A sign is plainly displayed where every Free Centre pc can see it.

                  THE FREE SCIENTOL OG Y CENTRE

    All auditing is done by student auditors.

    It is unsupervised.

    We only take responsibility for auditing done in our HGC by professional
auditors.

    The applicant for free auditing does so on his own responsibility.

    The results may be good but we cannot guarantee them. If you  want  safe
auditing or are a rough case, buy your auditing in the HGC.

    Place an ad in your local paper or display signs near your public  phone
box if papers won't take the ad:

                    FREE SCIENTOLOGY CENTRE

    Free services offered the Community for Problems,  increases  in  Health
and IQ and Scientology Assists. Conducted as a Free Public Service  by  (org
name). Call Free Scientology Centre Registrar (phone) or come  to  (address)
evenings or week ends only.

    The pilot project on this was  1/3  of  the  applicants  signed  up  for
courses and intensives after Free  Service  where  the  auditing  was  good,
without being urged to do
SO.

    Every student with a certificate of any kind down to HBA can be a  Field
Staff Member. Remind the  students  they  can  select  these  applicants  to
training or processing.

222

    Students doing their Provisional Classification Course are compelled  to
attend the Free Clinic each evening of their Classification Course and  only
leave if no applicants show up. They must be  told  to  keep  exact  auditor
reports of all they do as the Examiner will want them.

    The Free Scientology Centre Registrar doubles in brass for  all  evening
and week end services-Coaudits, BS (PE), HAS as well  as  paid  service  for
the HGC and Academy evenings and week ends. If she becomes  very  busy  give
her reception service. Students can help her if  they  volunteer.  They  may
not be assigned without volunteering as it cuts into their processing  time.
She must get the name and address of every Applicant  and  the  Auditor  who
picks him up and turn these into Address the next business day.

    She need not assign student auditors. They should be on  their  own  and
should bring the applicant in to get him registered.

    Auditing can be done in rooms as available.

    There is no real effort here to do  more  than  have  students  pick  up
people in the waiting room and get them registered  and  take  them  off  to
audit them. It is up to the  student  to  make  continued  appointment.  The
student may not accept any gratuity of any kind. But the student if a  field
staff member, may select the person but only after at least an assist and  a
case gain.

    Only standard processes of the student's study level or below  are  run.
No effort need be made to follow the grade system on free pes.  Just  get  a
result with standard processes.

    There is no D of P work on free pc folders. There is only Examiner  work
and it is without advice.

    A course (instructor) supervisor may use the free folders as examples of
what to do and what not to do if so minded.

    The Free Folders are picked up by the Examiner and sent to the  Dept  of
Estimations on org lines for filing under the  student's  name,  cross-filed
with a card under the pc's name.

    The legal attitude is 'Yell, you knew it was a student auditor".  Courts
uphold this.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

(Cancelled by HCO P/L 8 June 1970 issue II, Student Auditing, page 227.1

223

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 MAY AD IS
      Issue 11
General Non Rernimeo
Not, for Public Release      Technical Division

                      ACADEMY PROCESSING

Applic. to: All Academies and Saint Hill

    You are out of the Processing Business effective as soon as the  current
students have completed the requirements of the level each is now on.

    Academies don't process.

    HGCs do.

    Students up to 1952 never did auditing in their courses. They audited
    raw meat.

    There is a firm basic policy about training. The student is trained with
the tools he will use as an auditor.

    This means even at Level Zero they have E-Meters in their  laps  whether
they know how to use them or not.

    This also means their practice auditing is a raw meat pc.

    Where are students to get  auditing  experience?  See  Free  Scientology
Centre above.

    Where do they get their own cases  cracked?  Students  can  audit  other
students but only on their own initiative. Course  Supervisors  can  see  if
their TAS and needles are awful and make them get auditing.

    In Dianetics auditors didn't have cases. We  audited  an  awful  lot  of
people well. Since, Academy and course emphasis on  cases  is  ruining  your
training.
    In the Classification Course (Practical) a  student  must  show  he  can
audit a pe so he can be pink sheeted. And that can be  on  another  student.
But just for show.
    The Examiner, for  final  Classification  Exams  for  every  level  must
require Legible properly kept Auditor's Reports showing success with pcs  on
the processes of the level. Non-standard application or a false report  must
be reported by the Examiner at once to the  Ethics  Officer.  This  auditing
can be done in the evenings of the (Practical) Classification Course and  on
week-ends on the Academy evening courses.

    The best auditors we ever  had  were  taught  before  students  auditing
students became a part of training.

    The Dept of Training Trains. Coaudits, clinics, processing belong to the
Department of Processing.

    There is no more Course Auditing for the sake of another student's case.

    Auditors audit.

    If a student's case gets in his way as an auditor (until you have a full
Qualifications Division as is now formed at Saint Hill) he goes to the HGC.

    If he wants to coaudit, he can join the evening Coaudit at no charge.

    I have found out that a student's delay on course  is  usually  not  for
theory and practical but because of auditing-auditing  required  because  of
student cases, not for student learning.

    So that finishes Academies and courses as a place to go to get  audited.
It's where you go to get trained.

    Let's turn out some eager beaver auditors! That audit!

LRH:wmc.rd  L. RON HUBBARD

Copyright@ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard      (Cancelled by HCO P/L 8 June 1970 Issue 11,
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Student Auditing, page 227.1

224

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 OCTOBER 1965

Rernimeo
Qual Div
Tech Div
Sthil Students

REQUIREMENTS FOR STUDENT CLASSIFICATION

    HCO B of 27 September 1965 "Release Gradation"  states  "It  is  obvious
then that GRADE CERTIFICATES FOR PRECLEARS lapse and are  no  longer  issued
and are  replaced  by  Release  awards,  awarding  'Grade  -  Release'  when
attained".

    HCO Policy Letter 31 July 1965 "Purposes of the Qualifications Division"
states that the prime purpose of  the  Dept  of  Examinations  and  all  its
sections and units is:

    "TO HELP RON ENSURE THAT THE TECHNICAL RESULTS OF THE  ORGANIZATION  ARE
EXCELLENT AND CONSISTENT, THAT STUDENTS AND PRECLEARS ARE WITHOUT  FLAW  FOR
THEIR SKILL OR STATE WHEN PASSED AND THAT ANY TECHNICAL  DEFICIENCY  OF  ORG
PERSONNEL IS REPORTED AND HANDLED SO  THAT  THE  TECHNICAL  RESULTS  OF  THE
ORGANIZATION CONTINUE TO BE EXCELLENT AND CONSISTENT."

    "The integrity of Scientology and its hope for beings in  this  Universe
are entrusted to the Department of Examinations."

    Because of the above it becomes  necessary  that  students  in  training
present their preclears to the Examiner to  be  declared  at  the  grade  of
Release attained if a floating needle is attested by  the  student  auditor.
Even if a floating needle is not  obtained  students  should  still  present
their preclear to the Examiner for her to observe that good  indicators  are
in on the pc.

    Provision for this is made on the Night Foundation and  in  cases  where
the preclear works at  night  and  cannot  be  presented  to  the  Examiner,
special representation may be made to the Examiner and the  matter  will  be
individually handled.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.kd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

225

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 OCTOBER 1965

Rernimec,
Students
Tech staff

STUDENT AUDITING OF PRECLEARS

    Students may not audit any public preclear who is a preclear of any
    organization.

    A student when looking for a preclear to audit for their  classification
on a level must first check with the preclear if they have been  audited  by
an organization and if they have, they are not to be audited by the  student
without express permission from the organization concerned.

    As the purpose of having students get preclears to audit  on  their  own
initiative is to teach them how to disseminate  and  reach  into  the  broad
public, it is hardly acceptable for them to reach  Scientologists  and  will
be an automatic disqualification for classification if this is found  to  be
the case.

LRH: ml.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF I FEBRUARY 1967
Rernimec,   (Replaces HCO Policy Letter of
Students    29 October 1965 of same name)
Tech Staff
Qual Staff
                STUDENT AUDITING OF PRECLEARS

    Students may not audit for their Classification any current preclear  of
any organization or any preclear who has been audited  in  any  organization
within the past two years.

    A student's preclear who does not fall into the  above  two  categories,
but who  has  had  to  have  either  an  assist,  a  Review  session,  or  a
Stabilization  Intensive  done  in  any  organization  due  to  the  student
classification lines is still considered the student's preclear and  is  not
considered an organizational preclear.

    A student may not audit another student's  preclear  without  getting  a
written attestation from the other student that permission  is  granted  for
the preclear to be audited.

    A student is held responsible for abiding by this  policy.  Further  the
technology, Ethics, and Policies as regards auditing  of  preclears  applies
fully to a student's auditing of his or her preclear.

                                      Written by a Board of Investigation:

                                           Marilynn Routsong
                                           Joan Thomas

                                           Mary Sue Hubbard The Guardian WW
                                           for L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:jp.bp.rd     Founder
Copyright @ 1967
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

226

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint kill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
Ecs
Tech See    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 JUNE 1970
DTS   Issue II
DofT
All Courses
Supervisors and
Students
        (CANCELS HCO PL 29 Oct 65 Student Auditing of Preelears, HCO PL
        23 May 69 Issue II Dianetics Course Student Auditing, HCO Pl, 17 May
        65 Free
        Scientology Center, and HCO PL 17 May 65 Issue 11 Academy
        Processing.)

                       STUDENT AUDITING

    The following policies regarding student auditingare made with reference
to LRH ED 104 INT 2 Jun 70 "Only  training  gives  low  cost  auditing  from
fellow students" and LRH ED 107 INT 3 Jun 70 "See that students do a lot  of
mutual auditing".

    Students may not audit any public preclear. (Unfinished but promised pes
existing at this date of issue may be assigned to the student as  a  Charity
pe by the Chaplain.)

    Students may audit students who have been enrolled and who have paid  in
full for a Scientology level 0 or above or Dianetic Course.  They  may  also
audit contracted staff members and may be  required  to  audit  organization
preclears under the D of P who are not enrolled on  a  course  in  order  to
complete their auditing requirements.

    The course supervisor is to ensure that each student  preclear's  folder
is C/Sed for each session to be given  and  that  any  needed  folder  error
summaries are done.

    The course supervisor must make the auditing  requirements  of  students
and preclears known on a scheduling board so that student  auditors  can  be
assigned to preclears  and  sessions  scheduled.  Regular  sessions  may  be
scheduled during course hours besides any other mutually agreed upon time.

    The Classification requirement  for  each  level  is  that  the  student
surcessfully audits several preclears to the  attainment  of  the  grade  of
release of the same level by auditing each of  the  many  processes  of  the
grade to its end phenomenon.

    The auditor must produce consistent well done or very well done sessions
on at least three preclears in which all standard tech for  that  grade  has
been exactly applied. Every effort must be made  to  see  that  the  student
audits each process of the grade.

    Scientology course students may audit Dianetic Course  students  on  any
needed Scientology actions.

    Any student auditing successfully for the Director of Processing may  be
given an honors class for the level.

    A student who has honors for every level may be awarded an honors  final
certificate and the certificate clearly marked and permanent.  He  also  may
be awarded an Interneship for his highest class qualifying him as a C/S  for
that Class providing he also does the C/S checksheet  well  for  that  class
Interne.

    Students not permitted to audit for the D of P and who otherwise qualify
as students are awarded PROVISIONAL certificates made permanent  only  after
a year.
    Students may NOT audit local residents for classification and  the  Free
Scientology Centre is not now permitted. They may  of  course  audit  anyone
after graduation and if for fee, must charge at least as much  as  the  full
org price. They may of course, if qualified, audit friends and  family  free
of charge.

    This does not prevent the Chaplain or D of' P from assigning charity
    cases to
students at the discretion of the org.
      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:dz.rd   Founder
Copyright @ 1970
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Modified by HCO P/L 4 November 1971 Issue 11, Academy Pre-requisite, in
the 1971 Year Book.]

                              227

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
Remimeo
Org Exec Sec WW  HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 APRIL 1966
ES Comm Tech WW
ES Comm Qual WW
Org Exec Sec Hat
Tech Sec Hat     DIANETIC AUDITORS COURSE
Qual Sec Hat
Org Sec Hat The Org Exec See WW has
Dir Reg Hat the authority to arrange
      and order and issue check
      sheets for Dianetic Auditing
      Training

    For any arranging or establishment of a Dianetic Course as  per  HCOB  3
April 1966 "Student  Auditing  Dianetic  Auditing"  the  following  must  be
observed:

    I - The course must be not less than one month.

    2.      It must not be extended endlessly for the student.

    3.      It is not the same as grade courses in that it does not contain
    grade material
    or even the gradation chart but contains Dianetic; data.

    4.      It must remain precisely within the limits set by HCOB 3 April
    1966 so far
    as its  auditing is concerned.

    5. It may not be sold as a course for less than $500 in the US or f  125
    sterling in the UK or other continental areas.

    6.      Scholarship up to 50% may be issued.

    7.      Only cash may be accepted and no credit allowed.

    8. Healing laws must be given heed  by  not  selling  such  auditing  or
    promising to heal by reason of Dianetic auditing.

    9. The course may be advertised as, paraphrase, the way up to a  capable
    human being is the realm of Dianetics-Scientology reaches from a capable
    human being upward. Success in Scientology  is  assured  by  a  thorough
    grounding in Man's most advanced school of  psychology  (or  the  mind)-
    Dianetics. Dianetics was the ultimate development of the mind  of  human
    beings. Scientology is the road from there to total Freedom. This  is  a
    study and practice course which is a prelude to becoming  a  Scientology
    auditor and brings one a complete understanding of the mind so that  one
    is then prepared to understand the spirit in Scientology, etc.

    10. Academies and especially Saint Hill may teach and  practice  HCOB  3
    April 1966 as part of Level 0 providing it is  studied  along  with  the
    other materials and forms the practical of Level 0.

    At this writing there is no pattern of how to include this material  and
one must be developed by experience. But it is pointed  out  that  Academies
have never failed to do well so long as a  one-piece  Dianetic  type  course
was available.

    It could be that experience, cautiously won, will show that  the  public
will buy the Dianetic course in droves.

    It could be we should drop the Dianetic word from Dianetic techniques as
refined in HCOB 3 April 1966, as they are  really  pretty  awfully  advanced
from where we were in 1950 and call it the Basic  Auditor's  Course  or  the
Basic  Academy  of  Scientology  Course  and  call   the   technique   Basic
Scientology.  If  so,  texts  will  have  to  be  edited   and   Scientology
substituted everywhere for Dianetics.

    These problems are left to the Org Exec See WW as  they  will  gradually
evolve into a new success.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRH:lb-r.cden
Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

228

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 AUGUST 1966
                                  Issue 11

Rernimeo

     Impmant

DIANETIC AUDITING

Dianetic Auditing is being re-introduced for TRAINING ONLY.

In all publications or announcements this fact must be included.

    Dianetics is known as a healing mental science and as such, announcement
of its. use could be interpreted as an entry  into  healing  by  Scientology
organizations.

    Dianctic Auditing may NOT  be  offered  for  sale  in  Hubbard  Guidance
Centres or by Centres. It may be offered as a training  course  in  auditing
by Franchise Holders, Centres and Orgs but ONLY by making the  statement  in
every announcement that  it  is  to  train  auditors  and  is  not  part  of
Scientology practice.

    Dianetic auditing demonstrates mental anatomy to students  and  improves
their auditing skill. Scientology practice  is  today  too  fast  to  permit
training as an auditor to be sufficient to qualify them.

    Its re-introduction in no way enters orgs  into  the  field  of  healing
despite the fact that healing does occur in Dianetic auditing.

    The insane belong to the psychiatrist and we as a reform group only wish
he would clean up his practice and get his practitioners to  act  ethically,
and actually help his patients.

    The sick belong to the medical doctor and as a social group we only wish
he would advance his science to include workable psychosomatic medicine.

    We are not interested in the insane or the sick and refuse to take  them
in Centres and orgs. We are only interested  in  freeing  the  human  spirit
from materialism and making the able more able.

    Dianetic auditing is not for sale or use by centres or orgs. Use  of  it
is  instructional  only.  Any  benefit  is  incidental  even  if   sometimes
considerable.

    Dianetics was and is the answer  to  psychosomatic  illness  but  we  in
Scientology are not in the field of healing.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:lb-r-cden
Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

229

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 SEPTEMBER 1967

Remimeo
All Students
Tech Sec Hat
D of T Hat
Dia Course Supervisor Hat
Qual Sec Hat
Dir Exams Hat
Dir Rev Hat

                          DIANFrIC AUDITOR'S COURSE
                               AUDITING POLICY

    Queries have been received as regards what Grades of  preclears  can  be
allowed to have secondaries and engrams run on them in relationship  to  the
Dianetic Auditor's Course.

    Preclears with no Grade or Grades 0 to III can be run on secondaries and
    engrams.

    Preclears with a Grade IV can be run on engrams.

    Preclears with Grades V, VA and VI are not to be run on  secondaries  or
engrams. The only exception is when a Dianctic Release state is found to  be
missed at a  later  date,  but  this  is  not  normally  handled  by  course
students.

Org Exec Sec WW  - Fred Hare
D.O. Tech WW     - J.J. Delance
      Mary Sue Hubbard
      The Guardian WW
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD
      Founder

LRH:jp.rd Copyright @ 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

230

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO, POLICY LETTER OF 23 FEBRUARY 1968
Rernimeo
Dianetic Course Students

                          DIANETIC AUDITOR'S COURSE
                               AUDITING POLICY

    The following Grades of preclears can be allowed to have secondaries and
engrams run on them by Dianetic Auditor's Course students.

    Preclears with no Grade or Grades 0 to  III  can  be  run  on  ARC  S/W,
secondaries and engrams.

    Grade IV Preclears can only be run on engrams.

    Preclears with Grades V, VA and VI  are  not  to  be  run  on  ARC  S/W,
secondaries or engrams, other than by Internes or  above,  when  a  Dianetic
Release state is found to be missed at a later date. This is  never  handled
by course students as they have not been trained on the Technology of  Power
and Power Plus.

                                    Proposed by a Board of Investigation
      Mo Budlong
      James Hare
      Mary Sleight
      Mary Sue Hubbard
LRH:jc.rd   The Guardian WW
Copyright (~) 1968     for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 25 JANUARY 1969
Rernimeo
Dianetic Course Students

                          DIANETIC AUDITOR'S COURSE
                               AUDITING POLICY

    HCO Policy Letter, "DIANETIC AUDITOR'S COURSE-AUDITING POLICY",  23  FEB
1968 is hereby cancelled as it introduces an arbitrary into Standard Tech.

                                  Proposed by:     R.C. Ash
                                   D/Tech See SH
                                  Approved by~     Sane Kember
                                   The Guardian WW
                                   for
                                   L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:ei.rd   Founder
Copyright @ 1969
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

231

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 APRIL 1969

Remimec,

DIANETICS,

    The policy on Dianetics is that it was and is intended to make a  happy,
well human being and that it can now be  used  in  conjunction  with  purely
medical (not political psychiatric) treatment.

    Any person not recovering his health and sense of well being by  use  of
Dianetic auditing should be given by competent medical and clinical  doctors
or technicians a  thorough  physical  examination  to  locate  the  illness,
structural  or  pathological  (disease),  which   is   troubling   him   and
introverting him.

    Scientology healing and mental treatment policies apply to Scientology.

    Dianetics is fully excepted from these policies.

    This is in view of the strong and increasing interest and cooperation of
individual medical doctors over the world  which  should  be  continued  and
promoted.

    This policy does NOT include turning any person over to institutions  or
practitioners engaged in political treatment and expressly  does  not  allow
the use of such political treatment as  electric  shock,  lobotomies,  brain
"operation" or drugs producing convulsions.

    This policy does permit surgical and structural operations including the
alleviation of concussion or skull fractures or the removal of brain  tumors
but only after they are proven  to  exist  beyond  any  doubt  by  competent
clinical examination. It does not include exploratory operation.

    The severance of nerves to "end psychosis" is  expressly  condemned  and
the use of produced convulsion by any means  to  "alleviate  psychosis"  and
the practice of euthanasia (mercy killing)  or  any  barbaric  torturous  or
murderous or terrifying treatment or approach are not only not condoned  but
should be actively fought due to the non-therapeutic results, the  immediate
or  early  demise  of  the  "patient"  and  to  the  efforts  to  use  these
"treatments" to  effect  political  ends.  The  persons  using  these  means
actively financed and fought Dianetics and Scientology over  the  world  and
were the  sole  source  of  repression  of  a  valuable  sincere  and  vital
breakthrough in the field of healing as consistently demonstrated.

    This HCO Pol Ltr amplifies as policy HCOB 6 April 1969 and HCOB 12 March
1969.
    Dianetics is a healing practice supplementing medical treatment.

    Scientology is a religious practice applying to  Man's  spirit  and  his
spiritual freedom.
    In areas, mainly America, where  the  freedom  to  heal  is  subject  to
attempted monopoly, all Dianetic auditing of physically ill persons (not  as
student  practice)  must  be   in   conjunction   with   competent   medical
practitioners who must be informed why a medical  examination  is  requested
for the preclear. "This is a member of the Church of Scientology. As he  may
be physically ill we wish a full medical examination and diagnosis  and  any
medical treatment which will resolve the illness found. With  the  leave  of
the medical doctor and with the  patient  under  his  care  we  will  employ
Dianetic auditing as well to assist his recovery. Until healed  this  person
is not eligible for  Scientology  auditing.  We  cooperate  fully  with  the
medical profession and expect in our turn that our trust in it will  not  be
betrayed.  Under  no  circumstances  will  we  permit  this  person  to   be
brutalized with psychiatric political treatments."

    In other countries any variation of this statement or its  lack  may  be
employed, depending on the legal position of healing.

LRH:cp.ei.cden   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1969  Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

232

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 MAY 1969
                                  Issue 11

Rernimeo Dianctic
      Course
Qual Secs
Tech Sees

DIANETIC COURSE EXAMINATIONS

    There are two examinations on the Dianctics Course.

I . PRE-AUDITING EXAMINATION.

    This is done after the student has completed the  theory  and  practical
    drill sections of the course. The examination is standard and  has  been
    written up and issued to all Qualifications Divisions in Orgs.  It  must
    be passed 100% before the student is permitted to audit.

    As Diaretics is now a very standard routine it will be  found  that  the
    student either understands it or he doesn't.  There  are  no  shades  of
    grey.

    If the student flunks the examination he goes to Cramming to review  the
    materials of the course.

2.    FINAL EXAMINATION.

    This is done after the student has completed his auditing  requirements.
    When the 25 hours of auditing are  complete  (or  more  if  required  to
    obtain the required result),  the  student  presents  all  his  auditing
    folders to the Examiner with an attestation that he was the auditor, and
    that all the sessions he audited  have  been  recorded  in  the  folders
    presented to the Examiner.

    The Examiner inspects the folders to see if the auditor has demonstrated
    the practice of Standard Dianetics, and to see if the  PC  has  attained
    the expected gains. (If the sessions look standard but the  PC  has  not
    attained the expected gains the examiner knows the session  reports  are
    incomplete or false.)

    If the Examiner is satisfied  the  student  is  auditing  100%  Standard
    Dianetics the student is passed and graduated.

    If the auditing is non-standard and the results have not  been  obtained
    the student mbst continue auditing until the Examiner is satisfied.

    The student auditor's sessions are case supervised.  If  the  PC  is  in
trouble the auditor ends the session and sends the PC to the  examiner.  The
case supervisor orders the student to cramming if he has goofed.

    The PC may be ordered to a Scientology Review such as a Green Form.

    Review and cramming are at normal Org rates. There is no charge for case
supervision.
      Brian Livingston
      CS-5
LRH:BL:cs.ei.rd
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L, RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Cancelled by HCO P/L 29 July 1972 Issue 11, Fast Flow in Training, in the
1972 Year Book.]

                              233

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 MAY 1969
                                  Issue III

Remimeo Dianetic Course

AUDITORS CODE AND DIANETICS

     The Auditors Code (HCO Policy  Letter  14  October  1968)  applies  to
Dianetic auditing as well as Scientology.

     Clauses I and 2  (Evaluation  and  Invalidation)  especially  must  be
thoroughly understood. The Dianetic student  must  be  able  to  demonstrate
these with many different examples of each and should even  write  an  essay
on all the ways he can possibly think of evaluating for and  invalidating  a
PC.

     Clauses 12, 13, 15 and 24, are sometimes misinterpreted by  improperly
trained Dianetic auditors who are  not  too  familiar  with  what  they  are
handling. The clauses do apply but the following notes are made:

12.   1 PROMISE TO RUN EVERY MAJOR CASE ACTION TO A FLOATING NEEDLE.
In Dianetics you are auditing chains  to  ERASURE.  Erasure  of  a  complete
chain is normally accompanied by a FIN. The handling of a  lock  is  not  in
itself a major case action and may or may not produce an FIN.

13.   1 PROMISE NEVER TO RUN ANY ONE ACTION BEYOND ITS FLOATING NEEDLE.
In Dianetics you do cease an action on an FIN. But, if the  FIN  is  on  one
incident and the chain is not erased you just cease  to  run  that  incident
but continue on down the chain to erasure.

15.   1 PROMISE  NOT  TO  MIX  THE  PROCESSES  OF  SCIENTOLOGY  WITH  OTHER
     PRACTICES EXCEPT WHEN THE PRECLEAR IS PHYSICALLY ILL AND ONLY MEDICAL.
     MEANS WILL SERVE.
As Dianetics concerns the body, Medical and Dianetic practices  may  proceed
together.  Whenever  possible  you  would  cease  medical  treatment  during
auditing  but  sometimes  the  medical  treatment  can  only  be  eased  off
gradually. With accidents and acute illness medical treatment must be  given
immediately and the engram can only be audited  when  the  PC  has  somewhat
recovered. In some instances the PC will only  respond  to  correct  medical
treatment after a Dianetic assist has been given.

You never mix  Dianetics;  or  Scientology  with  any  psychiatric,  occult,
mystical, hypnotic, or other practices.

24.   1 PROMISE NOT TO ADVOCATE SCIENTOLOGY ONLY TO CURE ILLNESS OR ONLY TO
     TREAT THE INSANE KNOWING WELL IT WAS INTENDED FOR SPIRITUAL GAIN.
The improvement and freedom of man as a spiritual being is the  vital  realm
of Scientology. Dianetics  erases  those  things  (Locks,  Secondaries,  and
Engrams) which make a person susceptible to, and  hold  in  place,  physical
illness. Hence Dianetics, while not treating illness or  insanity  directly,
does enter those fields. When a person is no  longer  troubled  by  unwanted
physical conditions  he  can  then  advance  on  the  much  wider  field  of
spiritual gain and freedom covered by Scientology.

     The use of F/Ns in Dianetics and the relation  between  a  Dianeticist
and the medical practitioner is fully covered  in  other  materials  of  the
Dianetics course.

      Brian Livingston
      CS-5
LRH:bl.an.ei.rd
Copyright (c) 1969     for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

234

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 MAY 1969
                                  Issue II

Remimeo
Dianetics
Course

         Tech Division - Qual Division

STUDENTS GUIDE TO ACCEPTABLE BEHAVIOUR

 (Edited for the Hubbard Standard Dianetic Course)

GENERAL

1.    Get sufficient food and sleep. Always eat breakfast before class and
    morning sessions.

2.    When being a preclear, be one, not a student or auditor.  When  being
    an auditor, be an auditor, not a student or preclear. When in class  and
    lectures, be a student not an auditor or a preclear.

3.    If you don't know something or are confused about course data, ask  a
    Supervisor or send a despatch. DO NOT ASK OTHER STUDENTS AS THIS CREATES
    PROGRESSIVELY WORSENING ERRORS INDATA. Also despatches from  you  to  L.
    Ron Hubbard will be relayed if you place all such in the  basket  marked
    "Students Out".

AUDITING

4.    Do not consume any alcoholic beverage between 6 a.m. on Sundays and
    after class on Fridays.

S.    Do not consume or have administered to yourself or any other  student
    any  drug,  antibiotics,  aspirin,  barbiturates,  opiates,   sedatives,
    hypnoties or medical stimulants for the duration of the  course  without
    the approval of the D of T.

6.    Do not give any processing to anyone under any circumstances without
    direct permission of the D of T. (Emergency assists excepted.)

7.    Do not receive any processing from anyone under any circumstances
    without the express permission of the D of T.

8.    Do not engage in any "self-processing" under any circumstances during
    the course at any time.

9.    Do not receive any treatment, guidance, or help from  anyone  in  the
    healing arts, i.e. physician, dentist, etc., without the consent of  the
    D of T / Ethics Officer. (Emergency treatment when the D  of  T  is  not
    available is excepted.)

10.   Do. not engage in any rite, ceremony, practice, exercise, meditation,
    diet,  food  therapy  or  any  similar  occult,   mysti~41,   religious,
    naturopathic, homeopathic, chiropractic treatment or any  other  healing
    or mental therapy while on course without the express permission of  the
    D of T / Ethics Officer.

11.   Do not discuss your  case,  your  Auditor,  your.  Supervisors,  your
    classmates, L. Ron Hubbard, ORG personnel or the ORG with  anyone.  Take
    up any complaints with your supervisor.

12.   Do not engage in any sexual relationships of any nature or kind or
    get emotionally involved with any classmate who is not your legal
    spouse.

13.   Follow the Auditor's Code during all sessions when being the Auditor.

                               235

14.   Follow technical procedure as outlined on the course exactly and
precisely.

15.   Be honest at all times on your auditing report  form.  Stating  every
    process run, Tone Arm changes and times, sensitivity setting, cognitions
    of your preclear and any  changes  of  physical  appearance,  reactions,
    communication level, or otherwise what you observe in your preclear.

16.   Place all reports in the folder of your preclear after each session,
    turn it into the Examiner for examination.

17.   Students must not read their own report folder or that of another
    student, unless he is auditing that student.

PREMISES

18.   Do not make any undue noise either indoors, or when leaving class.

19.   Use the correct entrances for entering and leaving the premises.

QUARTERS

20.   Do not put cigarettes out in plastic waste baskets or on the floors.

21.   Keep all your bulletins, supplies and personal possessions in the
    space allotted to you and keep your space neat and orderly.

22.   Students are allowed to smoke during breaks only and always outside
    any study or auditing quarters.

23.    The  basket  marked  "Student  In"   is   the   basket   where   all
    communications, bulletins or mail to students are placed.  Always  check
    this basket daily to see if you have received any communications.

24.   Report and turn in any damaged property or goods used on the Course.
    Protect and keep the premises in good condition.

25.   No food may be stored or eaten in the Classrooms at any time.

SCHEDULES

26.   Be on time for class and all assignments.

27.   Buy any books you need from the bookstore at appointed times.

28.   Follow all schedules exactly.

29.   Study and. work during your class periods and over weekends. You have
    a lot to get checked out on in order to get  a  course  completion.  You
    can't afford to waste time.

L. RON HUBBARD Founder LRH:emp.cs.ei.rd Copyright (c) 1969 by L. Ron
Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

236

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 MAY 1969
                                  Issue 11

Dianetic Course

       -    HUBBARD STANDARD DIANETICS COURSE POLICY

I     The checksheet of the Hubbard Standard Dianetic Course as contained
    in HCO Policy Letter of 7 May 1969 Issue I may not be altered without
    the authorization of L. Ron Hubbard.
2.    The course time should not exceed one month.
3.    The price of the course is $500 in the US or ~C125 sterling in the UK
or other
    Continental areas. This includes the Supervisor's Section.
4.    Only cash may be accepted and no credit allowed.
5.    The Standard Dianetic Course may only be taught by Standard Dianetic
    Supervisors. Qualification is graduation from the HSDC and the
    Supervisor's Course.
6.    The HSDC may be taught in any official Scientology Organization,
    Franchise Center, or Gung Ho Group by a QUALIFIED PERSON.
7.    In order to maintain the standard, students may only be examined in
    an official Scientology Organization, the Qualifications Division of
    which is authorized to issue the Standard Dianetic Certificate.
8.    This course may not be taught as part of any other course.

                                             Tony Dunleavy
LRH:TD:cs.rd     CS-2
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Cancelled by HCO P/L 19 May 1969, Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course
Policy, page 241.1

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MAY 1969
                                  Issue II

Rernimeo

                   FAST FLOW BY ATTESTATION

    The Standard Dianetics Course is taught by the Fast  Flow  System.  This
means that Students are not required to be checked out  by  another  person,
the exceptions being only  those  bulletins  which  have  drills  especially
designed for their study, as contained in HCO Bulletins.
    The student does however have to attest that he knows each  bulletin  or
policy letter on the Checksheet in detail and that he is able to  apply  it.
This is done by signing each item on his own Checksheet when he has  studied
it.
    Further, a student may work with another student to be sure he knows it.
In this case, HCO Policy Letter of 26 August  1965,  "Scientology  Training-
Twin Checkouts", should be followed, except that the student  still  attests
on his own Checksheet for each item.
    There is a Pre-auditing Examination as well as a Final Examination.

      Tony Dunleavy
LRH:TD:cs.an.rd  CS2-Training Aide
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder
ICancelled by HCO P/L 29 July 1972 Issue 11, Fast Flow in Training, in the
1972 Year Book.1

                               237

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
CORRECT COLOUR FLASH
      RED ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                         HCO BULLETIN OF 8 MAY 1969
                                  Issue 11

Remimeo Dianetics Course

TEACHING THE DIANETICS COURSE

    As the teaching of basic data restimulates  confusions  which  are  then
dramatized by throwing the course off line, the teaching  of  the  Dianetics
Course as follows is hugely vital.

    The teaching of Dianetics Auditors is laid down on these simple
    principles.

1.    The data on tapes and Bulletins is studied without alter-is,
    interpretation or addition by the student, fellow student, instructor or
    supervisor.

2.    Well done and other folders are studied by the individual student.

3.    No lecturing or additional interpretation or evaluation by
Supervisors.

4.    The student audits only when he has completely passed on I and 2
above. He
      must not audit before he has completed his checksheet three times
through.

5.    Things the student is weak on are done in clay.

6.    The student is sent to cramming at his own expense for bad auditing
    goofs. He may also be taken off auditing and made to do his checksheet
    again.

7.    Any student question is answered by referring to the HCOB, folder or
    tape or by explaining it is beyond the scope of Dianetic auditing.

8.    A rigid invariable schedule is precisely adhered to.

9.    Checksheets and tapes and folders are gone through in the sequence
    laid down by the checksheet and not randomly out of sequence.

    If this is made difficult then the programme must be  cut  back  to  the
bare bones of the original above.

    The teaching of standard tech must also be standard. Therefore the above
MUST be adhered to completely.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:jp.an.ei.rd Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

238

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MAY 1969
                                  Issue IV
                      (Revision for Standard Dianetics
                       Course of HCO PL of 22 Nov 67)

Rernimeo
Student Hat

All Students
All Courses

OUT TECH

    If at any time a  supervisor  or  other  person  in  an  org  gives  you
interpretations of HCOBs, Policy Letters or tells you, "That's old. Read  it
but disregard it" or gives you a  chit  for  following  HCOBs  or  tapes  or
alters tech on you or personally cancels HCOBs  or  Policy  Letters  without
being able to show you an HCOB or Policy Letter that cancels  it,  YOU  MUST
REPORT THE MATTER COMPLETE WITH NAMES AND ANY WITNESSES ON DIRECT  LINES  TO
THE INTERNATIONAL ETHICS OFFICER AT WORLD WIDE.

    The only ways you can fail to get results on a pe are:

I . Not study your HCOBs and my books and tapes.

2.    Not apply what you studied.

3.    Follow "advice" contrary to what you find on HCOBs and Tapes.

4.    Fail to obtain the HCOBs, books and tapes needed.

    There is no hidden data line.

    All of Dianeties and Scientology works. Some of it works faster.

    Any supervisor or executive who interprets, alters or  cancels  tech  is
liable to the assignment of a Condition of Enemy. All the data is  in  HCOBs
or Policy Letters or on tape.

    Failure to make this mimeo known to every student carries a  8  10  fine
for every student from which it is withheld.

                                             L RON HUBBARD
                                             Founder

LRH:jp.an.ei.rd Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

239

I

                 HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 Remimeo    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 MAY 1969
 Dianetics Course      Issue 11

 Sup. Section     HOW TO DO A STARRATE CHECKOUT

    Earlier forms of education suffer because of  a  habit.  The  habit  was
contracted in one's years of formal schooling  where  this  mistake  is  the
whole way of life.
    If the student knows the words, the teacher assumes he knows the tune.
    It never does a student much good to  know  a  few  data.  In  life  one
succeeds only if he can USE facts.
    It is so easy to confront thought and so hard to  confront  action  that
the teacher often complacently lets the student mouth words and  ideas  that
mean nothing to the student.

    ALL THEORY CHECKOUTS MUST CONSULT THE STUDENT'S UNDERSTANDING.

    If they don't, they're useless and will upset the student eventually.
    Course difficulties stem entirely from the  student's  non-comprehension
of words and data.

    So examining by seeing if somebody "knows" the text  and  can  quote  or
paraphrase it is completely false and must not be done.

    Correct examination is done only by making the person being tested
    answer
(a)   The meanings of the words (re-defining the words used in his own
    words and demonstrating their use in his own made up sentences), and
(b)   Demonstrating how the data is used.
    The Supervisor can ask what the words mean. And the Supervisor  can  ask
for examples of action or application.
    A Starrate Checkout must have  been  100%  right  answers  for  a  pass.
However the following rules apply-
 I .   Spot check the words and materials, do not try to cover it all.  This
    is done the same way a final examination is given  in  schools;  only  a
    part of the material is covered by examination,  assuming  that  if  the
    student has this right the student knows all of it.
      2.    Flunk on comm lag in attempts to answer. If the student "er
ah
      well  flunk it as it certainly isn't known well enough to use.
    (Doesn't
    include stammerers.)
3.    Never keep on examining a bulletin on the same exam after a student
has missed.

                        THE GLIB STUDENT
    You will find that often you have very glib students you won't  be  able
to find any fault in who yet won't be able to apply or  use  the  data  they
are passing.
    Demonstration is the key here. The moment you ask this type  of  student
to demonstrate a rule or theory with his hands or the paper  clips  on  your
desk this glibness will shatter.
    The reason for this is that in memorizing words or  ideas,  the  student
can still hold the position that it has nothing to do with him  or  her.  It
is a total  circuit  action.  Therefore,  very  glib.  The  moment  you  say
"Demonstrate" that word or idea  or  principle,  the  student  has  to  have
something to do with it. And shatters or passes.
    Clay Table isn't used by a Theory Examiner. Hands, a diagram, paper
    clips, these
are usually quite enough!
      Compiled from earlier policy letters by
      Tony Dunleavy
LRH:TD:an.ei.rd  CS2-Training Aide
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Cancelled by HCO P/Ls 20 January 1971, Checkout Mini Course,  and  5  March
1971 of same title (which cancelled and replaced 20 January  1971),  in  the
1971 Year Book.)

                               240

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 MAY 1969
                         (Cancels HCO PL 7 May 1969
                            Issue II Same Title)

Remimeo Dianetic Course

                         HUBBARD STANDARD DIANETICS
                                COURSE POLICY

1.     The  checksheet  of  the,  Hubbard  Standard  Diarietic:  Course  as
   contained in HCO Policy Letter of 7 May 1969 Issue I may not be; altered
   without the authorization of L. Ron Hubbard.

2.    The course time should not exceed one month.

3.    The price of the course is $500 in the US or f 125 Sterling or equ
ivalent in the UK
    and South Africa and the equivalent of f 150 Sterling in ANZO. This
    includes the
    Supervisor's Section.

4.    Only cash may be accepted and no credit allowed.

5.    The Standard Dianetic Course may only be taught by Standard Di anetic
   Supervisors with a Hubbard Dianetic Graduate Certificate.  Qualification
   is graduation from the HSDC including the Supervisor's Section.

6.    The HSDC may be taught in any official Scientology Organization,
    Franchise Center, or Gung Ho Group by a QUALIFIED PERSON.

7.    Students may take their Pre-auditing  examination  at  the  Franchise
   Center or Gung Ho Group at which they do the course. Org Qual  Divisions
   are to supply copies of the examination to Franchises and Gung Ho's  who
   run the HSDC, which are confidential. However, in order to maintain  the
   standard, the students' requirements for certification must be  examined
   by the Qual Examiner of an official Scientology Org..This may be done by
   mail, by the Franchise or Gung Ho sending to the Org Examiner  the  full
   Auditing Reports, Worksheets, Pc Examiner forms, etc (Le. the  students'
   preclears' folders) of the students' auditing on the course showing that
   the auditing requirements of HCO Bulletin of 6 April 1969 Issue 11  have
   been met by the student, as well  as  his  checksheet  attested  by  the
   student as completed. The pc folders will be returned to  the  Franchise
   or Gung Ho Group after examination.

    Only the Qual Div of an official Scientology Org is authorized to  issue
    a Hubbard Dianetic Graduate certificate. It must be promptly sent to the
    student upon his passing the Final Examination.

8.    This course may not be taught as part of any other course.

                                             Tony Dunleavy
LRH:TD:an.ei.rd  CS-2
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL\RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Note. This issue of Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course Policy  differs  from
the 7 May 1969 issue in its inclusion of more detailed data  (especially  in
points 3, 5 and 7).]

                               241

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 MAY 1969

Remimeo

HUBBARD STANDARD DIANETICS COURSE

COURSE MATERIALS PAPERS AND FILES
     (referred to on HCO P/L 16 May 69)

                     STUDENT REQUIREMENTS

    Each student enrolling on the HSDC is required to have the following:

BOOKS Original Thesis
      Dianetics, the Modern Science of Mental Health
      Evolution of a Science
      The Book Introducing the E-Meter
      The Book of E-Meter Drills

MATERIALS   E-Meter
      2 Soup Cans for electrodes
      E-Meter lead with jack plug and crocodile clips
      1 eraser
      1 pencil
      blank paper
      2 black or blue pens
      1 good dictionary
      1 timepiece
      Worksheets
      Auditor Report Forms
      Stapler
      Paper clips
      Clay (various colours)
      Demonstration kit (box of assorted bits and pieces for use in
            "demonstrating")
      Good picture frame for his certificate

                       ORG REQUIREMENTS

    The following is a checklist of materials, files and papers needed for
    the HSDC.

    Check them off and make sure you have adequate quantities of every item.
Always reorder in sufficient time those materials which are used up, such
as student packs of materials, so that you never run out.

                   ADMINISTRATIVE MATERIALS

1 Thick hard cover foolscap size book for roll book
1 Thick hard cover foolscap size book for student auditing record
1 Master Checksheet kept up to date
1 Pack of materials kept up to date
1 Schedule made up and posted clearly
1 HSDC students' notice board
Thumb tacks
1 Student progress board (described separately)
1 Student statistic board

242

File cabinet Pens Stapler Staples Paper clips Ruler Felt tip pens Stock of
orange coloured PC folders (or other different colour to that regularly
used in the Org for PC folders) Routing forms: New students Student to
examiner Student to ethics 1 IN basket for each student 1 OUT basket for
whole course 1 Basket TO I-RH

                       COURSE MATERIALS

Adequate supplies of checksheets
Adequate packs of course materials (for issue one to every student)
Adequate copies of LRH Case Supervised Sessions
Weekly Student report forms to LRH
PC Assessment forms 24/4/69 (HCOB)
Pastoral Counselling form 24/4/69
Summary Report forms 17/3/69 (HCOB)
Parent and Guardian Assent Forms
Sufficient copies of "Alice in Wonderland" books
Pink sheets

                           TAPES

21 July 1966 Dianetic Auditing
28 July 1966 Dianetic Auditing and the Mind
18 June 1964 Study, Introduction
      9 July 1964 Study, Data Assimilation
      4 Aug 1964 Study, Summary of
      6 Aug 1964 Study, Gradients & Nomenclature
I I Aug 1964 Study, Evaluation of Information
13 Aug 1964 Study and Education
22 Sept 1964 Study, A Review of
18 Aug 1966 Study and Intention

                     SUPERVISOR MATERIALS

I Desk (in the training room)
I Chair
I IN-OUT basket
I Stapler
Paper
Pens
Ruler
Clipboard and carbon paper
Very large dictionary
Demonstration kit

GENERAL COURSE REQUIREMENTS

Large photo of LRH in course room
Sufficient space for class at all times (large quiet well lighted room)

243

Folding chairs (one for each student)
Folding card tables (one for each student pair)
Adequate number of good quality tape recorders
Tape head cleaning fluid (alcohol) and cotton buds (for regular
      cleaning of tape heads)
HiFl headphones (the type with miniature speakers as the earpiece
      not the telephone type)
Supervisor's certificate posted very visibly

                       CERTS AND AWARDS

Hubbard Graduate Auditor certificates
Dianetic PC lapel pins

                          BOOKSTORE

    The bookstore should get in adequate quantities of books listed above
under student requirements. Blazer badges Lapel pins

W/O Ken Delderfield LRH Public Aide CS-6 for L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:KD:an.ei.aap Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: The titles of the tapes listed have been corrected per HCO P/L 23
Oct '70.]

                               244

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER CORRECT COLOUR FLASH RED ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

   HCO BULLETIN OF 20 MAY 1969

Remimeo
Dian Checksheet

KEEPING DIANETICS WORKING IN AN AREA

    In that  any  Dianetics  Course,  starting  out,  has  only  its  Course
Supervisor trained, the problems of what is used for  Case  Supervision  and
Cramming Supervisor in Qual will arise.

    Here more than any other points, alteration can enter.

    Altering, doing something else, is a  sufficiently  serious  problem  to
destroy a Course and all the benefits of Dianetics in a whole area.

    Early on, during the development of the Standard  Dianetics  Course,  we
were suddenly getting case failures. These were traced by  Case  Supervision
to wild variations from Standard Dianetic procedure. These  variations  were
traced to an examiner who during student checkouts was giving  "advice".  As
soon as this was handled, case gains immediately resumed.

    Over the many years of Dianetic use, I  think  we  must  have  seen  all
possible variations of auditing. "New" phenomena were often  discovered  and
used and eventually the whole subject wandered  off  into  never-never  land
and ceased to produce uniform results.

    What has happened here in Standard Dianetics is that the  exact  actions
that produce results on all  cases  have  been  isolated  and  used  as  THE
procedure.

    The procedure is a  thin  narrow  walk  way  through  a  huge  field  of
potential alterations.

    THERE ARE NO DIFFERENT CASES.

    Built in to the Standard Dianetic procedure are the remedies.

    For instance early Dianetics was plagued by several problems:

    I .     Lack of visio-an inability to see pictures. This was solved by
        getting date and duration.

    2.      Perception shut off.  Not  required  in  total  now  to  produce
        results. Sonic, ability to hear the sound in pictures, is not needed
        at all. Impression is sufficient.

    3.      Somatic shut off. Not now required to be solved but its source
        (drugs and alcohol) have been discovered.

    4.      Rough sessions. Solved by TRs.

    5.      Lack of auditor judgement in diagnosis. Solved by the E-Meter.

    In these years of research I have been able to wrap up these and other
    things.

    There have been more  cases  run  on  Dianetics  than  could  easily  be
counted. So the research data is very broad. This is no new subject. It  has
been close to 39 years under research.

    Thus what you are told on the Standard Dianetics Course is the essence
    of all this

245

work and experience. There are no unsolved problems, there  is  only  varied
application where there should not be.

    The whole object of the course is to train people to get  good  RESULTS,
and train people to give a course that results in GOOD AUDITORS. That's  the
whole thing.

    We could also teach over 50,000,000 words about things  that  don't  get
results or train auditors.

    The essence of a brilliant subject is a simple subject.

    Therefore anything that varies the data of a Standard  Dianetics  Course
can send it out into unworkability.

    I've seen auditors also use "peyote" (a drug), C02 and  drugs  "to  help
auditing". I've seen many different meter types used.  I've  looked  over  a
thousand different ways to run a session. And I've  seen  all  these  things
fail.

    The four points of greatest potential failure are

    I .     A Course Supervisor who interprets data and alters it in order
       to satisfy some student's offbeat quest.

    2.      An Examiner who throws curves into data by means of invalidating
       the right data.

    3.      A Case Supervisor who does not simply and only put the auditor
       back onto the main line and who seeks to "solve" cases by altering
       data.

    4.      An Auditor who, not knowing his data in the first place,  alters
       the data and, because in an altered form he fails, starts off  on  a
       wilder alteration of data and fails harder.

    Under Supervisor comes the course and cramming supervisor both.

    So you see, that to get real Standard Dianetic results going in an  area
you have to be very alert to hold the exact data line as  contained  in  the
HCOBs.

    Where you begin to find case failures, look to  I  to  4  above  and  to
student failure to just simply study and drill.

    For the first time you have  an  exact  subject  in  the  field  of  the
"humanities". These "humanities" for all man's history have been a  mass  of
superstition, bad logic,  propaganda,  authority  and  brutality.  An  exact
humanity is so new that it has a bit of a hard  time.  All  the  errors  and
prejudices start to "blow off" when truth enters in.

    Just be sure you don't lose the subject with the confusion.

    Cope, make do, hold the line and you'll have a successful Dianetic area.
It's worth working toward, worth achieving.

    You have only one big stable datum.

    IF IT ISN'T WORKING IT IS BEING VARIED.

    To get ~t working again, find who and what is varying it and get back on
the main line.

LRH:an.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1969  Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

246

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 MAY 1969
Remirneo
Dianetics
Checksheet  DIANETIC CONTRACT
Div 6

    This form is a standard offering and promotion form for preclears for
    Dianetic
Auditing.
                           DIANETICS

    FULL REFUND IF YOU DO NOT GET WELL THROUGH AUDITING.

    Anyone accepting this offer must also agree to  receive  if  required  a
medical examination and any effective treatment  for  any  entirely  medical
illness he may have
both before and after auditing.
    The extent of the refund will consist of the exact fee paid.
    The claim for refund must be made within three months of the  conclusion
of the auditing.
    If the fee is refunded no  more  Dianetic  or  Scientology  auditing  or
training may be given to the person.
    Medical illnesses which beforehand could not be cured medically  usually
respond to medical treatment after some auditing.
    Auditing after such medical treatment tends to stabilize the medical
    cure and
prevent relapse.
    A standard release form covering these points must be signed by the
    applicant.
      Some large percentage of Man's physical ills are psychosomatic and
respond
directly to auditing,  I
    Only  auditing  done  by  Hubbard   Dianetic   graduates   in   official
organizations are covered by this offer.
    WHY BE TIRED?
    WHY BEIN PAIN?
    WHY FEEL BAD?
    AUDITING CAN MAKE YOU FEEL WELL AND HAPPY WITH LIFE.
    OUR ORGANIZATIONS ARE FRIENDLY. THEY ARE ONLY HERE TO HELP YOU.

    These points above are to be included as additional clauses in our
    release forms.
    IF ANYONE EVER DEMANDS A REFUND UNDER THIS OFFER make him or her sign an
undertaking never again to purchase training or processing and A RECEIPT  IN
FULL and GIVE THEM THEIR MONEY BACK ON A MINUS INVOICE AT ONCE. Do not  make
a long argument out of it or a long drawn out Admin action.
    By paying these claims quickly, getting the promise  not  to  have  more
auditing  or  any  training  and  getting  a  receipt  YOU  ACTUALLY   BUILD
CONFIDENCE.
    It is fully understood that this campaign applies to DIANETICS.
    Trying to sell Scientology to make physical health has been  a  betrayal
of Scientology. The subject that made bodies well was and  always  has  been
Dianetics. Scientology increases ability and gives one immortality.  Refunds
for Scientology services are governed by the older policies which remain  in
force.

    The first line, FULL REFUND IF YOU DO NOT GET WELL THROUGH AUDITING, can
be posted in any display space. If so, a small printed complete  leaflet  as
written above should also be displayed so they can get all the facts.
    Persons asking about this should be handed the leaflet.
    New additional leaflet should also be available and handed out at the
    same time:

                           DIANETICS

    Dianetics (Dia-through, noos-mind) has been 39 years in development.
    It is the first fully precision science of the mind.

247

    Physical illness, aches, pains, continual exhaustion, body  malfunctions
are created or held in an unchanging state  by  the  mind.  This  is  called
psychosomatic (psycho-spirit,  somatic-body)  illness.  It  has  been  known
about for a century but there  has  never  been  a  positive  remedy  before
Dianetics.
    Auditing (it means to listen) is a term given to the application of
    Dianetics.
    No drugs, no hypnotism, no mechanical treatment is used.
    The actual source of psychosomatic illness has been isolated in
    Dianetics.
    Processing is the action of an auditor letting the preclear (person  not
yet cleared) find the actual source of his physical illness.
    Processing requires usually 25 hours or less.

    Various forms of mental therapy were  in  existence  before  Dianetics.
These were psychology, psychiatry and psycho-analysis.
    Psychology  and  psychiatry  were  developed  chiefly   by   a   Russian
veterinarian named Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (1849-1936).  His  basic  principle
was that men were only animals and could be  conditioned  and  trained  much
like dancing bears or dogs. This work was only intended  to  CONTROL  people
and so has found great favor with certain rulers and upper classes. None  of
the activities of psychology or psychiatry were designed to  help  or  cure,
only to Control the masses.
    Psycho-analysis was developed by an Austrian Jew  Sigmund  Freud  (1856-
1939). His occasional successes  served  to  point  out  that  there  was  a
possibility of solving psychosomatic illness through  addressing  the  mind.
His concentration on sex gave the subject considerable popularity.
    Dianetics  was  first  released  in  1950  and  has  been   increasingly
successful  since  that  time.  Unlike  earlier  studies,  the  interest  of
Dianetics was the relief of physical suffering.
    The results of psychiatry are physically damaging, consisting of various
brutalities and often injure the patient for  life  or  kill  him  outright.
There have never been any cures listed or claimed for psychiatric  treatment
as its interest lies only in control. The cost is about $2000 a month  often
for years in America and 160 a week for as long as a decade in England.
    Psychology is mainly used for testing aptitude or intelligence.  It  has
counseling as part of its activities but  it  is  more  concerned  with  and
financed for warfare.
    These two subjects have bitterly contested any healing subject  and  use
public media governments and even rumor to forward population Control.  This
action has often made it difficult to bring bonafide mental  health  to  the
people.
    Psycho-analysis requires up to five years for an  uncertain  result  and
costs about E9000.
    Dianetics requires only a matter of  hours,  only  helps  and  does  not
physically injure anyone. It costs about $25 an hour in  the  US  and  about
E50 total processing cost in the UK.
    There is no quarrel between Dianetics and general  practitioners  of'the
medical profession. They both have the same purpose (to  make  people  well)
and are not political. It is freely  admitted  in  Dianetics  that  physical
illness that can be effectively treated  medically  should  be  so  treated.
Auditing will not set a broken leg or deliver a baby. But it  can  help  get
the leg healed in two weeks instead of the usual six and  after  effects  of
childbirth do not exist when Dianetic auditing is also used.
    Many people who cannot work, who cannot enjoy life, are  physically  ill
without realizing it.
    Aches, pains, colds, even malfunctions of the body are symptoms of
    illness.

    See the Registrar.
      (address)

    Variations of the central ideas of these themes may be used.
    But remember, Dianetics is pastoral Counseling  and  all  HDGs  must  be
ministers.  Psycho-somatic  means  spirit-body.  Look  up  "psyche"  in  the
dictionary and you'll see.

LRH:an.ei.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (c) 1969     Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

248

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 MAY 1969

Remimeo Dianetics Course

PROGRESS BOARD

    The purpose of this board is as follows:-

1.    It shows the names of the students on the course. It's a vertical
    column on course list.

2.    It shows their progress according to their checksheet completions-
    horizontal column.

    It must be kept up to date. The Supervisor or the course  Administrator,
where the class is large enough to warrant one,  enters  the  names  of  new
students.

    Upon completion of each section the student makes the checks (ticks)  on
the Progress Board.

    Upon completion of the course each  section  has  three  checks  in  its
columnbooks one check.

    Keynotes of the Progress Board are:

I . It is drawn up according to the checksheet sections.

2.    It is kept in order by the Administrator.

3.    Each section is checked by the student upon immediate completion.

4.    It must be kept up to date and replaced, periodically. Send to be
    filed when taken down.

    Students returning from cramming take up where they left off having been
corrected on the specific outness for which they were sent to  Cramming  Div
V.

    The Supervisor regularly  observes  this  board  as  it  is  a  valuable
indicator of fast students and  those  students  who  should  be  routed  to
cramming.

    Supervisor's Section follows this layout.

    The Progress Board is posted conspicuously and open to view for anyone
    to see.

249

Supervisor's nam - ( ) qualification HDG
Administrator's name- ( )    Date

                               PROGRESS BOARD
                                    HSDC

(taken from the rough draft of the first HSDC checksheet)

 NAME DATE  INTRODUCTION DEFINITIONS AUDITOR'S     PROCESS AND ASSISTS
 POLICY     DEFINITIONS      AUDITOR
      STARTED          CODE  APPLICATION      AGAIN      REPORTS

 LRH C/S E-METER PRE-AUDITING AUDITING FINAL SUP.
FOLDERS     AND  EXAM  EXAM SECTION
      DRILLS

                      Record of Sessions Given

    The Administrator is to keep a posted list of sessions given by
students. Each session is graded Well Done or Flunk as indicated by the
Case Supervisor. The student too should keep this form indicating he has
complied with HCOB 6.4.69 Issue II-Dianetics Auditing Course Requirements.

    One sheet per auditor

    STUDENT AUDITOR    DATE

                     AUDITING COMPLETIONS
I DATE C JALLOCATEDI HRS I GAINS OR I HRS IWELLDONE"
     I AUP)ISTED SPACE AUDITED    AUDITED

LRH:JB:an.ei.rd  W/O James Byrne
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Cancelled by HCO P/L 30 July 1969, Student Progress Board, page 212. ]

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 MAY 1969
                                  Issue 11

Rernimeo
Dn Course

DIANETICS COURSE STUDENT AUDITING

    Policy on the Dianetics Course is that students may audit other students
on the same course, but only upon assignment to audit that  student  by  the
Course Administrator. It is expected  that  all  Dianctics  Course  students
will  complete  the  course  after  having  significant  gains  on  Standard
Dianetic auditing.

    This modifies the policy for the Dianetics Course ONLY that students may
not audit other students.

    The policy that students may not audit any  public  preclear  who  is  a
preclear of any organization is also modified for the Dianetics Course  ONLY
as far as other students on the Course are concerned.

    Dianetics Course Students will of course have to also audit pcs who  are
not on the course to complete their requirements, in which  case  the  above
policy DOES apply in that such preclears may not previously  have  been  pcs
of any Scientology Organization.

    NO DIANETIC PROMOTION MAY PROMISE OR INFER BECOMING  CLEAR  BY  DIANETIC
AUDITING. THE END PRODUCT OF  DIANETICS  IS  A  WELL  BODY  AND  A  CHEERFUL
ATTITUDE TO LIFE.

                                             Tony Dunleavy
LRH:TD:an.ei.rd  CS-2
Copyright'oc 1969      for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

(Cancelled by HCO P/L 8 June 1970 issue 11, Student Auditing, page 227.1

                               251

                 HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 Rernimeo   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 MAY 1969
 Dian Course
 Sup. section
       DIANETICS COURSE SUPERVISION AND ADMINISTRATION
       SUPERVISOR CHECKOUTS

CLAYDEMOS

    Clay demos are done by the student at his  own  table  or  at  the  Clay
Table. The student raises his hand when he is  ready  for  a  checkout.  The
supervisor comes over and gives a checkout as per HCOB I I  Oct  1967  "CLAY
TABLE TRAINING". All demos must be  checked  out  in  accordance  with  this
HCOB.

TRAINING DRILLS

    The training drills are checked out, with the Supervisor being "the
    coach".

    If student flunks Supervisor has the student coach drill him on  the  TR
some more telling the student coach what the student flunked on.

E-METER DRILLS

    The Supervisor is to closely supervise E-Meter drills, making sure  they
are done correctly.

    (On Dianetics Course E-M Drills 23 & 26 are *checked out.)

SELECTION OF TWINS

    One of the duties of the Supervisor is the selection of twins.

    The main object in  selection  of  twins  is  to  team  up  students  of
comparable ability. SLOW students of course are sent  to  the  Examiner  for
Review or Cramming. Poor  case  gain  students  are  sent  to  the  Examiner
suggesting "GF to F/N and no 40GF and handle". (One cannot  order  Qual  but
one can suggest.)

    You just have to work it on trial and error for the first couple of days
until you get an idea of how fast the students are.

    Twins should remain twins for the duration of the course in  so  far  as
possible and are responsible for each other's progress.

COURSE AUDITING ADMINISTRATION

    Part of the duties of the Course Administrator are:

1.    KEEPING A FULL RECORD OF WHO'S AUDITING WHO.

    (a) No. of sessions
    (b) Auditor's name
    (c) PC (or pre OT's) name
    (d) Dates of each session
    (See HCO Pol Ltr 24 May 69 "Progress Board", Record of Sessions Given.)

2.    Scheduling preclears to auditors.

3.    Making sure all auditing reports, work sheets and Summary Reports are
    written legibly or written over neatly by the auditor using a different
    colored pen.

4.    Making sure all folders are intact ready to go to Case Supervisor.

5.    Having folders easily accessible and in alphabetical order so they
    can be quickly obtained.

    The Course  Administrator  must  make  available  any  folder  the  Case
Supervisor or Student Auditor requests.

                                           Michael Mauerer
                                           Dianetics Course Supervisor

LRH:MM.an.ei.rd  Sea Organization
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                               252

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF I JUNE 1969
                                  Issue II

Rernimeo, Dn Supervisor's Course

                       DIANETICS TRAINING

    A datum has emerged which is vital to  Dianetics  training  and  to  the
whole forward advance of Dianetics and Scientology.

    A COURSE SUPERVISOR WHO DOES NOT KNOW HIS COURSE MATERIALS TO THE  POINT
    OF BEING ABLE TO INDICATE WHERE IN THE MATERIALS ANY DATUM CAN BE  FOUND
    WILL EVALUATE FOR AND GIVE DATA TO THE STUDENTS.

    Further students will have extreme confidence in the Supervisor who  can
and does direct them to the exact Bulletin section or paragraph  where  they
will find the answer to their tech questions, or which they  need  to  study
further.

    Therefore on any Supervisor's Course, the student must be drilled and is
expected to know his materials by Bulletin and paragraph. He must  know  his
materials backwards as well as Study Materials and supervision technology.

    The Text Book for any course must be compiled by subject, and paragraphs
numbered. There must be an Index by  Terms,  giving  all  the  page  numbers
these terms are used, with any page on  which  they  are  defined  in  heavy
print.

    There are two Dianetics Courses.

    HUBBARD STANDARD DIANETICS COURSE.

    On this course the student is trained to be a highly competent  Standard
Dianetics auditor. It is a thorough course, taught tough,  and  to  graduate
the Student must have  gotten  excellent  case  gains  himself  and  on  his
preclears. He graduates by reason of excellent examination  marks  and  well
done sessions.

    The certificate for  this  course  is  the  HUBBARD  DIANETIC  COUNSELOR
CERTIFICATE. The Graduate of this course is NOT qualified to teach an HSDC.

    The second course is the

    HUBBARD DIANETIC SUPERVISOR COURSE.

    This course  requires  that  the  student  knows  his  Dianetics  Course
materials so well that he can point to anything in the materials.

    He must also know thoroughly the Study Material and Supervision
    Technology.

    The Hubbard Dianetic  Supervisor  Course  is  taught  only  in  Official
Scientology Organizations, and, is very tough with  lots  of  drilling.  The
student graduates as a HUBBARD DIANETICS GRADUATE and he, and  only  he,  is
authorized to teach  a  Hubbard  Standard  Dianetics  Course  or  a  Hubbard
Dianetics Supervisor Course.

    A Dianetics Counseling Group should have a Hubbard Dianetics Graduate as
only then may it conduct and run a Hubbard Standard  Dianetics  Course.  And
it must hold a Franchise to do so.

    It should send in to  an  official  Scientology  Organization  its  best
Standard  Dianetics  auditors  to  be  trained  on  the  Hubbard   Dianetics
Supervisor Course.

                                            Tony Dunleavy
                                            Planning & Training Aide

LRH:TD:cs.ei.rd  for
Copyright (~) 1969     L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard      Founder
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

253

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 JUNE 1969
                                  Issue 11

Rernimeo Dianetics Course Checksheet

                  LEGAL STATEMENT CONCERNING DIANETICS AND
                            MEDICAL PRACTICE LAWS

    Dianetics is a science. It is not Scientology. In the hands of a medical
practitioner who is  also  a  trained  Dianeticist,  Dianctics  may  achieve
remarkable results in the handling of many  of  the  problems  and  ailments
which make up a large part of ordinary practice. It does not  infringe  upon
orthodox curative medicine for known  physical  ailments.  In  this  context
Dianetics may be called 'treatmenVand be said to 'cure'.

    In the hands of a priest or minister who is also a trained  Dianeticist,
the same tool has a different use and function. It is used as  a  technology
of pastoral counselling. It is then not used to treat and  to  cure  in  the
medical sense, but  to  handle  the  effect  of  the  spirit  on  the  body.
Dianetics, after examination, treatment, cure and a clean  bill  of  health,
as necessary, by a medical doctor, is used as a  tool  by  the  minister  to
free  a  person's  attentions  from  his  body  so  that  he  is  ready  for
Scientology. It is thus  true  pastoral  counselling  and  has  a  religious
function.

    Dianetics as a subject taught on the Hubbard Standard  Dianetics  Course
can be promoted in any authorized way. The teaching of Dianetics  cannot  be
excepted to. But promotion of the practice of Dianetics as a  treatment  for
the sick  or  afflicted  or  as  a  treatment  for  blemishes,  deformities,
diseases, disfigurements, disorders, injuries or other  mental  or  physical
conditions,  by  other  than  medical  doctors,  will  violate  the  medical
practice laws where they exist and lead to trouble.

    Hence the importance of controlled promotion, of sending sick pcs  to  a
medical clinic for examination, for emphasizing  that  pastoral  counselling
is a use of Dianetics and is a religious use with the  purpose  of  handling
the effect of the spirit on the body and not a use which conflicts with  the
proper sphere of the medical doctor as laid down in medical practice laws.

    That is not to say that Dianetics is a religion. It  is  not.  It  is  a
science, but  it  has  a  religious  use-to  free  the  spirit  from  bodily
considerations. Such problems of the spirit are  not  the  function  of  the
medical doctor, nor the concern of the medical practice laws.

    A proper adherence to the distinction between  promoting  Dianetics  the
science  taught  on  the  Dianetics  Course,  and  Dianetics  the   pastoral
counselling technology practised by Ministers of religion, will resolve  any
problems posed by medical practice
laws.

      Proposed by      Charles Parselle
            Legal Chief W/W
      Approved by      Jane Kember
            The Guardian W/W
            for
            L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:ei.rd Founder
Copyright (D 1969
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

254

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER CORRECT COLOUR FLASH
                               RED ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

   HCO BULLETIN OF 7 JUNE 1969

Rernimeo
Dianetic
Supervisor's
Course

             DIANETICS

POINTS WHICH GO OUT AND WRECK PCS

    These are the points which regularly go out on a course  and  wreck  it.
They are vital points which must be; policed and kept  in.  You  can  almost
take it on the basis that if student auditors wreck  any  pcs  these  points
are out and MUST be put in  fast  to  save  the  repute  of  Dianetics,  the
Course, org and area.

 I .  A student must not be permitted to audit until he has passed a tough
    written examination with a grade of 1001vo.

 2.   When a student flunks his auditing or examination he or  she  re-does
    the whole checksheet fully (three times through).  If  a  Qual  Cramming
    section is available with a trained  Dianetic  Cramming  Supervisor  the
    student, after flunking, goes to Cramming, gets his misunderstoods, etc.
    handled and then does the checksheet through three times.

 3.   When the student re-does his checksheet he must be checked out  again
    on the bulletins and drills as though  he  had  never  done  the  Course
    before. Do not check him out, on only those bulletins he flunked  on  or
    misapplied.

 4.   The person who says "it is all an overrun" (when made to restudy the
    materials) usually hasn't studied his materials in the first place.

 5.   LRH case supervised folders must be available and properly studied on
    course and on any retraining.

 6.   All materials must be available to the student. The course is compact
    and meaty. The student cannot graduate (or audit) without having checked
    out on all bulletins at least three times.  Crossing  an  item  off  the
    checksheet as 'not available' is not permitted. The Course Administrator
    must ensure all materials are available.

 7.   A student must be shown and must study all the C/Ses of his  sessions
    before  auditing  another  session.  He  must   be   checked   out   for
    understanding of the C/S instructions of each  before  auditing  another
    session. If this is not done he will repeat errors already corrected  by
    the C/S but not known to him.

 8.   Any new bulletins issued and designated for the Dianetic Course  must
    be issued to  the  students  and  checked  out  and  must  be  added  to
    checksheets for new students. New bulletins are issued  because  (a)  an
    important new aspect of the technology has been developed by Ron or  (b)
    the bulletin is  required  to  correct  an  outness  persisting  in  the
    application of the technology. In either case it is vital  for  students
    to have the data and to be able to apply it.

 9.   The Supervisor must not give Tech data to the student-even if he does
    know it verbatim. He must only refer the student to  the  materials.  If
    your students are auditing satisfactorily for  a  period  and  then  the
    sessions go on the rocks, auditors who  were  previously  doing  alright
    start doing goofy things, you can be certain  somebody  is  giving  Tech
    data. That is the time to call in Inspections and Reports or the  Ethics
    Officer to do an Investigation and find out WHO. The most likely  person
    is the Course Supervisor, the Examiner, the Cramming Officer, or some

255

    other 'technically knowledgeable' person. It may be one of the  students
    or it may be that the students are permitted to get their Tech data from
    other students.

10.   The Course must be tightly scheduled, starts, breaks and end of day
    being very precise.

11.   The course must be closely supervised, the supervisor there  on  time
    and there during the course, with no other org duties, and  an  adequate
    number of supervisors and administrators  must  be  on  staff  when  the
    course gets too large to be handled easily.  Large  courses  are  broken
    down into sub-units.

    These are the points which, if permitted to fall out,  will  wreck  your
course and your pes. We have already seen these points go out several  times
on a closely watched course.  It  is  quite  insidious  and  is  immediately
reflected in goofball auditing that drives a Case Supervisor nuts.

    Tech Secs, Qual Sees, and Case Supervisors must be alert to see that the
Course Supervisor gets these points in and keeps them  in  before  all  your
Dianetic pcs wind up in Review.

Brian Livingston CS-5 for L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:BL:fas.ei.rd Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

256

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 JUNE 1969

Remimeo

         DIANETIC REGISTRATION
            (Revises HCO Policy Letter of April 6, 1969 Issue 11
            Mainly in reference to Paragraphs two, seven and ten)

    A sign should be prominently displayed in all orgs servicing the general
public as follows:

    "if you have come here to be  cured  of  a  physical  illness,  SEE  THE
REGISTRAR and so inform her so that she can arrange for a competent  medical
examination and treatment and for Dianetic auditing while under the care  of
a doctor. When you are physically well, you can begin  Scientology  training
and processing on your road to total freedom."

    And another sign,

    "This organization  will  not  recommend  or  condone  political  mental
treatment such as electric shocks or brain operations  or  convulsive  drugs
and  condemns  utterly  this  Fascist  approach  to   'mental   health'   by
extermination of the insane. Because we will  not  agree  to  brutality  and
murder under the guise of mental healing or to the easy and lawless  seizure
of persons in the name of 'mental health'  for  political  reasons,  we  are
fought ceaselessly by those who seek  domination  of  this  country  through
'mental treatment'. You are safe so long as we live."

    The registrar is to sign the person up as he or she would any preclear.

    The org must make a liaison with a medical clinic which  has  diagnostic
equipment and obtain a flat rat., charge.

    Legally and ethically it is all right to send a person to a doctor for a
physical examination, but it will cause an ARC  break  with  the  doctor  to
specify what he is to do in that examination.

    It is best to say merely:  "Would  you  please  do  a  complete  medical
examination to include any acute or chronic illness  and  any  effects  from
past injury or illness."

    It should be made clear to the medical doctor who pays  his  fee.  "Your
fee for this examination and for any special investigation will be  paid  by
the bearer."

    It should end by saying, "Would you please give a note of your  findings
to the bearer."

    Note that it would be unethical for the  medical  doctor  to  treat  any
curable disease found unless the person examined specifically asked  him  to
treat it. otherwise he would refer the person to his own doctor.

    A doctor cannot be asked to  supervise  a  person  while  he  is  having
auditing because he cannot professionally be asked to join in a  non-medical
attempt to cure some  illness,  for  if  he  did  he  would  be  subject  to
discipline, charged with "covering", and if found  guilty,  struck  off  the
Medical Register.

    The org should make their position very clear to  the  clinic-that  they
are trying to co-operate with the medical profession  and  that  Scientology
is a religion. However, after or in the  absence  of  medical  treatment  if
none is needed, the persons sent will be given Dianetic auditing after  such
medical  examination   and   treatment,   if   given,   or   under   medical
[supervision]. A clean cut difference should be made  between  Dianctics  as
an assist  done  under  a  physician's  care  or  after  his  treatment  and
Dianetics as a religious function of pastoral counselling or Scientology  as
a religious practice.

   ; If contempt or hostility is met, write a letter of complaint to the
   medical

257

association and try another doctor or clinic. In such a letter of  complaint
make it very plain that you are not engaged in physical  healing,  that  you
have always tried to co-operate with medicine and that your only quarrel  is
with psychiatric casualties and their perversion of the medical profession.

    If the clinic shows clear cut evidence of the need of an operation,  the
D of Processing should give the preclear the verdict. If the  preclear  will
not have it, arrange a meeting between  the  preclear  and  the  doctor  and
discuss it.

    It is possible to engage in Dianetic  processing  even  when  a  medical
verdict is for an operation, but if the preclear  will  not  have  it,  then
undertake Dianetic processing only under the  doctor's  care  and  with  his
consent, and insist upon the preclear being re-examined during processing.

    The cost of  the  examination  and  any  operation  is  in  addition  to
processing fees and any such charges are paid directly to the clinic by  the
preclear, the org not taking responsibility for the costs of these.

    After any medical treatment, the entire treatment is run as an engram or
chain as the first action. Lingering symptoms are also  run  down  to  their
basics as per Dianetic Auditing Assists given in the Dianetic Course.

    Policy is not to engage on auditing sick pcs without medical  advice  or
treatment as required.

    Insane pes  are  handled  in  this  same  fashion  as  they  are  mainly
physically ill, need rest and  no  harassment.  Insane  pcs  are  a  lot  of
trouble unless one has an institution to hand, but  institutions  cannot  be
trusted. Until an org has some means  or  connection  by  which  the  insane
preclear  will  not  be  brutalized,  shocked  or  operated  on  with  brain
"operations", it is better to refuse them.

    By insane pe is meant one  who  is  subject  to  highly  irrational  and
destructive behavior. If not, they are regarded as physically ill.

    The senile and mentally retarded are also handled as per physically  ill
pes as above.

    Waivers in all cases are required.

    A new  clause,  "Will  not  hold  the  organization  or  its  principals
responsible for medical costs  or  errors",  must  be  included  in  signing
persons up for Dianetics.

    Complete files of all such should be kept in Division 6 to show in case
    of need

    (a) that the org does not engage in physical healing and

    (b) success stories with full records, X-rays, etc for Dianetics.

    Where this policy letter is fully in force, earlier policies on  healing
and the insane are cancelled.

    This change of policy is due to (1) our wish  to  cease  to  individuate
from the other social groups of the society and (2)  our  refusal  to  leave
the field of mental healing in the hands of public enemies.

    This is also part of our campaign to Revitalize Western Society. "A well
society is a sane society."

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:fas.ei.cden  Founder
Copyright 1969
by L. RonWubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: The word "principlee' has  been  corrected  to  "principals"  in  the
fifth last paragraph, per HCO PL 2 September 1969, Issue III, Correction  to
HCO PL 12 June 1969.1

                               258

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 JUNE 1969

Remimeo
Examiners

        DIANETICS

PRE-AUDITING EXAMINATION

    Confidential HCO Policy Letter of 5 May 1969 Pre-Auditing Examination is
cancelled.

    The  pre-auditing  examination  consists  only  of   a   tough   written
examination which must be passed 100% before the  student  is  permitted  to
audit.

    After a period the current written examinations  will  become  too  well
known,  also  some  students  may  flunk  the  exam  several  times   before
eventually passing with 100%,  hence  more  examinations  will  need  to  be
written from time to time. These should be originated as  necessary  by  the
Qual See WW or, under his direction, by  some  competent  person  who  is  a
Dianetic Graduate.

    All examinations must consult the student's understanding and ability to
relate the materials to a session.

    Sometimes a student will get high marks in the nineties  and  only  lost
marks for an incomplete answer rather than incorrect answers. In such  cases
the examiner after marking the  paper  can  verbally  ask  the  student  the
questions on which he lost marks. If the  student  then  gives  the  missing
data, without having referred to the materials or discussed the  examination
with somebody in the mean time, he passes.

    This opportunity is not given  if  the  student  answered  any  question
incorrectly or had less than about 94% on first marking.

    The purpose of the examination is., to find out if the student knows and
understands the materials cold. If he doesn't he will mess up cases.

    The student who flunks the examination or auditing goes to Cramming  and
then back to course. to re-do the full course.

    THE ENTIRE PURPOSE OF THIS EXAM IS TO PREVENT THE MESSED UP PCS WE  FIND
OCCURRING WHEN THIS QUALIFICATION TO AUDIT EXAM IS OMITTED.

                                             Brian Livingston CS-5 for

LRH:BL:eky.ei.rd L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1969 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

I Cancelled by HCOP/L 29 July 1972 Issue 11, Fast Flow in Training, in the
1972 Year Book.]

                               259

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER CORRECT COLOUR FLASH RED ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

  HCO BULLETIN OF 11 JULY 1969

Rernimeo Dianetics Supervisor's Course

SUPERVISION

    A Course Supervisor can  give  himself,  and  his  students,  losses  by
becoming too careful. The Supervisor being over anxious  and  harassing  all
his students to graduate without flunks can  unwittingly  bring  about  slow
cautious students. This extends course time and the  mode  is  carried  over
into auditing. The students then become slow cautious auditors.  An  auditor
who, in session, is being careful not to  flub,  not  to  violate  any  tech
datum or policy will not have his TRs in, will not have the  PC  in  session
and will flunk his auditing.

    Dianetics is a fast simple course. It is not complicated.

    The majority of students will fly through the course  in  two  to  three
weeks of full time study. If they don't the supervisor has  probably  gotten
too cautious and inadvertently slowed the course down.

    It happens several ways. For example: A student goes into  auditing  and
then flunks. The supervisor feels responsible for  not  having  trained  the
student adequately. He then takes up the student auditor's flunks  with  the
whole class and has them all star rate check out on  the  bulletin  so  they
won't make the same mistake. Another example is  the  super-visor  who  goes
anxious about the few slow students on course. He feels he is failing  as  a
supervisor to have any slow students so starts spending  much  of  his  time
coaching, checking out, and handling the few. It awards a  down  stat.  This
is done to the detriment of the majority of fast  students.  The  supervisor
should simply twin the slow  students,  have  them  work  together  using  a
dictionary and checking each other out on the materials.  When  they  really
know the data the supervisor checks them out on their star  rate  materials.
He doesn't spend a lot of time with them. If they just can't make the  grade
he routes them off to Qual for Cramming and Review to handle.

    There are two types of students:

(a)   The student who has had good case gain and studies easily, or the
    student who may not have had much auditing but studies and audits well
    in spite of his case.

(b)   The student whose case continuously gets in the way and requires
    auditing before he will make much progress.

    The fast students are permitted to fly right  along,  no  harassment  or
interruptions, quick concise checkouts. They go fast.  They  are  encouraged
to go fast. They get the idea that Dianetics is  simple  and  they  want  to
audit.  The  supervisor   doesn't   introduce   complications   or   unusual
assignments or 'special drills' not on  the  checksheet.  The  student  then
gets into auditing. He knows the course was  simple  and  uncomplicated.  He
carries this attitude into auditing and produces  simple  standard  sessions
with good results.

    The slow student is twinned with another  slow  student  (not  with  the
supervisor) and if he doesn't make the grade at all he is sent  to  Cramming
after a period and auditing may be required. The system of  senior  students
auditing the newer students, together with any needed Reviews,  will  handle
the (b) type student (particularly if  a  Class  VIII  Case  Supervisor  and
Review Auditor are available). The supervisor must

260

avoid  being  led  into  giving  the  slow  student  special  attention  and
additional time at the expense of the majority fast students.

    Supervisors are normally very hard working and conscientious. They do an
excellent job but can, in their own well  intentioned  desire  to  have  all
students  doing  well,  be  misled  into  adding  to  the  course,  becoming
instructors instead of Supervisors, getting too involved with slow  students
and thus slowing down the course as a  whole  and  producing  slow  cautious
students who carry this attitude into auditing  and  so  flunk  sessions.  A
supervisor doing this can make students too frightened to audit.

    If the  supervisor  validates  the  fast  students  by  quick  pertinent
checkouts,  keeps  the.  course  simple  and  avoids  all  additives   (like
assigning additional checkouts to the whole class,  or  group  question  and
answer periods, etc), pairs up any slow students and  uses  standard  course
policy, Ethics and Review, he will have  a  fast  course  and  will  produce
competent uncomplicated. auditors who know and apply  their  data,  like  to
audit, and give good standard sessions.

Brian Livingston CS-5 for L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:BL:ei.aap Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

261

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 AUGUST 1969
                       (Corrects & replaces HCO P/L of
                           14 May 1969-Same Title)

Dianetics Course

     STARRATE CHECKOUTS

ON STANDARD DIANETICS COURSE

    The following are starrate checked out on the Standard Dianetics
    Course.

    HCO Bulletin of 6 May 1969    "Routine 3-R Revised
      (Issue 11) Engram Running by Chains"
    HCO Bulletin of 23 April 1969 "Dianetics-BASIC DEFINITIONS"
    HCO Bulletin of 29 April 1969 "Assessment and Interest"
    HCO Bulletin of 19 May 1969   "Health Form, Use of"
    HCO Bulletin of 9 May 1969    "Case Supervising Dianetics Folders"
    HCO Bulletin of 28 June 1969  "How to Case Supervise Dianetics Folders"

    TRs 0-4 (Practical)

    TRs 10 1 - 104 (Practical)

    E-Meter Drill 23   "Assessment by Tone Arm"
    E-Meter Drill 26   "Differentiation between Sizes of Reads"

    The balance of the checksheet is done Fast Flow by Attestation.

                      STARRATE CHECKOUTS

    It is not required  that  Starrate  Checkouts  be  done  by  the  Course
Supervisor or Asst Supervisors. This becomes impractical  as  course.numbers
increase.

    Students should be Starrate Checked out by  students  other  than  their
twin. The usual way this is done  is  for  two  pairs  of  twins  to  "Cross
Checkout", that is, two pairs working side by side checkout members  of  the
other pair. But any student other  than  the  person's  twin  may  give  the
student a Starrate Checkout. The person giving  the  checkout  initials  and
dates the checksheet, thus attesting that he has  given  a  proper  Starrate
Checkout and that the Student has passed.

    The Course Supervisor and Assistant Supervisors must constantly  observe
Starrate Checkouts being given, and ensure that the standard  remains  high,
in full accordance with HCO P/L 14 May 69 Issue 11 (How  to  do  a  Starrate
Checkout) and HCOB I I October 1967 (Clay Table Training).

                                             Tony Dunleavy

LRH:TD:Idm.ei.rd Plans & Training Aide
Copyright Q 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

[Note: This revision corrected the date of "Health Form,  Use  of"  from  16
April 1969, added HCO B 28  June  1969,  TRs  101-104  and  the  last  three
paragraphs. It was later cancelled by HCO P/L  31  December  1970,  Standard
Twin Checkouts, in the 1970 Year Book; and 14 May 1969 was cancelled by  HCO
P/L 29 July 1972 Issue II, Fast Flow in Training (which  also  cancelled  31
December 1970), in the 1972 Year Book.]

                               262

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 OCTOBER 1969
      Revised and Reissued
Rernimeo    10 DECEMBER 1969
BM
Franchise

The Auditor DIANETIC COURSES,
                            WILDCAT

    Unauthorized and incompetent Dianetic courses are bound to spring up and
have already.

    Policy on this is to insist they have a competent HDG to teach them.

    They can send one of their number to an Sen. org. We will do  an  ything
possible to make it easy to train their instructor.

    We will grant their students an HDC certificate of a special type on the
sworn attestation of their HDG Supervisor (who  must  have  been  officially
trained) that his student has passed an exacting examination  with  a  grade
of 100%, has sworn to follow the Auditor's Code and has  done  25  hours  of
auditing all well done or very well done in results according to the  pc  at
certificate cost.

    We will make full study texts available to thern and their students.

    On the other hand we control absolutely the copyrights and materials and
can enforce them.

    As we are only insisting they get the straight data, it should  be  easy
to make such arrangements as we are very reasonable and only wish to help.

    Scientology auditors are trained only by our orgs.

    "Wildcat" (meaning springing up anywhere) Dianetic  students  will  soon
realize the value of being backed up by a Scientology auditor, thus  sending
students to our orgs.

    Action should be taken to handle this situation wherever it  occurs.  We
are only seeking to protect results and the repute  of  Dianetics.  We  want
people to win and stand ready to help.

    No one has to covertly teach Dianetics. We will let  them  do  it  quite
openly so long as they have their supervisor  trained  and  use  the  actual
texts.

    Authorized Franchises and officially registered groups teach HDC Courses
on an official basis and receive validated official certificates.

    All certificates are provisional until re-examined by  the  Director  of
Certificates and Awards of an Official org, at which. time they are  stamped
"Professional". The examination charge is $15.00.

    Any certificate may be withdrawn  if  falsely  procured,  for  abuse  or
failure to follow the Auditor's Code.

LRH:rs.ei.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1969  Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: This revision added the last three paragraphs and changed the  fourth
paragraph from "We will grant their students HDC certs on  their  attest  at
certificate cost (S2.50)" to the above.]

                              263

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH NOT
                                               GREEN ON WHITE
                  HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
               20 Buckingham Street, London W.C.2, England

Executives in Washington and London:
Mary Sue; Dick Steves, Julia Lewis; Don Breeding, Jack Parkhouse.

THE SUMMARY OF A BULLETIN FROM THE ACADEMY IN WASHINGTON D.C.
                     CONCERNING TRAINING

    Scientology organizations have recently surveyed and re-studied training
and its results in the light of the  best  benefits  for  the  student,  the
public and the organizations themselves, therefore  the  following  programs
are being instigated, as they prove feasible. Training is classified and  is
being enfranchised along the following lines:

FIRSTLEVEL:      FREE COURSE

    This level of training is performed by Auditors throughout the world and
even by the organizations themselves. It consists of a one or two-week  free
course (depending on whether or not it's given five times a  week  or  three
times a week) covering the most elementary principles which  general  groups
can agree with in Scientology. The total  aim  of  this  course  is  to  get
people who are working  in  and  are  interested  in  Scientology  to  carry
forward more of Scientology programs. This is a very important  course  both
for individuals and the organization,  but  it's  mainly  important  to  the
general public. It is not the purpose of this course to teach even  a  tenth
of what appears in "Scientology: The Fundamentals of Thought".  The  purpose
is to take people who have or have not heard of Scientology  and  give  them
their first real  reality  on  the  subject  by  taking  some  of  the  most
elementary but far-reaching principles  and  getting  them  to  examine  the
principles and finally come to an agreement concerning them. No  certificate
is awarded on this course.

SECOND COURSE:   ADVANCED COURSE

    This course is given for a fee and consists  of  twenty  hours  or  more
instruction,  advancing  even  further  into  Scientology  and  teaching  in
particular two subjects, ten hours of instruction at least being devoted  to
each. These instructions cover exactly the first  ten  hour  period  of  the
Advanced Course: the communication formula  and  its  use;  and  the  second
period of at least ten hours: the tone scale. These two subjects are taught-
each an equal number of hours so that people can be admitted to an  Advanced
Course at its mid point. Here again there's no effort to teach auditing  but
only the use and application of  the  communication  formula  and  the  tone
scale. Two books exist for this subject.  One  is  "Dianetics  1955!"  which
covers the communication formula, and "Science of Survival" which covers  at
least the elementary tone scale and what can be expected from it. These  are
the two text books of this particular course. Care must  be  taken  in  this
course that the student is not overwhelmed  and  confused  but  is  actually
given a few more key stable data with  which  he  can  work  in  line.  This
course does not intend to make an auditor, there is no  certificate  granted
for this course.

THIRD CO UR SE:  ELEMENTARY SCIENTOLOGIST

    This course teaches  auditing  of  individuals  and  groups  and  is  in
actuality a very complete course on the subject of Scientology. It takes  up
1956 HCA  tapes,  it  takes  up  the  various  text  books  and  it  teaches
individual and  group  processing  and  teaches  as  well  the  handling  of
organizations and personnel in them. It is probable that this  course  would
cost about $125 or at least f 35. This course  requires  a  right  to  train
from the Founding Church or the HASI. It ends with a  certificate  from  the
Central Organizations,  the  exact  title  of  this  auditor  has  not  been
established,  but  the  title  would  mean  Elementary  Scientologist.   The
certificate is signed by the Training Auditor who did  the  actual  training
and by the secretary of the organization issuing the certificate. The  title
of this course would not be an HCA Course even though  HCA  tapes  are  used
and the certificate given would not be Hubbard Certified Auditor or  Hubbard
Professional Auditor. As it is to this level that most rights to  train  are
directing themselves and as they are cramped by having  to  charge  so  much
money and as the examination  has  occasioned  so  much  difficulty,  it  is
thought to be helpful to Auditors "training  in  the  field"  to  have  this
course to teach.

FOURTH COURSE: HUBBARD CERTIFIED AUDITOR

    This course will be taught by the Central Organizations only. The
    British

264

equivalent would be  Hubbard  Professional  Auditor.  According  to  present
planning  this  course  would  require  as  its  fundamental  the  requisite
certification by a field training auditor either in  day  or  night  school,
probably most effectively the latter and would apply some of what  had  been
paid on an elementary course to the fee in the  Central  Organization  as  a
reduction. In other words it  would  not  only  be  a  requisite  in  having
training elsewhere but also the training elsewhere would  carry  with  it  a
reduction. That this is only taught by the Central  Organizations  does  not
mean  the  Central  Organizations  would  not  also  teach   an   Elementary
Scientologist Course. A considerable rigor of training would be  entered  in
to the Central Organizations and the certificate of  HCA  or  HPA  would  be
awarded by examination only.

FIFTH CO UR SE:  HUBBARD ADVANCED AUDITOR (B.SCN. ABROAD) ,

    This course would be  an  extended  Advanced  Course  which  would  more
closely take up the entire body of theory  and  information  of  Scientology
and which would improve' the Auditor's case level and  operational  ability.
The  certificate  of  Hubbard  Advanced  Auditor  (Bachelor  of  Scientology
abroad) would be awarded  at  course  completion  by  reason  of  successful
examination.

SIXTH COURSE:    HUBBARD GRADUATE AUDITOR (D.SCN. ABROAD)

    This course would be taught as an Advanced Clinical Unit, preferably  by
L.R.H. only. It would consists of the equivalent of a three-week  intensive,
two weeks of high school indoctrination so as to be able to  cope  with  any
kind of a case and a week of coaching on processes. This is actually  a  new
type of Advanced Clinical Course only  so  far  as  its  actual  pattern  is
concerned. It would be  instructed  by  L.R.H.  At  the  end  of  course  by
examination the  certificate  of  Hubbard  Graduate  Auditor  or  Doctor  of
Scientology abroad, would be issued.

SEVENTHCOURSE:   ORGANIZATIONAL INTERNSHIP

    This course would be actually an internship and would  be  available  in
the several ways as follows:

(a) TYPE A INTERNSHIP

    The Central Organization chooses amongst the HPAs  or  HCAs  graduating,
extremely likely  students  and  offers  them  a  year's  internship  to  be
performed in the various organizational  units,  auditing,  instructing  and
administrating so as to completely familiarize the student with the  various
workings of the organization (which  are  sufficiently  complex  and  are  a
sufficiently large study at this time that very few people  understand  them
who are not working with the organizations themselves).  The  student  would
sign a contract paying a certain  sum  of  money  by  the  contract  to  the
organization for the year's internship. A Type A  Internship  would  however
give the student several weeks, of probationary employment at a  rather  low
wage and the remainder of the year employment at  a  reasonably  good  wage,
only less than that of an equivalent staff member. At the end of his  year's
training he is given a certificate as a Staff Auditor and with  that  title,
which  attests  the  fact  that  he  has  served  for  a  year  within   the
organization  in  the  capacity  of  a  Professional  Auditor.  The  Type  A
Internship and no other internship would  influence  earlier  training  fees
contracted. By issuing such internships the organization would be sure  that
the individual then released into the  field  would  be  able  to  carry  on
independently and would be able to do extremely well as his  auditing  would
be excellent. The reason of being entered on an internship would  not  bring
about any other degree and these would have to be studied for as in an  ACC,
deducting only such time of study from  the  year,  but  the  fees  for  any
additional courses would have to be paid.

(b) TYPE B INTERNSHIP

    A Type B Internship would be solicited by students, not offered  by  the
organization. It would consist of the payment of a fee to  the  organization
for a year's additional  training  in  the  organization  itself  and  would
follow more or less the same pattern  as  a  Type  A  Internship,  with  the
exception that the Type B Intern would not be on the pay roll,  All  of  his
activities would be conducted on a purely self-supporting  basis.  He  would
pay the fee to the organization for this work and training. At  the  end  of
that time he too would be issued a  certificate  as  Staff  Auditor  of  the
organization. Both*  the  Type  A  Internship  and  the  Type  B  Internship
certificates would be signed by the Director of  Training  and  Director  of
Processing and by L.R.H.

                              265

(c) TYPECINTERNSHIP

    This Internship would be available to  HCAs  determining  to  work  with
Staff Auditors in the field. In addition to his HCA training he  would  then
have a year's training  working  in  the  offices  of  other  auditors.  The
initiation of a Type C Internship would be totally in  the  hands  of  field
auditors  and  the  arrangements  they  would  make  would   be   completely
independent of the Central Organization.  The  only  certificate  authorized
for a Type  C  Internship  would  be  an  endorsement  on  the  HCA  or  HPA
certificate by the Central Organization that this  auditor  had  worked  for
one year with a field auditor under internship.
    Concerning all Internships, credit for the Internship fee  would  be  no
great liability to the organization since people who  will  get  around  the
organizations for a  year  actively  engaged  in  handling  the  fundamental
problems of the organizations of Scientology  are  usually  in  their  later
personal practices quite well off. No shorter period than  one  year  should
be tolerated. The Intern  in  leaving  the  organization  or  in  committing
sufficient  breaches  of  the  Code  of  a  Scientologist  to  occasion  his
dismissal from the organization would not be absolved  from  his  Internship
contract and the contract should be so  written.  When  he  has  passed  his
probationary period of the first few weeks and has  actually  been  accepted
on a  full  internship  basis  he  is  fully  committed  to  his  Internship
contract. Up until that time his dismissal or relief from  Internship  would
absolve him of the contract. The grade of permanent  staff  would  therefore
have to be designated. This exists in fact at this time. There are  auditors
who  prefer  the  companionship  and  team-work  of  the  organizations   to
individual practice and these as Instructors  and  Staff  Auditors  are  the
backbone of the organization. They would  therefore  have  to  be  specially
designated as permanent staff and would receive a higher salary  than  other
auditors in the organization-by which is meant permanent interns Type A.
    This training plan is built out of experience and  although  some  fault
may be found with it in various places it is  discovered  that  a  high  fee
long duration HCA course works a considerable hardship on a  field  auditor.
He does not actually profit from it. He could however profit from a low  fee
evening or  even  day-course  without  the  added  complexities  of  Central
Organization examination, checking states of case and  the  randomity  which
has occasionally arisen. It is thought that  a  person  with  the  right  to
train would be able to support himself much better financially at the  lower
fee he would rather charge and without having the duress put upon him to  do
the same amount of work with the student as would be  required  in  an  HCA.
Furthermore this type of training could be made available in other parts  of
the world than the United States. The Central  Organization  could  actively
support these rights to train by demanding that training  be  done  to  some
degree in the field as a requisite to  Central  Organization  courses.  This
would permit the Central Organization to turn out a better grade of  HCA  in
the long  run  and  would  actually  put  a  lot  of  auditors  into  action
throughout the country who would not then, if their  work  was  not  of  the
highest possible calibre, bring embarrassment to auditors in the  field  who
are very busy in numerous directions and do not  complete  training  to  the
degree that the Central Organization insists on. One  of  the  reasons  this
third course is instigated is to permit the auditor with the right to  train
to swell his numbers of students and to relieve hirn  of  the  rather  heavy
expense connected with an arduous complete  auditor  course  and  permitting
him to exist without putting into rivalry with himself a  number  of  people
who have more or less the same degree he has, a point which has lately  been
found quite important in large cities. A  new  training  contract  could  be
entered into with the  Central  Organizations  which  obviated  the  irksome
"Bond-note" and the duress which has occurred because of the anxiety of  the
Central Organization to keep up the quality or raise the quality as high  as
possible  of  the  HCA  or  HPA  certificate.  This  arrangement  would  not
influence certificates issued ex post facto, but would influence all  future
certificates. Areas of training could be assigned to people with  the  right
to train. It has been discovered that people who take the  Free  Course  and
-the Advanced Course then get ready for a  third  course,  and  unless  this
course is available they are dead-ended since these are business people  who
must take their training at night and it is not usually  possible  for  them
to take a local course of the  vigor  of  HCA,  nevertheless  they  want  to
become auditors and professional Scientologists and every effort  should  be
made to encourage them. At the same time, since  every  auditor  who  has  a
right to train has been  trained  by  the  Central  Organizations,  his  own
dominance in his  area  to  some  degree  depends  upon  his  own  level  of
certification by the Central Organization and he should not be permitted  to
destroy his dominance in his own area by creating equal  grades,  or  grades
which even come within the scope of Central Organization certificates  since
the public itself is liable  to  consider  this  an  equal  grade.  This  is
actually antipathetic to the general customs of man, which  is  why  it  has
not worked. The basic error in all these rights  to  train  was  the  people
were being given the right by the Central
                               266

Organization to create at the same level of operation as  themselves  and  a
considerable hardship resulted since their  own  superiority  in  their  own
areas then became rivalled and randomity ensued.
    It is my recommendation to various staff and  executives  that  this  be
taken up both in Washington and London, looked over very  carefully,  and  a
thorough paper be prepared and issued on the subject giving in addition  the
exact cost, except in the case of the  Elementary  Scientologist  where  the
fee should be arranged in the area  by  the  individual  auditor  doing  the
training. He should not  be  limited  in  his  charges  or  made  to  charge
excessively.
    Completely aside from the actual studies which have  been  made  of  the
subject utilizing the data accumulated during the last six  years,  we  have
at this time another paralleling program of some  interest  in  the  Central
Organizations. This, just amongst ourselves, consists of  processing  people
up to a point of where they can handle other people.  We  have  accomplished
this now. It is a fact, and as we ourselves advance in the  organization  in
this capability we then of course  then  extend  this  capability  outwards,
therefore  we  will  have  to  be  thinking  in  terms  of  seniorities   of
certificates and training in order to back up this basic program. The  basic
program of course consists of demanding that everybody that we keep in  good
circulation and that we help along, have enough processing  on  the  current
processes to permit him to control rather  easily  individuals  and  groups.
This of course going out as the waves in  a  pool  into  which  a  stone  is
dropped would mean that our organizations would become  dominant  on  earth.
It might not even take very long to  accomplish  this  program.  In  working
with this program we of course must have an equivalent  series  of  training
staffs.
    One further note on Elementary  Scientologist.  We  would  require  this
certificate and successful completion of a further course above  as  a  pre-
requisite to Ministerial ordination by the field churches.  They  are  going
to ordain people anyway sooner or later and we prefer of  course  that  they
ordain at  HCA  or  HPA  level,  but  they  can  ordain  at  the  Elementary
Scientologist level, but we require  an  HCA  ordination  and  therefore  we
have. a much higher grade of ordination and it makes the ministers which  we
train dominant in the field.
    It is my suggestion that for their own good, people with rights to train
and other people who'd like to have rights to  train,  particularly  in  the
British Isles and in places in America where there is very little  training,
that this third Elementary Scientologist Course be sold. 1 do not  think  it
would be wise to undertake in the future HCA training in any  branch  office
of the organization, such as New York  or  Dublin.  1  think  it  should  be
adequate that those offices simply run a  third  level  course.  They  would
find many more candidates since they would not have to charge as much  money
and these offices are not equipped to train at HCA the  way  we're  training
now.

    One of the primary factors which makes this an urgency and  gives  us  a
priority in putting it in through the works is the use of a  double-type  of
training which  we're  doing  now  in  the  Central  Organization  where  we
indoctrinate for two or three  weeks  and  even  process  before  we  train.
Nobody can afford to do this in the field. The cost  of  it  is  very  high,
consequently nobody will do it in the field. Therefore an HCA course and  an
HPA course will become something entirely different.
    There is no reason under this why British auditors in good  repute  with
the organization could not undertake evening courses  for  people  in  their
area in order to fit students of theirs for using  Scientology  in  industry
and personnel posts and so forth. The title of the grade is important  since
it must be good enough to make the field auditor capable of selling  it  and
it  must  not  be  so  good  that  it  devaluates  a  Central   Organization
certificate-must hang in that middle-ground.
    Another factor which occasions  this  release  to  executive  staff  and
interested persons is that I am not willing that  auditors  who  are  poorly
trained and in terrible condition longer use Hubbard Certified Auditor  when
I have not even seen them or checked them. We're  getting  sufficiently  big
that I realize with a shock that I have  Central  Organization  HCAs  around
that 1 have not even met and this is a peculiar state of  affairs.  We  have
to have some way of  identifying  the  arduous  training  which  our  people
receive because we are about to make  it  about  ten  times  as  arduous  as
anybody in the field would oven dream of.
    Lot's put this one into operation.

LRH:re.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Dict'd 12.9,S6
Typed 19.9.S6

267

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                  NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1

                         HCO BULLETIN OF 3 MAY 1957
                           (Issued at Washington)

To All Staff

                          TRAINING-WHAT IT IS TODAY
                         HOW WE TELL PEOPLE ABOUT IT

    In London I made up a chart of training  for  the  Comm  Course  (former
Indoc) and HPA/HCA.

    This course is plotted exactly on eight weeks including an intensive  by
a graduating student upon an incoming student.

    The stable datum of all training now is:

    "A student is graduated when his training level is such that he could be
        entrusted with an HGC preclear."

    Thus examination is rendered much easier and stable.

    HPA/HCA Training requisites stress:

    I .     Synopsis of A important Dianetic and Scientology Books and a
        synopsis of tapes heard.

    2.      Profile student achieved when auditing an incomer.

    3.      Memorized Axioms.

    4.      Five levels of Indoe.

    5.      Long form CCH.

    6.      Good attendance record.

    7.      Ability to Group Audit.

    8.      The Codes down pat.

    That is more or less it. The Chart is intensely specific.

    Paramount in all our training are:

    I . To get our graduating students in good shape; and

    2.      To make sure  our  incoming  students  are  given  a  good  week
        intensive by the graduating student before the newcomer enters  Comm
        Course. Why? Because Comm Course can reduce havingness and  we  want
        our new Comm Course student to learn, not agonize.

    Training today can be pretty smooth.

    But be alert here. We've changed  type  of  training  from  emphasis  on
Classroom to emphasis on Student. "Academy" means coaching.

    In Public representation of Washington and London  schools  stress  that
eight weeks of personal individual attention can make a Scientologist and  a
good one and that this is why the cost is what it is. This training  is  the
best on Earth for living in general as  well  as  doing  Scientology.  "It's
personal. It's for you. It's good. Only those who have it can Survive."

                                              L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:md.cden Copyright @ 1957 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

268

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1
                          (Issued at Washington DC)

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I OCTOBER 1958

Full Distribution
Not Confidential

HCO BOARD OF REVIEW

    We must now recognize that  we  are  training  Earth's  mental-spiritual
practitioners of tomorrow. Therefore:

    Hereinafter, all examinations for certificates will be conducted by  HCO
Boards of Review only.

    General  Qualifications  and  prerequisites  for  all  certificates  and
degrees worldwide:  No  candidate  for  enrollment  or  examination  may  be
disbarred by reason of race,  colour,  creed,  nationality,  ideology,  age,
mental condition, language, former training or social condition.

                     Qualifications for HPA/HCA

    One year minimum in training before certificate may be issued,  although
examination may be within that period.

    At least 8 weeks spent iri an Academy of Scientology with creditable
    grades.

    Actual evidence of skill in handling Formal Auditing (TRs 0 to 5).

    Actual evidence of skill in handling Tone 40 Auditing (TRs 6 to 9).

    Verbatim knowledge and understanding of: The  Auditor's  Code  The  Pre-
        Logics The Logics of Dianetics The Axioms of Dianetics

    Mental Anatomy: Definitions and  examples  of  each  of  the  following:
        LOCKS, SECONDARY, ENGRAM, CHAIN,  TIME  TRACK,  CIRCUIT,  MACHINERY,
        VALENCE, OCCLUSIONS, MOCK UP, THE PARTS OF LIVINGNESS.

    Manifestations: Definitions and examples of each of the following:
        Overt-Act-Motivator  Sequence,  DED-DEDEX,  Problems,  computations,
        past  lives,  cognitions,  oc~mm  lags,  and  when  they  are  over,
        introversion, extroversion, ARC, remedy of ARC breaks.

    The candidate must demonstrate Ids ability to:
        (No E-Meter work of any kind is  done  or  required  in  an  HPA/HCA
        course.) Run Factual Havingness
        Run an engram
        Find and run a past death Find and run a secondary Run ARC  Straight
        Wire
        Handle difficulties with old  style  straight  wire  Run  Remedy  of
        Havingness

                               269

        Handle an Assist
        Locational Processing
        8-C
        Op Pro by Dup, Old Style

    No other processes are required or taught as these are quite adequate.
    Texts:
Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health, Science of Survival, Self
Analysis and Advanced Procedure and Axioms.

    The following Scales must be known and examples must be provided:

        ARC Tone Scale
        Effect Scale
        Know to Mystery Scale

    Evidence of having read and understood Dianetics: The Modern Science of
Mental Health, Science of Survival, Self Analysis and Advanced Procedure
and Axioms must be given.

    After a set date of enrollment (October 15, 1958) no examination
exceptions will be made. Students whose enrollment date is prior to October
15, 1958 will be the same as before.

    Three Formal case history forms giving evidence of having helped three
persons with Dianetics and Scientology.

    An HPA/HCA student must present evidence of having had 5 hours of Op Pro
by Dup Old Style run on him without interruption.

                     Qualifications for HCS/BScn
                      (which are equivalent levels)

    Certificate to be issued no earlier than one year from date of
enrollment in HCS/BScn course (Effective after October 15, 1958).

    Successful attendance of at least 5 weeks of courses at an Academy of
Scientology.

    A review examination guaranteeing ability in TRs 0 to 9.

    Verbatim knowledge of: The Axioms of Scientology

    Demonstration and Evidence of complete conversance with:
       The Handbook for Preclears Scientology 8-80 Scientology 8-8008 The
       Creation of Human Ability

    Demonstration of excellent knowledge of CCH 0 to CCH 4.

    Demonstration of good knowledge of and handling of an E-Meter.

    Demonstration of knowledge of the six types of processes: I . Starting-
        Ending Session 2. Control Processes 3. Duplication Processes 4.
        Subjective Processes 5. Objective Processes 6. Straight Wire
        Processes

    Some knowledge of all the R-I and R-2 processes of The Creation of Human
Ability.

                               270

    Demonstration and knowledge of Creative Processing.

    Demonstration and knowledge of the basic  clearing  processes  given  in
Clear Procedure, Issue One, and a concentration on this clear procedure  and
no other later procedure as this clears 50% of the preclears easily so  long
as one uses simple geometric forms, particularly simple spheres, in Step 6.

    Three Formal case history forms giving evidence of having  helped  three
persons with Scientology (in addition to HCA/HPA required cases).

                     Qualifications for 1ICS/DScn
                     (effective October 15, 1958)

    Certificate may not be issued for one year after date of application for
    an ACC.

    A review examination of TRs 0 to 9 requiring excellence in handling
    them.

    Demonstrate how to produce the 5 manifestations of an E-Meter and handle
an E-Meter in auditing.

    A review examination of the whole of the above requirements for  HCA/HPA
and HCS/BScn. (A passing grade on this section will  be  50%  until  October
15, 1961 when a grade of 75% will be required.)

    The knowledge and ability to do group auditing.

    Demonstration of a full and complete knowledge of ACC Procedure  of  the
Sth London ACC.

    Knowledge of the basic buttons taught in the 20th ACC US and their use.

    Attendance at an Academy ACC with a  course  completion  and  a  passing
grade. One or more ACCs  may  be  attended,  only  one  need  to  have  been
completed and passed.

    A knowledge of hypnotism.

    A knowledge of the history of religion and psychotherapy.

    Evidence of  having  cleared  one  person  and  the  full  case  history
submitted as well as the Formal Case Report.

    Evidence of having greatly helped two persons with auditing with  Formal
Case History.

    A thesis covering an application of Scientology to a field of endeavour.

    Membership in the HASI.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rs.rd

(Note: Per HCOB 9 October 1958, in Qualifications for HPAIHCA, Advanced
Procedure and Axioms was added to the list of texts, and also replaced
Handbook for Preclears two paragraphs later.]

271

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I
       (Issued at Washington D.C.)

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 OCTOBER 195 52

Worldwide Distribution and Application

                     SALE AND CONDUCT OF ACADEMY COURSES
               (Refer to HCO Policy Letter of I October 1958)

    As of October 15, 1958, effective date, the circumstances and enrollment
procedures of courses are changed worldwide.

    While the administration must yet be set up the fact and  advertisements
exist as of October 15, 1958. Even if it isn't done  don't  put  anybody  on
wait while we scramble. Sign them up and somehow deliver.

    Basically: A student may enroll for a  course  as  before  but  he  must
understand  it  will  require  a  year  from  enrollment  date  to  get  his
certificate because of Extension Work. We then have two phases of  training:
Extension Work done at home, and Class work done at the Academy. His  course
in the Academy is still 8 weeks for HCA/HPA, London, 5 weeks  for  HCS/BScn,
London, 6 weeks for HGS/DScn, London. He may do these weeks at once  but  he
has other work to do as well. He is enrolled for'a one-year course  in  each
certificate status. He should not be discouraged  by  confronting  him  with
this. It does not matter when he takes his time in the Academy  so  long  as
he does it. There are written work, exercises and reports  on  cases  to  be
done before his final exam. It has always taken a year, you can say, to  get
any actual certificate. We are just now making  a  reality  of  it.  He  can
audit people or do anything else he wants, but the time  is  one  year  from
enrollment to certificate in any grade. He could take all Academy  work  for
all three grades in 5 months all jammed up but he'll still have to  complete
his first year to get his first certificate.  This  is  no  gyp  school.  It
takes three years to get the top rating and more time is spent on  the  mind
and thetan  in  those  three  years  than  in  15  years  of  psychology  or
psychiatry. We're taking over the fields of the mind and  spirit  on  Earth.
Our people have to be good. Any applicant will agree to that.

                       EXTENSION COURSES

    Anyone may enroll in an Academy course to HCA/HPA for f 2.0.0 or  $5.00.
He has to buy his texts (we give away no more texts after October  15,  1958
and allow only membership discount if he is a  member).  The  enrollment  is
for  one  year.  Any  answer  to  his  enrollment  is  to  send  him  C.O.D.
(permission to do so must be on  the  blank  he  sends  in-blank  to  be  in
Certainty) a "Dianetics: Modern  Science  of  Mental  Health",  hard  cover.
(Blank must also be able to say he already has it if he does.)  He  is  sent
directly by first-class mail his first lessons.  Even  if  he  has  been  in
Academy he does these. They are printed lessons  he  has  to  fill  out.  He
furnishes the envelopes and stamps. The lessons are  uniformly  simple.  One
is due back each week. The page is perforated  at  the  bottom  so  a  lower
strip may be torn off by the  Extension  Course  Director,  written  on  and
returned by first-class mail in an envelope.  The  student  gets  a  nudging
card if he fails to send in  a  lesson.  These  lessons  are  a  chapter  by
chapter coverage of Dianetics: Modern Science of Mental  Health  only.  They
require mainly agreement. The student can  go  no  further  than  Dianetics:
Modern Science  of  Mental  Health  data  (no  practice)  when  we  find  it
necessary to bring him in for his 8 weeks (preferable) or at  least  a  Comm
Course. Given his Comm Course, his next lessons still  apply  to  Dianetics:
Modern Science of Mental Health but now they are auditing practice  lessons.
We make him find locks, secondaries, engrams  in  several  people.  Then  we
bring him back for more training or (if he took his 8  weeks)  we  have  him
audit things out of people-locks, engrams, secondaries. We  have  additional
lessons covering the remaining texts. The Addressograph Section takes  these
students' names and addresses and  keeps  the  list  up  to  date.  Sets  of
envelopes, cards for file for lessons (that can be used as postal cards  but
are not stamped) for each week are run off and  refiled  as  lessons  appear
from student (leaving the delinquents to be reminded by simply  mailing  the
card).

    The whole of this or any extension course is crisp comm line and
    accurate

272

administration. It is simple if it is prompt and  neat.  The  whole  project
can be nicely ruined by poor administration on this. The quality of  lessons
should be good but are secondary to  good  thorough  administration.  People
would always rather get a new theory or a dizzy plan rather than face  these
vital pieces of Mest and a systematic  handling  of  them.  Cards  and  file
drawers are obviously vicious.

    A plan of the course and how to do it is sent with the enrollment reply,
plus an enrollment card he can show his friends to explain why he  wants  to
practice on them.

    Similar texts and enrollment measures are taken for the HCS/BScn course,
and the HGS/DScn.

    The texts for each of these courses are listed in HCO Policy  Letter  of
October 1, 1958. No other textual or factual material is to be used  and  no
further course booklets or pamphlets are necessary.

    What is necessary:

    Lesson tablets, in glued-together  sheets  like  a  writing  tablet,  25
lessons to a  tablet,  each  sheet  being  its  own  lesson.  The  sheet  is
perforated across the last 5th of the  page.  The  student's  name,  current
address, course, and answers, are all written by the student. The  Extension
Course Director writes any comment or grade on the  bottom  slip,  tears  it
off and sends it back to the student. If no lesson  came,  a  card  goes  to
student reminding him. When it comes time for the student  to  come  in  for
his course he comes in, pays for the week or  weeks  he  takes,  goes  home,
gets more work to do, is finally examined (either  at  home  or  at  Academy
[two different exams]) and when he passes he promptly gets his  certificate.
This is true for all three courses.

    Certainty must at once carry ads and continue to carry ads for  "Academy
Enrollment-one year, do work at Academy and at  home-Enroll  now,  f  2.0.0,
receive your first lessons." An enrollment blank, that with f 2.0.0  enrolls
him must always be part of the ad.

    The idea of field training plus Academy training for a  certificate  and
the fact of 3 years of training to the top will appeal.

    Academy courses must be carefully geared to HCO Policy Letter of October
1, 1958. This scramble to "get  the  newest  learned  first"  is  giving  us
training disasters. Of course, the student would prefer facing a thought  or
theory or a quick think process to facing real  live  engrams,  secondaries,
and banks. So we don't train them  well.  They're  not  like  1950  Dianetic
auditors-they're flinching these days.

    And who said you couldn't clear people by running engrams? You  couldn't
if you had no TRs and therefore ragged auditing and ARC breaks.

    Any time you write or say Dianetics; today, define  it-"Dianetics,  that
part of Scientology which stresses mental anatomy." That swings people  into
Scientology before they think about it. They are not then surprised to  hear
from the Academy of Scientology about Dianetics.

    "A minister has to know mental anatomy before he can know the spirit ...
.. The brain forms no part of the study of Dianetics," are  two  more  lines
that must be gotten about even if only as bottom lines  on  a  Certainty  or
Ability page.

    This programme of 3 years training by I year stages is now begun.  We'll
just have to commit ourselves to it and cope with it and  have  it  wheeling
before the paper-back Dianetics: Modern Science of  Mental  Health  gets  in
the drugstores next spring. So here we go.

    Who activates all this? Why,.you do, of course.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:md.rs.rd

273

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       3 7 Fitzroy Street, London W. I
                            Issued at Washington

 Distribution:    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 15 DECEMBER 1958

AllActivities
          ACADEMY TRAINING CURRICULUM & EXAMINATION
              Supersedes all earlier Theory & Practice Releases

    The training of HPAs and HCAs must include the following skills. HCO Bds
of Review, by this directive will examine only on these skills and texts:

    Comm Course, TR 0 to 4 Old Style (as given in TR Manuals and bulletins),
with TR SN substituted for all earlier TR 5 drills.

    Upper Indoc TR 6-9 Old Style (original, as given in TR Manuals and
    bulletins).

    The above must  be  done  thoroughly  and  well  and  will  be  examined
rigorously by HCO Bds of Review. If flunked in any case no further  exam  is
given or will be given for 120 days for any certificate  (HAS  being  exempt
from examination except by instructor or field auditor).

    Theory & Practice Basic theory is more  or  less  covered  by  Extension
Course but may be examined on these texts:

        Dianetics: Modern Science of Mental Health
        Science of Survival
        Advanced Procedure & Axioms
        Scientology- Fundamentals of Thought

                          TECHNIQUES

    The HCA/HPA must know two types of auditing:

        Tone 40 Style Formal Auditing Style.

    He must know the difference and not cross them. (T-40 is taught in Upper
Indoc, Formal is taught in Comm Course.)

    He must know these processes:

    Tone40  CCH I
      CCH 2
      CCH 3
      CCH 4
    and Formal   Straight Wire
      S-C-S
      Factual Havingness (3 questions)
      What can you confront?
      You make a picture for which you can be wholly responsible.
      Help
      Step 6 (and its dangers)

    BScn/HCS training  and  examination  includes  all  materials  on  Clear
Procedure and ACC Clear Procedure Fall 1958,  plus  Scientology  8-8008  and
Creation of Human Ability and E-Meters,  and  must  be  able  to  audit  all
processes in ACC Clear Procedure Fall 1958, including  CCH  0.  He  must  be
able to do a full track Scout.

    DScn/HGS: Engram Auditing and other materials as will be prescribed.

    Note HCO Secretaries everywhere, please  assist  Academies  to  hold  to
standard Technology as above and assist where possible with publications.

    Note: HCO Bds of Review: Examine only on the above henceforth. This is a
finalized version since Clears can be made  by  HPAs/HCAs  now  as  well  as
BScns and DScns with these processes.

[See also HCO B 6 January 1959, page 277.1   L. RON HUBBARD

                               274

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH NOT
                                               GREEN ON WHITE
                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 1812 19th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.

DofT  HCO BULLETIN OF 16 DECEMBER 1958
Acad Admin
Ext Course Dir
Acad Insts
D of P
Processing Admin
HCO Bd of Review
ACC Worldwide Inst
HCO
      EXTENSION COURSE CURRICULUM

The Extension Course for HCAIHPA is outlined as follows:

    Section A - I tablet
    Lessons IA to  20A,  eight  questions  each  lesson:  Dianetics,  Modern
Science of Mental Health, entire book covered in 160 questions.

    Section B - 1 tablet
    Lessons I B to 20B, eight questions each lesson,  Science  of  Survival,
entire book covered in 160 questions.

    Section C - I tablet
    Lessons I C to 20C, eight questions each lesson. Advanced Procedure  and
Axioms, entire book covered in 160 questions.

    Section D - I tablet
    Lessons  ID  to  20D,  eight   questions   each   lesson.   Scientology:
Fundamentals of Thought, entire book covered in 160 questions.

The Extension Course for HCSIBScn is outlined as follows:

    Section E - I tablet
    Lessons  I  E  to  20E,  eight  questions  each  lesson.   The   Hubbard
Electrometer and Electropsychometric Auditing,  entire  subject  covered  in
160 questions, theory and practice.

    Section F - I tablet
    Lessons IF to 20F, eight questions  each  lesson,  Scientology:  8-8008,
entire book covered in 160 questions.

    Section G - I tablet
    Lessons I G to 20G, eight questions each lesson, The Creation  of  Human
Ability, entire book covered in 160 questions.

    Section H - I tablet
    Lessons IH to 20H, eight questions each lesson. Various Clear Procedures
from various texts, entire subject covered in 160 questions.

The Extension Course for DScnlHGS is outlined as follows:

    Section J - 1 tablet
    Lessons I J to 20J, eight questions per lesson. All  TR  Drills,  entire
subject covered in 160 lessons (text not yet published).

    Section K - I tablet
    Lessons I K to 20K, eight questions per lesson, Track Scouting (text not
yet published). Entire subject covered in 160 questions.

    Section L - I tablet
    Lessons  I  L  to  20L,  eight   questions   per   lesson,   Scientology
Organizations, entire subject covered in 160 questions.

    Section M - I tablet
    Not outlined.

    The following activities are responsible for submitting questions to  be
made into printed lessons:

275

        Section A      Academy DC
        Section B -    Academy London
        Section C -    HCO Bd of Review DC
        Section D -    HCO Bd of Review London
        Section E -    HGC Washington DC
        Section F -    HGC London
        Section G -    Academy London
        Section H -    HCO Washington DC
        Section J -    ACC Worldwide Instructor
        Section K -    ACC Worldwide Instructor

    When you have completed your section, please send the questions complete
to HCO for forwarding to me.

    This is the fastest way I know to get the Extension Course completed.  I
have only its format and a DMSMH outline at this moment. Would you  do  this
for me?

           HOW TO WRITE AN EXTENSION COURSE SECTION

    An Extension Course Section consists of  a  textbook  and  a  series  of
lessons done on a glued-top tablet, one sheet per  lesson,  eight  questions
or exercises per lesson. The questions are consecutively numbered from 1  to
160 with the Identifying letter on each number. Example:  Section  B,  third
question, is 3B. The name of the textbook  but  not  its  page  numbers,  is
carried on every lesson page, not each question.

    We only want the questions for the section, not the printed complete
    product.

    The questions concern only vital definitions needed for a  knowledge  of
the subject and examples of the use and meaning.

    To do a course, use the following:

    I . Make a list of all vital definitions used in the text  specified  on
the subject. These should number around eighty so pare or  expand  the  list
until it is composed of eighty vital words or phrases or objects:

    Use the definition for odd numbered question&

    Demand an explanation,  an  example,  a  discovery  from  real  life,  a
consequence,  etc,  of  the  definition  as  the   following   even-numbered
question.

    The Extension Course should  give  the  taker  a  passing  knowledge  of
Dianetics and Scientology terminology phenomena and parts. This is its  goal
and purpose. The reasoning or examples in a text are  considered  secondary,
for the purposes of the course, to precision definitions.

    The Extension Course Student should finish the course with  the  feeling
he is dealing with a precision science, composed of identifiable parts.

    Example (not necessary to use):

    Question 5A: What is a reactive mind?
    Question 6A: Give something  out  of  your  own  experience  that  would
illustrate a reactive mind at work.

    The  main  tasks  imposed  here  are  (1)  To  summarize  the  important
definitions and parts of Dianetics and Scientology from a text and  (2)  Ask
interestingly for an application to life.

    Now you see why I want your swift help in writingit. It would  take  one
person months. Your contribution, as assigned in this bulletin,  will  speed
it up by months.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRI1:md.rd

Distribution:
Not to be stencilled in London (their copies being sent direct from DC).
Info copies rig to Melbourne, SA, and all field offices, via HCos;
3 copies-1 E0i HCO, 1 to D of T, 1 to D of P.

276

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
   NOT GREEN ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                   1812 19th Street N.W., Washington, D.C,

 HCO BULLETIN OF 6 JANUARY 1959

Full Distribution

(CHANGE OF HCO POLICY LETTER OF 15 DECEMBER 1958)

Step 6 is deleted from HCA/HPA Curriculum and added to HCS/BScn section.

No E-Meter is used or taught in HCA/HPA courses. Comm lag is taught
instead.

L RON HUBBARD

LRH:gn.rd

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

HASI POLICY LETTER OF 19 JANUARY 1959

EXTRA WEEKS ON HPA COURSE

    The following is policy in relation to students who could not make the
grade in the eight weeks HPA Course:

    If the course was paid in whole, in advance, the student is entitled to
free weeks to finish his training.

If he has not paid in advance he is only permitted eight weeks.

Extra weeks will cost f.7.1 0. 0 per week.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mp.vmm.cden Copyright @ 1959 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

277

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I MAY 1959
       (Convert into a Sec'l ED)

, HPA/BSCN "RETREADS"

There is no such thing as an HPA/BScn retread fee.

    If an HPA wants to retread to new HPA course, he can pay the usual price
per week for training (about 15 gns).

    I know there is now a mish-mash in training because of a new course more
basic than old courses. We'll just have to cope.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:cden Copyright Q 1959 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 AUGUST 1959

CenO

STUDENTS ATTENDING COURSES

    Students are allowed to do Extension Courses and attend another Central
Organisation for their actual training if this be more convenient. Normally
students would get their Extension Course material from the nearest Central
Organisation, and would attend the course there.

HCO Secretary WW

NW:brb.gh.rd Copyright @ 1959 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

278

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 31 AUGUST 1959

CenOCon

CERTIFICATIONS

    In order to get an HPA/HCA or BScn/HCS Certificate, it is not necessary
    to wait
one year.

    It is necessary, however, that the student be fully trained and have all
    Extension
Course work completed and corrected.

NW:brb.rd   HCO Secretary WW
Copyright @ 1959
by L Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 'Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                    HCOTOLICY LETTER OF 22 FEBRUARY 1960
                            (Reissued from Sthil)

CenOCon
HCO Board of Review

HPA QUALIFICATIONS

    Policy states that an HPA/HCA certificate may not be awarded  until  all
requirements including Extension Course, are completed.

    However, students  who  have  completed  the  academy  course  and  have
graduated successfully andhave passed the HCO Board  of  Review  examination
are in fact entitled to start practising  professionally  even  though  they
may not have completed the Extension Course work.

    Sometimes also a student may have passed all the  requirements  and  yet
may not be in possession of a  certificate  because  he  has  not  completed
paying for the course.

    In all such cases, provided that the HCO Board of  Review  is  satisfied
that the student is fully competent to start practising professionally,  the
student should be given a letter of Certificate, Pending by  the  HCO  Board
of Review. This letter would give the student a  grace  period  to  complete
his qualifications, say 6 or 8 months, and would state that he  is  entitled
to audit professionally during this period. Each letter would be  dated  and
would  state  the  limit  of  the  grace  period,  set  according   to   the
individual's circumstances.

    This procedure would regularize the position of the new auditor  who  is
waiting for  his  certificate,  and  will  also.  encourage  the  individual
concerned to complete his
requirements, including paying off his account.

      Peter Hemery
LRH:js.mm.eden   HCO Secretary WW
Copyright @ 1960 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

279

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH NOT GREEN ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

  HCO BULLETIN OF I APRIL 1960

BPI

TRAINING REQUIREMENTS

               HUBBARD APPRENTICE SCIENTOLOGIST

    Have all  present  lifetime  overts  and  withholds  cleared  and  taken
responsibility for. Have done the same with one other person.  Account  paid
in full for HAS course.  Any  infraction  theses  completed.  HCO  Board  of
Review will be the authority on the  overt/withholds  requirement  and  this
must be cleared through HCO Board of Review. This applied  only  to  Academy
HAS.

                                   HPA/HCA
           HUBBARD PROFESSIONAL AUDITOR/HUBBARD CERTIFIED -AUDITOR

    8 weeks of training, all passed. 8 weekly reports submitted. Synopsis of
Dianetics  '55.  Account  paid  in  full  for  HCA   course.   International
Membership in force. HCA Extension Course completed, Any  infraction  theses
completed. The HCA examination passed-this consists of  examination  of  the
following: Verbatim knowledge and understanding  of  the  Codes,  (Auditor's
and Scientologist's), Axioms of Scientology,  Pre-Logics  and  Logics  (this
includes footnotes), Scales and  definitions.  Ability  to  open  and  close
sessions; to handle ARC breaks and pe originations; usage of  CCH  processes
1-4 smoothly and well; usage of the Hubbard Electrometer (E-Meter).

    Your case level must be high enough to be entrusted with a pc  (this  is
as per the APA and IQ test as well as personal inspection by  HCO  Board  of
Review).

    Three case histories of pcs audited to state of release, after  training
at the Academy. Release: a case on which all the charge of current  lifetime
overts and withholds has been audited off and taken responsibility for.

    Ability to run PE and HAS Co-audit Course.

    Ability to recognize and produce'four basic needle reactions on E-Meter.
Ability to assess a case with an E-Meter (this is very important).

    HCO Board of Review is the certifying authority.

                                  B.SCN/HCS
           BACHELOR OF SCIENTOLOGY/HUBBARD CLEARING SCIENTOLOGIST

    6 weeks of training, all passed. 6 weeks' reports  submitted.  B.Son/HCS
Extension Course requirements completed. Account for B.Scn/HCS  Course  paid
in  full.  B.Scn1HCS  Examination  passed.  Have  an   HPA/HCA   certificate
International Membership in force. Any infraction theses completed.

    The student must be a good enough auditor that he is employable  at  the
Hubbard Guidance Center  (this  includes  own  case  level,  as  in  HPA/HCA
requirements). The student  must  be  able  to  clear  individual  pcs.  The
students must be able to use the E-Meter excellently.

    A time limit for completion of HCA/HPA and  B.Scn/HCS  certificates  has
been set. It is twelve months from the end of Academy  training  to  HCA/HPA
HCS/B.Scn standard.

    This is effective on all HCA/HPA B.Sen students finishing their  Academy
training after 5th March 1960.

                               280

    Those students who have completed their HCA/HPA or B.Scn/HCS training on
or before the Sth March, 1960, to be given a twelve month  grace  period  in
which to complete all requirements; this is to end on 4th March, 1961,  with
the financial requirement -to be as other requirements, or the date  due  of
the note, whichever is the later. It is also proposed that a  student  shall
not be penalized for enthusiasm and desire to  advance  in  Scientology  and
that with this in mind, if the student completes  Academy  training  to  HCS
standard within six (6) months of completion of the HCA  training,  he  will
have a maximum time limit for completion of  both  certificate  requirements
of 24 months, dated from the completion of the HCA course Academy  training.
In the event of the student completing HCS training before having  completed
the HCA, as has occurred, the time limit  shall  be  eighteen  (18)  months,
dated from the end of the  HCS,  for  the  completion  of  both  certificate
requirements.

    It is proposed that  failureto.  complete  Academy  requirements  within
twelve (12) months (or as  amended  above)  of  the  completion  of  Academy
training will bring about the transfer of the  candidate's  files  from  the
"student incomplete" category  to  be  classified  as  "student  incomplete,
disqualified HCA (or HCS)" in the Academy files and Addressograph plates.

    RECEIPT OF A CERTIFICATE BY L. RON HUBBARD, SEALED AND NUMBERED  IS  THE
FIRST TIME THE AUDITOR HAS PROFESSIONAL STATUS  AS  SUCH  (THIS  APPLIES  TO
HPA/HCA  AND  B.SCN/HCS  ONLY-HAS  IS  NOT  A  PROFESSIONAL  SCIENTOLOGIST'S
CERTIFICATE).

LRH:js.rd  Rosamond Harper
Copyright @ 1960 HCO Technical Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED   L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 MAY 1960

CenOCon

ACCEPTANCE FOR ACC AND ACADEMY COURSES

    It is now Policy that no students be accepted for an ACC  or  any  other
training course conducted by a Scientology Organization who have  a  chronic
bodily condition for which they are under medical care and/or taking drugs.

    These students should be encouraged to take an Intensive at H.G.C. until
their condition is resolved and they are off drugs.

    The reason for this ruling is that, for example, on a  recent  ACC,  the
only two blow-offs have been (1) a student who was on 30 grains a  night  of
Sodium Bromide, Chloral Hydrate and gentian and who sometimes took  as  much
as 90 grains and (2) another student under drugs from her  physician  for  a
dropsical condition. This student was given only five months to  live,  five
years ago, and was taking the ACC on her own risk.

    Cases such as the above need  intensive  auditing  before  attempting  a
course such as an ACC. A smoother gradient is indicated, and this  could  be
done by getting  the  condition  resolved  through  auditing  first,  before
allowing the student on to the course.

LRH-.js.rd  Rosamond Harper
Copyright @ 1960 HCO Technical Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

                               281

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                   Saint HUI Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I OCTOBER 1960

CenOCon

CASE ASSESSMENTS FOR STUDENTS

    It sometimes happens that a student can graduate from an HPA/HCA  course
and pass the exam, and yet fail in the field on account of a low case  level
or poor subjective reality on Scientology.

    To prevent this, it is now policy that  after  an  HPA/HCA  student  has
passed the HCO Board of Review examination,  and  before  4  certificate  is
issued, he shall be required to have from the HCO Board  of  Review  a  case
assessment. If it is found that their case is in poor shape,  or  that  they
have little subjective reality on  Scientology,  they  must  be  ordered  to
processing before their certificate can be issued.

      Issued by: Peter Hemery
            HCO Secretary WW
            for
LRH:js.rd L RON HUBBARD

Copyright @ 1960 by L Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 NOVEMBER 1960

HCOs
Central Orgs

HPA/HCA COURSE

    To avoid any confusion that may exist, it is~ emphasized that the
Academy HPA/HCA Course is basically an eight week course, and is sold as
such. The student pays for any extra weeks he may take.

Issued by:  Peter Hemery
      HCO Secretary WW
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD

LRH.js.eden Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

282

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex.

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 NOVEMBER 1960

All Central Orgs

NEW ORG PROGRAMMES

    1 have been extremely busy designing new programmes for Central Orgs and
getting all their bits and pieces together here in Johannesburg for  use  in
other Orgs.

    Testing as a service is pulling well on very flimsy advertising here  in
Johannesburg. A classified ad is pulling better than any such ad has  pulled
here before.

    Testing, open  from  1:30  to  9:00  or  thereabouts  does  all  testing
including PE, and is now steadily rising. It was  17  people  a  day  as  of
yesterday.

    To handle this flow I have reorganised PE Course  to  Monday,  Wednesday
and Fridays, put an Anatomy of the Human Mind Basic Course (HAS)  for  1Ogns
running 10 weeks, enrolling before any lecture (not every 10 weeks). I  have
put in Group Auditing, old Vol 1 and 2 Group  Auditing  style,  5  nights  a
week, 6:00 to 7:00 pm, 5 shillings a night. HAS Co-audit  is  suspended  for
lack of space but may go back in in addition to above.

    Also I've designed a night HCA/HPA to enroll every  week  (mostly  every
week) 16 weeks long with a Basic Course added to it (but not ahead  of  it).
It runs Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

    I've converted day HCA/HPA to enrolling every Monday using 2 instructors
each in both night and day course.

    I have found that an Org that doesn't have service like  PE  above  will
lose people brought in by testing.

    Also, more importaut, an Org that does not enroll  a  day  and  a  night
HCA/HPA every week quickly begins to depend on  processing  alone  with  its
expensive overheads and so over-burdens the HGC and runs the  Academy  at  a
loss or nearly so. To keep the  unit  up  they  can  only  sell  processing!
HCA/HPA courses that enroll every few weeks or months make  an  Org  into  a
clinic  which   does   not   disseminate   Scientology.   Trained   auditors
disseminate. Pcs rarely do to any extent.

    I told you that  I  was  going  to  shape  up  Central  Org  depts  with
Johannesburg as the model, and this is getting busy and successful  and  I'm
very happy the way it's going.

    I'll be sending more definite data soon.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:js.aap Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

283

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 NOVEMBER 1960
All Cen Orgs for info
For SA only
              ANATOMY OF THE HUMAN MIND COURSE.
               AS A PRE-REQUISITE FOR HPA TRAINING

    The Anatomy of the Human Mind Course will become a pre-requisite for HPA
Training, effective immediately.

    Should a student sign up for  and  pay  for  an  HPA  Course  (effective
immediately) he shall be entitled to attend the Anatomy of  the  Human  Mind
Course free of any further charge.

    Should a student sign up for the Anatomy of the Human  Mind  Course  and
while still on that course decide to follow up with an HPA Course,  the  fee
he has paid for the Anatomy of the Human Mind  Course  shall  be  deductible
from the gross HPA fee.

    If a potential student makes use of a grant given  to  him  by  a  field
auditor it should be made quite clear  that  the  fee  of  75  guineas  (125
guineas less grant of 50 guineas) is net. There are no further discounts  or
allowances and after April 1, 1961 the Anatomy  of  the  Human  Mind  Course
will be a pre-requisite and the student must take this Course  and  pay  for
it.

LRH:js.rd   Jack Parkhouse
Copyright@ 1960  Assoen Sec-HASI SA
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 FEBRUARY 1961
Cen Orgs    [Excerptl
Copy for each
Staff Hat
Not for Franchise      THE ACADEMY OF SCIENTOLOGY

    Headed by the Director of Training, the Academy is responsible  for  the
technical excellence of Sciintology practice tomorrow.

    Teaching two different courses in the same classes, the  Academy  trains
Hubbard  Practical  Scientologists  and   Hubbard   Professional   (HPA/HCA)
Auditors.

    The Academy also teaches an upper level course once or more a year known
as the B.Scn (Hubbard Clearing Scientologist) Course.
    Precise scheduling, crisp training  and  true,  direct  answers  to  the
students' questions makes an Academy.

    The HPA/HCA Course enrolls more or less every Monday  unless  the  total
average unit is to  be  gained  expensively  through  individual  processing
only.

    The Practical course is the saine as the old professional course  except
that  it  is  for  people  "Who   don't   want   to   practice   Scientology
professionally". The professional course is  a  tougher  version  with  more
requirements.

    A bad Academy results in a bad HGC tomorrow  as  many  graduates  become
staff auditors.
    A good Academy is known by its snappy scheduling and the degree of basic
    data
and action the student actually absorbs.
LRH: aecjs.rd
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: A full  copy  of  this  Policy  Letter,  The  Pattern  of  a  Central
Organization, appears in Volume 7, page 147.1

                               284

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 APRIL 1961
Academies

                               HCA/HPA RUNDOWN
                         OR PRACTICAL COURSE RUNDOWN
                                FOR ACADEMIES

    The following rundown (attached) was designed by myself and Peter
Slabbert, Director of Training in Johannesburg.

    It will be seen that a student can enter the day course any week and the
evening course every two weeks.

    There are only two units, thus requiring only two instructors.

    Comm Course will soon be getting taught again for HAS in the PE
Foundation, so this should give enough romm course.

    If in doubt about any of this, write Director of Training, HASI
Johannesburg, PO Box 10795, Johannesburg, South Africa, who should reply
via HCO Tech Sec, Saint Hill,

    This is the official HPA/HCA Academy Training Schedule and forms the
basis of future examination. HPA/HCA has additional requirements. This is
the totality of training for Hubbard Practical Scientologist.

    Directors of Training should shift to this schedule as soon as possible
    in all Central
Organizations.
LRH:ph.rd
Copyright@ 1961  L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

HPA LECTURE SCHEDULE

 1. Pre-Logics    14.  Definitionsof: FormalAuditing,
 2. Logics        Tone 40 Auditing, Muzzled Auditing
 3. Scientology Axioms 15. Group Processing
 4. Code of a Scientologist  16. Running PE Courses
 5. Code of Honour     17. Running HAS Co-Audit Courses
 6. The Factors   18. Knowingness Control Responsibility
 7. Scales  19. ARC
 8. Definitions   20. Victims

 9. Native State and first four postulate 21. Franchise
      chain 22. Parts of Man
10. Assists 23. Havingness and Duplication
11. The 8 Dynamics 24. SAPA Interpretation
12. The 4 Universes 25. How help became betrayal
13. Obsessive and Unknowing Games 26. Flat point
      Condition

                     Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard
                             All rights reserved

             285

WEEK 1 (Unit 1)

      SECTION               MONDAY      TUESDAY         WEDNESDAY
 THURSDAY  FRIDAY TIME
                                                        8.30
                 Briefing   on Course
                 8C, Requirements,
      Tape       Weekly Reports, Ext    Tape 14S/HPA          Tape 15S/HPA
      Tape 16S/HPA     Tape 17S/HPA
                 Course, Synopsis, etc
                 Coach - Auditor - Pc
                       -Student- HATs
                                                        9.30
                            Comm Formula&TR I                 Duplication
 and  Auditor's Code
      Lecture/Briefing            ConfrontingTR 0  Axiom 28         TR2
 Comm bridges    and Handling
                            Communication                     TR 3
 Originations
                            Mechanicsof Control
                                                        10.00
      BREAK                 BREAK BREAK      BREAK      BREAK BREAK
           1                                            10.15
      TR Session "A"              TRO   TR I       TR2        TR3   TR4
      TR Session "B"              TRO   TR I       TR2        TR3   TR4
                                                        12.15
      Lecture/Briefing            TRO   Comm Formula          TR 2
 Duplication and Handling
                                                   Havingness Originations
 12.30
      LUNCH                 LUNCH LUNCH      LUNCH      LUNCH LUNCH
                                                        1.30
      TR Session "A"              TRO   TR1        TR2        TR3   TR4
 . 2.15
      T R Session "B"             TR 0  TR I       TR2        TR3   TR4
                                                        3.00
      BREAK                 BREAK BREAK      BREAK      BREAK BREAK
                                  I          . I   __   - 3.10
      TRSession"A"                TRO   TRI        TR2        T13 3 T84
                                             I          - 3.50
      TR Session "B"              TR 0  TR 1       TR2  I     TR3   TR4
                                                        4.30
      Tape             Lecture No. 6    Lecture No. 7         Lecture No 8
      Lecture No. 10   Lecture No. 17
!5q Sth London ACC     5th London ACC   5th London ~CC I 5th London ACC
5th London ACC   5.30

WEEK 2 (Unit 1)

   SECTION  MONDAY     TUESDAY    WEDNESDAY  THURSDAY    FRIDAY     TIME

                                                                    8.30
           Briefing on Course 8C, Requirements,
       Tape Weekly Reports, Ext    Tape 18S/HPA     Tape 19 S/HPA   Tape 20
  S/H PA    Tape 21 S/HPA
            Course, Synopsis,ete
            Coach - Auditor - Pc
            - Student - HATs
            E-Meter Reactions                            9.30
       lecture/Briefing      Setting Calibration    Tone Arm Positions
  Dating Using Arm     Dating Using Meter     Dynamic Assessment
            ate
                                        10.00
       BREAK      BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK BREAK      10.15
            See Lecture above
        10.30     E-Meter Reactions     Dating Using Arm Dating Using
        MeterDynamic Assessment
  T R Session "A" E-Meter Reactions                      11.15
      11.30       E-Meter Reactions     Dating UsingArm  Dating Using
  MeterDynamic Assessment

       T R Session 'V' E-Meter Reactions                            12.15
       Lecture/Briefing            E-Meter Reactions     Dating Using Arm
  Dating Using Meter   Dynamic Assessment
                                        12.30
       LUNCH      LUNCH      LUNCH LUNCH      LUNCH LUNCH      1.30
       TR Session "A"  E-Meter Reactions      E-Meter Reactions     Dating
  Using Arm Dating Using Meter     Dynamic Assessment
                                        2.15
- TR Session "B" E-Meter Reactions      E-Meter Reactions     Dating Using
Arm   Dating Using Meter     Dynamic Assessment    3.00
      BREAK BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK      BREAK
                                        3.10
      TI1Session"A*'   E-Meter Reactions     E-Meter Reactions      Dating
Using Arm   Dating Using Meter    Dynamic Assessment     3.50
      TRSession'V'     E-Meter Reactions     E-Meter Reactions      Dating
Using Arm   Dating Using Meter    Dynamic Assessment
      1                           - - 4.30
    Tape         Lecture No. 1    Lecture No. 2    lecture No. 7    lecture
    No. 8        Lecture No. 14
             6th London ACC 1 61blondonACC    Sth London ACC   6th London
             ACC , 6thLondonACC    5.30

286

WEEK3 (Unit 1)

 SECTION   MONDAY      TUESDAY    TIME
                                                                  8.30
          Briefing on Course
          8C, Requirements,
   Tape     Weekly Reports, Ext    Tape 22 S/H PA   Tape 23 S/HPA   Tape 24
   S/H PA   Tape25S/HPA
       Course, Synopsis, ate
       Coach - Auditor - Pc
       Student - HATs                         9.30

      Lecture/Briefing Upper 1 ndoe & T R 6  TR7   Tone 40 Auditing Chart
of Attitudes     Spotting Buttons &
                                  TR 9 Coaching
                                        10,00
      BREAK BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK      BREAK 10.15
            TR 6 Steering bodies
      T R Session "A"  Blind steering;  TR 7 TR8   TR 8  TR9
            non-verbal 8C                          11.15
            TR 6Stearing bodies
      TB Session "B"   Blind steering;  TR 7 TR 8  TR8   TR9
            nCR-Verbat 8G                          12.15
            7hg- Course
          BrLe ing , n Cou "0
            r of n
          8C' R 'qu irements
                ' ram
          Wly Re
           eek    eports, Ex
          PO, S
          Coutir se S v      S, ate
               no $1 ate
          Coach  ~Ayudiptor' Pc
            nt HATS
           Student no HAR 7 s
                  r PC

      Lecture/Briefing Control in Auditing   TR7         TR8  TR9
Coaching    12.30
      LUNCH LUNCH      LUNCH      LUNCH LUNCH      LUNCH
      TR Session "A'         TR7        TR 8 TR9         TR9
      TR Session "S"   TR6   TR7        TR8  TR9         TR9  2.15
                                                   3.00
      BREAK BREAK      BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK
                                                   3.10
      T R Session "A"  TR 6  TR7        TR 8 TR9         TR9
                                                   3.50
      TRSession"W'     TR 6  TR 7       TR8  TR9         TR9
                                                   4.30
      Tape  Lecture No. 1    Lecture No. 5   Lee              ).9   Lecture
No. 25
              TR6

              TR

             BREAK

              T

              TR60 1
            Lecture ' N                       5.30
           1stgMelbourneACC  1StLNelbourneACC 1stme      oACClstMelbourneACC

WEEK 4 (Unit 11

 SECTION   MONDAY      TUESDAY    WEDNESDAY  THURSDAY -7 FRIDAY     TIME
      Briefing on Course    8.30
      SC, Requirements,
            Tape Weekly Reports, Ext         Tape 26 Part 1   Tape 26 Part
2 & 3 lecture No. 1 State    Lecture No. 3State
                 Course, Synopsis, ate       S/HPA S/HPA of Man Congress
of Man Congress
                 Coach - Auditor - PC
                 .Student - HATs
                                                   9.30
                                        PTP Cause of R i~ing  Goals In
Rudiments
lecture/Briefing Anti (1 & A      ModelSession     ModelSession     7 A
between sessions
                                                   10.00
      BREAK BREAK            BREAK      BREAK      BREAK BREAK
                                                   10.15
T R Sessio n "A" AntiO&A          ModelSession     Mode[Session
ModelSession     Model Session
                       1                           11.15
TR Session 'V'   Anti G & A  1    ModelSession     Model Session
ModelSession     ModelSession
                                                   12.15
Lecture/Briefing Relevant,              ModelSession     Model Session
Mode[Session     ModelSession
                 Irrelevant Guestion
      LUNCH LUNCH            LUNCH      LUNCH      LUNCH LUNCH      12.30
                                                   1.30
TR Session "A    Relevant         ModelSession     ModelSession
ModelSession     ModelSession
                 1 rrelevan~ Question
                 Relevant         ModelSession     Model Session
ModelSession     Model Session
TR Session "B    Irrelevan~ Question                                3.00
      BREAK -    BREAK       BREAK      BREAK      BREAK BREAK      3.10
TR Session "A"   Relevant,        ModelSession     ModelSession     Model
Session     ModelSession
      - Irrelevant Question 1 1                          3.50
TR Session "B"         Relevant,  ModelSession     ModelSession     Model
Session     ModelSession
      - Irrelevant Question                        4.30
   Tape           lecture No, 26  Lecture No. 27   Lecture No. 29   Lecture
   No. 30   Lecture No. 1
      lst Melbourne ACC           lstMelbourneACC  ist Melbourne ACC
   1st Melbourne ACC   HCS Course
            1                           - 5.30

287

WEEK I (Unit 2)

      SECTION    MONDAY     TUESDAY     WEDNESDAY  THURSDAY T FRIDAY
  TIME
                                        8.30
      Lecture               - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - SEE
  LECTURESCHEDULE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
      Tape Tape 1 S/HPA     Tape 2 S/HPA 1   Tape 3 S/HPA 1   Tape4S/HPA
  9.15
      BREAK                 XK    BREAK      BREAK
   Lecture  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - SEE LECTURESCHEDU 1 LE - - - -
   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10.30
                                                                - 11.15
   Briefing ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6 TYPES 0 F PR OCESSES - - -
   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
      11.30
      Auditing Team "A" - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6 TYPES OF PRO
CESSES - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - 12.30

                                                           LUNCH
   LUNCH    LUNCH LUNCH      LUNCH      LUNCH 1 - 1.30

   Lecture  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - SEELECTURESCHEDULE - - - - - - - -
   - - - - - - - -
                                                                   2.15
Auditing Team 'V'      6 TYPES 0 F PR OCESSES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-

   BREAK    BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK      BREAK 3.15
            1                     1           3.30
   Lecture  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- SEE LECTURESCHEDULE -    -
                                                                   4.30
    Tape          Granting of      Route 1 (4,5, 6, 7)   Route 1 (8,9,
    10,11)  Route 1 (12,13,14,     ARCTr nole
       Beingness  State of Man Cong.    State of Man Cong.     15) State of
    Me 15thACC
                  1    Congress         5.30

WEEK 2 (Unit 2)

      SECTION    1     MONDAY     1     TUESDAY    1     WEDNESDAY 1
THURSDAY -F FRIDAY     TIME
                                                         8.30
      Lecture[Tape           Purpose & Running           Purpose& Running
Tape 6S/HPA Tape7 8/HPA      Tape8S/HPA
            Op. hy Oup.      Op. by Dup.           1          1     - 9.30
      Lecture                     Definition, Description & Demonstration
of "THING"
      BREAK            BREAK 1    BREAK

      Team"A"     Finding, Handling & becoming cause     10.15
            overTHING on other students
                  11.15
      Team'V'     Finding, Handling & becoming cause
            overTHING on other students
      lecture          12.15
                                   Definition, Description & Demonstration
                                   of "THING"
                                                                 12.30
 LUNCH
                                   LUNCH      LUNCH      LUNCH
                                                                  1.30
      Team "A"               Finding, Handling& becoming cause
                       overTH 1 N G on other students
                                   2.15
                       Finding, Handling & becoming cause
      Team "B"
                       over TH 1 N G o n other slude nts
            .2    .2               3.00
      BREAK            BREAK BREAK
                                   BREAK 1    1
                                                                  3.10
 Team "A"   Finding, Handling & becoming cause
      over TH 1 N 6 on other students
                                                                  3.50
 Team "B"   Finding, Handling & becoming cause
      overTH 1 N G on other students
                                                                  4.30
  Tape      Communication&   ExactControl    Uses of Control
                                 Isness 17thACC    17th ACC    1    17thACC
                                 5.10j

288

WEEK 3 (Unit 2)

 SECTION   MONDAY      TUESDAY    WEDNESDAY  THURSDAY   FRIDAY      TIME
                                                                - 8.30
      Tape  Tape9S1HPA,           Tape 10S/HPA           Tape 11 S/HPA
Tapel2S/HPA Tape 13S/HPA     9.30
      Lecture/Briefing Lecture on CCH's      lecture on CCH's       Control
in Sessions
            1 and 2          2 and 3         RealityScale     SCS Howto Run
Auditing S C S   10.00
      BREAK BREAK            BREAK           BREAK BREAK BREAK      10.1 5
      Team "A"   CCH 1       CCH2       CCH 3      SCS   SCS  11,15
      Team 'V'   CCH 1 1     CCH 2           CCH 3 SCS   SCS  12.15
      Lecture/Briefing CCH 1      CCI-12am13       CCH 4 SCS  SCS   12.30
      LUNCH LUNCH            LUNCH           LUNCH LUNCH LUNCH      1.30
      Team "A"   CCH 1       CCH 3           CCH4  SCS   SCS  2.15
      Team,V,    GCH 1       CCH 3           CCH4  SCS   SCS  3.00
      BREAK BREAK            BREAK           BREAK BREAK BREAK      3.10
      Team "A"   C           CCH 3           CCH 4 SCS   SCS  3.50
      Team 'V'   GCH 1       CCH 3      1    CCH 4 SCS   SCS  4.30
            Restpointsand         Extroversionand        lecture No. 1
Lecture No. 3    Lecture No. 4
      Tape  Confusions       Introversio           5th London ACC   Sth
London ACC  5th London ACC
            17th ACC         17th AC    1                     - 5.30

 SECTION   MONDAY      TUESDAY    WEDNESDAY  THURSDAY   FRIDAY      TIME
                                                                  8.30
   Tape     Lecture No. 5 State    Tape N o. 1 S/HPA           Tape No. 2
   S/HPA    Tape N o. 3S/HPA       Tape No. 4 S/HPA
      of Man Congress        1                1          9.30
Lecture/Briefing - - - - - - - - - FORMULA 15 AUDITING RUNDOWN AND
PROCEDURE - - - - - - - - 10.00

  BREAK     BREAK BREAK      BREAK      BREAK BREAK      10.15
  Auditing  Formula 15 Formula 15 Formula 15  Formula 15 Formula 15 12.15

lecture/Briefing - - - - - - - - - FORMULA 15 AUDITING RUNDOWN AND
PROCEDURE - - - - - - - --

  LUNCH     LUNCH LUNCH      LUNCH            LUNCH      LUNCH 12.30
                                              1.30
  Auditing  Formula 15 Formula 15  Formula 15            Formula 15 Formula
  15
                                              2.55
  BREAK     BREAK BREAK      BREAK            BREAK      BREAK
  Auditing  Formula 15 Formula 15  Formula 15            Formula 1 15
  Formula 15      3.05
      Lecture No. 2    Lecture No. 3    Granting of      1 Routel(4~5,6,7)
      Routel(8,9,10,11)
                             S teofM
   Tape     H CS Course      H CS Course      Beingne,, 2m1ACC ta   A n
   Cong.State of Man Cong.
                                                                  5.30

FORMULA15: Cleanup terminals in Scientology, Instructors, etc and also
people who object to Scientology..

289

                     WEEK 1 UNIT 1      WEEK2 UNIT 1

              MONDAY   WEDNES-D-T TIME
  SECTION   AY    FRIDAY           SECTION    MONDAY     WEDNESDAY-T- FRIDAY
  TIME
                  7.00                  7.00
      Tape             Tape       Tape  Tape 8.00  lecture/ Briefing
TR2         TR3  TR4
                                  Comm Formula
            7.30
      Lecture/Briefing            TRO        Axiom 28    TR1        Team A
TR2         TR3  TR4
                                  Mech. of Control
            8.25
                                             8.30  BREAK BREAK
BREAK BREAK
      BREAK      BREAK       BREAK      BREAK
      ~ -1

.0.
      Team A                 R 0        TRO  TR 1  .40   Team B     TR2
TR3   TR4
                                             9.35
9.30
      Team B                 TRO        TR 0 TR 1        Tape Tape
Tape  Tape
            1                                10.30
10.30
                             WEEK 3 UNIT 1                          WEEK 4
UNIT 1

       SECTION    MONDAY     WEDNES-DAY FRIDAY      TIME SECTION    MONDAY
  WEDNESDAY       FRIDA-Y -~TIME
                             7.00                        7.00
       Tape Tape (Clear BC)  Tape  Tape       Lecture/Briefing TR8  TR9
  Spotting Buttons
                             8.00                   TR and Coaching

      lecture/Briefing       TR6  TR7        TR8   8.30       Team "A-
TR8         TR9  TR9   7.30

,8.25
      BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK 8.40       BREAK BREAK
BREAK BREAK 5

.3
      TeamA 1    TR6   TR7   1    TR8              Team "B"   TR8
TR9   TR9
                                        9.35 -                1
9.30
      Team 8           TR6   TB 7       TR8  10.30       Tape Tape
Tape  Tape  10.30

                     WEEKS UNIT 1 WEEK 6 UNIT 1

       SECTION    MONDAY     WEDNESDAY  FRIDAY      TIME SECTION    MONDAY
  WEDNESDAY FRIDAY
                                   7.00                        7.00
       Tape Tape (Clear 80   Tape  Tape             Lecture/Briefing
  Dating with meter    Dynamic Assessment Dynamic Assessment
                             -     8.00                  -     7.30

      lecture/Briefing E-Meter Reactions           TA positions
Dating using arms            Team "A"   Dating with meter     Dynamic
Assessment  Dynamic Assessment
                                             -     8.30
8.25
      BREAK BREAK            BREAK                 BREAK            BREAK
BREAK BREAK BREAK
                 1           1 .  8.40
      Team "A"   E-Meter reactions           E-Meter reactions      1
            Q -~r,     Team "B-   Dating with meter      Dynamic Assessment
Dynamic Assessment     9.30
      Team "B"   E-Meter reactions           E-Meter reactions
Dating using     s           Tape Tape  Tape Tape
                                    1   !1-1 10.30 1 ~ 10.30

                     WEEK 7 UNIT 1     WEEK 8 UNIT 1

      SECTION     MONDAY     WEDNESDAY  FRIDAY     TIME  SECTION
  AIEDNESDAY      FRIDAY     TIME
                             7.00                        7.00
      Tape  Tape (Clear 8C)  Tape  Tape                  Cause of Rising
  Goalsin
                             8.00  lecture/Briefing      Model Session    TA
  between   Rudiments

      lecture/Briefing Anti (1 & A      Relevant/  Model Session
      sessions
                 Irrelevant Question
7.15
                                  8.30  Team "A"   Model Session    Model
Session     ModelSession
      BREAK BREAK            BREAK      BREAK
8.15
      Team "A"   Anti (1 & A Relevant/       8.40  BREAK BREAK      BREAK
BREAK
                 Irrelevant Question    Model Session
      8.30
                                  9.35  Team "B"   ModelSession     Model
Session     Model Session
                                                              9.30
      Team "B"   Anti (1 & A            Model Session
                 Irrelevant Question               Tape  Tape Tape  Tape
                                  10.30                       10.30

           WEEK l UNIT2                            WEEK 3 UNIT 2
SECTION    MONDAY           WEDNESDAY  FRIDAY      TIME SECTION     MONDAY
      WED N E 5:1D:A::Y::::E F W D A Y TIME
                                                   7.00
      7.00
      lecture    - - - - - - SEE LECTURE SCHEDULE - -    7.15
Lecture/Briefing -Definition, Description and Demonstration of "Thing" -
      Briefing   - - - - - - 6 TYPES OF PROCESSES-
            7.30
                                                   7.30  Team "A"
Finding, Handling and Becoming Cause over "Thing"- -
      Team "A"   - - - - - - 6 TYPES OF PROCESSES - - - - - -
                 8.15
      Tearn'V'   - - - - - - - 6 TYPES OF PROCESSES-          8.15  BREAK
      BREAK BREAK -    8.30
      BREAK      BREAK       1    BREAK 1    BREAK 9.00  Team 'V'   - - -
Finding, Handling and Becoming Cause over "Thing` - -    9.15
      lecture                SEE LECTURE SCHEDULE--- - - -    .15   Lecture
--- ---SEE LECTURE SCHEDULE- - - -- -
                                                   9.30
      9.30
                                                 10.30   7- Tape    Tape
                                                 10.30
                             0    -1    Tape Tape  Tape
                                             c U~
                                                            T~,,p,r

                    WEEK2 UNIT2   WEEK4 UNIT2
      SECTION    MONDAY           WEDNESDAY  FRIDAY      TIME SECTION
MONDAY      1    WEDNESDAY   F R 1 D-A-Y--- T71 M E
      Lecture          SEE LECTURE SCHEDULE - - - - - -  7.00
Leciure/Briefing - - ~Definition, Description and Demonstration of "Thing"-
- -   7.00
      Briefing   - - - - - - 6 TYPES OF PROCESSES - - - - - --      7.15
Team "A"    - - - Finding, Handling and Becoming Cause over "Thing"- - -
7.30
                                                 7.30    BREAK      BREAK
                                                 BREAK   BREAK      8.15
Team "A"    ---- ---6TYPES OF PROCESSES---- ---    1     - 8.30
Team "B"    - - - - - - - 6 TYPES OF PROCESSES - - - - - - - 8.15   Team
"B"   - - - Finding, Handling and Becoming Cause over"Thing"- - -

 BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK - 9.00     Lecture    -SEE LECTURE
 SCHEDULE - - - - - -  9.15
 Lecture    - - - - - -- SE 1 E LECTURE SCHEDU LE- - - - - 9.15     Tape
 Tape       9.30
                             9.30             10.30
      Tape  Tape  Tape Tape        SUNDAY     8.30-9.00 Purpose of Op-by-Dup
                             0.30       9.00-5.30 Running of Op-by-Dup

                       WEEK 5 UNIT 2               WEEK6UNIT2
                             FR   SECTION
      SECTION    MONDAY     WEDNESDAY  FRIDAY      TIME             I l!'
 Ill, 1 ~~i l Ell: I P      TIME
                            7.00                              7,00
      Lecture/Briefing CCH1 CCH 2 CCH3 7.15  Lecture/Briefing CCH 4 ses
 SCS
           CCH1  CCH2  CCH 3                                        7.15
                            8.15  Team "A"   CCH 4 SCS  SCS
      BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK
 8,15
                            8.30  BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK
      Team "B"   CCH 1 CCH 2      CCH 3      9.30
 8.30

- Tape      Tape Tape  Tape  10.30      Team "B"   CCH 4 SCS  SCS   9.30

                                                                                                               1
                                                                                                               0
                                                                                                               ,
                                                                                                               3
                                                                                                               0



   SUNDAY  8.30-9.00 purpose of OP-by-Dup    Tape       Tape  Tape
      9.00-5.30 Running of Op-by-Dup
           WEEK l UNIT 3          WEEK2 UNIT3

      SECTION    MONDAY     WEDIDAY    FRIDAY      TIME SECTION     MONDAY
           TIME
                            7.00                        7.00
      lecture/Briefing AuditingRundown AuditingRundown  Auditing Rundown
 lecture/Brief ing     AuditingRundown Auditing Rundown AuditiniRundown
           Formula 15  Formula 15 Formula 15
 7.15
                            7.15  Tearl      Formula 15 Formula 15  Formula
 15
      Team "A"   Formula 15 Formula 15 Formula 15
 8.15
                            8.15  BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK
      BREAK      BREAK BREAK      BREAK
 8.30
      Tearll     Formula 15 Formula 15 Formula ~5 :1    8.30  Tearll
 Formula 15      Formula 15 Formula 15 9.30
                       1    9.30
    Tape   Tape  Tape  Tape _i    Tape  Tape Tape  Tape 10.30

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 APRIL 1961

CenOCon

HCO LTD HPA/HCA CERTIFICATE CONDITIONS

    The following are the current requirements and conditions for obtaining
an HPA/HCA certificate:

    Complete Practical Course.
    Complete Anatomy Course.
    Pay E131.5.0 total (which includes the f 100 fee for the Practical
    Scientology
    Course).
    Receive any required auditing to case level standard (set by HCO Board
    of
    Review).
    Pass Practical (Academy) Course (Repeat necessary weeks at no extra
    cost).
    Pass HCO Board of Review Oral.
    Pass Written Examination 85%.
    Complete HGC Training (which includes 50 hours of auditing for the
    Organiza
    tion).
    International Professional Membership held.

    For validation, it is necessary also to complete an HPA/HCA Extension
Course and certain other requirements, as stipulated by the HCO Board of
Review.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jl.cden Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

294

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HOD POLICY LETTER OF 17 APRIL 1961

CenOCon

                           TRAINING, PROFESSIONAL
                                 NEW POLICY
                 (Cancels any policy that may contradict it)

    The Purpose of the Academy (or an HGC when training staff)  is  to  make
the student  letter  perfect  technically  before  going  on  to  any  other
training.

    Theories and processes can be picked up in books and from tapes as  well
as in classes. Technical skill cannot  be  picked  up  anywhere  but  in  an
Academy or HGC training unit, a fact proven by years of observation.

    Therefore the 1000 to I stress of an Academy (or HGC training unit) must
be Technical Perfection.

    The following comprise at this writing what is meant by technical skill:

    1.      Command of the TRs, revised 196 1.
    2.      Command of Model Session.
    3.      Command of the E-Meter.
    4.      Command of rudiments detection and process.

    All these are covered in  unit  I  of  present  schedule.  Therefore  it
follows that a student can't get out of Unit I until he or she  is  perfect,
if it takes a year.

    Don't necessarily keep a professional student in the  week  he  flunked.
You can let him go on through Unit I (but not to Unit  2).  But  put  on  an
evening coaching class, paying an evening  instructor  to  teach  additional
technical subject time.

    No student enrolling after the date of receipt of this HCO Pol  Ltr  may
be given a course completion as a professional auditor  until  he  has  been
given and has passed an examination as follows.
    I . Perfect performance on the TRs 0 to 9.
    2.      Perfect command of a Model Session.
    3.      Perfect control and knowledge of an E-Meter.
    4.      Perfect handling of rudiments and rudiments processes.

    The student must get 100% on the above.

    A written examination on the subjects of Unit 2 in HPAJHPSJHCS  Training
or in the theory taught on a higher course should also be given and must  be
passed with a grade of 80%.

    The Unit One examination may be given when the student completes Unit
    One.

    In examining on Technical (Unit One)  the  student  must  be  unshakably
confident of his or her skill.

    Lack of this skill rather than  lack  of  theory  and/or  processes  has
nullified the results of those  auditors  who  have  not  been  successfully
taught on 1-4 above (Unit One) technical skills.

    SOP Goals application has searchlighted the necessities outlined in this
    bulletin.

    Letting an auditor out of the Academy  without  the  basic  skills  down
perfectly is opening the door to failure.

    Be tough!

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH.jl.cden Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

295

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MAY 1961

HCO Bd Rev
Academy
Ext Course

EXTENSION COURSE

    The requirement that Extension Course students who begin the HPA/HCA or
the BScn/HCS Courses turn in to the Academy all their completed Extension
Course lessons is no longer required, as in student files completed lesson
slips are kept, and the addition of keeping all their written or typed
lessons would jam Academy files.

LRH:jl.rd   Mary Sue Hubbard
Copyright (E) 1961     HCO Treasurer WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 MAY 1961
CenCCon
                      MODIFICATION OF HPA/HCA, BScn/HCS
                                  SCHEDULE

    The following modifications of the HPA/HCA and BScn/HCS Training
Schedules are to be put into immediate use by all Academies,

                            HPA/HCA UNIT 1 consists of:-
I . Command of the TRs, I to 9 Revised.
2. Command of the Model Session. (See Note 1)
3. Command of the E-Meter.
4. Command of rudiments detection and processes.
Note 1.     Model Session to be run against the TRs. (Student flunked for
poor TR 0,
      TR 1, TR 2, TR 3, TR 4 and TR 5/0.)

UNIT 2 consists of:-
1.    The 36 Pre-sessions.
2.    The Havingness and Confront process for the pc,
3.    General Assessment and running pes on Pre-havingness scale and for
assessment on
      Pre-Hav of terminals (not SOP Goals).
4.    Joburg Security Check, How to do one.
      Tapes are to be listened to after Academy hours.
      Axioms to be learned in student's own time.

    Goal: To make a Release.

                            BScn/HCS

    Establishes full technical perfection on E-Meter, Model Session and TRs.
Teaches SOP Goals fully.

    Goal: To make a Stable Mest Clear.

LRH:jl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (~) 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               296

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER CORRECTCOLOUR FLASH
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE     RED ONWHITE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

   HCO BULLETIN OF 7 JUNE 1961

Central Orgs

ACADEMY SCHEDULE, CLAREFICATION OF

    There is apparently a considerable confusion going on as to what  should
be taught in an Academy. Some schedules  and  advices  from  various  people
have been handed about that didn't really duplicate the intention well,  and
I have not before clarified since the issue of the Pre Hav.

    A review of Academies and auditors and  their  skills  at  the  time  of
examination, and in application for and early service in  HGCs,  shows  that
Academies have for some time been in violation of one  of  the  stable  data
about new auditors. A new auditor should be trained up to a point  where  he
or she can be employed at once as a staff auditor and put on  a  pc  without
the D of P giving them endless hours of additional training.

    This does not mean that all auditors graduating should  be  employed  by
the HGC. It means all graduating should be capable of being  employed.  Why?
Well, these auditors are going out to audit and haven't got  a  D  of  P  to
further train them, so they are  being  handed  a  career  failure  if  they
cannot audit people without further training.

    The attention of all Assn Secs and Ds of T is vigorously called  to  the
technical  calibre  desired  from  an  academy  student  and  the  necessary
training reality.

    You are not training auditors if when they graduate they  cannot  audit.
Now whatever  schedules,  classes  and  other  fancy  ways  of  dodging  the
necessity to confront students have been employed, just tear  them  all  up.
They are not a good substitute  for  training.  Because  we  have  all  been
trained in the educational system circa midtwentieth century we  are  liable
to think that forming people up into classes and getting them to  jump  over
books on schedule will educate them. Well it won't. We  are  here  to  train
auditors not to educate them. Sojust train them.

    How?

    Well you do it by check sheet. You make up a  check  sheet  of  all  the
items  this  person  must  actually  know  in  order  to  practise  auditing
effectively. Then each time the person passes a level  he  is  examined  and
chocked off on the check sheet, and goes on.

    Here is the leader in all this data: You can dawdle around  with  theory
outside an academy, read books and so on. But in an  academy  only  can  you
LEARN certain things and not all the books in the world will teach them.

    These things are as follows: the TRs 0 to 9,  the  Model  Session  while
obeying the TRs, the E-Meter, the CCHs, the Pre Hav Scale  and  its  use  in
assessment. The running of general Pre Hav levels,  how  to  do  a  Security
Check.

    Those are the things they  can't  learn  anywhere  else.  Therefore  all
training should not be of a class, for this terminal  called  a  class  will
-never audit anybody. All training should  be  of  student  individuals  who
will audit people, for only an individual student, not a class, will do  any
auditing.

    Now you will also find that if the student doesn't listen  to  at  least
fifty taped lectures of mine he won't know the mood or flavor of  all  this,
and so will develop rather weird ideas of what we're all  about  and  charge
around making nothing out of people, so  a  daily  hour  of  tape  is  quite
important for the whole eight weeks the student is there.

                               297

    All right, he also has to know the Auditor's Code. And  he  should  know
the Code of a Scientologist. And he should know his axioms.

    What else? Not another blistering cotton  picking  thing,  that's  what.
NOTHING else. If you try to teach anything else you've had it.

    So your cheek list should be composed of the various parts of just those
things. Now all this frantic motion of getting the student into classes  and
regimented doesn't fit in with what we're doing. So it is pure silliness  to
say "How can we enter a student in a comm course when we only run one  every
few weeks and er what gee can't well er
       can't dogs alter-is let's see    Actually the first and last part of
 the sentence
makes the same sense. NEITHER make any sense of course.

    So you have two UNITS. These two units are called unit one and unit two.
They are not so called because of weeks present or cats  on  the  belfry  or
diabums on the scollery. They are called  units  one  and  two  because  the
students in unit one are studying techniques and the students  in  unit  two
are studying processes or applications.

    Thus we know a unit one student not by the colour of his glasses or  his
voucher of payment. We know him because he has a  check  sheet  in  his  paw
which says unit one on the top of it and which  has  under  it  Code  of  an
Auditor, the listed TRs, the Model Session, the E-Meter and the  CCHs.  Then
we have a unit two student and he is obvious  not  because  he  has  a  time
clock in his hand but because we can clearly see that he has in  his  paw  a
sheet which  has  on  it  Code  of  a  Scientologist,  the  Pre  Hav  Scale,
Assessments how to do, commands how  to  make  up,  Security  Checking,  and
character of auditing review and the axioms, and  then  follows  a  list  of
fifty or sixty tapes.

    All these items have little tails after them four times  so  he  can  be
examined four times by instructors and flunked the first three.

    Now when he gets out he can take an extension course  and  complete  his
theory, but he can also do a creditable job of Routine one and  Routine  two
as covered in HCO Bulletin of June 5, 196 1.

    No classes. He reports. He works with other students. He sweats it  out.
He gets no auditing, but may be security checked and  security  cheek  other
students. He may assess people, but as long as he is in  unit  one  he  only
concentrates on mechanics, and in unit two  before  he  is  perfect  perfect
perfect perfect perfect perfect perfect in unit one. He can only leave  unit
two until he is safe safe safe safe safe safe to employ at once in the  HGC.
A student may not be examined by  HCO  until  those  cheek  sheets  are  all
initialled as perfect by instructors.

    What's this do to training? It demands  that  our  instructors  are  all
letter perfect on the above material  and  that  they  impart  the  personal
touch to  every  student,  and  not  in  big  masses  but  with  hammers  on
individual heads.

    1 herewith forbid classes and authorise only one daily seminar. 1 forbid
more than the above to be taught in the Academy. 1 forbid as well length  of
time present to operate as any criteria of the skill of an auditor.

    Now that's an academy. Write down your questions and mail them to me
    fast.

    Then read this again for it's all I will say.

LRH:jl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: This HCO B has been corrected per HCO P/L  9  October  1961,  HPAIHCA
Rundown Change, which moved the Auditor's Code from unit two to unit one.1

                              298

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 AUGUST 1961

CenOCon

HPA/HCA POLICY

    No HCA/HPA course may be offered or run outside a Central Organization.

    In event of a City Office conducting such a course, arrangements must be
made with HCO Continental Exec Sec in any given area.

    All former permissions to conduct HCA/HPA courses are cancelled herewith
save only in Central Organizations.

                        SPECIAL COURSES

    The conduct of Special courses of professional quality may be undertaken
only after arrangement with HCO Continental Exec See, and all literature  to
be released about them and the curriculum to be taught must be passed  upon,
in writing, by HCO Cent Exec Sec.

LRH.jl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 SEPTEMBER 1961

CenOCon
Franchise

TRAINING POLICY

    On and after January I st, 1962, only  students  who  have  successfully
completed an Academy course on or after July I st, 1961  shall  be  examined
and certificated by the HCO Board of Review.
    In order to emphasize the value of improved training in Academies and to
encourage students to qualify for certificates without delay, the  following
policies are instituted.

    Any students who have completed their Academy training before July  Ist,
1961 should be notified of this. The HCO Board of Review should also  inform
them of the latest date on which they  can  be  examined.  If  they  do  not
attend  and  pass  their  examination   and   complete   their   certificate
requirements by 3 1 st December, 196  1,  they  will  be  required  to  take
further training in the Academy at their own expense  before  being  allowed
to be examined or certificated by the HCO Board of Review.

    Also, students who complete (or have completed) the Academy course on or
after July Ist, 1961, shall be required to pass  the  HCO  Board  of  Review
exam, and to complete their certificate requirements, within 12  months.  If
after 12 months they have not done so,  they  will  not  be  allowed  to  be
examined or certificated by the HCO Board of Review until  they  have  taken
further training in the Academy, at their own expense.

LRH:jl.cden L. RON HUBBARD

Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               299

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 OCTOBER 1961
Cen Orgs
DofT

Training    STANDARDIZED E-METER BOOK EXAM

    The attached exam is a standardized verbal test.on E-Meter Essentials to
be given to all course students using this book. Answers to this  exam  must
be 100% correct to pass.
    Any additional questions could (and should) be added from  the  book  by
the examiner. The student is only examined until he misses a  question.  The
student has failed and the exam is over and the whole  examination  must  be
taken again.

    Examiners should not  ask  these  questions  consecutively,  but  should
select questions at random.

Philip D. Quirinc, HCO Technical Secretary WW for L. RON HUBBARD

E-Meter Book Exam

 1.   Define a Hubbard Electrometer.
 2.   Can a person be cleared without the use of an E-Meter?

 3.   Will the use of non-standard Meters produce a clear?

 4.   Is the E-Meter a precision instrument?

 5.   Does the E-Meter know what is what before the preclear does?
 6.   What causes the various needle reactions?

 7.   Which Tone Arm reading indicates greater density of masses, 1.5 or
 5.5?

 8.   A low toned male preclear who can not influence his mind or body at
    all reads at what position of the Tone Arm?

 9.   Where would a dead body female read on the Tone Arm?

10.   Where does a female Clear read on the Tone Arm and what needle
    manifestation would she have?
11.   A low toned person has what kind of needle response?

12.   What reading will a dead body male pass through before becoming a
    high Tone Arm case?
13.   What are the two most important things that the Tone Arm tells the
Auditor?
14.   How can you tell a case is not movine.

15.   Can you change a process if the Tone Arm is moving?

16.   At what Tone Arm motion would you leave a level of the Pre Hav Scale?

17.   Is the following good Tone Arm action: 3.5 to 3.3 to 3.6 to 3.4 in
    twenty minutes of auditing?
18.   What two things do you know when the Tone Arm is not moving under
    processing?
19.   What are the mechanics of what happens when the Tone Arm is not
    moving under a process?
20.   What do you do if you have run a terminal on a level too long and
    have stuck the Tone Arm?
21.   How is the Sensitivity knob set for any preclear?

22.   While doing a goals assessment, would you change the Sensitivity
knob?

23.   Can you change the Sensitivity knob during rudiments?

                               300

24.   Can you change the Sensitivity knob during a process?

25.   What three things monitor the needle action?

26.   What are the ten main needle actions and describe the direction of
    action as seen by an Auditor looking at the meter or the movement of
    each.

27.   What does a fall tell the auditor?

28.   How can you check to see if the E-Meter is working?
29.   Can a case be assessed on a change of needle characteristic?

30.   What does a rising needle mean?

31.   What is the only use of a rising needle at present?

32.   Is the needle returning to position after a fall considered to be a
rising needle?

33.   What does a Theta-Bop mean?

34.   Which takes precedence in an assessment, a fall, a Theta-Bop or a
Rock Slain?

35.   If a Rock Slam turns on while running a process, but the Tone Arm is
    not moving, would you continue or change the process?

36.   What does a free needle indicate as regards state of case?

37.   How can you tell whether a preclear is really eating during
processing?.

38.   What kind of processes need to be run on Stage Four cases?

39.   Havingness is read where on the E-Meter?

40.   How can the Auditor tell whether the havingness process is working or
not?

41.   Confront processes are run where on the E-Meter?

42.   How does an Auditor know when a Confront process is working?.
43.   What is the only reason you use a Havingness process?

44.   What is the only reason you use a Confront process?

45.   When and why are Havingness and Confront processes done in SOP Goals?

46.   On a Security Check, if the needle still falls on a question what two
    things can you conclude?
47.   What must you do about the two things above?

48.   Do you turn up the sensitivity knob on each question of the Security
    check to make sure you have all on any particular question?

49.   What do you do if on a Security check, on a particular question when
    you get a fall, then a no fall for two repeats, then a fall?

50.   Will a preclear who has withholds progress?

51.   On a Security check do you follow up a change of needle
characteristic?

52.   What does a rise on a can squeeze tell us about a case?

53.   Would a person who Rock-Slammed or Theta-Bopped on all questions of a
    Security check pass the check?

54.   What is the only significance with regard to a different Tone Arm
    reading if both cans are held in either the left hand or the right hand?

55.   What is the most important thing about a lie reaction test?
56.   Will a regular EMeter be of use in auditing a person from Clear up to
OT?

57.   What is the main use of the needle in Auditine.

 58.   What is the main use of the Tone Arm in Auditing?

LRH.jl.vmm.cden
Copyright Q 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

301

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 OCTOBER 1961

CenOCon

 ACADEMY TRAINING
(Revises existing Schedules)

    Due to new discoveries on what can be done with a  Security  Check,  and
the difficulties entered by hidden standards in getting a case  trained,  it
is important that the HCA/HPA Student become familiar and able  with  meters
and security checks and hidden standards early in his training.

    Therefore, without otherwise altering the intensity of current  training
or curricula of Units I or 2, the  following  becomes  policy  effective  at
once on receipt of this Policy Letter:

    ALL STUDENTS, FROM THEIR EARLIEST ENTRANCE INTO THE ACADEMY, SHALL  HAVE
TRAINING ON SECURITY CHECKING AND A PART OF EACH TRAINING DAY  (OR  WEEK  IN
THE CASE OF WEEKEND OR EVENING STUDENTS)  SHALL  BE  DEVOTED  TO  GIVING  OR
RECEIVING PROCESSING (SECURITY) CHECKS.

    This is in keeping with the oldest of  Academy  policies:  To  turn  out
auditors capable of being employed in the HGC without further  training.  It
has not been possible to follow this policy for a very long  time.  But  now
with the advent of auditor classification,  if  security  checking  is  well
learned by end of training, the new graduate will be  instantly  employable.
This means greater field results.

    The teaching of Security Checking from the outset introduces other items
which must therefore become policy.

    A STUDENT ENTERING AN ACADEMY MUST PROVIDE HIMSELF OR HERSELF WITH AN E-
METER OF APPROVED DESIGN AND MANUFACTURE.

    This may be arranged as the organization finds most practical and as may
be feasible for the student.

    The Academy may not loan, use or own Meters. The  organization  may  not
furnish E-Meters for use or instruction to an Academy.

    It should be broadly published that meters not approved by HCO cannot be
used in an Academy for training. A whole programme of training  could  break
down through the  use  of  meters  that  work  with  too  sensitive  or  too
insensitive or freak reactions. Meters  that  are  not  standard  cannot  be
described or taught.

    STUDENTS FOUND TO BE USING THE WITHHOLDS OF OTHER  STUDENTS  FOR  JOKES,
HORSE PLAY OR MAKING ANOTHER STUDENT  GUILTY  SHALL  BE  SUBJECT  TO  SEVERE
DISCIPLINARY ACTION.

    The types of processing (security) checks for student  practice  at  the
outset should be very specific and easily  cleared  and  should  contain  no
general questions.

Example of general question: Have you ever been angry about anything?

302

Examples of specific question:

Have you ever withheld anything from your mother? Have you ever lied to
Joe? (an Instructor)

    The difference between a general question and a specific question  is  a
matter of general or specific  terminal.  If  the  question  has  a  general
terminal such as "anyone", "men", "people", it is harder  to  clear  than  a
question with a specific terminal such as "your father", "Miss Smith",  etc,
etc.

    It is dangerous to a case  (since  the  person  may  blow)  to  leave  a
question with charge on it. General questions are much  more  likely  to  be
charged or to produce blows.

      It is intended by this Policy Letter that about an hour of each
instruct ' ion day be
      devoted to giving or receiving a Processing Check whether the student
can do it or not.

    Familiarity alone will gradually promote confidence. Training coupled to
this will make a good auditor, However, no training at  all  need  accompany
this exercise in the first couple of weeks. Just give the student a  mimcoed
special Processing Cheek form, have him hold an E-Meter  and  cheek  another
student for an hour. They'll bumble through and finally  be  ready  to  know
they don't know about it. This can go in on the student's first day. And  it
can continue, right on through to  the  last  day  on  course,  whether  the
student is using simple cheeks or standard forms depending on his progress.

    Warning: The main danger in doing this is  turning  an  HPA/HCA  into  a
specialized security checker, not an auditor. So  steps  must  be  taken  to
make sure the skills of the auditor are not lost and that the  student  does
not get a highly over developed idea of himself as an Inquisitor.

    Thus processing periods  as  such,  using  old  processes  such  as  ARC
Straight Wire, must also be employed as the student goes on.

    We expect a student to emerge from an HPA/HCA Course able to pass with a
70% or better grade, a general examination on  Scientology  Auditing  and  a
perfect examination  on  the  Model  Session,  Rudiments,  the  E-Meter  and
Security Checking. His TRs and auditing deportment  must  be  good.  And  he
must be able to handle a routine auditing process.

    Training time  has  been  demonstrated  to  be  lengthened  when  actual
processing  is  deleted  from  an  Academy  Schedule.  The  introduction  of
Security Checking over the  whole  training  period  and  continuing  actual
auditing on old basic processes during Unit Two  will  give  us  a  training
speed up and good field results.

    Note: Hidden Standards are taught only on Unit Two  and  are  found  and
relieved on beginning students only by Advanced (Unit  Two)  Students.  Unit
One Students may only do simple checking.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:md.rd Copyright (D 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

303

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 OCTOBER 1961

Academies

NEW RUNDOWN FOR BSCN/HCS COURSE

    The present situation of the BScn/HCS course is as follows:

    I SOP Goals is being taught by instructors who have not graduated from
    the
        Saint Hill Briefing Course.

    2.      No one has ever been reported to have found their goal, terminal
        and pre-hav level.

    3.      Too much time is being spent on the basics of auditing which
        should have been learned on an HPA/HCA course.

    Therefore, the BScn/HCS course will be revised as follows and is  to  be
put into effect immediately.

    SOP Goals is to be taught in the BSenfflCS; course, but only by a  Class
Four auditor who has graduated from the  Saint  Hill  Briefing  Course  with
honours. This instructor must at all  times  keep  in  direct  communication
with HCO WW and will only be under Ron's direction.

    The goals of this course are:

    1 . To make Class Three auditors.

    2.      To emphasize SOP Goals training.

    3.      To pull in old BSen/HCS auditors for an "SOP GoaW' Validation
    Seal.

    There is a prerequisite to this course, which is that the applicant must
be up to the HPA/HCA standards on E-Meter, See  Checks,  Model  Session  and
TRs. If the applicant is not up to these standards he must take  an  HPA/HCA
Retread course to raise him up to current standards at  which  time  he  may
reapply for the BSen/HCS course.

    No student may qualify for the BScn/HCS  Certificate  with  "SOP  Goals"
Validation Seal until he has:

    1 .     Had sections "C" and "P" of Problems Intensive (HCO Bulletin of
        October 17, 196 1, Problems Intensive) flattened, i.e. no hidden
        standards.

    2.      Had his own goal, terminal and pre-hav level found.

    3.      Successfully found a preclear's goal, terminal and pre-hav
    level.

    4.      Been checked out on all data on SOP Goals.

            Issued by: Philip Quirino
                 HCO Technical Secretary WW
                 for
LRH:iet.rd             L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
      304

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 NOVEMBER 1961

BPI

ALLOWED PROCESSES FROM COURSES

    As it is taking three months or more at Saint Hill to make  a  qualified
Class III auditor,  and  as  all  field  courses  are  only  six  weeks,  my
experience and data on progress of these courses  demands,  in  fairness  to
the public, that:

    No Course not taught at Saint Hill may qualify a field auditor for Class
III processes, and no field auditor or HGC auditor not  qualified  as  Class
III may use Routine 3.

    See Safety Table HCO Bulletin of October 26, 196 1.

    It is too dangerous running  the  wrong  goal  and  terminal  to  permit
auditors not qualified to find and run them on pes.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:iinj.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

305

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 NOVEMBER 1961

HCO Sees Assn Sees Ds of T BPI

TRAINING COURSE REQUIREMENTS

    As from this date, certificates  will  only  be  issued  when  the  full
requirements for any Scientology training Course have been met.

    These requirements will now include the Extension Course which  must  be
completed within one year of enrolment, and which  must  now  appear  as  an
item on the Check-sheets for ALL current and subsequent Courses.

    Application Forms  for  all  levels  of  Professional  Training  Courses
should, from now on, include a clause to the effect that  the  Course  shall
not be deemed to have been  completed,  and  the  Certificate  will  not  be
awarded until ALL the course-requirements have been met.

    Also, all HPA/HCA Courses, including current  ones,  shall  include  the
Anatomy of the Human Mind Course as a Check-sheet requirement.

    This policy is instituted so that no-one  will  receive  a  professional
qualification without  having  an  adequate  knowledge  of  the  most  basic
material of the subject. ,

                                Issued by: HCO Technical Secretary WW

LRH:jw.eden.rd   for
Copyright @ 1961 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 NOVEMBER 1961

HCO Sees Org Sees Ds of T

SAINT HILL TAPES FOR HPA/HCA COURSES

    Any Saint Hill Special Briefing Course tapes on E-Metering, CCHs, Sec
Checking or Problems Intensives may be played to HPA/HCA Courses, providing
the usual basic tapes are also played.

    Saint Hill tapes on Clearing may NOT be played to HPA/HCA Courses.

                                Issued by: HCO Technical Secretary WW
LRH:esc.rd  for
Copyright@ 19 61 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

306

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 DECEMBER 1961

CenOCon

STUDENT &METERING

    All Academy students must be trained on E-Meters from the start even  if
they only hold one in their lap whenever they  are  'auditor'  or  'student'
(not coach) in a Comm Course TR

    A student must have studied and passed E-Meter  Essentials  with  a  70%
grade and have received instruction on E-Meters before  being  permitted  to
See Check any other student.

    A student may only use innocuous See Cheek Forms such as some  of  those
that have been released in HCO Info Letters and may  not  use  HCO  Pol  Ltr
type Sec Checks while being trained to Sec Check.

    All auditing on  any  process  must  be  don  c  with  a  Meter  in  the
'Auditor's'  hands  whether  Sec  Checking  is  being  done  or  not.   Only
exception: the CCHs and Upper Indoc TRs. Where there's an Academy  'Auditing
session' in progress the auditor (never the coach) is  holding  an  E-Meter.
Where there's an Academy session there's an E-Meter.

    A second examination on E-Meter Essentials must be passed 100%  and  the
student must pass E-Meter demonstration training 100%  and  must  feel  easy
and familiar with the E-Meter before he or she can run a HCO  Policy  Letter
See Cheek Form such as Form 3 (the Joburg) and Form 6, etc.  on  any  fellow
student.

                           SUMMARY

    This divides student E-Meter training into four stages:

    1.      Holding a Meter and nothing else. Prerequisite: Being an
    Academy enrollee.

    2.      Observing their Meter while auditing basic Class I processes.
        Prerequisite: Having held a Meter through Comm Course.

    3.      Using the Meter on HCO Infe, Ltr type See Cheeks.  Prerequisite:
        1 & 2 above, passing E-Meter Essentials with a grade of 70%,  having
        had E-Meter demonstrated and explained in class.

    4.       Class  II  type  Sec  Checking  using  HCO   Pol   Ltr   forms.
        Prerequisite: 1, 2 and 3 above, and having passed E-Meter Essentials
        with a grade of 100%, having.  received  demonstrations,  tapes  and
        coaching on the E-Meter and passed an  examination  on  them.  (This
        step is equivalent to Class II auditor requirenients  but  does  not
        award Class II by havingg been reached in the Academy.)

                            REASON

    Academy Ds of T and Instructors will be getting blows, entheta and upset
cases by reason of missed withholds unless the above is  vigorously  applied
and required without exception.

    (It is expected that an Academy Graduate at HPA level will  be  able  to
easily pass a Classification Examination as well as his HPA exam when  going
to work for a Central Org. The Classification exam is not to be given  as  a
matter due because of course completion. It cannot be so  awarded.  A  Class
11  examination  can  only  be  given  if  the  student  goes  to  work,  on
graduation, at the Central Organization or City Office.)

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:esc.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

307

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 JANUARY 1962

CenOCon

UPGRADING OF AUDITORS

    Now that a definite  standard  has  been  established  in  training  and
classifying  auditors  from  HPA  upward,  everything  should  be  done   by
Academies and HCO Boards of Review to make the  diplomas,  certificates  and
classifications really valuable and meaningful.

    Current requirements for any certificate, classification  or  validation
must be rigidly enforced, without exception.

    A gradient scale of proficiency should be aimed at, for a  new  HPA  off
the  Academy,  via  the  HGC  or  field,  enabling  him  to  participate  by
graduating to higher levels. A candidate for a higher  level  course  should
not be accepted unless he has completed all the  necessary  requirements  of
his current lower level, and unless he has taken responsibility for his  own
case level and subjective reality by obtaining adequate auditing.

    Instructors should not be allowed to instruct in  Academies  or  on  PEs
unless they are fully qualified and certificated.  Practice  in  running  PE
Courses, PE Comm Courses, HAS Co-audits and Group Auditing  should  be  part
of the requirements for a basic HPA certificate.

    Current requirements for a validation seal should be enforced,  and  old
graduates  encouraged  to  take  training  retreads  to  qualify   for   new
validation and classification.

    When sufficient numbers  have  been  through  the  Saint  Hill  Briefing
Course, a list of Clearing Scientologists can be made up, which may be  made
available to the public.

    If these basic rules are followed, a standard of  professional  auditing
can be established which will be respected everywhere.

Issued by:  Peter Hemery
      HCO Secretary WW
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:sf.cden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbdrd ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

308

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 MAY 1962
CenOCon
Franchise

                   PRACTICAL AUDITING SKILLS

                     How to Use this Policy Letter

    Issue the following form to all auditors, students, etc for their own
insight, and issue it routinely.

                       Practical Auditing Skills
                        A Self Appreciation

    These are the total doingness skills of "the Perfect Auditor".

    Any auditor would do well to check himself or herself out on his or her
doingness of an auditing session as an auditor. Theory is easier to
confront than doingliess. Therefore, mark yourself honestly on these points
and then practise doing what you need until you are satisfied. Then do
another sheet and practise those. BE HONEST WITH YOURSELF. Auditing is a
precise doingness of the following items:

TRs   CALM  FA IR      UNSURE
TR 0:
TR 1:
TR 2:
TR 3:
TR 4:

CCH.s
CCH 1:
CCH 2:
CCH 3:
CCH 4:
SCS:
Op Pro by Dup:
Two Way Comm in CCHs:

E-METER
Trimming:
On-Off Switch:
Sensitivity Knob:
Tone Arm Handling:
Needle Pattern Reading:
Nul Needle:
Theta Bops:
Rock Slams:
Falls:
Rises:
Speeded Rise:
Speeded Fall:
Slowed Rise:
Slowed Fall:
Ticks:

309

Free Needle: Stuck Needle: Body Motion: Tiny Reads: Testing for a Clean
Needle:

MODEL SESSION
Beginning Ruds: Body of Session: End Ruds: Two Way Comm:

HANDLING PC
Detecting Missed W/Ms: ARC Breaky Pcs: Getting Off Missed W/Hs: Getting off
Invalidations: Q & A-ing with Pc:

PRACTICAL PROCESSES
PTP Process: ARC Break Action: Finding Overts: Forming What Questions: When
All Appear Who System: Finding Bottom of Chain: Finding Hav Process: Pre-
Hav Assessment: Listing: Testing Completeness: Nulling: Checking: Getting
Missed W/Hs Off: Getting Item Invalidations Off: Getting Suppressions Off:
Cleaning a Needle Reaction: Cleaning a Dirty Needle: Getting More Goals or
Items: Getting Pc into Session: Getting Pc Out of Session: Controlling Pc's
attention: Creating R factor: Holding up against Pc's Suggestions: Holding
Constant against Adversity: --

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ph.rd Copyright (E) 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

310

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 MAY 1962

Sthil Students Academies

                              TRAINING SECTIONS
                        Effective on the first Monday
                         after Receipt in Academies
                      and on 14 May 1962 at Saint Hill

    Training  Courses  are  hereby  divided  into  three,  and  only  three,
Sections. These are:
        The Theory Section

        The Practical Section

        The Auditing Section

    The sections run concurrently with each other, not consecutively. Tables
will be issued giving the requirements by sections and  their  check  sheets
from time to time.

                      THE THEORY SECTION

    In this division is taken up all applicable theory in Training.

    The student is given a check sheet on which all theory items are named.

    The student studies HCO Bulletins, Tapes and Texts as given in his check
sheet. These are studied independently by the student, not  in  a  group  of
students.

    When the individual student believes he can pass an examination  on  the
item studied, he goes to the examiner, who gives him  an  oral  examination.
The examination sheet has twenty or more questions for tapes.  There  is  no
examination  sheet  for  HCO  Bulletins.  The  examiner  asks  five   random
questions of the student from the sheet or text.  The  student  must  answer
all five perfectly without hints or coaching from the  examiner.  If  a  re-
examination occurs, different questions are asked. If  the  student  passes,
the examiner initials the student's check sheet and the  student  goes  back
to a study room to study additional HCO Bulletins, texts and tapes.

    The examiner is in charge of the Theory Section and hands out the  items
of study for the course and keeps all records and materials for  the  course
as well as his or her section and all files for the students.  The  examiner
is available during normal hours for examinations. Examinations may  not  be
scheduled for certain days of the week only, and no appreciable time  should
elapse between completion of study of all item and examination on it.

    The book "E-Meter Essentials," the Axioms  and  possibly  other  special
texts are not included in the five question rule, for  many  more  questions
than five should be asked on such vital items.

    There is a final course examination, written, which may review any  item
passed already in the Theory Section.

    The Examiner must remember that to be easy  on  future  auditors  is  to
invite disaster to some future preclear. The only overt one  can  really  do
in Scientology is poor or inaccurate dissemination.

                     THE PRACTICAL SECTION

    As it has recently been found that theory is more easily confronted than
doingness, the Practical Section is created to care for  this  fact  and  to
make the student confront and do accurate doingness. This  section  may  not
then become a  second  theory  section  where  one  studies  texts.  In  the
Practical Section the student only does.

311

Drills and practical auditing presence are the whole concentration  of  this
section. Any study for it is instantly translated into doingness.

    The drills of the Practical Section are basically outlined in HCO Policy
Letter of May 3, 1962, to be supplemented.

    The student may have a Comm Course in  the  Practical  Section  but  one
should not hang a student long on TRs 1  to  4.  For  there  are  many  more
practical steps to be done.

    Demonstrations may be done before groups of students  but  only  if  the
demonstration is translated under supervised student doingness.

    The person in charge of the Practical Section is  called  the  Practical
Supervisor. This person  supervises  all  drills  being  done  by  teams  of
students  and  gives  examinations  in  another  capacity  as  a   Practical
Examiner.

    The beginning student is furnished with a Practical Check Sheet. As each
drill is examined  for  accuracy  of  performance,  the  Practical  Examiner
checks the drill as passed on the student's check sheet.

    Until an indicated number of these drills are passed, the student may
    not audit.

    A final examination may be given at Course end on the student's
    practical.

    The whole concentration of the Practical Section is based  on  the  fact
that for any auditing situation there is an exact auditor response. The  by-
word of the Practical Section is  "When  faced  with  the  unusual,  do  the
usual." Random, wild  auditor  responses  and  extraordinary  solutions  are
ground out of the student in the Practical Section. The  whole  goal  is  to
achieve a dependable auditor who will give standard  responses.  This  alone
will make his auditing effective as our records show.

                      THE AUDITING SECTION

    The student, when he has passed minimal  theory  and  practical  for  an
auditing class, is  then  also  assigned  to  the  Auditing  Section.  While
working in the Auditing Section, the student completes the  requirements  of
the level he or she is auditing in.

    The Auditing Section is headed by the Auditing Supervisor (usually the D
    of T).

    The Auditing Supervisor does most of his or her inspection  by  studying
Auditing Reports written by the auditor. In the event of no gain  or  worse,
the Auditing Supervisor investigates the  auditor's  auditing  in  terms  of
GROSS AUDITING ERRORS and finds and corrects these by  close  inspection  of
the next session.

    The Auditing Section is there to instil the fact that standard  auditing
gets results, that only  results  are  acceptable  and  that  extra-ordinary
solutions get bad results.

    The Auditing Supervisor is  not  there  to  crack  cases.  The  Auditing
Supervisor is there only to get good auditing done. His or her attention  is
on the auditor not the pc, an important  fact  which,  if  overlooked,  will
stagnate auditing results.

    The D of T may resolve personal problems amongst  students  by  ordering
them to the HGC. The  Auditing  Section  is  there  to  get  good,  standard
auditing done. It is not the HGC where attention is all on the preclear.

                           SUMMARY

    It is intended that the emphasis of  all  course  training  shall  be  a
flawless ability to do auditing, and a command of the theory  and  goals  of
Scientology. A student on leaving course should be able  to  do  Scientology
and achieve excellent auditing results.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.cden Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

312

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 MAY 1962
                                   Issue 2

Sthil Students
Academies

  TRAINING
Classes of Auditors

    The following outline of materials is to be  used  for  compiling  check
sheets and gives the fundamental skills  and  understandings  by  class  for
Academy and Saint Hill Courses.

    An Academy teaches up to Class Ila which is the  equivalent  of  HPA/HCA
and results in the award of that certificate. The highest level of skill  of
an HPA/HCA is expected to be repetitive processes,  assists,  and  the  CCHs
combined with Prepchecking.

    Anyone retreading at an Academy should be considered to need  all  check
sheets up to HCA/HPA.

    While this material will be set out in full in future lectures  and  HCO
Bulletins, Academies should begin by using what they have to hand.

    Class lIla & Illb material is to be taught at Saint Hill in addition  to
the lower classes.

    This outline is released so  that  instructors  can  proceed  with  what
materials they have, converting to  this  outline  at  once  and  using  new
materials being released to keep their check sheets up to date.

    It will be noted that all sections of a class are concurrent  with  each
other and are not taught consecutively. The auditing  section  lags  only  a
bit behind the other two.

    Class 1a:

       Theory Section: Auditor's Code, E-Meter  Essentials,  Basic  Scales,
       Dynamics.

       Practical Section: Complete CCH Section of HCO Policy Letter of  May
       3, 1962.

       TR 0, 1, 2, 3, 4. Model session. The complete E-Meter check Iternson
       HCO Policy Letter of May 3, 1962.

       Auditing Section., Op Pro by Dup and SCS. Assists.

    Cass 1b:

        Theory Section: Communication Formula.
       E-Meter Tapes, tapes on the theory and attitudes of an auditor, Code
       of a Scientologist. Basic materials on ARC and  ARC  straight  wire.
       Havingness.

       Practical Section: Model session section of HCO Policy Letter of May
       3, 1962.

        Auditing Section: ARC straight wire done in Model session.
        Havingness.

313

Class Ila:

    Theory Section:
    HCO Bulletins and Tapes on Prepchecking. Tapes on CCHs. Axioms.
    Practical Section:
    Handling PC part of HCO Policy Letter of May 3, 1962. Pertinent items of
    the Practical Processes Section of HCO Policy Letter of May 3, 1962.

Auditing Section:
Prepchecking by HCO Policy Letter forms and HCO Bulletin of May 10,
1962 and CCHs. (The Prepchecking is done in conjunction with CCHs, some
of one, some of the other alternately.)

    The above completes the modem level of HPA/HCA; or if completed at Saint
Hill gives Class 2. An old HCA/HPA is prerequisite for entering Saint Hill
training.

    The following is carried on only at Saint Hill in addition to the
    earlier classes.

Class Ilk:

    Theory Section:
    Various tapes and bulletins on Assessments. Problems Intensive. Advanced
    HCO Bulletins and tapes on Rudiments.
    Practical Section:
    Practical Processes section of HCO Policy Letter of May 3, 1962 in full
    and
    any weakness remedied in any phase of practical.
    Auditing Section:
    Havingness. Getting Rudiments in. Dynamic Assessment, Pre-Hav
    Assessment. Problems Intensive.

Class III&

    Theory Section: Routine 3 processes, various HCO Bulletins and tapes on
    auditing and auditing attitudes.

    Practical: Review of any weakness in Practical.

    Auditing: Current Routine 3 process.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:cw.rd Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

314

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 MAY 1962

Sthil Students
Academies

                                  TRAINING
                             CLASSES OF AUDITORS

(Revised from HCO Policy Letter of 14 May 1962)

    The following outline of materials is to be  used  for  compiling  check
sheets and gives the fundamental skills  and  understandings  by  class  for
Academy HPA/HCA, Class 11, and Saint Hill Courses.

    An Academy HPA/HCA teaches up to Class Ila which is  the  equivalent  of
HPA/HCA and results in the award of that certificate. The highest  level  of
skill of an HPA/HCA is expected to be  repetitive  processes,  assists,  and
the CCHs combined with Prepchecking.

    Anyone retreading at an Academy should be considered to need  all  check
sheets for Class 11 skills. This is the Academy Class 11 Course.

    While this material will be set out in full in future lectures  and  HCO
Bulletins, Academies should begin by using what they have to hand.

    Class Illa and Illb, material is to be taught at Saint Hill in addition
    to Class 11 skills.

    This outline is released so  that  instructors  can  proceed  with  what
materials they have, converting to  this  outline  at  once  and  using  new
materials being released to keep their check sheets up to date.

    It will be noted that all sections of a class are concurrent  with  each
other and are not taught consecutively. The auditing  section  lags  only  a
bit behind the other two.

    Class 1a: It is expected that the student know the basics of Scientology
    and be able to do duplicative processes.

        Theory Section: Auditor's Code, E-Meter  Essentials,  Basic  Scales,
        Dynamics.

        Practical Section: Complete CCH Section of HCO Policy Letter of  May
        3, 1962. TR 0, 1, 2, 3, 4. Model session. The complete E-Meter check
        Items on HCO Policy Letter of May 3, 1962.

        Auditing Section: Op Pro by Dup and SCS. Assists.

    Class 1b: It is expected that the student be able to do a  good  session
    with an E-Meter and repetitive formal processes.

        Theory Section: Communication Formula. E-Meter Tapes, tapes  on  the
        theory and attitudes of an auditor, Code of a  Scientologist.  Basic
        materials on ARC and ARC straight wire. Havingness.

        Practical Section: Model session section of HCO Policy Letter of May
        3, 1962,

        Auditing  Section:  ARC  straight  wire  done  in   Model   session.
        Havingness. Repetitive formal processes.

315

Class Ila: It is expected that a student be able to get  good  results  with
Prepchecking and CCHs.

    Theory Section: HCO Bulletins and Tapes on Prepchecking. Tapes on  CCHs.
    Axioms.

    Practical Section: Handling pc part of HCO Policy Letter of May 3, 1962.
    Pertinent items of the Practical Processes Section of HCO Policy  Letter
    of May 3, 1962.

    Auditing Section: Prepchecking  by  HCO  Policy  Letter  forms  and  HCO
    Bulletin of May  19,  1962  and  CCHs.  (The  Prepchecking  is  done  in
    conjunction with CCHs, some of one, some of the other alternately.)

Class Ilb: It is expected that the student have a complete  command  of  the
fundamentals of sessions and E-Meters at an advanced level.

    Theory Section: Auditor's Code, E-Meter Essentials, Havingness,  E-Meter
    Tapes.

    Practical Section:

        TRs: TR 0, TR 1, TR 2, TR 3, TR 4.

       E-Meter:  Trimming,  On-Off  Switch,  Sensitivity  Knob,  Tone   Arm
       Handling, Needle Pattern  Reading,  Nul  Needle,  Theta  Bops,  Rock
       Slams, Falls, Rises, Speeded Rise, Speeded Fall, Slowed Rise, Slowed
       Fall, Ticks, Free Needle, Stuck Needle.  Body  Motion,  Tiny  Reads,
       Testing for a Clean Needle, Finding Hav Process.

       Model Session: Script; Beginning Rudiments; End Rudiments;  Rudiment
       Doingness:  Room,  Auditor,  W/H,  PTP,  Untruth,  etc,   Influence,
       Commands, Session W/Hs, Auditor, Room.
        And other drills as required.

    Auditing Section., None.

Class Ile: It is expected that the student have a theoretical and  practical
level command of processes for this lifetime and be able to audit a  skilled
Model Session with havingness and be able to keep all rudiments in.

    Theory Section: Basic HCO Bulletins and Tapes on  Prepchecking  and  the
    CCHs, Axioms, Basic Rudiment Processes, Tapes and Bulletins.

    Practical Section:

        CCHs: CCH 1, CCH 2, CCH 3, CCH 4.'

        Two-Way Comm: Drill.

       Handling Pc: Detecting Missed W/Hs, ARC Breaking  pos,  Getting  Off
       Missed W/Hs, Getting Off Invalidations, Q and A-ing with pc.

       Practical Processes: ARC break  action  by  goals,  Finding  Overts,
       Forming What Questions: When, All, Appear Who System, Finding Bottom
       of Chain, Cleaning a Needle Reaction, Cleaning a Dirty Needle.

    Auditing  Section:  Beginning  Ruds,  Locating  Havingness  process  and
    running it, and End Rudiments (I hour sessions only) Short Sessioning.

Class 11d: It is expected that the student acquire a  high  level  skill  in
handling the CCHs and Prepchecking and  administer  these  perfectly  in  an
auditing session.

316

    Theory Section: Completion of CCH and Prepchecking Bulletins and Tapes.

    Practical Section: Getting pc into Session, Getting pc Out  of  Session,
    Controlling  pc's  attention,  Holding  up  against  pc's   suggestions,
    Creating R Factor, Holding Constant Against Adversity. And other  drills
    as required.

    Auditing Section: Prepchecking and CCHs. Form 3 and Form 6A completed.

Class Wa: It is expected of a student to have a  theoretical  and  practical
command of the basics of assessment.

    Theory Section: Basic  bulletins  and  tapes  on  Assessments.  Problems
    Intensive, Advanced HCO Bulletins and Tapes on Rudiments.

    Practical Section: Pre~Hav Assessment,  Listing,  Testing  Completeness,
    Nulling, Checking, Getting Missed W/Hs Off, Getting  Item  Invalidations
    Off, Room End Rud, Getting Suppressions Off, Cleaning  Needle  Reaction,
    Cleaning Dirty Needle, Getting more goals or items. And other drills  as
    required.

    Auditing Section: None.

Class IIIb: It is expected of a student to have a high level command of  the
theory and practical aspects of Class Ill skills and be  able  to  audit  by
assessment.

    Theory Section:  Further  Bulletins  and  Tapes  on  Assessments,  Basic
    Routine 3 process bulletins and tapes.

    Practical Section: Getting pc into Session, Getting pc out  of  Session,
    Controlling pc's attention, Creating R Factor, Holding up  against  pc's
    suggestion, Holding Constant against  adversity.  And  other  drills  as
    required.

    Auditing  Section:  Dynamic  assessment,  Pre-Hav  Assessment,  Problems
    Intensive.

Class Illc: It is expected of a student to have  a  high  level  command  of
Routine 3 processes and to audit them with skill.

    Theory Section: Routine 3 processes as given  in  Tapes  and  Bulletins.
    Auditing and auditing attitudes.

    Practical Section: Review of any weakness in Practical and other  drills
    as required.

    Auditing Section: Current Routine 3 process.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH.jw.eden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

317

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 MAY 1962

Sthil CenOCon All Academy Hats

      TRAINING
SESSION CANCELLATION
  AUDITING SECTION

    Today auditing results depend on the exact performance, by the  auditor,
of the simple steps of auditing.

    The exact and expert use of a proper E-Meter, the exact use of the steps
of the session, the exact use of procedure and  techniques  alone  give  the
expected results.

    Extraordinary solutions, departure from the  precise  material  lead  to
auditing failures. And only improper usage of  modern  technology  can  give
auditing failures.

    In training the student auditor must get a good reality on these  facts.
Scientology properly used gives wins, improperly used gives loses.

    Instructors too must realize that where a pc is not  winning  the  fault
does not lie in the peculiar or unusual nature of the case  but  with  gross
auditing errors by the auditor.

    Session Cancellation, rather than other discipline, is  a  workable  and
better  policy  than  scoldings  or  infraction  sheets,   as   by   session
cancellation as a system in training the pc is saved further abuse  and  the
auditor goes back to discover that lie or she was making a  gross  error,  a
thing students often contest or disbelieve.

    Students usually believe  the  pc  is  "different"  or  that  there  are
variables in procedure rather than that  their  own  application  is  wrong;
this is a motivator aspect-the student auditor believes he or she  has  been
wronged by "unworkable
                                                0
processes" or "bad pes" rather than realizing that he or she  has  committed
gross auditing errors.

    If a student's errors are not corrected, the student continues  to  lose
on pes, pes lose and the student eventually ceases to audit.

    The student must be taught to meet the unusual with  the  usual  and  if
this is done, everybody will win.

    With this end in view, Session Cancellation as a system is introduced as
the only training rebuttal by an instructor in the Auditing  Section  for  a
gross auditing error.

    The system, briefly, is this. When a student  auditor  commits  a  gross
auditing error in  the  auditing  section,  the  student's  sessions  as  an
auditor are cancelled, the student  is  put  back  through  the  Theory  and
Practical Sections on those points involved in the gross auditing error  and
is then permitted to audit again. All former passes in Theory  or  Practical
on the subject of the gross auditing error are cancelled and the items  must
be passed again as though they had never been taken before.

    We have hitherto considered that an  auditing  session,  scheduled,  was
inexorable, and we sought to patch up errors while  permitting  auditing  to
continue. This is too hard on pcs and gives entirely a wrong  idea  of  what
is expected.

    All auditing sessions given in the Auditing Section are  for  gain,  not
for practice. The auditor is to audit to produce a case improvement  in  the
pc, not to practice auditing.

    When a student is assigned to the auditing section, he is expected to be
conversant with the skills to be employed in the session.  He  attains  this
by high quality passes in the Theory  and  Practical  Sections.  He  employs
this learned skill in the Auditing Section to the benefit of the preclear.

    While in the auditing section, if the student commits a  gross  auditing
error violating what he learned in Theory and  Practical  for  the  type  of
session the student is giving, the penalty is Session Cancellation.

318

    This is posted only after the session  given  has  been  completed.  The
auditing supervisor does not break up the session in progress,  although  he
may direct that certain steps are taken. That  certain  steps  were  ordered
taken and the taking  of  those  steps  by  the  student  auditor  does  not
influence Cancellation of future sessions  either  way.  That  the  Auditing
Supervisor gave the student directions on what to do with the  pc  does  not
mean that the student is thereafter cancelled.

    The exact procedure is as follows:

    An auditor's report is turned  in  by  every  auditor  in  the  auditing
section at the end of the auditing day. These  reports  are  written  during
the session by the auditor.

    Every preclear in the auditing  section  has  a  Preelear's  Folder,  of
distinctive colour, in which all lists, comments and auditor's  reports  are
always kept.

    The Auditing Supervisor goes over these folders before the next  session
and comments on the report, or gives directions. The  Auditing  Supervisor's
data may be taken from actual observation of the session or from the  report
or from an interview with the pc. The written comment may  be  amplified  by
personal interview with the student auditor.  The  common  means  to  obtain
information for auditing directions is by studying the  report  and  looking
at the preclear after the session.

    If the Auditing Supervisor or Instructor  sees  that  a  gross  auditing
error (as per list below) is occurring before  the  next  scheduled  session
the Auditing Supervisor posts on the Student Board the "Cancellation  List".
This list gives the date of the list, the name of the auditor and the  items
in theory and practical that must be done before sessions are resumed.

    Theory and Practical Supervisors take their data from this  sheet  after
it is posted and re-correct their students' class check sheets from it.

    When the student has redone the Theory and Practical work required,  the
Practical Supervisor posts the student on a "Session  Restored  List"  which
advises both the Auditing Supervisor and the student that  the  student  can
continue in the auditing section in addition to other work.

    As a student has to do a minimum number of hours of auditing in a  class
it is in his or her interest to re-do  the  Theory  and  Practical  work  as
quickly as possible. A session resulting in a cancellation  is  not  counted
into these minimum hours.

    That the required Theory and Practical work  has  been  done  is  easily
ascertained as more than one passing initial will be found on the  student's
cheek  sheet  by  the  Practical  Supervisor  and  he  also  can   see   the
Cancellation Lists of previous days.

    The auditing supervisor also makes up his  auditing  assignments  before
Monday morning and should review check sheets and his previous  cancellation
lists in order to do this to keep from missing a student who  has  done  the
required work.

    A student may be restored to auditing at any time, providing  only  that
he or she has had the required work done.

    Cancellation of Session may occur  only  in  the  presence  of  a  gross
auditing error. These are listed as follows:

    1.      Failure to give a session.

    2.      Failure to handle an E-Meter at the level of class for the
    session.

    3.      Disobedience of auditing directions given by the Auditing
    Supervisor.

    4.      Use of unusual means to handle the pc or the pc's case.

    5.      Failure to apply items already passed in Theory and Practical in
        giving the session.

    6.      Nattering about the pc out of session or derogatorily spreading
        the pc's withholds.

    7.      Being late for session.

    8.      Concluding a session early.

319

     9. Cheek of pc with a meter by the Auditing Supervisor discloses gross
     errors.

    10.     Check of pc with a meter by the  Auditing  Supervisor  after  a
        Class II or Class Ill type session discloses rudiments to have  been
        flagrantly  out  during  the  session  or  Sec  check  or  Prepcheck
        questions unflat or goal or lists in error.

    11.     Misemotion by the student auditor during session resulting in a
        termination of session.

    12.     A pc blowing.

    13.     In a Class II or Class Ill type of session, pc throwing down
    cans.

    14.     Disobedience of the Auditor's Code.

    15.     A pc looking worse after the session, or sessions, determined
        by the Auditing Supervisor's personal observation (not examination).

    ALL AUDITING ERRORS LEADING TO NON IMPROVEMENT ARE NOT MINOR.  THEY  ARE
GROSS.

    Some tolerance must of course be employed. Cancelling  Sessions  because
'7R3 is out" is insufficient reason. However, a student auditor  just  plain
not answering his pc or failing to give further commands comes under  No.  1
above. But at all times, the Auditing Supervisor  must  be  alert  and  must
cancel sessions where one or more of the items above are occurring.  Usually
several will be found to be out if one is.

    The Auditing Section is not a practice section and may not be treated as
such. No matter how minor is the  process  being  run,  it  will  be  found,
because of the processes selected for the auditing section for  each  class,
that the pc will gain and come up shining if the auditing is done right.  If
there is any practising it is done in the Practical Section but  no  pc  may
be put into session in the Practical Section.

    In Academies the Auditing Supervisor is ordinarily the D of T even  when
assisted, in very large classes, by an Instructor. In  any  argument  as  to
the validity of cancellation the Auditing Supervisor is right.

    Apparently this also might seem to punish the preclear. But it  will  be
found that less casualties and more  overall  gain  for  the  preclear  will
result from this system.

    If the student auditor is cancelled and is not re-learning  his  or  her
Theory and Practical on a Monday posting, the  Auditing  Supervisor  on  his
own judgment should give the pc another auditor.

    Do not make the other students carry dead weight. It is expected that  a
student will give as many hours as he or she receives.

    In case of flagrant and continual no-audit  by  a  student,  cancel  the
student also as a pc. This can be used as a booster on the  student  to  get
his Theory and Practical passed.

    Handling of the student follows, approximately, these courses:

    1.      Giving Auditing.

    2.      Commits small error and is warned.

    3.      Audits better.

           or

    1 . Giving Auditing.

    2.      Commits small error and is warned.

    3.      Commits same or bigger error and is Cancelled.

320

    4.      Re-passes Theory and Practical and is restored to Auditing
    Section.

           or

    1 . Giving Auditing.

    2.      Commits small error and is warned.

    3.      Commits same or bigger error and is Cancelled.

    4.      Fails to be industrious in re-passing Theory and Practical and
       is Cancelled as a pc.

    5.      Passes and is restored to Auditing as an auditor and then as a
       pc (to equalize give-receive auditing balance).

    6.      Continues to malinger and is passed to HGC.

    A STUDENT MAY BE ORDERED TO THE HGC IN NO OTHER WAY  AND  FOR  NO  OTHER
REASON.

    There is no process to be used in the Auditing Section except those laid
down by Policy Letters.

    There is no process specified for the Auditing Section  that,  correctly
used, will not produce good gains for pcs.

    If this system is well carried out and diligently employed  the  student
will graduate from each class  and  from  the  Academy  knowing  that  exact
Scientology works and inexact doesn't.

    Scientology will spread as far as  it  works  and  no  farther.  Student
auditors who know it works and can make it work will spread it far.  Student
auditors permitted to commit any or all of the  gross  errors  listed  above
will do us all a great disservice.

    So be tough. And be accurate. Use this system in training.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.cden Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

321

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 MAY 1962
                                  Issue 11

All D of Ts
Do not rernimeo

   URGENT

QUESTIONNAIRE

    Please fill out and return airmail to me. I WANT THIS BACK SOON. Take
only one week to complete it. I need your data badly.

HASI Location    Date

Director of Training

    You now have in your hands recent HCO Pol Ltrs including HCO Pol Ltr of
May 24, 1962, Issue 1.

    This gives you a three section Academy based on pilot work done for a
year at Saint Hill.

    I want and need your comments and suggestions on these matters. You are
to put the new Academy plan into effect at once as contained in the policy
letters. Having done that you should fill out this questionnaire:

     1. Does the system seem adequate to the training of students?

2.    What part of the system is hard to understand?

3.    Aside from the usual complaints about change, what student response
   is there?

4.    What do you now need to help you with this system?

322

5. What processes do you feel are lacking in the Classes?

6. What basic theory is missing in the Classes just issued for Academies?

7. What Instructor difficulties do you forecast?

8. What student difficulties do you forecast?

9. What Changes or Improvements do you advise?

10. What especially do you need from me?

    Fill this in and return to me as fast as possible. All class
requirements for Class I are conditional. As soon as I have heard from you,
I will finalize these classes, possibly add a Class Ic or even Class Id and
le.

    Then I can give you final check sheets.

    Meanwhile make do. Whatever the students pass now can be transferred to
new sheets in a month or two.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

323

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 JUNE 1962
Central Orgs Franchise Field BPI
                              CLASS II TRAINING
                      ONLY BY ACADEMIES AND SAINT HILL

    Because of the upgrading of Class 11 Training and skills, and the length
of time and staff needed to teach such a course, all rights to  teach  Class
II Courses are hereby rescinded except for  Academies  and  the  Saint  Hill
Briefing Course.

    No Saint Hill  Briefing  Course  tape  lectures  are  available  outside
Central Orgs, and Saint Hill.

    Saint Hill graduates may, however, listen to these tapes at a Central
    Org, for their
own information, by arrangement with the HCO of their area.
LRH:dr.rd
Copyright (j) 1962     L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 JUNE 1962
CenOCon Franchise BPI
                      PROFESSIONAL TRAINING TO BE DONE
                       IN ACADEMY AND SAINT HILL ONLY

    As all previous experience has shown that professional training is  only
effective when done in an Academy at a  Central  Org,  the  following  basic
policy is to be adhered to without exception.
    No professional course (HPA/HCA and above) or retread of any such course
may be offered or run outside a Central Organization Academy. This  includes
the  HPS  (Hubbard  Practical  Scientologist)  course,  as   this   is   run
concurrently with the HCA/HPA course in an  Academy.  Saint  Hill  graduates
are not permitted to run professional courses or Class 11 or  other  special
courses in the field.
    This policy is instituted and reaffirmed in the  interest  of  students,
who are entitled to the most excellent training  possible.  The  Academy  is
the only place where this is continuously obtainable.
    Professional auditors in  the  field  are  requested  to  co-operate  by
encouraging the promising members of their groups to go to the  Central  Org
for professional training, and meanwhile continue.giving basic  training  in
the form of PE-type and HAS-type courses (including Comm Course) up to  non-
professional standard. This type of training has  great  value  in  teaching
the basics of Scientology, and improving  the  student's  case  and  reality
level.
    The pattern of training is:

    PE, HAS  and  other  basic  courses  up  to  non-professional  standard,
conducted in the field or in the Central Org.

    Professional courses to HPA/HCA and above, conducted in the Central  Org
Academy only.
    Saint Hill Special Briefing Course-to ensure the final professional
    excellence and
to learn clearing techniques.
LRH:dr.rd
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               324

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 JUNE 1962

CenOCon

CERTEFICATION REQUIREMENTS

    In order to expedite the issue of  certificates,  the  Extension  Course
Director  must  always  inform  Certifications  immediately,   whenever   an
Extension Course Student completes an Extension Course.

    A completed Extension Course is still a requirement for a professional
    certificate.

    The  Extension  Course  Director   must   send   this   information   to
Certifications in every case, whether the student is in the Academy  or  not
at the time of completing his Extension Course.

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 JULY 1962

Franchise

 ACADEMY

EXTRA WEEKS

    Any extra week  payment  being  required  of  Academy  students  in  any
Organization is abolished herewith  effective  on  receipt  of  this  Policy
Letter.

    The mission of an Academy is to make Auditors who can audit,  and  issue
them their certificates.

    Should a student leave the Course and return after two weeks  a  retread
fee of 301yo without further grant or discount of the original HPA/HCA  full
course fee shall apply.

    The Academy course has no finite duration but  every  effort  should  be
made to graduate the student at the end of twelve weeks.

LRH.jw.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

325

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 JULY 1962

CenOCon
Post Public B. Board

CERTIFICATION AND VALIDATION REQUIREMENTS
            (Cancels previous policies)

    Effective immediately, completion of the HPA/HCA Extension Course is  no
longer regarded as a requirement for HPA/HCA certification. It is,  however,
required as a qualification for validation.

    This  policy  is  re-instituted  so  as  to  speed  up  the   issue   of
certificates. It is emphasized that it assumes  that  the  basic  policy  is
being implemented in the Academy-namely that no  auditor  is  released  from
the Academy unless he/she can be trusted to audit  HGC  preclears-this  also
implies that the graduate does know his basic data.

    As there have been some changes lately  in  certification  requirements,
current requirements are now summarized here again:

    I -     Graduated successfully from Academy, all Academy requirements
        completed according to current rundown.

    2.      HCO Board of Review Oral and written examinations passed 100%.

    3.      Anatomy of Human Mind Course completed.

    4.      Course fees fully paid up, or satisfactory arrangements made for
    payment.

    5.      International membership with HASI in force.

    HPA/HCA Certificates can now be issued without delay to any persons  who
have completed these requirements.

    In order to obtain a red seal validation on an HPA/HCA certificate,  the
requirements are now as follows:

    1.      Serve one year in the Org, in the HGC or a similar post.

    2.      Complete the HPA/HCA Extension Course.

    In addition, no higher level certificate (higher than HPA/HCA)  will  be
issued to any auditor until the HPA/HCA Extension Course is completed.

L RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

326

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 SEPTEMBER 1962
(Reissued from See ED No. 404 of Washington DC)

CenOCon

AN ARRANGEMENT OF THE ACADEMY

    The closer you adhere to the exact training pattern of an Academy as  it
has been worked out at Saint Hill, the better off you're  going  to  be  and
the easier it's going to be.
    I've been working this thing over left, right and center and it's a very
workable plan. The plan exactly consists of this:-

    There are certain classes of auditors, there's Class I a, I b, I  c  and
2a. These Classes each connote certain types of auditing. Class  la  has  no
auditing; Class lb has some type of  auditing.  The  administration  of  the
Academy depends upon the auditing requirements more than  the  classes.  You
get auditing something on this basis, you have a class of auditor  and  that
requires certain checkshects, and you also  have  a  unit  and  the  auditor
belongs to that unit. But if the auditor is changed-the  student  rather  is
changed-from one unit to another until,  such  as,  you  GAE  him  and  this
throws him into Unit W, this doesn't cost him his  intervening  class.  He's
still maybe a Class lb, but he's no longer in X unit. He can  be  downgraded
then in his unit number without being downgraded in his  class.  It'd  break
his heart to cost him his class. He's just pulled an awful GAE and  he's  up
there at 2a-he's in Class 2a, he's very proud and happy,  and  he's  managed
to prepcheck a whole list alive, clean nothing and leave all  the  rudiments
smoking. He promptly becomes a W right in there with the  new  students,  if
he's GAWd, until he covers the checksheet or the GAE things that  have  been
assigned to him to cover before  he  is  restored  to  auditing.  Then  he's
restored back to his Z unit. So you see you can shift them  in  unit,  which
is designated by letter, without costing them their class. So an  individual
auditor is actually designated by his class,  which  would  be  Class  1  a,
Class 1 b, 1 c or 2a.

    That's his classification. What unit he appears in is determined by  the
current auditing he is doing and these units are Unit W, X, Y & Z. The  unit
in which he finds himself is doing certain auditing  actions  and  you  will
sometimes GAE somebody down from one auditing activity to  another  auditing
activity, and although he still  retains  the  classes  he  has  he's  doing
another type of auditing.

    Your student body is divided up into A and B, and that's compared to the
first letters. The W's are brand new students. They're brand  new  and  they
don't do any auditing, nobody'd trust them near  an  E-Meter,  and  a  W  is
involved basically in just studying the fundamentals,  just  as  undoubtedly
you have it now. The number of W's you have are divided into A  and  B,  and
you get the WA then and the W13 unit.

    The X's are the most fundamental and the tiny bit of auditing  they  do-
they do something without any Model Session or something of this sort.  They
go through some auditing motions, and they are divided into the XA  and  XB,
and that gives you your teams-A audits B and B audits A. So this  gives  you
your auditing assignments.

    Now you get your next line, which  is  your  Y,  and  your  Y  is  doing
something on the order  of  a  Model  Session,  pocketa,  pocketa,  pocketa.
They're doing something  terribly  fundamental  like  finding  a  Havingness
process and doing a Model Session. This is rather elementary  type  auditing
but nevertheless gives them practice in this line. Then you get your  Z  and
that is doing the kingpin or the top activity that is done in  the  Academy,
which is in this  particular  case,  as  we  are  dealing  with  HCA/HPA,  a
Problems Intensive, and when they can do a Problems Intensive from  one  end
to the other of course that's your Class 2a Auditor,  but  they're  auditing
in Unit ZA and ZB.

    This makes very easy administration and scatters  your  students  around
and puts them under certain control at certain times of  the  day  and  puts
them in certain situations at certain times of the day. You  get  this  kind
of thing going then. You get

                               327

class-anytime an auditor gains his class of course he graduates up to a new
unit and you have to keep your numbers balanced in these units; you have to
keep the same number in both sides. It's very hard to re-arrange two  in  a
unit because they will become a co-audit and you don't want  that,  so  you
actually have a minimum number in a unit of four and that permits  them  to
criss-cross so that the auditor doesn't get audited by his own pc.

    Now, let's take a look at the time scheduling in an Academy. You  got  a
time schedule that goes from 9:30 to 12:30 and goes from 1:30  to  4:30  and
4:30 to 5:30 and 5:30 to 6:30, and that's an  Academy  day,  and  that  goes
Monday through Friday inclusive. Now, if  you  divide  up  your  times  like
this, you will see that this is very easy to move  these  units  around  and
within that frame-work you have three sections.  Your  sections  consist  of
the Theory Section, the Practical Section  and  the  Auditing  Section,  and
there are only three sections.

    In actual fact (depending on numbers of course, that has  a  lot  to  do
with  it)  there  are  three  basic  instructors.  There  is   your   Theory
Instructor, there is your Practical Instructor, and there is  your  Auditing
Instructor, so the minimum number of instructors in an Academy is three.  If
you had a great number of students these fellows would  be  supervisors  and
they would have instructors under them.  Your  Director  of  Training  would
ordinarily double in brass as your Auditing Instructor  since  this  is  the
most knowledgeable post offhand. Your toughest instructor-the guy who  won't
stand for no nonsense no-place-is ordinarily your Practical Instructor,  and
your reassuring instructor is ordinarily your Theory Instructor, and  that's
about the way that divides up as to who to appoint to what post.

    Now these fellows are located on the ground that they are located on, in
other words-these fellows are located in such a way as to make  a  split  up
of space. Now your Director of Training would normally  sit  in  his  office
and you use your scattery rooms, your odds and ends of rooms that  you  have
around, as auditing rooms. This is a fairly  practical  plan  if  you  don't
have a perfectly designed building for your Academy.  Practical  would  take
up the biggest piece of space and your Theory  the  next  biggest  piece  of
space.

    The characteristics of these classes are that certain different types of
auditing are going to take place, but they are not all  at  the  same  time.
So, frankly, it doesn't really require the tremendous amounts of space  that
you think to handle the auditing section.

    The Theory on the other hand  is  rather  specialized  as  to  quarters,
because that's got to consist of first and  foremost  a  room  in  which  to
study-tape recorder outlets  and  so  forth  are  put  into  that  room  and
everything that goes on about studying occurs in that  room.  Tape  recorder
listening is done by earphones, not by speakers. The Theory room is  usually
the quiet room and quiet is maintained. There should be a little booth  over
to the side of it or a little adjoining ante-room of  some  kind,  in  which
the Theory Instructor lurks, so that he can give his examinations  across  a
desk and in quiet  so  that  other  students  in  Theory  do  not  hear  the
questions he is asking and do not disturb  and  are  not  disturbed  by  the
activity of examination. That's an ideal Theory set-up.  It  doesn't  matter
how many students you try to pack into it or how  stamped  up  they  are  or
anything. Those are not considerations. You've got to have some outlets  for
tape recorders. You've got to have some earphones, and you've  got  to  have
some seats for them to sit in. And then you've got to have  a  little  ante-
room of some kind or another for them to be examined in so  they  don't  get
disturbed by each one  being  examined.  That  usually  carries  with  it  a
blackboard, and the rotation by which they are  examined  is  determined  by
how they enter their name on the blackboard. Soon as they come in  they  put
their name on the blackboard. When the instructor is ready,  he  just  calls
their name off the blackboard.

    The Practical Supervisor or Instructor is not in  an  ante-room,  he  is
right in amongst them. But he has a desk in that room. If he  has  any  desk
anywhere in the Org at all, just like the  Theory  Instructor,  he  has  his
desk on  the  premises  of  his  activity.  He  doesn't  have  another  desk
someplace, and no longer in the Academy do we  have  walking  off  from  the
class. See there's no more walking off from  the  class,  that's  the  guy's
room. So it disturbs them to have other staff members come in  and  ask  him
questions and other things go on, but  he  uses  that  just  as  his  office
space. It's not a specialized instruction space, it  is  his  office  space.
And there he sits.  And  he  can  keep  an  eye  on  training  practice.  In
Practical you've got to have a widespread eye across Training.

                               328

    Ideally in the Auditing section you simply have a  very  big  room.  The
teams are well spread. apart. You get this other activity here-the  Auditing
Supervisor would sit in the same room and be able to keep  his  eye  on  all
the teams and go on ahead and carry on his business of the day too. In  view
of the fact that you  don't  have  that  kind  of  space,  Auditing  Section
Students will have to be split up into other quarters and other rooms.  That
isn't quite so good, but you can make that up  with  some  kind  of  speaker
system going into these auditing rooms on this basis:

    A system like this has already been developed, and it is pretty hard  to
install and is a little bit complicated, but you hang  a  microphone  around
the auditor's neck and you connect the pc's cans up to a central  meter  and
the meter is in the Auditing Supervisor's desk.  It's  the  connected  meter
and it has a switchboard. Just by throwing  this  switchboard  you  get  the
meter reading and you get the auditing activity of the auditor at  the  same
time. Now in view of the auditor never knows when this is on, a  great  deal
of supervision can be done. Oddly enough this isn't for a  scattered  series
of rooms, this is for a wide, large room.  That  thing  is  just  internally
wired, the Instructor sits over in the corner. Therefore he  never  gets  up
and stands back of the pe or stands back of the auditor.  He  never  has  to
approach the session, to know what's going on. Now this thing  in  its  most
complicated activity uses the microphone as a small speaker, and if you  get
too outraged this microphone being very close to the auditor's mouth it  all
of a sudden can talk back. ThaVs  a  fairly  ideal  auditing  activity.  You
could of course give him an earphone, a little plug-in earphone,  that  will
be more satisfactory, but frankly any microphone acts as a speaker.  So  you
could make these things talk back.

    That is the type of circuit which is most ideally suited to a  bunch  of
auditing sessions. It doesn't make the instructor have to approach  sessions
to give his advice, to find out what's going on, to find out how  the  meter
is reading or anything else. You can use a  booster  on  these  circuits  so
that the meters are able to put  out  the  current  over  the  line  to  the
auditing meter and the current to the other meter. There is a little bit  of
electronic difficulty as they wire them up, but those  things  will  all  be
overcome.

    Now, there's your Auditing Section. How do  these  things  operate?  How
does all this operate on scheduling? Your schedule goes  something  on  this
order-in the morning your W's, X's & Y's, that's the A units, all appear  at
9:30 in the Theory Section. And in the morning all  of  the  B's-W,  X,  Y's
appear over in the Practical Section. Then after lunch your B  Unit  of  the
first  three  letters  appears  in  Theory,  and  your  A  Units  appear  in
Practical, so they get three hours of Practical a day  and  three  hours  of
Theory a day. And everything is done by checksheet.  Individual  checksheet.
There is no class activity, you get the idea. There isn't  getting  all  the
students together and teaching them how to thread  a  needle  when  half  of
them know how and the other half can't  be  taught  anyhow.  There  is  this
individualization, but  you  can  have  this  tight  scheduling  along  with
individualization, the checksheet gives you the individual attention to  the
student and the compartmentation of time gives him a scheduled activity.  He
knows where he's supposed to be.

    That same morning, the A  section  of  the  Z  group  reports  to  their
auditing room and they spend three hours auditing. In other words,  this  is
the most important auditing so therefore we  give  it  the  most  time.  And
there's your three hours of auditing, and your  B  Group  is  receiving  the
auditing during that time. Then in the afternoon  the  ZB's  are  doing  the
auditing and the ZA's are receiving auditing in the Auditing Section.

    On alternate days Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, your ZA's  spend
two hours in Practical on Monday from 4:30 to 6:30. On Wednesday  your  ZA's
spend two hours in Practical and ZB's their two hours in Theory. They  spend
two hours twice a week in Theory and two hours twice  a  week  in  Practical
from 4:30 to 6:30. Don't try to make that class  cliange-the  4:30  to  5:30
and then a shift 5:30 to 6:30 because it uses too much  time  and  commotion
on a break. You just might as well use it that way.

    You've got quite a bit of auditing space in proportion to the number  of
people that are using it, so your X Group doing its first auditing  occupies
one little piece of auditing space and they  are  weak,  so  they  do  do  a
shift. You've got your 4:301o 5:30 session and you've got your 5:30 to  6:30
session. That's just sort of a lick and a ,promise.  It  would  actually  be
about a 50 minute session. They flip, flop, during that afternoon, and  they
flip, flop daily on this. And then when you get up to your Y,  you're  doing
a little more serious activity on this thing. It takes a  little  more  time
to do it; to get in the Model Session, to find the  Havingness  process  and
so forth, so you flip

                               329

flop them days so it's 2 hours  on  Monday  and  they  receive  2  hours  on
Tuesday and so on, you don't give  them  that  5:30  to  6:30.  The  student
starts in with his X Group with an hour auditing session less  ten  minutes.
When he gets to his Y group, he's doing a two hour stint. When  he  gets  to
his Z group, it's a three hour session.  This  graduates  him  up  into  the
stamina and stick-to-ivity of it.

    That's your scheduling activity for auditing. You find all this runs off
smooth as butter. Now, if you have limited toilet facilities  and  so  forth
there is another gimmick you can pull and this  gimmick  is  a  simple  one.
That you simply stagger the lunch hour  15  minutes  ahead  and  15  minutes
behind in your Theory  and  Practical.  In  other  words  you  can  increase
Practical 15 minutes and decrease Theory 15 minutes, therefore they let  out
slightly  different  times  with  a  15  minute  difference.  This   is   in
consideration of limited toilet facilities, you got other little  dodges  of
this particular character but actually you mustn't  upset  the  progress  of
these units through the various stints,  you  find  out  this  balances  out
pretty well.

    You've got to have checksheets for each  one  of  these  classes,  these
checksheets are carried out on this basis. The student has a  copy  and  the
instructor has a master copy and if a checksheet gets lost the  signups  are
on the student's checksheet and that's just his hard luck, he  has  to  take
the check all over again.  That's  a  simple  penalty.  In  other  words  he
mustn't lose his checksheet. You record this on the instructor's  checksheet
and so forth-do any recording you want to, but put  the  burden  of  keeping
the record with the student and you'll find out you'll get  into  much  less
trouble by doing t1iis. You don't have to have mounds of  administration  to
carry this forward. Mounds of administration tend to  accumulate  around  it
and the instructors all of a sudden are doing  nothing  but  shuffle  paper.
We're not interested in their shuffling  paper,  we're  interested  in  them
setting students right. That's  our  basic  interest.  We're  interested  in
their instructing. We're interested in getting  people  checked  out.  We're
interested in all these other factors involved in the situation. We want  to
turn out good auditors. This system I've worked  out  very  carefully,  this
system has been in the works at Saint Hill for some time.  I've  refined  it
and grooved it and found things wrong with it and I've  been  planning  this
up for an Academy shift. I gave warning a little while  ago  that  Academies
were going to follow a pattern along this line, but I hadn't  perfected  the
pattern until now. It seems to me that this is quite feasible. I thought  it
over with regard to quarters and numbers  of  instructors  available  and  I
think it will make a very successful Academy.

    The role of the Academy of course is to turn out auditors  that  can  be
employed in the HGC. They have to be good enough to be used on  the  HGC  at
once. Certification requirements recently have  been  reduced  to  the  fact
that if the fellow goes through the school he gets his certificate.  There's
been nothing else hanging up on this. To get his  certificate  in  hand,  of
course, he must have paid his training fee and other people hang  things  on
this in other departments. But my basic intention is that a  certificate  is
put in his hot paw the moment he finishes up and gets examined.  HCO  should
have its Board of Review capable and ready to examine  the  papers  of  this
person. In spite of the checksheets there is another general examination  at
the end of his Academy training period. And the  results  on  his  pcs  also
count on this, if he has audited a pc through a Problems Intensive where  he
can point out  certain  definite  results.  That,  however,  sometimes  gets
balled up, people get transferred on pcs and he  can't  point  to  a  single
result. So that's not paramount, but his auditing skill must be  taken  into
account.

    The point that must be driven home with a student is that  the  Auditing
Section is not a training section. I just kill 'em on sight  if  they  start
developing this idea. They are not in the Auditing Section to learn  how  to
audit. They are in the Auditing Section to  DO  AUDITING.  If  you  get  any
instructor who regards the Auditing Section of any of these  training  units
as a place where they learn how to do it kick them in  the  head,  Mac,  and
send him someplace else-send him down to Central  Files  or  something,  but
don't keep him on training. When they're in there, that auditing has got  to
look good. And if that auditing being done  isn't  looking  good  and  isn't
producing results, there's only  one  thing  that  the  auditing  supervisor
does. He shows the auditor which direction the cases are  taking,  that  has
nothing to do with auditing you see. He  shows  him  which  direction  these
cases are taking and the logical course to pursue.

    Now if there's anything wrong  with  this  fellow's  Model  Session,  if
there's anything wrong with his finding  Havingness  Processes,  if  there's
anything wrong with

                               330

his approach to Prepchecking-he doesn't learn it in  the  Auditing  Section!
He is simply GAE'd-that means Gross Auditing Error-his  name  is  posted  on
the board, and if this person during the week he is given the GAE  fails  to
make it up and get his cheekshect (it'll  be  a  little  special  checksheet
he's got to make up now)-if he fails  to  make  it  up  and  hasn't  got  it
totally caught up, then he is GAE'd as a pc in the following week.  That  is
the penalty of not making up a GAE in  the  same  week  that  it  is  given.
That's a God-help-us proposition.

    How does a person get a GAE? There's several ways: 1. By observation  of
the auditing he's doing. The Auditing Instructor is not supposed to hang  up
over the back of his neck and say no, no, no, you ask about a  Present  Time
Problem as the 3rd rudiment, you see. He hasn't got any business doing  that
at all. It's just observation. Is this guy functional? Is he working  as  an
auditor? Does he look like an auditor? How are his TRs and so forth?  That's
all. He looks like an auditor. Okay. Now, the next one is the  condition  of
the pc when inspected.  That  starts  with,  simply,  you  see  a  pc,  he's
drifting around and he looks in a horrible fog and he doesn't know  if  he's
coming or going. That is enough for a GAE.  Auditing  is  supposed  to  make
people feel better. We don't care how much trouble  this  person's  had.  We
don't care how mean the instructors are to him. An hour session should  have
straightened him out. You get this very tough look  at  the  situation.  The
third method, of course, is by graphs, progress and so forth as  represented
by the various papers of auditing which are auditing report forms.  Auditing
report forms are done by students  on  all  sessions  every  day.  They  are
handed in to the auditing supervisor  who  is  supposed  to  look  at  these
things and hand them back. In the following day's session. He puts them  out
there in baskets, where the auditor can pick them up.

    An Academy has a number of things that it has to cope with  and  amongst
these things is students getting  entangled  in  their  personal  lives  and
getting so messed up in a personal relation and this kind of thing  that  he
can't study. It's very much in our interest to prevent that sort  of  thing.
So you have a very tough set of regulations. The penalty for breaking  these
regulations or any one of these regulations is an  infraction  thesis  which
you all know well. You make the student  turn  it  in,  saying  in  so  many
hundred words he's got to give you all the hot dope on this  and  that.  Now
there's terrific injustice in this and there's  a  lot  of  danger  in  this
infranction system because you're liable to miss  withholds.  And  then  the
student winds up angry as hell about it all and that sort of thing.  If  any
better system to keep the rules and regulations in force could  be  devised,
why that would be fine.  That  would  be  very  acceptable  to  me.  In  the
meantime, the only one we have that has worked  at  all  is  the  infraction
thesis. That's pretty gruesome, has a lot of things wrong with it.  Alright,
that's the discipline.

    An Academy is as full as its snap and pop, and don't make  any  mistakes
about this. Academy enrolment has very little to do with the  Registrar.  It
has everything to do with the quality of the Academy. Sounds awfully  funny.
A bad Academy empties almost at once. There's no new enrolments in  a  badly
run Academy. A good Academy mysteriously  picks  up  a  lot  of  enrolments.
We've learned this over the years. It's the funniest  darn  thing  you  ever
wanted to see. You never figure out how anybody found out. You  hardly  have
time for them to find out. If the HGC drops in  quality  it  takes  6  or  7
months to go down the drain as far as income and pes are concerned,  and  it
takes another 6 or 7 months to pick up again. This is  not  true  about  the
Academy. It will do it in a week. It's just one of the  most  sudden  things
you'd want to see happen.

    What looks  like  a  good  Academy  is  having  instructors  know  their
business, and Schedules that are kept. A precise scheduling and  instructors
that know their business. And nobody puts up  with  anything  but  excellent
auditing. Now that is a good Academy in the estimation of  students.  A  bad
Academy is one that is kind, is  nice,  that  helps  them  out.  The  Theory
Instructor is just, not pleasant, but kind. A person comes in and  there  is
a bulletin to be examined "What are the buttons  used  in  Prepchecking?.  "
The fellow says, 'Vell, 1 didn't quite get that  far,"  and  the  Instructor
says, "Oh, come on now, does careful, careful, mean anything to  you?"  This
type of examination, man, is cutting  the  poor  student's  throat.  They'll
turn a student out of there who will one  day  be  sitting  in  an  auditing
chair who won't know which direction is  up  or  down  or  South!  In  other
words, they've done the guy a rotten dirty trick.

    So it's precision  of  information,  the  demands  put  on  the  student
concerning the information, the precision of the scheduling,  and  the  fact
you don't put up with anything less than perfection.  That's  what  makes  a
good Academy in the public estimation, not necessarily  my  estimation,  but
in public estimation.

                               331

    As far as the length of time in an Academy is concerned we do  care  how
long a student stays in the Academy. We  do  care,  because  he's  using  up
usable quarters, and the slower he learns the more of a liability he  is  to
us.

    You have this difficulty in an Academy; the  one  thing  that  can  snap
somebody around and completely change his life  is  finding  his  goal.  And
you're not finding Academy students' goals. This is  a  tough  rap,  so  you
just have to climb the hill without that assist, because I  have  now  found
out that those people who do worst can only really  be  remedied  by  having
their goal found. You get somebody who is really stumbling, there is  simply
nothing you can do short of finding that person's goal; that will snap  them
out of it just like that. There isn't any remedy short of that. That's  what
you got to put up with. But you have a terrific  process  in  this  Problems
Intensive. This is a terrific package. It'll do some marvellous  things  one
way or the other and therefore (and this is  going  to  be  incorporated  at
Saint Hill) 1 wouldn't have a slow student hang on and on and on and on  and
on and on month after month after month after month in an Academy.

    When it became very obvious to me that this  student  was  going  to  be
terribly, terribly slow and learning impossible to him, instead  of  cutting
the student's throat for him, 1 would send him to  the  HGC.  But  the  only
thing 1 would permit him to buy would be the thing that finds his goal.  Now
that is very difficult because HGCs are not  necessarily  rigged  for  this.
But 1 am telling you though, that this is what we must  do.  We  can't  send
him over there to get him  some  Prepchecking,  or  some  Sec  Checking,  or
something like that, because it's not going to do him any  good.  We've  got
to find this fellow's Dynamic and his Item  and  his  Goal.  We  don't  care
about getting it listed, but we got to  find  that  far-and  you  all  of  a
sudden will find this fellow straightening out. We're going to  start  doing
that at Saint Hill very shortly. The economics of it are very  difficult  to
handle at Saint Hill, because a person comes there for  Training  and  there
is no HGC at Saint Hill.

    NOTE: Up to here this See ED has been a transcription of a tape  L.  Ron
    Hubbard made during a Technical Conference with the Technical  Staff  of
    the FC-DC on Sept 7, AD 12.

    The following are notes taken by Eleanore Turner at the same  conference
    after LRH had ceased to record on tape.

    How to handle a new student ARC broke with life and everything: Give him
a reality on Scientology. The solution is too  simple.  Give  him  a  simple
tenet of Scientology and tell him to find things about it he can agree with-
keep him at it. Four students at Saint Hill were set  up  in  two  teams  of
two, and in turn wrote up on a blackboard 12 things they  could  agree  with
about a pe (and about an E-Meter). Three of  these  four  were  phenomenally
better thereafter. I could talk to the other, have a  long  talk  with  him,
and possibly square him around.

A relatively unteachable person is one whose goal is an overt against
Scientology.

    The chief use of the TV in the Academy is for rudiments checkouts by the
instructor on Friday afternoons. Students are  GAE'd  on  this-so  they  are
alert during a demonstration. Missed withhold check should be added  to  the
Friday rudiments check, "Do you have a withhold that hasn't been cleared  up
on you?" The other Academy use is occasionally  an  Instructor  demonstrates
how a session should be done. And the TV in  the  Central  Org  is  used  in
Staff Auditor Training Programme.

    If you follow too closely any rules, it becomes a Simple  Simon  idiocy.
You have a well  trained  D  of  T,  Tech  Director,  etc.  Too  many  rules
invalidates these people. These  people  introducing  too  many  innovations
defeats the purpose of the training activity. You need  to  strike  a  happy
medium in carrying out the rules. Don't take the datum that  students  don't
have cases to mean that you can't occasionally pull missed  withholds,  when
that action is called for. Rule that D of P must not audit  is  simply  that
he must not sign himself up to give  intensives.  To  say  that  an  auditor
can't audit is idiocy.

    There's no gradient from simply acknowledging what someone says and
    putting

                               332

him on the E-Meter to find out. You can't straighten out  by  administration
what needs to be handled on an E-Meter. You say  to  the  natterer-"Yes,  we
know it's all wrong, we know there isn't  a  toilet  for  the  women,  we're
doing something about that-now take these cans, has a withhold  been  missed
on you?"

    The "Idiot meter" has been in the  works  since  1952-an  E-Meter  which
shows a red fight on a read and stays lit until the read is  cleared.  Maybe
we'll have it this year or 1975 or 2000. Working on one  in  London  now-may
be it.

    The Mark V is not as good as the Mark IV-but is a gorgeous  goal-finding
E-Meter. Only a  well  trained  auditor  can  use  a  Mark  V.  It  will  be
available, it will not replace the Mark IV.

    Use E-Meter drills  1,  11  and  111,  as  follows,  over  and  over-not
flattening one at a time, but in rotation. Eventually the student  can  read
the meter.

    E-Meter I - Reach and withdraw from E-Meter.

    E-Meter II - Student A sitting in any posture with E-Meter held  in  any
way he wants to hold it. Looking at  meter.  Student  B  sitting  reading  a
bulletin that he needs to study anyway (no need to  waste  time).  He's  not
reading it aloud. (This drill gets more screwed  up-more  alteration  to  it
than any other.) When the  meter  ticks,  the  student  A  says  to  himself
"read". (He doesn't say it to student B, or to an instructor, and NOT  to  a
coach.) Having called a dozen or so reads he now calls clean every  time  he
sees the meter not doing anything. Then he calls reads. Student  gets  dopey
and funny things happen, he wants  to  tell  the  instructor  about  strange
reads he has seen-we're NOT INTERESTED. All this drill is supposed to  teach
is when it reads it reads  and  when  it's  clean  it's  clean-gets  rid  of
significances on it. PLEASE KEEP IT SIMPLE.

    E-Meter III - Student reading bulletin goes along reading  (NOT  aloud)-
when the student reading the meter sees a tick, he asks "what did  you  just
read", having student B read it again, out loud now.  The  essence  of  this
drill is the recovery of that read and finding out what that  fellow  didn't
agree with. Getting him to take it up with you a  little-the  student  finds
out about two-way comm. The majority of auditors think the  meter  reads  on
their own voices, that it doesn't have a thing to do with  pcs.  On  E-Meter
III they find out that when a guy thinks sometliing the meter reads. Now  he
finds out that the E-Meter  reads  on  disagreements.  The  student  finally
cognites that student B doesn't understand the bulletin. He gets  missionary
about it. Don't stop the student, it's not an  auditing  session-it  is  all
right for him to help the other fellow.

    Instructors can let students in on ARC break read-show them by  cleaning
up the ARC break.

    The drill has got to be loose-otherwise the student doesn't learn a
    thing.

    Many are called but few are chosen. Most of the students go through  the
course, they only have to pass their  regular  requirements  and  get  their
certificates. But sometimes the instructor picks a student  near  graduation
and says, "You get Joe Blitz and straighten him out." If this auditor  can't
do this he's about 1000 hours short  of  being  a  good  Scientologist.  You
might have the  six  students  about  to  graduate  straighten  up  the  six
beginning who are having difficulties. Got your students  to  take  care  of
their fellow Scientologists.

    There are a lot of ways of handling these things that don't  come  under
routine action.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

333

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 SEPTEMBER 1962

CenCCon Franchise Field BPI Magazine

CLEARS MUST BE TRAI1*4ED

    It is standard knowledge that a one-goal Clear is a very capable person.

    A two-goal Clear is a human dynamo.

    It should also be recognised that though they have these capabilities
they are not, unless trained as an HPA/HCA, educated and are therefore
incapable of utilising this released action and ability to the greatest
good of the greatest number of dynamics.

    An untrained Clear can, through non-education, become a severe
embarrassment not through bad intention but solely because he wants to get
something done. He wants to help but doesn't know how.

    It therefore becomes mandatory that as soon as the first goal has gone
to a free needle and been checked out fully by a Class IV Auditor as a Ist-
goal Clear, the individual must receive and complete training of HPA/HCA
level BEFORE proceeding any further with auditing on his own case.

LRH:dr.oden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED (Cancelled by HCO P/L 31 May 1963, Trainingof Clears,
page 341.)

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 OCTOBER 1962

CenOCon

HPA/HCA WRITTEN EXAMINATION

    Because HPA/HCA students have a chance to not confront taking their
written examinations and thus postpone until sometimes they eventually
never take this exam, thus causing an incipient ARC Break with the
Organization, no HPA/HCA student should be released from the Academy until
he/she has fully completed all the requirements for his/her certificate.

LRH:jw.eden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

334

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 OCTOBER 1962

sthil
Academies
         AUDITING SUPERVISOR AND AUDITING INSTRUCTORS,
                           DUTIES OF

    On the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course and in Academies,  Supervision
of the Auditing Section is done by the  Auditing  Supervisor,  and  Auditing
Instructor or Instructors.

    The Auditing Supervisor and Instructors are not there  to  audit  cases.
This can be a most serious error-using the Auditor only as a robot. This  is
done in a Co-Audit. It is not done in  an  auditing  section.  The  auditors
being taught in the  auditing  section  are  under  a  heavy  discipline-the
discipline that they  must  follow  procedure  and  obtain  results.  A  bad
auditing presence, a squirrelly approach, a failure to  use  what  they  are
taught, can cause two things to happen:

    (a)     A Pink Sheet on what they must re-do in Theory and Practical or:

    (b)     A GAE to the next lowest classification for retraining.

    The Auditing Section is that section of a training course where auditing
occurs. It is not where  auditing  is  taught.  It  is  that  section  where
auditing is experienced, as an auditor, as a preclear.  Auditing  is  taught
in theory and practical. It is only guided in the Auditing Section.

                     AUDITING ASSIGNMENTS

    The Auditing Supervisor (or in some cases the Course  Supervisor  as  at
Saint Hill)  assigns  all  sessions  and  teams.  The  following  rules  are
observed in this assignment of auditors:
    (a)     No auditor may be assigned to an upper Auditing level until  he
        or she has passed the Theory and Practical Check Sheets of the lower
        auditing levels. In other words, only when an auditor is prepared in
        Theory and Practical is he or she assigned to auditing in  the  next
        classification.
    (b)     No Co-Audit is to occur, by which is meant there is no auditor
        auditing his own auditor. This makes a minimum of four in a class.
    (c)     Rock Slammers (as by Sec Check)  are  assigned  to  audit  Rock
        Slammers and be audited by Rock Slammers as this  tends  to  protect
        other students from bad auditing and  yet  lets  the  Rock  Slammers
        progress.
    (d)     Change of auditors is avoided as may be found practical.

    Auditing Assignments are posted by class time on a Monday and are seldom
changed through the week.
                      AUDITING ATMOSPHERE

    Students are heavily indoctrinated into two major maxims about being  an
auditor:
    (a)     If the auditor is warm and breath can be detected, he or she is
        in condition to audit. An Academy or course takes no interest in the
        case of the auditor. Courses where attention is  dominantly  on  the
        case of the student and not his ability  to  audit  are  always  bad
        courses. It  is  true  that  people,  while  they  cannot  postulate
        themselves clear, don't have to act aberrated.  A  thetan  can  rise
        superior to his aberrations.  Thus,  the  less  worry  about  how  a
        student has to be audited before he or she can  audit,  the  better.
        Scientology is a bootstrap operation. If this idea of "not  in  case
        shape to audit" or "not in condition to audit" is let creep in, then
        we'll never make it. So, if they're warm and breath can be detected,
        they can audit.

    (b)     Auditing in a common room is noisy and hard  on  preclears  and
        auditors. But auditing can be done under such conditions. It makes a
        much better auditor. Preclears soon get used to it. So no  attention
        is given as to how quiet it must be "because of the preclear".

    Admittedly these two factors (a and b) contain unrealities.  This  is  a
case of that's the way it is.

335

                        SCHEDULING TIME

    Sharp Scheduling, on the dot, is the mark of a successful Academy.

    Sessions must begin and end on schedule.

    It's part of instruction that the Auditor never be late  for  a  session
and to end sessions on the dot.

    Time of Session must be tightly adhered to and enforced.

                       INFRACTION SHEETS

    The disciplinary weapon is the Infraction Sheet.

    An auditing Supervisor  does  not  give  these  out  for  bad  auditing,
however. He gives these out  only  for  Infractions  of  the  Rules  of  the
Academy,  including  a  refusal  to  follow  his  auditing  directions.  Bad
technical is handled by Pink Sheet and GAEs.

                    OBSERVATION OF AUDITING

    There are three sources of  observing  auditing  used  by  the  Auditing
Supervisor and Instructors. These are

    (a) Direct observation of the session;

    (b) Study of the Auditor's Report;

    (c) Observation of the Preclear.

    The Auditing Supervisor combines all three, giving the most time to  (a)
Direct observation of the session.

                         THE PINK SHEET

    Fasten a packet of long (legal) pink paper, about  16  substance,  to  a
clip board. Put three piec" of long carbon paper in place to use  the  first
four sheets. Use a black ball point pen. Put a student's name at the top  of
the sheet. Put in the date.

    Sit down near the session or use other inspection devices.

    Note what the auditor is making mistakes with.

    On the left hand side of the paper, in column, write down the exact  HCO
Bulletins and Drills this Auditor must do in Theory and Practical.

    Keep the sheets together. Look over  the  Auditor's  report  later.  Re-
insert the carbons and put down any further things the auditor must do.

    Keep one sheet in a basket. Give the Theory  Instructor  one,  give  the
Practical InWuctor one. Give one to the student.

    If by the week ending nearest after two weeks from date, the student has
not completed this Pink Sheet, he or she is GAE'd to the next  lowest  class
to complete it and any others before being raised again.

    This is wholly independent of and  in  addition  to  the  regular  check
sheets for classes.

    Thus a thorough inspection of an individual student's auditing  need  be
made only once every two weeks.

    Nothing in the Pink Sheet System  prevents  comments  on  the  Auditor's
reports or personal discussion with him or  her  on  emergency  remedies  by
note during a session.

                              GAE

    Gross Auditing Error (GAE) is the action of the Auditing Supervisor when
the Pink Sheet is not completed by the Student or when, in  the  opinion  of
the Auditing Supervisor, the errors being made are so gross that a  preclear
is being heavily damaged (such as Auditor's Code breaches).

    A "GAW may consist of relegating the Auditor to the  next  lowest  class
or,  if  violent  and  flagrant,  and  directly  against   an   Instructor's
instructions, to the lowest unit of the Academy.

                               336

    Only in two cases may a GAE be substituted for an Infraction Sheet,  and
in both cases the student is sent to the lowest unit. First is the  flagrant
and dogged refusal to follow an order relating to technical matters and  the
second is breaking Rule 28. These two  may  not  be  permitted  to  come  in
conflict.

    A student's check sheets are not torn up by any GAE, but one that places
the student back in the lowest unit causes the  student  to  re-do  all  his
auditing and re-pass it.
                             FORMS

    A form for each pc undergoing clearing, giving the steps, must  be  part
of the pc's folder and kept up by the auditor. This is based  on  the  above
data.

    If a pc has had a recent Problems Intensive and  now  signs  a  Clearing
Contract this is made part of the Clearing rundown. If done, however, by  an
outside auditor, the pc must be given another Problems Intensive.

    A Special Form showing all steps and evidence of a clear must be sent to
    me.

    The idea is to get results, to turn out clears and to  keep  HPAsIl-ICAs
well occupied and at a high technical level.

                    ACCIDENTAL GOAL FINDING

    It will happen that in cleaning up old goals found  or  even  by  sudden
disclosure, the HPA/HCA staff auditor may find a goal that fires and is  the
goal. If so, it is checked out by the Goals Finder and listed  unless  other
orders are given regarding the pc (such as unburdening the goal).

    HPAs/HCAs are not, however, to attempt to find goals at this time and it
is highly illegal for an HGC to employ non  Saint  Hill  Graduates  to  find
goals no matter what the public pressure. It could be  very  destructive  to
Scientology to have a lot of wrong goals about or getting listed.

    In due course this last injunction will be  released  so  far  as  Tiger
Drilling the 850 list by HPAs/HCAs is concerned. But wait  until  technology
is better. This will apply only to experienced staff auditors.

                            METERS

    Only the latest Mark Meters are to be used by Goal Finders. Mark IV  and
onwards may be used by HPAs/HCAs.

    It would be dishonest to use less.

                           SUMMARY

    HGCs must afford public Clearing of individuals. Clearing  Co-Audits  of
the public are a special role and are to be relegated  to  District  Offices
as soon as possible. It is nb part of my plans to retain them in  a  Central
Org or City Office.

    Only the highest technology and most exact adherence to policy can  keep
us afloat at this time. These are not ordinary policies. These are  survival
itself for Scientology.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

337

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Gfinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 NOVEMBER 1962

CenOCon

   URGENT
OBJECTIVE ONE

    I HAVE KICKED THE DOOR OPEN.

    FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1950 ALL WRAPS ARE OFF.

    THIS IS IT.

    OUR FIRST OBJECTIVE IS:

         GET ALL PERSONS EVER ENROLLED IN AN ACADEMY
           AUDITED ON AND TRAINED TO USE ROUTINE 2-12,
                  THE UNDERCUT FOR ALL CASES.

    This marks the beginning of a heavy rapid advance toward our  objectives
of a cleared Earth and is Objective One in that advance.

    Use all means at your disposal to effect the accomplishment of this
    objective.

    Routine 2-12 is a  safe,  powerful  primary  clearing  action  and  will
produce rapid case gains.

    The objective is to be attained by the following actions:

    I .     Get all staff HPAs/HCAs and all auditors checked out on a Class
       Ilb check sheet as per HCO Bulletin of November 23, AD 12.

    2.      Get all staff HPAs/HCAs rapidly using R2-12 in staff clearing.

    3.      Get all Academy students checked out on Class flb perfunctorily
       at once and run on R2-12.

    4.      Get all HGC pcs run on R2-12, particularly HPAs/HCAs or former
        Academy enrollees.

    5.      Contact all persons ever enrolled in an Academy, whether
       graduated or not, and get them in to be run on and to learn Routine
       2-12.

    6.      Contact all Scientologists who are being run on goals or who
       have been cleared and get them run on Routine 2-12.

    The amounts to be charged for auditing and retreading are entirely up to
the Association/Organization Secretary, with only the  injunction  that  the
organization remain solvent or become so.

    Do not underplay the fact that Routine 2-12 is actually a vital clearing
step. And do not hold it back because it is a precise skill.

    THE     HCO SEC AND THE ASSOCIATION SEC SHOULD REPORT TO ME
REGULARLY ON ALL SUCCESSES AND FORWARD PROGRESS WITH
OBJECTIVE ONE.

                         OBJECTIVE TWO

    Objective Two consists of forming District Offices  wherever  there  are
centres or field offices.  This  objective  is  in  a  pilot  stage  but  is
progressing. It does not conflict with Objective One.

LRH:gl.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

338

                       HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS, OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead~ Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 FEBRUARY 1963
                                  Issue II

Academies
Sthil Students

ACADEMY TAUGHT PROCESSES

The following processes must be taught in all Academies:

 I . The CCHs.

 2.   Assists.

 3.   ARC Straightwire.

 4.   General O/W.

 5.   Pulling Missed Withholds.

 6.   Assist type Prepchecking using Suppress and Invalidate buttons only
    using a time period.

 7.   General Repetitive Prepchecking against a specific time period, big
    Mid Ruds and 18 button prepchecks.

 8.   Specific Repetitive Prepchecking against a subject, (auditing,
    listing, Item or Goal).

 9.   A Problems Intensive.

10. Routine 2-12A.

11. Routine 3-M.

    It is recommended that all these are not taught in one course.

    An HPA/HCA certificate should include up to 9 above (Problems
    Intensive).

    A higher level course should take in Routines 2 and 3 (BScn  or  Hubbard
Clearing Scientologist).

    The higher course need not be a completely separate course but run along
with the usual Academy Course on different check sheets.

    A Saint Hill Graduate must be in close supervision of a course  teaching
Routines 2-12A and 3. 2-10 and 2-12 are now included as 2-12A.

    HPA/HCAs of earlier years, certificate in hand, may be entered as trying
for BSCn or HCS (US) even though passing the Prepcheck materials as well  as
Routines 2 and 3.

    No Classification may be assigned by reason  of  course  attendance  and
examination only. Time on Staff or Saint Hill training are  required  for  a
Valid  Classification  even  though  "Valid  for  2-12"  is  stamped  on   a
certificate.

    With processes settling down we can get our house in order.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright g 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

339

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill,Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 MARCH AD 13

CenOCon Franchise

       CLASSIFICATION OF AUDITORS

                               CLASS R & GOALS
          (Modifies all HCO Policy Letters on Classes of Auditors)

    Goals finding is declared herewith to be a Class 11 activity.

    Using Class If goal finding skills as released, any Class 11 Auditor may
employ them to find goals.

    Running the goal found on Routine 3  processes  is  not  authorized  for
Class If Auditors,

    This authorization is based on the.following technical discoveries:

    I It is highly beneficial to a case to have goals finding processes run
       on it, regardless of whether a goal is found or not;

    2.      The only danger in finding a wrong goal lies in running it;

    3.      The public at large can understand and respond to the finding of
       a basic purpose;

    4.      1 have made a breakthrough in expediting the finding of goals.

    5.      The longest period in clearing is now Goal Finding.

    Any goal found may be Prepchecked by a Class 11 Auditor  using  standard
prepchecking.

    No goal found may be run on Routine 3 processes by a Class If auditor.

    Any goal found must be checked out by a Class IV Auditor.

    A correct goal may be run on Routine 3 processes by a Class III  Auditor
under the supervision of a Class IV Auditor.

                         CLASS If AWARD

    Class If may  be  awarded  by  reason  of  attendance  and  satisfactory
completion of an Academy Course specifically  designated  for  Class  11  or
satisfactory work in an HGC.

                         CLASS III AWARD

    A Class III may be awarded  to  auditors  satisfactorily  completing  an
advanced Academy Course and satisfactory work under  staff  contract  in  an
HGC.

                       SAINT HILL AWARDS

    Class  III  and  IV  awards  are  given  to  Saint  Hill  graduates  who
satisfactorily complete their training for these classes.

LRH:dr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

340

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 31 MAY 1963

CenOCon
Franchise
Field
BPI
Magazine

                             TRAINING OF CLEARS
                (Cancels HCO Policy Letter of Sept 27, 1962,
                          Clears Must Be Trained.)

    HCO Policy Letter of September 27, 1962 Clears Must Be Trained, is
hereby cancelled.

    However, it should be borne in mind that education in Scientology is
highly desirable for all who obtain Scientology processing. Continual
efforts should be made to get all such to read Scientology books, to take
PE courses, Extension courses and HPA courses, even if they do not intend
to become professional auditors.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright @ 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

341

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 JUNE AD] 3
Central Orgs Academies
                            SCIENTOLOGY TRAINING
                              TECHNICAL STUDIES

    All Academy Students will be expected as an early activity in training
to acquire a knowledge of the Time Track and engram running..

    Modernized material on this subject is now being released.

    A Revised Curriculum for Academies places in the hands of the HCA/HPA
the fundamental skills of auditing as follows:

     1. The CCHs
     2. Self Analysis version of ARC Processes (for training auditing
     practice)
     3. The Time Track
     4. ARC Straight Wire Modern Version
     5. Withholds
     6. Dating by meter
     7. Locating and Indicating By-Passed Charge
     8. Engram running by Chains

     9. Routine 3N
     10. Programming Cases

    In addition it is expected that the common academic subjects be retained
such as Model Session, Scales, Axioms, the E-Meter, etc.

    However, it is clearly visible that no auditor would be worthy of the
name if he or she did not have the above listed skills at his or her
command. All other types of processing may be dropped.

LRH:gl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 JULY 1963
CenOCon

                HPA/HCA CERTIFICATE CHECK SHEET

    The attached check-sheet is to be put into effect for all new HPA/HCA
students and for all those students presently attending Academies.

    I do not want to have any more certification delays.

    An HPA/HCA student should not be regarded as graduated and should not be
released from the Academy until his check sheet as attached is fully
completed.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright (~) 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

342

                HPAIHCA CERTIFICATE CHECK SHEET
ROUTE IN ORDER:

 1. DIRECTOR OF TRAINING ORIGINATES ON DAY STUDENT ENTERS
    CLASS WORK.

         PRINT NAME AS STUDENT WANTS IT ON CERTIFICATE

    Signature of Director of Training   (date)--

 2. HCO BOARD OFREVIEWICERTIFICATIONS
    A. Certificate sent to be made up-(date). Number
   B. Recorded in log book and sent to WW for  LRH  to  sign.  --(date)  C.
   Received back and filed in Val Doc_-----'-(date).

                                 Signature

 3. ACCOUNTS
    Is course paid for or other satisfactory arrangement made for payment?
    Yes___No_     qignature Accts_      -(date)-

 4. MEMBERSHIPS
    Does student have International Membership in force? Yes------No
    Expiration Date-   ignature Memberships-- (date)

 5. DIRECTOR OF TRAINING
    Student has completed class work    (date)-
      Signature Director of Training
 6.DIRECTOR OFPROCESSING
      Oral Exam given--(date), Written Exam given  date)
      Signature Director of Processing-
    (Attach Oral Exam Check Sheet, Auditor Reports and student's Answer
    Sheets)

 7. HCO BOARD OF REVIEW
    A. Oral and Written Exams reviewed and graded   (date)
       Flunked Oral--(date) Flunked Written____(date)
       Passed Oral     date) Passed Written-(date)
   If either or both flunked,  Check  Sheet  is  returned  to  Director  of
   Training and exam papers sent to Academy  Admin  to  file  in  Student's
   Folder.
   If both exams passed, student may then make certificate application, and
   exam papers are sent to Academy Admin to file in Student's Folder.
    B.      Certificate Application:completed- Not completed-- (date)-
   If Certificate Application is not completed, Check Sheet is returned  to
   Director of Training and Certificate Application form  sent  to  Academy
   Admin to file in Student's Folder.
    If Certificate Application form completed, it is attached to Check Sheet
    and:-

 8. HCO BOARD OFREVIEWICERTIFICATIONS
    A. Memberships rechecked if past expiration date in 4 above. If no
       present membership graduate is told to get one immediately.
    B. Certificate dated (   ), sealed and issued to graduate--(date)
    C. Recorded in log book- Address/CF informed- HCO WW
       informed-
    Signature of HCO Bd Review/Certifications

 9. ACADEMY ADMINISTRATOR files Check Sheet and Certificate Application
    form in Student's Folder and transfers folder to Auditor's file.

10. If graduate not going on staff, HCO FRANCHISE SECRETARY WW notified of
   name and address of graduate for inclusion of  HCO  WW  Field  mailings.
   Alternatively  graduate  applies  for  HCO  Franchise   immediately   on
   graduation, if situated outside a promulgated Central Ora, Control Area.
   If situated within a  Central  Org  Control  Area,  graduate  placed  on
   Interim DO arrangements.

343

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 JULY 1963
CenOCon
Franchise
Students Sthil
Not for M.A.     CURRENT PLANNING
      (Staff Meeting Material)

    It may help you to know the immediate future planning in Scientology.

    Research-wise O.T. is wrapped up. It's just a matter of getting the data
out, getting it applied. The Track is complicated. The  length  of  time  in
processing is long. But  this  is  offset  by  the  fact  that  IF  YOU  GET
CONSISTENT TA ACTION THE CASE WILL EVENTUALLY MAKE O.T.

                    ORGANIZATION OF SUBJECT

    1 am dividing Scientology data into five levels and 1 think you will see
the usefulness of this.

FIRST LEVEL: SCIENTOLOPY ONE

    Useable  data  about  living  and  life,  applicable  without  training,
presented in Continental Magazines and booklets.  This  is  for  anyone.  It
contains assists as its auditing  level.  You  have  much  of  this  already
around. It is a complete unit in itself. "Be Right With Scientology."

SECOND LEVEL: SCIENTOLOGY TWO

    Academy HPA/HCA accomplishment level. Scientology for use  in  spiritual
healing. This is a healing strata, using the wealth of past processes  which
produced  results  on  various  illnesses.  1   am   shortly   sending   out
questionnaires to get all Healing process results  as  a  research  project.
The auditing level is Reach  and  Withdraw  and  Repetitive  Processes.  The
target is human illness. We have never entered this field but as we are  not
thanked for staying out of it, we might as well dominate it. It  is  a  good
procurement area.

THIRD LEVEL: SCIENTOLOGY THREE

    Clearing and O.T. preparatory levels including advanced  auditing  above
HPA/HCA Level. The work on this was more or less suspended  when  it  became
obvious that O.T. had to be attained. Includes key out. clearing  and  other
sub O.T. states. However, much technology exists on it. This  is  the  level
of the better human being.

FOURTH LEVEL: SCIENTOLOGY FOUR
    Processes  to  O.T.,  Saint  Hill  Special  Briefing  Course  1963  type
technology and targets.

FIFTH LEVEL: SCIENTOLOGY FIVE

    Scientology  applied  at  a  high  echelon  to  social,  political   and
scientific problems. This requires the earlier levels and a  high  state  of
training on theoretical and wide application levels.

    Data for levels one to four is mostly already researched, most of it  is
in your hands and many publications already exist. Level Three needs  a  lot
of codifying but is not difficult to assemble. You'll see  a  lot  of  Level
One now from me for  magazines  and  a  lot  of  new  booklets  using  older
materials. Level Four is more or less complete, more so now than three.

    This brings a lot of order to our technical and gets us past the "past
    lives"

344

scramble and other points which slow dissemination by  relegating  these  to
upper levels. Lord knows we, have  enough  fascinating  data  at  Level  One
without feeding the public Level Four.

                   ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

    We are neating up the corporate structures of  Scientology,  using  each
org as a company whose majority shares are owned by a central company.  This
makes the structure easier to handle and better off for  tax  purposes.  The
instructions on this will soon be  released.  Shares  and  Life  Memberships
will all be properly adjusted.

                   ORGANIZATIONAL ATTITUDE

    Finding exactly who we're up against on Earth (the A.M.A.)  helped.  But
finding exactly what each one of us faces and how in the Between Lives  Area
bids for a change of mood.

    We're not now in this for play. Our personal futures depend  on  keeping
going and making no major flubs. it isn't a question of is  there  something
else. There isn't. Nobody can be  half  in  and  half  out  of  Scientology.
Scientologists are Scientologists no matter what they do for a living.

    If we're  going  to  make  this  we  have  to  work  at  it  personally,
administratively and as a group and work well.

    The prize is regaining self and going free. The penalty for our  failure
is condemnation to an eternity of pain and amnesia  for  ourselves  and  for
our friends and for this planet.

    If we fail we've had it. It's not just a matter of getting killed.  It's
a matter of getting killed and killed and killed  life  after  life  forever
more. Even if you have no great reality on this now you  will  soon  enough.
But probably you already understand it.

    Those guys up there mean business. We've got to match  or  better  their
energy level and dedication or we lose.

    We've been given this priceless chance.

    We must make good.

    The hour lost on natter, the slow down time because of  some  petty  ARC
Break have to be salvaged.

    We haven't any time for doubts and maunderings.

    We're the elite of Planet Earth, but that's only saying  we're  the  not
quite gone in the graveyard of the long gone.

    Somehow, despite our condition and the degraded  environment  we're  in,
we've got to keep the dedication and the guts to  carry  through  no  matter
what comes. And carry through.

    And that's our future.

                                              L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd
Copyright (j) 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard      (See also HCO Policy Letter 21 August 1963, Change
of
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Organization Targets, Volume 2, Page 95.1

345

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 APRIL 1965

Remimeo

        TECH

LEVEL 0 COMM COURSE

    All Level 0 courses wherever taught must begin with the Dublin  type  PE
Comm Course.

    It will be called the Zero Comm Course.

    This consists of the same TRs as the real Comm Course  but  run  without
the coaching flunking.

    The TRs were released in London after 1956.

    Naturally this may not be put in on students already in the 0 course  at
the time this is received but may be begun on the next students to enrol  on
that course the first Monday after this is received.

    Itsa, with its premature acknowledgements has  not  been  successful  in
making good auditors. What is needed is  auditors  who  will  run  processes
without dawdling or changing the commands or changing  the  process  because
the pc had a somatic. Auditing worked better when we  didn't  train  pes  to
itsa for hours on one command. We used  to  do  much  better  on  repetitive
commands. It was how many commands were answered per unit of  auditing  time
that made cases gain.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:wmc.rd Copyright (D 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

346

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 MAY 1965
                                  Issue III

Remirneo
Students

           TECH DIVISION

            ACADEMY

             COURSES

         GENERAL REMARKS

           ZERO COURSES

HUBBARD RECOGNIZED SCIENTOLOGIST

    On all new cheek sheets of Zero Courses, include the following  on  both
the (Theory) Certificate Course and the (Practical) Classification Course:

    1 . E-Meter Tone Arm.

    2.      Analysis of Case Condition by Tone Arm.

    3.      HCO Policy Letter of Apr 2, 1965 and (on Classification Course)
        drills for same.

                         TRS WITH METER

    All Academy TRs will now be done with an E-Meter before the student  and
his coach holding the cans, whether the Meter is being used or not.

                        AUDITOR'S REPORT

    All Academy TRs and auditing for  supervisor  inspection  must  have  an
Auditor's Report form close to the student's hand, whether kept or not.

    Materials on how to keep an Auditor's Report must be  included  on  both
Zero Courses (Certificate and Classification).

    If a report is actually written during the drill or session the  student
must be made to put it carefully in a folder and file it.

    This is all part of his training.

                          FIRM POLICY

    A student must be trained only with the tools of his trade to hand.

    Therefore in an Academy the Supervisor must not  omit  what  an  auditor
actually uses in sessions whether it is covered in the  levels  training  or
not.

    This therefore includes a card table, a ball point, as well as  a  Meter
 and a preelear" and an Auditor's Report.

    Do NOT let a student be trained with the tools absent. In  upper  levels
the unfamiliarity of the tools causes them to stumble.

    Academies may not supply Meters or give away Auditor's Report pads, work
sheets or ball points. If no Meter is available  use  a  similarly  coloured
and shaped box with a dial painted on it and cards  and  cans  attached  and
urge the student to get a Meter.  The  Academy  furnishes  card  tables  and
chairs. An Academy must not use solid desks or solid tables in  training  as
they are too hard to move about and too expensive.

347

                        ZERO VOCABULARY

    The 13 word Vocabulary belongs in the Beginning Scientology Course.

    A Zero student is expected to learn  all  common  Scientology  words  in
current use up to the number of 200.

                    ZERO CERTIFICATE COURSE

    A student is supposed to study evenings and week-ends  during  the  day-
Zero Certificate Course-and any day-Certificate Course. The evening  student
is supposed to study on week-ends during the Evening Certificate Course  and
evenings on the Week-End Certificate Course. Those not so studying  must  be
reported to Ethics. Supervisors must  assign  what  is  to  be  studied  off
course.

    This is true of all Certificate Courses.

    Classification Course students must frequent the Free Scientology Centre
when not in class in those periods assigned  to  study  in  the  Certificate
Course. If not in action at the Free  Scientology  Centre,  the  student  is
expected to be gathering his Auditor's Reports  elsewhere  for  presentation
to the Examiner as  Examination  is  to  occur  at  the  exact  end  of  the
Classification Course completed check sheet, no matter when that occurs.

                         EXAMINATIONS

    Zero Certificate Exams  and  all  other  Certificate  Exams  consist  of
verifying that the data was actually studied.

                      ZERO CLASSIFICATION

    Exams are by written Exam and by inspection of the submitted auditing
    reports.

    Where there is not yet a Department of Review, the student who fails  is
returned  to  Course.  It  will  be  found  however  that  this  is  a  very
catastrophic procedure and a Review Cramming Section  should  be  instituted
as soon as possible. When  it  is  there,  an  Examiner  never  returns  the
student to Course but sends to Review.

                         TWIN CHECKING

    Twin Checking proceeds with the slight change that the twins are not co-
auditors, but may assist each other by auditing if they wish  but  not  with
regular sessions on Course time.

    Twins are for Theory  Checking  on  the  Certification  Course  and  for
Practical Drills on the Classification Course.

    Until all check sheets and materials are to hand the D of T  must  cope.
Additions to a check sheet may be written in on old  check  sheets  but  not
while the student is on it, and only for the next student to be given it.

                          ZERO COURSE

    The basic point of Zero today is Find the Auditor. "Look at  me  who  am
IT' "Who would I have to be to audit you?" is the type of process that  best
defines the Level- Recognition.

LRH:mh.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

(Note: The 13 word Vocabulary referred to above can be found in Volume 2,
Pages 95 & 96.1

                               348

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH NOT GREEN ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                                   LONDON

HCO BULLETIN OF 21 JANUARY 1958

  ACCs

HPA/HCA

    An ACC is a special activity. It may modify HCA/HPA but not necessarily.
What is good in an ACC is generally taught in HPA/HCA sometime.  HPA/HCA  is
a tougher course by far and must prepare a student  for  all  eventualities.
Thus HCA/HPA must cover all types  of  processing  and  theory.  Clearing  a
student is riot the province of  HCAjHPA.  Teaching  how  to  clear  is  the
emphasis. If they  get  clear  it's  incidental.  They're  all  auditors  in
HCA/HPA.

                                             LRH

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 NOVEMBER 195 8

ACC RECORDS

HCO now owns ACC records.
ACC files worldwide all go to London when fairly complete locally.
HCO Board of Review completes ACC files, does all correspondence, etc.

LRH:mp.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 JANUARY 1959
                           (Issued at Washington)

(HCO PERSONNEL ONLY)

                          INSTRUCTORS OR HCO STAFF
                        PROCESSING PAST ACC STUDENTS

    Instructors or HCO staff processing as preclears students who have
appeared on an ACC course during the past two years, or forthcoming two
years, for money are required to refund HCO 75% of all monies so received.

LRH:mp.cdon L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1959
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

349

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 FEBRUARY 1960

CenOCon
HCO Board of Review
ACC Personnel

ACC FILES

    Immediately an ACC is completed, ACC files become the responsibility  of
the HCO Board of Review at the  place  where  the  ACC  was  conducted.  The
procedure for dealing with ACC files is as follows:-

    Immediately at the end of the course, ACC Administrator turns  over  ACC
Log and student's. profiles to the  local  HCO  Communicator,  who  forwards
them immediately to ACC Conductor. When ACC Conductor  has  seen  them  they
are filed permanently at HCO WW, Saint Hill. All  other  files  and  records
are handed to the local HCO Board of Review.

    A definite date by which DScn/HGS requirements must be met in  order  to
qualify for the degree from that particular ACC should be  set  by  the  ACC
Conductor  Chief  Instructor  and  HCO  Board   of   Review.   It   is   the
responsibility of the Chief Instructor  to  see  that  a  date  is  set  and
approved by the  ACC  Conductor,  and  that  the  HCO  Board  of  Review  is
informed.

    The local HCO Board of Review holds all ACC student  folders  and  other
ACC papers necessary to his  job,  doing  whatever  communicating,  testing,
correspondence, etc,  that  is  necemry  to  the  issuance  of  degrees  and
qualifications from that ACC until the final date set is  reached.  At  this
point, he completes his records and forwards all the  files,  materials  and
records from that ACC to HCO WW at Saint Hill. He  may  still  receive  some
communications and correspondence from time to time. If so,  he  handles  it
if possible, or refers the matter to HCO WWI.

Peter Hemery HCO Secretary WW for L, RON HUBBARD

LRH:js.vmm.cden Copyright (D 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

350

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 FEBRUARY 1960

CenOCon

                            ACC HATS

    The following hat write ups have been approved by LRH:

                          ACC Supervisor
PURPOSE: To ensure for HCO that the administration of an  Advanced  Clinical
Course runs smoothly  from  beginning  to  end.  That  proper  quarters  are
secured in accordance with  HCO  Policy.  That  all  required  supplies  and
materials are acquired and on hand as scheduled.

    ACCs are L. Ron Hubbard's special courses,  personally  taught  by  him,
scheduled by him and are sponsored for him by an HCO Office.

    An HCO ACC Supervisor's primary duty is to see  that  adequate  quarters
are secured and that all needed materials and supplies are obtained.

    HCO Sponsors an ACC, and Central Organization staff assist  in  carrying
out  the  requirements  for  an  ACC-i.e.,  the  Organization  Secretary  is
furnished a copy of the Master List of requirements for an ACC; he  normally
secures a proper building, has it thoroughly checked over per  requirements,
sees that Material  Department  acquires  and  places  proper  supplies  and
materials in the ACC building, and that everything is on hand before an  ACC
begins. (A copy of the Master List is furnished Material also.) ,

    ACC Supervisor maintains a checklist to ensure that everything  required
gets done. Sample Checklist:
    1.      ACC building obtained
    2.      Mailings sent announcing ACC
    3.      Announced in Org Magazine
    4.      All ACC posts filled -
    5.      ACC hat folders given ACC personnel by HCO See
    6.      All ACC personnel checked out on their hats by HCO See
    7.      All items on Master List completed
    8.      All mimeoing completed by HCO & delivered
    9.      (Other as needed.)

    ACC Supervisor keeps LRH posted on status of affairs-e.g., readiness  of
building, number of ACC applications on hand, number expected, number  paid,
etc, and any other data as he may request.

    (Note: "Master List of Materials Required for an ACC" will be  found  in
an ACC Supervisor's hat folder.)

                      ACC Chief Instructor's Hat
PURPOSE: To turn out auditors who are responsible  for  clearing  their  pes
and who know and can use the best methods of doing so. To make  an  ACC  the
greatest real education on this planet.

ORDERS: Directly under ACC Conductor. It is an HCO post.

POST: During ACCs, ACC  Classroom,  secondarily,  ACC  Instructor's  office.
Between ACCs at home address or as otherwise arranged with HCO WW.

DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:
 1. Trains students.
 2. Sees that data communicated to students is real, clear, and is
 understood and can
    be supplied by them as their own.
 3. Sees to it that results of course are such that ACCs have a growing and
 continuing
    reputation of excellence among Srientologists and public.

351

 4.   Sees that stable data and instructions of ACC Conductor are carried
    out and observed.
 5.   Keeps ACC Conductor informed.
 6.   Sees that ACC Administrator functions.
 7.   Determines conduct and teaching procedure of ACC Instructors. Arranges
    for lectures by Instructors.
 8.   Stays in 2-way comm with ACC Instructors, personnel, students and
    course Conductor.
 9.   Arranges course scheduling in consultation with ACC Conductor. Builds
    schedule around ACC Conductor's lectures.
10.   Sees that course comm-lines with HCO WW and local HCO/HASI are kept
    free and open. Establishes lines as necessary.
11.   May be required to take charge of pilot, experimental, or model
courses other
 1 than ACCs as specified by LRH at HCS/BScii or HCA/HPA or other levels.
12.   Is answerable for anything that happens or doesn't happen on course.
13.   Is answerable for the quality of auditing demonstrated by former
    students after their departure from course.

                         ACC Instructor Hat
PURPOSE: To train the best auditors on earth.

    Works directly under ACC Chief Instructor, who is under ACC Conductor.

POST: ACC Classroom; secondarily, ACC Instructor's office.

DUTIES:
1.    Makes auditors.
2.    Owns and puts into effect instructions from ACC Chief and ACC
Conductor.
3.    Runs tight 8C with understandable ARC on students; includes keeping
    their hats straight.
4.    Keeps alert for ways and means of improving training.
5.    Is fully responsible for students' degree of auditing skill, or lack
    of it, for their behavior as,students, and for their beingness as
    preclears.
6.    Is responsible not only for putting out clear, correct data and
    instructions, but for getting it owned, understood and used by students.
7.    Teaches pilot courses at HCA/HPA or HCS/BScn level as required by
HCO.
8.    Keeps Chief Instructor informed about any unusual procedures or
    instructions. If very non-routine, checks with Chief before employing
    them.
9.    Maintains 2-way comm with ACC Conductor, Chief Instructor, other
    instructors, Administrator, Clerk and students.

                          ACC Clerk Hat
PURPOSE: To create an orderly ACC by performing efficiently the routine
work of
ACC Administration.

    The ACC Clerk works directly under the ACC administrator, who is under
    the
ACC Chief Instructor, who is under the ACC Conductor. It is an HCO post.

POST: The ACC Instructor's office for  paper  work,  filing,  etc,  the  ACC
Classroom  for  picking  up  auditors'  reports   and   infraction   sheets,
distributing students' mail, delivering
messages to instructors, etc; the door to the ACC lecture room during LRH
lectures, to
handle any bodies coming or going. (He/She is entitled to hear LRH's
lectures.)

Note: The ACC Clerk will be instructed in any unfamiliar duties by  the  ACC
Administrator.

REGULARDUTIES-
 I . Answering phone and taking messages.
 2.   Handling visitors.
 3.   Handling course paper work-includes collecting, checking, filing
    auditors' reports, Infraction sheets, homework, etc. Routine issuance of
    infraction theses.
 4.   Keeping ACC supplies in order, and notifying ACC Administrator when
    anything needful to course is running out.
 5.   Course typing and stencil cutting.
 6.   Pick up and delivery of mail and messages between local HCO/HASI and
 the ACC.

352

 7.   Assists at Registration of students.
 8.   Prepares ACC roll book.
 9.   Administers and scores APAJOCAs and IQ to late-entering students.
    (The course before-and-after tests are normally scored by the students.)
10.   Grading any written tests that may be given during the course.
11.   Seeing that coffee or tea is ready for instructors at certain breaks.
12.   Referring students to Instructors if they ask questions about
    Scientology data; referring them to their auditor, if they start asking
    about their cases.

The ACC Clerk is required throughout the final Saturday of the course.

                          ACC Schedules
PURPOSE: To set a time for Congresses & ACCs.

POST: Wherever found, or c/o HCO WW.

DUTIES:
1 .   To establish starting and ending dates for Congresses and ACCs and to
    obtain agreement on these between LRH and all other interested parties.
2.    To make sure these dates are known to all concerned.

                       ACC Administrator Hat
PURPOSE: To ensure a smooth-running ACC as regards material.

    Works under ACC Chief Instructor and ACC Conductor. Supervises ACC
    Clerk.

POST: ACC Instructor's Office.

DUTIES
 I .  To furnish ACC Supervisor, wherever an ACC is given, with a  list  of
    material needed for ACC and to make certain that these are  on  hand  in
    the quantities needed and at the time required.
 2.   To keep the ACC Master List (of such materials) up to date and
    adapted to the current course.
 3.   To predict what will be needed, where and when, for an ACC, and make
    sure it arrives.
 4.   Stays in comm with ACC Chief Instructor and ACC Conductor so that
    material requirements are known and fulfilled on schedule.
 5.   Keeps ACC Log.
 6.   Instructs ACC Clerk and makes certain his/her work is being done in
    an orderly way. (See ACC Clerk's Hat for duties.)
 7.   Is responsible for all ACC Material during course,  and  for  turning
    over ACC Files to local HCO Board of Review (for eventual shipment to St
    Hilt), at course conclusion.
 8.   Carries on person to ACCs:
      (a) Logs of prior ACCs.
      (b) Copies of standard ACC issue mimeoed (roneoed) material.
      (c) Standard issue booklets.
      (d) Copy of ACC Master List and spare copies of ACC personnel hats.
 9.   Keeps memoranda and exchanges dispatches concerning ACC as required
    by Chief Instructor.
 10.   Obtains  ACC  material  direct  from  local  HCO  or  HASI   Material
    Administrator, with whatever amount of 8C and  ARC  is  effective.  The
    correct line is through ACC Supervisor to HASI  Material  Administrator
    with  direct  liaison  between  ACC  Administrator  and  HASI  Material
    Administrator. Should this line break down, be effective.
11.   At end of course, hands ACC log and student profiles to HCO
    Communicator to send to LRH (and then direct to ACC file to HCO WW).
    Hands all other ACC files
      to local HCO Board of Review.
           Peter Hemery
           HCO Secretary WW
LRH:js.bp.rd for
Copyright Q 1960 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

353

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 MARCH 1960
                            (Reissued from Sthil)

CenOCon

   HATADDITION

ACC SUPERVISOR HAT

The following hat addition to the ACC Supervisor hat is approved:

    The ACC  Supervisor  is  responsible  for  seeing  that  two  "stand-by"
students are provided for the  ACC,  in  case  an  odd  number  of  students
appears for the course, or in case the number of  students  becomes  odd  at
some point.

    The most likely prospects for "stand-by"  students  are  those  who  are
qualified for the course and waiting to take it, but are unable to  pay  for
it. They attend all the lectures and hold themselves in  readiness  to  fill
in at a moment's notice. Unless they eventually pay for the course, they  do
not get the complete course.

    The Association Secretary (Org See) is usually the person best qualified
to know what  people  are  available  and  suitable  to  act  as  "stand-by"
students.

LRH:js.mm.rd     Peter Hemery
Copyright (j) 1960     HCO Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 MAY 1960

CenOCon

ACCEPTANCE FOR ACC AND ACADEMY COURSES

    It is now Policy that no students be accepted for an ACC  or  any  other
training course conducted by a Scientology Organization who have  a  chronic
bodily condition for which they are under medical care and/or taking drugs.

    These students should be encouraged to take an Intensive  at  HGC  until
their condition is resolved and they are off drugs.

    The reason for this ruling is that, for example, on a  recent  ACC,  the
only two blow-offs have been (1) a student who was on 30 grains a  night  of
Sodium Bromide, Chloral Hydrate and gentian and who sometimes took  as  much
as 90 grains and (2) another student under drugs from her  physician  for  a
dropsical condition. This student was given only five months to  live,  five
years ago, and was taking the ACC on her own risk.

    Cases such as the above need  intensive  auditing  before  attempting  a
course such as an ACC. A smoother gradient is indicated, and this  could  be
done by getting  the  condition  resolved  through  auditing  first,  before
allowing the student on to the course.

LRH:js.rd   Rosamond Harper
Copyright (j) 1960     HCO Technical Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

354

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OF
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Su

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 DECEMB
Franchise Hldrs
Central Orgs
ACC Instructors
Australia: Mail to all Australian Auditors
London: Mail to all UK Auditors

                     CURRICULUM FOR ACCS

                          January 1961

    Dick and Jan Halpern are giving the majority  of  the  US  ACC  starting
after the Congress in January, 196 1. 1 am giving the  I  st  week  of  this
course.

    Mary Sue Hubbard and Peter Williams will assist  me  on  the  2nd  South
African ACC starting on January 23, 1961 in Johannesburg, after  a  Congress
on 21st and  22nd  January.  Peter  (Association  Secretary,  Australia)  is
flying in from Melbourne for this purpose  and  to  study  the  Johannesburg
test lines. On his return to Australia Peter will teach  an  Australian  ACC
based on the Johannesburg ACC.

    These ACCs will specialise in the following processes and data  and  all
students will run on them.

        Presessions I to 37. All variations. Formulas 15, 13, 14 and 16.
        Regimen 3 using all the data contained in presessions 2 to 36.

    S-C-S and Connectedness will be used on all persons who had a  hard  run
on the Formulas after these are flat and before sessions are run on  Regimen
3.

    Assessment will be taught heavily to locate proper  terminals  for  help
before Regimen 3 is scheduled.

    Model Session and precise auditing will be stressed,

    I can guarantee that all cases will be  stably  started,  some  for  the
first time, due to our experience on the I st Saint Hill  and  my  research,
and the application of Mary Sue as  D  of  P,  and  the  staff  auditors  of
Johannesburg who for the first time in South Africa are moving all cases  in
the HGC.

    Tapes will be made of all my lectures. The South African tapes  will  be
professionally recorded. The US tapes will be done on an Ampex. All  copying
will be done in Washington on Ampex pro machines.

    We have had a great technical win, first on the I st Saint Hill and  now
on field and off-the-street pes in South Africa (the roughest cases  in  the
world according to our data).

    Most of this data has been released. The technology of its use  has  not
been entirely released and there is much to know aside from the bare data.

    There will be an early summer ACC in England taught  at  Saint  Hill  by
Dick, Jan and myself.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:des,js.rd Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

355

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 SEPTEMBER 1961

All HGCs All Academies

CURRICULUM FOR CLEARING COURSES

    (Note: LA and Melbourne are to begin Special Clearing Courses at the end
of this month. This gives data to be stressed.)

    (This data may be used in HGCs.)

    In the last DC and Melbourne courses, goals assessments were reported to
be taking so long that very few goals were found in Melbourne  and  none  in
the DC course.

    This condition also existed elsewhere and on my very  careful  research,
in all cases where goals assessment exceeded 150 goals, the actual goal  was
to be found in the first 150 goals  given  by  the  pc.  Out  rudiments  had
buried it. As soon as rudiments  were  put  in,  the  goal  reappeared,  the
terminal was found and all went off routinely.

    On all long, arduous runs on the goals terminal rudiments  were  out,  a
chronic PTP or heavy withhold had stopped clearing.

    Plainly, auditors are in a games condition on goals and prevent  the  pc
from having one or attaining  one.  This  and  unreality  on  track  is  the
probable source of all long or bad auditing.

    The general remedy for this is to flatten Routine IA  on  all  auditors,
flatten the games condition process where the auditor won't let the  pc  win
and get every auditor to have a reality on own track.

    Several cases have been found  stalled  on  "treatment",  the  pc  being
wildly allergic to any and all "treatment" and thus taking forever to run.

    All bad auditing is done by auditors who have no reality on  the  track,
and the then-ness of pictures. These are seeking to  escape  and  thus  pull
the pc into escaping, whereas clearing lies in confronting.  Auditors  whose
pictures flick in and out and who never linger are "out of valence"  on  the
track or are otherwise seeking to escape. The remedy is  to  make  such,  as
pes, run pictures with unknown when found, not  escape  from  them.  Several
lectures cover this.

    Q and A with the pc is entirely taking what the pc  suggests  or  taking
orders from the pc. One order taken from the pc by  the  auditor  and  bang,
ARC breaks. This is the source of ARC breaks.

    All this and more is covered in the Saint Hill lectures of the last half
of August and early September.

    The exact lectures are being listed and examinations prepared for  them.
This list and the examinations will be sent for these two courses.

    It is suggested that the students get at least two of these lectures per
    day.

    To make your students into auditors, skip  the  TRs  in  these  advanced
courses, relegating TRs to the Academy and Saint Hill.  Instead,  start  the
course cases as follows:

    Find if the pc has ever been "in  himself'  or  herself  in  a  picture.
Unbury and run that picture with Unknown with this command:

    "What was unknown about that incident?" Keep the pc in the incident.

356

    If the pc has never had a picture 3D in his own valence, run  either  or
both of the following:

    "What was unknown?" and another process,
    "What unknown should you escape from?" "What unknown should you attack?"
    "What unknown should another escape from?" "What unknown should another
    attackT'

    These last two processes also handle problems, treatment and  the  other
factors mentioned above and class as I A processes.

    Omit Routine 2 out of all instruction.

    Rewrite  your  Pre-Hay  Primary  Scale  to  include  all  emotions  from
"serenity" to "hide". Include on the scale in  the  place  of  "No  Motion",
PROBLEMS. Include also UNKNOWN, FORGET, NOT KNOW. Add also  DISLOCATE.  Omit
anything that is a brother to "No Motion". Include DENY.

    Get assessment going only when IA is flat. IA  can  be  considered  flat
when Escape-Attack on Unknown produces no TA motion after this or  other  IA
processes have been run.

    Get ordinary security checking going at once on HCO WW Sec Form 6.  When
students do this well, shift to the Not Know version  of  Security  Checking
on Form 3. Do the last two pages of Form 3 before the rest.

    In all auditing done on course (or in HGCs) get  daily  cross-cheeks  on
rudiments. Let a student (or in HGCs another auditor) check  (but  not  run)
the rudiments on every pc and point out to the pc's auditor those  that  are
OUT.

    Let  students  see  check  each  other  evenings,  independent  of  days
auditing, but make sure they know how it is  done.  Don't  let  them  assess
evenings. Do all assessment in class auditing time.

Stamp ruthlessly on Q and A (auditor doing whatever the pc says).

Arrange two 21/2, hour auditing periods a day.

Instructors check out any goal and any terminal found before letting it be
run.

    A course completion depends on a student:

1     Doing a good Not Know version of Security Checking.
2.    Finding the goal and terminal of a pc.
3.    Doing a proper Pre-Hay Assessment.
4.    Having Form 3 and a Form 6 Sec Cheek completed on self.
5.    Passing a perfect exam on the book E-Meter Essentials plus Instant
    and Latent Read.
6.    Getting a decent graph change on his pc or clearing.

    Any student clearing his pc on either course will instantly be awarded a
    D.Sen.
Clear status must be checked out by HCO.

    Routine 1A consists of flattening problems (or unknowns) on the TA and
completing a Not Know Sec Check, HCO WW Form 3.

    Routine 3 consists of finding the goals and terminals of the pes and
    doing any
available See Cheeks.

    These two routines are the only routines to be used or taught on Special
    Courses
at this time.

357

    The processes to be used to clear rudiments are as follows (supposing
the difficulty has been finally stated by pc):

    ROOM: TR 10 or pc's havingness process, run only until question about
room produces no needle reaction.

    AUDITOR: What would you be willing to be? What would you rather not be?
(Run TA motion out.)

    PT PROBLEM: (When pc has stated it and who) What is unknown about that
problem with -? (Run until needle no longer reacts on terminal, check any
other PTP and run it as necessary.)

    WITHHOLDS: To whom wasn't that known? To whom shouldn't that be known?
(Run until needle no longer reacts.)

    ARC BREAK: What didn't an auditor do? When? What weren't you able to
tell an auditor? When?

    Alter Model Session Script to include the above.

Limit two-way comm to asking what, where, when questions.

                           SUMMARY

    Spend no course time trying to make auditors.  Criticise  blunders.  But
give no long lectures of any kind to the class. Just tell them  what  to  do
individually, exactly as above, and see that it gets done on  an  individual
basis.

    In instructing, confront each student, one at a time. Don't worry  about
general confronts of the class, not even a seminar period.

    Tell the student to do so and so as above with his pc. Show him  or  her
how to do it. Skip all extra ordinary solutions. Just use the above.  Get  a
maximum of solid auditing done.

    Spread your teams as far apart as possible.

    Dispense with cheek sheet examination except on Saint Hill tapes.

    Make auditors by making them audit. If they goof, assume  they  have  no
reality on the track and get the student to  confront  his  bank  as  above.
Subjective reality alone can make an auditor. Routines I A and 3  alone  can
make clears.

    All auditor goofs stem from unreality. Reality is found

        a.  By auditing and
        b.  By familiarity with own bank and track.

    If an auditor on your  course  has  already  received  HPA/HCA  and  any
further training and still has no hang of it,  you  won't  educate  them  to
victory. They just don't have reality on the mind yet. See that they get  it
subjectively. And so teach them to make clears.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jl.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L~ Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

358

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 DECEMBER 1961
Assoc Secs
HCO Cont Sees
                       CLEARING COURSES

    I will not approve any clearing courses  anywhere  in  the  world  until
there are a majority of Class II auditors in Orgs and field.

    Teach Class 11 special courses. Advertise. them as special as you want.

    All clearing courses fail where no Class 11 auditors exist.

LRH:ph.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 SEPTEMBER 1969
Rernimeo
BPI
Auditor
            OLD ACC STUDENTS

    Any and all persons who have ever enrolled in an ACC (Advanced  Clinical
Course) providing only that a fee was paid  in  full,  is  entitled  to  the
following:

I     Full training as an HDG in the DAC of his nearest org or an SH or an
AO.
2.    Student Auditing in Dianetics and org reviews to resolve any possible
    case difficulties.
3.    Assistance in obtaining any medical treatment indicated as necessary
    by competent medical examination.
4.    A retread to Class VI in a modern SH Course.

    No fees, except for any medical treatment indicated, may be charged  for
any of the services above.

    All orgs, AOs and SHes are ordered to deliver the above services.

    The Public Executive Secretary is to cause his division to  unearth  all
past ACC records for names and addresses and  to  have  his  divisions  send
copies of this Policy Letter to all such former ACC students.

    Those ACC students who have recently paid for the new S tandard Dianetic
Course may  have  the  amount  credited  to  AO  levels  or  AO  reviews  on
presentation of invoice to AOs.

    It is the full intention of this Pol Ltr to ensure that old ACC students
receive full benefit of modern technical developments. These  students  were
once promised they would not have to  pay  for  further  training  and  this
favour is offered to redeem that promise at least in part if not in full.  I
want them to be well and happy beings  wherever  they  may  not  have  fully
achieved that goal.

LRH:Idm.ei.rd    L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1969 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

359

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 NOVEMBER 1963

General
Release
BPI
MA

                   CERTIFICATE AND CLASSIFICATION CHANGES
                             EVERYONE CLASSIFIED
                (Subject to last paragraph this Policy Letter
               changes all earlier Certificate Classification
                HCO Policy Letters, as of February 15, 1964.)

    Acceptance, requested  change  or  objection  to  this  plan  should  be
airmailed to me at Saint Hill  so  that  any  necessary  amendments  can  be
issued before the effective date. If objections are minimal  and  acceptance
general, this plan goes into full effect February 15, 1964, without  further
announcement and will remain the stable gauge of all  training,  processing,
certifying and  classification  in  the  future.  It  is  only  possible  to
formulate this now that technology to OT is complete.

    Signalizing the discovery and refinement of all levels of processing  up
to and including the  highest  targets  set  in  Scientology  research,  the
following classification schedule has been developed.

    It is evident that 13 years of research  developed  many  processes  and
styles of auditing and that these  are  all  useful  and  necessary  to  the
successful progress of cases.

    To open the road to everyone, it is necessary to have a precisely mapped
course of progress. Experience shows that preclears entering too  high  into
processes without adequate  processing  and  training  background  at  lower
levels will fail.

    Technical data now makes it evident that a person  not  trained  to  run
high level OT processes cannot receive successful case improvement  on  them
and that it is dangerous to run an uneducated pe at high levels. This  alone
makes classification of preclears as well as  auditors  necessary.  Even  at
lower levels it will be found  that  preclears,  lacking  training,  do  not
advance well.

    Further it is economical to co-audit to higher levels.

    Therefore, without disturbing private or HGC processing commitments  and
yet placing these as well into these classifications for the  protection  of
the preclear and auditor alike, the following rules  are  adopted  and  have
the full  force  of  policy.  Effective  February  15,  1964,  auditors  and
preclears  violating  these  policies  will  be  subject  to  Committees  of
Evidence.

    I . NO PRECLEAR MAY BE AUDITED ABOVE HIS OR HER CLASS.

    2.      NO AUDITOR MAY USE PROCESSES ON ANYONE ABOVE HIS OR HER CLASS.

    3.      A PRECLEAR. MAY BE PROCESSED WITH THE PROCESSES OF HIS OR HER
        CLASS OR WITH THE PROCESSES OF ANY LESSER CLASS.

    4.      AN AUDITOR MAY USE THE PROCESSES OF HIS  OR  HER  CLASS  OR  ANY
        LESSER CLASS, BUT MAY NOT USE ON ANY PARTICULAR PRECLEAR ANY PROCESS
        ABOVE  THAT   PRECLEAR'S   CLASS   REGARDLESS   OF   THE   AUDITOR'S
        CLASSIFICATION.

    Any HUBBARD CERTIFIED AUDITOR or HUBBARD PROFESSIONAL AUDITOR who  holds
the actual certificate may  train  any  person  to  the  level  of  HUB13ARD
APPRENTICE  SCIENTOLOGIST  and  may  further  train  to  Class  I   and   by
Application to the nearest Central Organization may have the person  he  has
trained

360

certified or classified, for which application forms and  certificates  will
be furnished by Central Organizations.

    A full Classification Chart will be published from time Jo  time  giving
the requirements and processes of every level and  concise  text  books  and
answer sheets are in preparation for  every  class.  But  absence  of  texts
shall not preclude training or classifying so  long  as  the  materials  are
communicated, at least until such time as texts are complete and available.

    It readily will be seen that stress is being placed on co-audit at every
class level. While no objection will be made to private pcs or HGC pcs,  the
above rules apply as to what the pc may be run on and  a  pe  who  fails  to
study for and attain his next classification levels will not be able  to  be
processed at higher levels. Technical surveys demand these measures for  the
safety of preclears. Furthermore, training is far  cheaper  than  processing
in the long run.

    It will be found that auditing skill varies even within a class.  It  is
true that an auditor receives no better processing than  he  gives  if  only
for the reason that no one wants to co-audit with him or her when the  skill
is low. Therefore there is an incentive to be a very good  auditor  if  only
to receive good processing at any class level.

    These measures are dictated by a desire to have everyone make it and  to
leave a precisely marked roadway from the lowest to highest levels.

    It will also be found that auditors disseminate and purely preclears
    seldom do.

    A great many recent instances are to hand which not only demonstrate the
impossibility of attaining the highest  levels  without  training  but  also
demonstrate the way cases are barred out at the lower  levels  through  lack
of training and orderly forward programming up through the levels. The  only
case barriers now are failures to  have  experienced  certain  processes  at
lower  levels  which  reduced  the  confusion  of  the  environment,  hidden
standards, etc. For instance you cannot pull missed withholds on a  preclear
who has no concept of communication  much  less  the  definition  of  missed
withholds.

    Unless we take this step and adopt classification for preclears as  well
as auditors, we will find ourselves continuously losing people off the  road
and halting our forward advance.
    The general Classification Chart Issue One is as follows:

Cws   Process Types    Certificate
0     Listen Style     HAS
I     Listen Style,    HAS Classed
           Assists
           R-1-C
      Principles of ARC, Dynamics
Il    Repetitive Processes, HCA
      CCHs, Straight Wire,
      Tone 40 and Formal Auditing
           Axioms O1W
III   Prepchecking, Metered Processes, HPA
           Assessing
      Old "R2" and "R2H"
IV    Service Facsimiles,   HCS
      ARC Break Assessments,
      Programming,
      Missed W/Hs
V     Implants, Engrams, Whole Track,  HAA
      Whole Track Case Analysis
VI    OT Processes     HSS
      Own GPMs
      Old R3 and R4 Processes
Vil   Old Route One and Other     HGA
      Drills

361

    The certificate schedule HCO  Policy  Letter  of  August  12,  1963,  is
cancelled.  The  certificate  Hubbard  Book  Auditor   is   withdrawn.   The
certificates   Hubbard   Apprentice    Scientologist,    Hubbard    Clearing
Scientologist and Hubbard Advanced Auditor are reinstated. HCA and  HPA  are
both given international standing but now are different classes,

    The rules of processing apply to CLASS not to certificate. A certificate
may have almost any lower class stamped on it. It is the classification  not
the certificate that permits use of processes or being run on processes.

    While under actual training for the next class a preclear may be run  on
those processes. But to be under training for the next class one  must  have
been classified for  the  immediately  preceding  class.  One  cannot  enter
training for the next class, regardless  of  the  certificate  held,  unless
classed for the earlier class.

    Each class has its theory, practical and auditing section. Each  process
has its Basic Auditing, Technique and Case analysis for that class.

    It is envisioned that training courses be brief and precise and  require
exact  levels  of  attainment  as  to   theory,   practical   and   auditing
requirements. Every effort is being made to handily assemble this  data  for
each class, although all of it already  exists  in  various  forms  such  as
books, bulletins and tapes.

    A more expansive Classification Chart is nearing completion.

    Stress in any course is 50% on auditing, 50% on case  gain.  It  is  not
expected that a person will  be  allowed  into  the  next  class  until  the
processes of the previous class have been flattened on him or her.

    Maximal attention will be paid in the  enforcement  of  this  policy  to
circumstances surrounding persons  who  have  long  been  in  Dianetics  and
Scientology. For these a special class is being created saluting their  long
presence in Dianctics and Scientology and permitting the use  of  processing
as auditors and preclears up to a reasonable class  level  in  keeping  with
their experience, successes and case advance, the only  proviso  being  that
actual case advance has been obtained and that their cases are  not  impeded
by having failed to benefit from a certain lower level.

    Classification changes and upgrades  will  not,  however,  be  attempted
above the Class IV of the above chart and any Class IV now  awarded  may  be
upgraded in special cases only to Class V. No classification  for  Class  VI
is now obtainable except by training and no actual GPMs may be  run  by  any
auditor until the full  technology  is  released  and  re-classification  is
earned. This is due to the numerous upsets at this level (V1).

    Classes V, VI and VII may only be awarded at Saint Bill. Classes 0 to IV
inclusive may be awarded by Central Organizations. Classes 0  to  1  may  be
awarded by HCAs or above by application for, not of  rights  to  award,  but
for certificate and class to HCOs of Central  Organizations.  The  right  to
award HAS and Classes 0 and 1 are inherent in holding a  valid  HCA  or  HPA
certificate.

    Note: If any pre- 1960 auditor feels confused about his class, he or she
need only honestly answer  the  question,  "What  processes  do  1  do  very
successfully and get good results with and do  1  succeed  on  myself  as  a
case?" and that will serve as a  good  gauge  of  what  class  that  auditor
should have in order to go forward on the charted course to OT with  maximum
gain and minimal upset.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright @ 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Amended by HCO P/L 11 December 1963, Classification for Everyone, page
364.1

                               362

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 DECEMBER 1963

HCO Secs Assoc Secs

     URGENT

ORG PROGRAMMING

    HCO Pol Ltr of 26th November 1963 and the tape of 3 December 1963
outline a new departure and if handled well prosperity for Central Orgs.

    The remaining two tapes of this week, that of 4 December 1963 and 5
December 1963 are illuminative of technical.

    The Association or Organization Secretary should play these three tapes
and take up the Pol Ltr of 26 November 1963 with all staff, using more than
one period, and discuss and examine these points. until certain they are
understood.

    Doing this should give the necessary promotional and technical data and
programming necessary to carry organizations forward with higher impetus.

    It is possible that course costs will be changed. Any suggestions for
this will be appreciated.

    Reports of the conduct and results of the staff meetings above should be
reported to me directly.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.rd Copyright Q 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

363

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I DECEMBER 1963

CenOCon
General Release

           URGENT

 CLASSIFICATION FOR EVERYONE
(Amends HCO Pol Ltr of Nov. 26, 1963)

    HCO Policy Letter of November 26, 1963 should be corrected  and  amended
before magazine or general release where this is possible.

    HCA is restored to Level III in the table and HCA is ranked as the  U.S.
version of Commonwealth HPA. HCA/HPA is the Certificate at Level III.

    At Level  II  HCA  is  replaced  by  "Hubbard  Qualified  Scientologist"
initials HQS. Mark it so in table.

    Change the rights to train to HAS and to give Class I to  "All  auditors
including and above Hubbard Qualified Scientologist".

    The Academy course envisioned for the HQS is  the  old  one  month  Comm
Course Upper Indoc HCA/HPA course. Both Comm  Course  and  Upper  Indoc  are
however taught in one week. At the end of this course the  student  will  be
given his or her certificate.  At  the  end  of  this  course  however,  the
student is not given Class IL The student is now qualified to train  to  HAS
and Class I and to use and be audited on Class II materials since he or  she
is in training for Class II. When the student feels ready,  he  or  she  may
take their Classification examination for Class 11. No  additional  training
may be sold this student by an Academy until the student is  Class  11,  and
no additional Class 11 course may be given this student.

    The cost of the original HQS course is envisioned as f 35. It may not be
priced above this figure anywhere. The cost of an HAS course  is  envisioned
as not more than f 5 where it is charged for and the Class I course for  HAS
Class I is envisioned as an additional course costing no  more  than  f  10.
Any auditor from HQS up may teach and charge for HAS courses and  HAS  Class
I courses. There is no restriction on auditing fees charged by  auditors  or
HGCs. Charges for co-audit unit attendance are at discretion.

    In short it is envisioned that a person may receive  his  HAS  from  any
auditor HQS or above, or from any Scientology  Organization,  and  similarly
may receive his HAS  Class  1.  These  HAS  and  HAS  Class  I  courses  are
envisioned as evening or weekend  courses.  The  only  restriction  is  that
failure to train well before awarding can result in a Committee of  Evidence
for the trainer.

    Any HAS Class I may take his or her HQS course at any Academy,  will  be
certified on completion and will be  given  Classification  Examination  for
Class Il at a future date without further formal training.

    It is necessary to have been classed as Class Il before being  permitted
to take an HCA/HPA course at Level 111.

    Academies will teach the HCA/HPA course with Level  III  materials.  The
course is envisioned as 2 months in  length  and  its  cost  about  f  7  8.
Classification arrangement is similar to HCA/HPA.

    It is not envisioned that people taking  HAS  or  HQS  or  even  HCA/HPA
courses are making a career out of Scientology. They are  expected  to  keep
on working at their

                               364

jobs. This  must  be  stressed.  There  is  no  effort  to  follow  medical-
psychiatric practitioner patterns and have offices, There is  an  effort  to
work evening and weekends running  small  organizations  of  co-audits.  The
effort is to make Scientologists, not have  "patiente'.  This  dictates  the
length of the HQS course as people can seldom get off work for more  than  a
month.

    This does not interfere, however, with someone working full time in
    Scientology.

    Cost and length of courses rise somewhat as they increase  in  Class  as
the increased ability of the student, if well processed.  on  classification
level processes, commonly brings him or her more income and leisure.

    The intent of this programme is to (1) Open the road  for  everyone  (2)
Provide wider dissemination (3) Guarantee an increase of knowledge  to  keep
pace with increase of ability (4) Provide the cheapest  possible  processing
(5) Regulate processes by Class Level to guarantee a more real  advance  (6)
Steer around rough spots found in the past in technical, administrative  and
personal areas.

    There is no effort to decrease the income or  present  activity  of  any
auditor or organization but only to widen the sphere of action.

LRH:dr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 FEBRUARY 1964
Central Orgs
BPI
      CLASSIFICATION

    There has been a very wide response to my request for your opinions  and
suggestions on the HCO Policy Letter of November 26, 1963,  Certificate  and
Classification Changes.

    I am glad to say that the basic principle of classification of  auditors
and  preclears  has  been  almost  universally  accepted,  and  mostly  with
enthusiasm. The scheme will therefore go into operation as outlined.

    Some objections have been made on the grounds that certain auditors,  or
certain  preclears,  might  be  prevented  from   progressing   further   in
Scientology. Such individual problems can be ironed out. The purpose of  the
policy is to enable everyone to progress through the levels  in  an  orderly
fashion and to ensure that many more individuals  have  the  opportunity  to
reach OT.

    I hope that most of your immediate objections will  be  removed  by  HCO
Policy Letter of February 5, 1964, Founding Scientologist Certificate.  This
implements the "Old Timers Clause" which appeared  in  the  original  Policy
Letter.  By  sending  in  your  application  you  will  have  the  right  to
processing (or auditing if you are qualified) up to Class IV.

    Thank you for your help in the past. You can help in the future, too.

LRH:dr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

365

                       HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE.
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 FEBRUARY 1964

Central Orgs Franchise Field

CLASSIFICATION

    The final shape of Classification Policy, now that opinions are in, some
of them belated, is as follows:

    Auditors will be Classified from I to VI as in the original issue.

    In response to numerous field requests, the original issue is changed as
    follows:

    Preclears will be separately Classified, Levels I to VI.  Classification
will be on the basis of processes flattened. Each level  will  have  certain
basic processes to be accomplished. Preclear Classification will not  be  by
certificate but by a specific log book issued to the preclear and signed  by
his auditor as each process is flattened and a level  completed.  Technology
now permits this to be effective and it will prevent case failures.

    The same log book will be issued to auditors and they  too  must  attain
their own preclear level  to  compare  with  certificate.  Certificates  and
current classes to be valid until 1 July 1965.

    Classification of auditors and preclears effective date is  extended  to
15 April 1965. The processing log books will be issued before that date.

    The log book also applies to Co-Audits.

    Founding Scientologists' Certificate issues are going forward,  allowing
up to Class IV for trained auditors and Class IV for preclears.  The  actual
Certificate must be possessed by the individual to be  in  effect.  Fact  of
having been a Scientologist or Dianeticist for years gives  no  dispensation
unless the Founding Scientology Certificate is in hand.

    HGCs and Saint Hill trained auditors may issue special  dispensation  to
HGC preclears and their own personal preclears to  temporarily  raise  their
preclear class during certain phases of processing.

    Effective 1 June 1968 field centres duly  established  with  Saint  Hill
Graduates may train to levels as high as IV and are permitted  effective  15
April 1964 to train to HAS Class 1 and HQS Class 11. On 1 June 1968  Central
Orgs will be permitted to train to Classes V & VI,  which  until  that  date
will only be taught at Saint Hill.

    Otherwise the basic policy letter is unchanged. A summary issue will  be
prepared and released.

    This policy has been  formulated  with  the  consultation  and  majority
agreement of organizations and field auditors all  over  the  world  and  is
final.

    The effective date is now 15 April 1965.

            L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:jw.rd
Copyright (D 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard      JNote: Policy on Founding Scientologist Certificates
is given
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          in Volume 2, pages 264-265.]

                               366

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 FEBRUARY 1964

All Orgs

     URGENT

ORG PROGRAMMING

    With the change to the Classification Policy there are various  possible
danger points to Org volume,

    Before the public understands Classification they may feel the  HGC  has
gone out of business or various other ideas may get afloat.

    At once all comm lines must be utilized to emphasize that Classification
means better case gains in the HGC  as  well  as  in  the  field.  One  gets
processed out of a level by the HGC or field auditors as well as trained  up
from it. The HGC is there to get peopl&s  processing  at  the  lower  levels
caught up in the quickest possible period of time. It can be  done  best  at
an HGC which can issue a processing clearance of lower levels and speed  the
person to higher classification levels.

    The Continental Mag should be issued to stress this at once.

    HQS as a course should be boomed.

    HAS should be stressed for the newcomer.

    Get bodies moving through the shop fast. Publicize the HGC well.

    Technically in the HGC stress to auditors processes that take care of In-
Sessionness. What isn't the pc  able  to  do  to  be  completely  auditable?
Permit questions to be asked by the auditor? Accept  the  environment?  Etc.
Assess by session parts and use processes to  remedy  these  things.  Stress
basic type repetitive processes and grant a right to be run on them  to  HGC
pcs, to handle Level I, and clean up  all  Level  11  pc  requirements.  Get
these flat on the pc. And you'll have wins, wins, wins.

    Inform the public of the new Case Supervisor and set him or her on duty.

    I designed classification to get maximum  case  gains  for  the  pc  and
prevent pcs being given loses. Stress that in HGC propaganda.

                             GPMs

    Issue publicly pes do have their own goals and GPMs. The best way to get
them run is to get graduated up through the levels.

    The Invalidation of the idea that a pc had his own goals  was  a  severe
blow. Invalidation of a pc's own GPMs, calling them  implants,  produces  an
instant ARC Break and physical repercussions.

    So correct this quick on Broad Public Interest (BPI), regardless of
    classification.

                   SOLVE IT WITH SCIENTOLOGY

    If the Org slumps during this transition period, don't engage  in  "fund
raising" or "selling postcards" or borrowing money.

367

    Just make more income with Scientology.

    It's a sign of very poor mangement to seek extraordinary solutions for
finance outside Scientology. It has always failed.

    For Orgs as for pes "Solve It With Scientology".

    Every time I myself have sought to solve finance or personnel in other
ways than Scientology I have lost out. So I can tell you from experience
that Org solvency lies in More Scientology, not patented combs or fund
raising Barbecues.

                            FUTURE

    This Policy Letter though urgent should be no cause for alarm. Orgs are
not going broke. They are however in a transition period to huge volume of
action and it is costly to bridge.

    These immediate steps will prevent any slump, if swiftly taken.

    So take them.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright@ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

368

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 APRIL 1964

Central Orgs
Franchise

              SUMMARY OF POLICIES
ON CLASSIFICATION AND GRADATION, CERTIFICATION,
      FRANCHISE AND MEMBERSHIPS, AND THE
               AUDITORS DIWSION

    This Policy Letter is a general summary of all current policies
    regarding:

    I Classification and Gradation
    2.      Certification
    3.      Franchise and Memberships
    4.      The Auditors Division of Saint Hill

    Certain parts of these policies have only just been formulated (such  as
Gradation) and will be more fully described in later  issues.  However,  all
the above affect each other,  and  this  summary  will  show  how  they  all
dovetail into each other, providing a  basis  for  an  orderly,  progressive
framework for Scientology in its expansion all over the world.

    All these policies have only one basic purpose in mind-to enable all to
    follow a
clearly marked road to freedom and OT. Three distinct routes  are  provided,
one of which should suit the capabilities of  any  individual.  These  three
routes are described in greater detail below.

                1. CLASSIFICATION AND GRADATION

    The general outline of classification is now well enough known, and,
    with various
modifications, has been generally accepted by all as  a  logical  system  of
orderly progress in the knowledge and application of Scientology.

    There are now three ways to progress along the road:

    I . The Preclear
    2.      The Co-Auditor
    3.      The Auditor (i.e. the Professional Auditor).

Definitions:

 1.    The Preclear has achieved the gains, knows the why and parts of the
 processes and
    the underlying basics. No auditor performance or ability required.

2.    The Co-Auditor is trained, can perform the process under supervision
and has
    passed a non-professional examination on it.

3.    The Auditor is professionally qualified in all respects in theory,
practical and
    auditing at his particular level.

    Scientology is categorized into various Levels, numbered at present
    from 0 to
VII-Le. from the completely untutored public to OT  (higher  levels  may  be
added later). Anybody who has progressed at all in Scientology can  be  said
to have reached a certain level. The  processes  of  Scientology  fall  into
these levels also. And so on.

    To distinguish and differentiate between the attainments and attributes
    of the
individuals who are  following  the  three  different  ways,  the  following
terminology is introduced:

                         The Preclear Route

    Grade is the word now used to denote the level of attainment of a
    Preclear or
Co-Auditor.

369

       Class or classification is the word  used  to  denote  the  level  of
   attainment of a Professional Auditor. The words class and  classification
   are reserved entirely for the Professional Auditor.

       Hence the revised nomenclature-Classification-Gradation Programme.

       Certificates  may  be  awarded   to   Co-Auditors   or   Auditors-but
   classifications are awarded only to Auditors.

       The Preclear's progress is recorded in a logbook, which is filled  in
   by his auditor (or auditors) as he progresses through the various  levels
   and attains higher grades. His training is limited to just enough  basics
   and education to enable him  to  obtain  the  maximum  benefit  from  the
   procedures and processes  of  each  level.  This  training  is  not  done
   formally or in an Academy but may be  imparted  to  him  by  a  qualified
   auditor. It is emphasized that no certificates or awards are given to the
   preclear.

                           The Co-Auditor Route

       A Co-Auditor progresses in a pair with  another  auditor  of  similar
   level, or in a group which is  supervised  by  a  qualified  Professional
   Auditor.

       The  level  of  attainment  of  a  Co-Auditor  is  denoted   by   his
   Certificate. There is a certificate appropriate to each level, as below:

                         I  -     HAS
                         II -     HQS
                         ill      -    HCA (not HPA)
                         IV -     HCS
                         v  -     HAA
                         VI -     HSS
                         VII      -    HGA

       Note that, for Co-Auditors, there is  no  HPA  (Hubbard  Professional
   Auditor) certificate, only an  HCA  (Hubbard  Certified  or  Certificated
   Auditor).

       A Co-Auditor is not  permitted  to  charge  fees  for  auditing.  His
   certificate has no classification seal.

       In order to obtain the certificates, Academy  training  is  necessary
   (except for  HAS  and  HQS)  but  it  is  limited  to  definite  periods.
   Successful completion of the course  results  in  a  certificate  without
   further examination.

       . group co-audit may not be run by a Co-Auditor, only by a Classified
       Auditor.

       . Co-Auditor may transfer to the Professional Auditor level, but must
   then obtain all the necessary classifications of each level in turn.

       Professional Auditors may  also  co-audit-the  group  would  then  be
   called a Professional Co-Audit.

                            The Auditor Route

       Professional Auditors qualify for the same certificates  as  the  CO-
   Auditor (except at Level Ill the certificate is HPA, not HCA).

       They qualify for classification by further training and examination
       at each level.
,~;'~:Their level of attainment is denoted by the  appropriate  certificate,
   and by a classification seal which is affixed  to  the  certificate.  The
   classification seal is a gold seal stamped with a Roman numeral to denote
   the level.

       Everybody has a preclear logbook and a preclear grade.

       The preclear has a logbook and grade.

       The Co-Auditor has a logbook and certificate.

       The Auditor has a logbook, certificate and classification.

    In token of appreciation of their support during  the  early  days,  any
Dianeticist or Scientologist who was in the movement  before  1964  will  be
awarded a Class IV honorary Classification  or  Grade  IV  upon  sending  an
application to the Auditors

370

Division of Saint Hill, 'giving him or her the right to  use  all  processes
up to and including Level IV if they  were  trained  before  1964,  and  the
right to be audited on all processes up to and including Level  IV  if  they
were not trained.

    A comprehensive booklet on  the  Classification-Gradation  programme  is
being printed and will soon be available for wide distribution.

                        2. CERTIFICATION

    It is intended that all certificates will be issued  in  effect  by  the
Auditors Division of Saint Hill.

    This is a new idea but one which was probably inevitable.

    However, HCO Boards of Review must  continue  their  present  system  of
issuing  certificates  until  otherwise  instructed.  Full  details  of  the
changeover will be issued shortly, together with a date on  which  it  takes
effect.

                 3. FRANCHISE AND MEMBERSHIPS

    A new look at Memberships has resulted in a new look at Franchise  also.
No radical change is contemplated in the basic idea  of  Franchise-i.e.  the
Franchise Holders will still be the most active and  important  professional
auditors working in the field. However, instead of contributing 10%  of  his
gross income to HCO WW, the Franchise Holder will now  take  out  a  special
category of membership. Two different memberships  for  Franchised  Auditors
will be available:

    I . Professional Membership 2. Consulting Membership.

    The Professional Member will pay an annual subscription  of  15  guineas
sterling (S45.00), in return for which he receives a certificate,  a  weekly
mailing of bulletins by surface mail, "The Auditor"  magazine  monthly,  and
advice and information personally from the Franchise Secretary at HCO WW.

    The Consulting Member will pay an  annual  subscription  of  45  guineas
sterling (S135.00), in return for which  he  receives  a  Consulting  Member
certificate, a weekly mailing  of  bulletins  by  air  mail,  "The  Auditor"
magazine monthly, and also participates in a  two-way  consultation  service
with Saint Hill. He will receive fast attention and advice from  Saint  Hill
on his preclears and other activities, and Saint Hill will consult with  him
on how he achieves his results and success.

    The whole Structure of membership is altered, the categories being as
    follows:

I .   Associate Member. This is given, free of charge, to  anyone,  but  if
    the recipient wishes he may pay 51- for a card and ScientologY  pin.  It
    is valid for life. Issued by all Scientology Orgs including the Auditors
    Division of Saint Hill.

2.    Participating Member. This membership  is  available  to  anyone,  on
    payment of 3 gns, (SIO) per annum. It is sold by the Central  Org,  and
    entitles the person to participate in its  services,  and  receive  the
    Continental magazine.

3.    International Member. This is available from the Auditors Division of
    Saint Hill only. It costs 5 gns ($15.00) per  annum.  It  entitles  the
    holder to the same privileges and discounts as now, including  the  PAB
    magazine monthly. He also receives  "The  Auditor".  The  holder  of  a
    certificate of Level III and above  must  also  hold  an  International
    Membership in order to keep his certificate in force.

4.    Professional Member-available to Franchise Holders  only,  as  stated
    above. Available from the Auditors Division of Saint Hill only. 15  gns
    ($45.00) per annum.

5.    Consulting Member. The higher grade of Franchise  Holder,  as  stated
    above. Available from the Auditors Division of Saint Hill only.  45  gns
    ($135.00) per annum.

371

    All existing memberships will carry on until they expire. Existing  Life
Memberships (or Shares in HASI Ltd) will be honoured, but no more  of  these
are to be issued now or in the future.

    A separate Policy Letter will be issued shortly summarizing  memberships
and Franchise in more detail, and giving a  date  on  which  the  changeover
will take place. Until  that  date,  the  existing  membership  system  will
continue unchanged.

              4. THE AUDITORS DIVISION OF SAINT HILL

    The Auditors Division of Saint  Hill  is  being  set  up,  as  its  name
implies, to look after auditors and co-auditors and  to  give  them  certain
services.

    The purpose of the Auditors Division is: To make all the auditors in the
world well-trained, properly accredited, successful and ethical.

    The Auditors Division will do the following:

I . See that auditors and co-auditors obtain good training and give good
processing.

2.    Issue "The Auditor", the Saint Hill Journal for Auditors.

3.    Set up Central Files at Saint Hill to keep records and correspondence
    of auditors throughout the world.

4.    Encourage the orderly progress of auditors through the training
    levels, including their final enrolment on the Saint Hill Special
    Briefing Course.

5.    Encourage good training generally by advices and information to and
    from the Enrolment Divisions of Central Orgs.

6.     Undertake  the  necessary  administrative  actions  to  ensure   the
    efficient and speedy issuance of certificates and classifications of all
    levels  throughout  the  world,  and  keep  accurate  records   of   all
    certificates and classifications.

7.    Issue and administer all memberships of Saint Hill, and keep accurate
    records thereof.

8.    Maintain excellent Franchise services, via the Franchise Secretary
WW.

    The  Auditors  Division  of  Saint  Hill  is  interested  primarily   in
Professional Auditors and Co-Auditors.

    Well, there it is. The new look at Scientology 1964.

    1 hope you'll like it.

Written and Issued by: Peter Hemery
      Org Supervisor WW
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD

Authorized by:   L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright Q 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

372

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, Fast Grinstead, Sussex

                 HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 MAY 1964

Central Orgs

  SUMMARY OF CLASSIFICATION AND GRADATION AND CERTIFICATION
                    (Amends earlier Policy Letters)

    This Policy Letter is a summary of current policy on Classification  and
Gradation and Certification,  incorporating  changes  as  mentioned  in  HCO
Policy Ltr of April 22, 1964.

    The purpose of Classification and Gradation is to ensure  that  everyone
is given the best possible chance  to  progress  along  a  well-mapped  road
towards OT.

    To achieve this, three well-defined  routes  have  been  established-the
Preclear Route, the Co-Auditor Route, and the Professional Route.

    The data and processes of Scientology have been categorized into seven
    Levels.

    Corresponding to these Levels, Preclears have a Grade, Co-Auditors  have
an appropriate certificate, and Professional  Auditors  have  a  certificate
and a Classification.

    The rules of Classification and Gradation can therefore now be stated as
    follows:

    I . NO PRECLEAR. MAY BE AUDITED ABOVE HIS OR HER GRADE.

    2.      NO PROFESSIONAL AUDITOR OR CO-AUDITOR MAY USE PROCES-
        SES ON ANYONE ABOVE HIS OR HER GRADE.

    3.      A PRECLEAR MAY BE PROCESSED WITH THE PROCESSES OF HIS OR
        HER GRADE OR WITH THE PROCESSES OF ANY LESSER GRADE.

    4.      A PROFESSIONAL AUDITOR OR CO-AUDITOR MAY USE THE
        PROCESSES OF HIS OR HER CERTIFICATE OR CLASS, BUT MAY NOT
        USE ON ANY PARTICULAR PRECLEAR ANY PROCESSES ABOVE
        THAT PRECLEAR'S GRADE REGARDLESS OF THE PROFESSIONAL
        AUDITOWS OR CO-AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATE OR CLASS.

    Without disturbing  private  or  HGC  processing  commitments,  and  yet
placing these as well into these Levels and Grades  for  the  protection  of
the preclear and auditor alike, these rules are adopted and  have  the  full
force of policy. Effective April 15, 1965, auditors and preclears  violating
these policies will be subject to Committee of Evidence.

    The word "Auditor" is used  loosely  to  designate  any  person  who  is
auditing a preclear, whether professionally or in a  co-audit  under  expert
supervision. However, it is understood that only  a  Classified  Auditor  is
truly a professional auditor.  Only  a  Classified  Auditor  is  allowed  to
charge fees for professional auditing, either privately or in an HGC.

    Consequent upon this, Class I and Class II are abolished, since HAS  and
HQS are not professional auditor  certificates.  Level  I  has  only  a  HAS
(Hubbard Apprentice Scientologist) certificate. There is no Class  1.  Level
II has only a HQS (Hubbard Qualified Scientologist)  Certificate.  There  is
no Class 11.

    When a person holds a HAS and a HQS, he  then  takes  the  next  course,
which is now an HCA course, and confers a HCA  (Hubbard  Certified  Auditor)
certificate.

    At this point, the person may  then  decide  to  become  a  Professional
Auditor. He or she  then  takes  further  training  and  then  undergoes  an
examination for Clos III. If successful, he exchanges  his  HCA  certificate
for a HPA (Hubbard Professional Auditor) certificate, sealed  with  a  Class
Iff seal.

373

    On the other hand, the holder of  a  HCA  (Level  III)  certificate  may
decide to proceed along the Co-Auditor Route. In this case,  he  would  omit
the classification training and examination,  retain  his  HCA  certificate,
and train only for higher certificates, without Classification.

    Thus, progress along the three routes is as follows:-

   1. The Preclear Route: The Preclear progresses up the Levels, from Grade
   I to Grade VI or above. He has no formal training, only enough specified
   education from his auditor to enable him to receive and benefit from the
   processes of any particular level. This training is brief  and  free  of
   charge. A continuous record of the pc's progress is kept in a Log  Book.
   Every individual, including Co-Auditors and Classified Auditors, has one
   of these Log Books and has a Grade as a Preclear.

   2. The Co-Auditor Route: Preclear  progress  as  in  1.  above.  Auditor
   progress is by training for Certificates only, not Classification. There
   is a Certificate for every level, as follows:

       Level I   -     Hubbard Apprentice Scientologist (HAS)
       Level 11  -     Hubbard Qualified Scientologist (HQS)
       Level III - Hubbard Certified Auditor (HCA)
       Level IV - Hubbard Clearing Scientologist (HCS)
       Level V   -     Hubbard Advanced Auditor (HAA)
       Level VI - Hubbard Senior Scientologist (HSS)
       Level VII - Hubbard Graduate Auditor (HGA)

   3. The Professional Route: Preclear progress as  in  1.  above.  Auditor
   progress is by training for  Certificates,  and  also  by  training  and
   examination for Classification, at Level III and above.

   Professional Auditors have to proceed through all the  Levels  in  turn,
   but at Level III and above they take further  training  followed  by  an
   examination.  The  Professional  Auditor's  progress  therefore  is   as
   follows:

       Level I   -     HAS
       Level Il  -     HQS
       Level III - HCA (then takes Classification)
                 -     BPA Class III
       Level IV  -     HCS then
                 HCS Class IV
       Level V   -     HAA then
                 HAA Class V
       Level VI  -     HSS then
                 HSS Class VI
       Level VII -     HGA then
                 HGA Class VII

   At each Level, he retains the Classification of the previous Level until
   he passes the next Classification examination.

    All auditors including and above HQS who hold the actual certificate may
train any person to the level of HAS, and by  application  to  the  Auditors
Division of Saint Hill  may  have  the  person  he  has  trained  certified.
Application forms for this will be supplied by  the  Auditors  Division.  In
Central Orgs, training for HAS is done by the PE  Foundation;  training  for
HQS and above by the Academy.

    Any Saint Hill graduate with a Class IV or  above,  by  application  for
permission to the Saint Hill Auditors Division, may train any person to  the
level of HQS, and by application to the Auditors Division of Saint Hill  may
have the person he has trained certified.

    A simple examination or test may be part of the HAS or HQS  course,  but
confers no classification. There is no Class I or Class Il.

374

    Correcting  previous  advices,  it  is  not  now   intended   that   all
certificates should be issued by the Auditors  Division  of  HCO  WW.  Until
further notice, therefore,  HCO  Boards  of  Review  should  continue  their
present system of certification exactly  as  before.  Supplies  of  the  new
certificates are being printed, and will be available from the Book Dept  of
HCO WW in the usual way.

    A full Classification-Gradation Chart will be  published  from  time  to
time giving the requirements and processes of every level, and concise  text
books and answer sheets are in preparation. But absence of tests  shall  not
preclude training or classifying so long as the materials are  communicated,
at least until such time as texts are complete and available.

    Sample check sheets will also be  issued  from  time  to  time  for  all
courses  to  ensure  a   consistency   of   training   material   throughout
Scientology.

    Preclears include every individual Preclears are separately graded.  The
grade is obtained by flattening the processes of that Level-i.e. a  preclear
who has had all the required processes of Level I  flattened,  would  become
Grade I and would then proceed to the processes of  Level  11.  And  so  on.
Each level has certain basic processes to be accomplished.

    Preclear Gradation is not by certification  but  by  specific  log  book
issued to the preclear  and  signed  by  his  auditor  as  each  process  is
flattened and a level completed. The grade is issued to the Preclear by  his
Auditor when requirements are met in the log book.

    Classification of Auditors and Gradation of Preclears effective date  is
extended to 15 April 1965. Preclear log books will be issued shortly.

    The Director of Processing is in charge of all log books for the Org's
    area.

    The log book also applies to Co-Audits, in which case it  is  signed  by
the Classified Auditor in charge of the Co-Audit.

    Founding Scientologist Certificates are now being issued, allowing up to
Class IV for trained auditors,  and  Grade  IV  for  Preclears.  The  actual
certificate must be possessed by the individual to be in  effect.  The  fact
of  having  been  a  Scientologist  or  Dianeticist  for  years   gives   no
dispensation unless the  Founding  Scientologist  Certificate  is  in  hand.
Founding Scientologist Certificates may not be applied for after January  1,
1965.
    Effective June 1, 1968, Field centres duly established with  Saint  Hill
graduates Class VI and VII may train to levels as  high  as  IV,  and  Saint
Hill graduate$ Class IV and above are permitted, effective April  15,  1964,
to train to HAS and HQS. On June 1, 1968, Central Orgs will be permitted  to
train to Classes V and VI, which until that date
will be taught only at Saint Hill.

      The General Classification-Gradation Chart Issue One is as follows:
Class (or Level) Process Types    Certificate

    0 Dangerous environment, ARC, education in basics of life.
      Case Improvement by education in Scientology and
      orientation in environment.  None
    1 RIC for PTPs, RICM (fishing with TA), Assists, R2C
      (discussion by lists), Listen Style and Itsa. Case Improve
      ment by communication on closely interested subjects and
      problems, using TA Blowdowns.     HAS
      Repetitive processes, Model Session, Op-Pro-By-Dup, 8-C,
      CCHs, Havingness, General OIW, ARC'63, Auditing Cycle,
      Case Improvement by disciplined comm cycle, awareness
      of mind and environment, using TA of meter and
      cumulative TA divisions.     HQS
    ill     Auditing by List, See Checking by List, Prepcheeking,

375

            Problems Intensive, Mid Ruds, and Model Session. (Audit
            ing by List is SOM-3L.) Case Improvement by removing
            psychosomatics, cleaning needle of all reads on given
            questions, any assessments done by upper level auditor. HCA/HPA

    IV      R4SC, ARC Break Assessments, R4H (R2H), and Case
      Analysis. Case Improvement by Service Facsimile, life
      ARC Breaks and Case Analysis, using the listing and
      assessment potentials of the meter, which is not done in
      lower levels. (Clearing this lifetime.) HCS
    V Omitted    HAA

    VI      Locating the truncation, checking goals, running the Line
      Plot and Track Analysis. Case Improvement by running
      pc's own goals all the way to operating thetan.    HSS

    VII     Old Route One and Other Drills.  HGA

    The certificate schedule HCO  Policy  Letter  of  August  12,  1963,  is
cancelled.  The  certificate  Hubbard  Book  Auditor   is   withdrawn.   The
certificates   Hubbard   Apprentice    Scientologist,    Hubbard    Clearing
Scientologist and Hubbard Advanced Auditor are reinstated.

    The rules of processing apply to CLASS not to certificate. A certificate
may have almost any lower class stamped on it. It is the classification  not
the certificate that permits use of processes or being run on processes.  In
a Co-Audit, the Classification of the supervising Auditor in charge  decides
the level of process which can be run.

    It is envisioned that training courses be brief and precise and  require
exact  levels  of  attainment  as  to   theory,   practical   and   auditing
requirements.

    Stress in any course is 50% on auditing, 50% on case gain. A person will
not be allowed Classification until the processes of that  Level  have  been
flattened on him or her and have been accurately recorded in the log book.

    Outlines of courses,  with  suggested  prices,  have  been  issued,  and
further information and more detailed instructions will be issued from  time
to time.

    A rigid requirement of the Classification-Gradation  programme  is  that
the requirements of one level must be met before the individual  is  allowed
to proceed to the next. This  applies  appropriately  to  each  category  of
person, whether proceeding along the Preclear,  Co-Auditor  or  Professional
route.

    Thus, a preclear may not be audited on a Level IV process until  he  has
completed the processes of Level III and below. An  auditor  may  not  audit
the processes of a certain level until he has the certificate  or  class  of
the preceding levels. And so on.

    There may be occasional exceptions to this-for instance, HGCs and  Saint
Hill trained auditors may issue special dispensation  to  HGC  preclears  or
their own personal preclears  to  temporarily  raise  their  preclear  grade
during certain phases of processing. But any  abuse  of  the  rules  of  the
Classification-Gradation system  which  results  in  harm  to  preclears  or
complaints by them may make offenders subject to Committees of Evidence.

    It is not envisioned that people taking HAS or HQS or even  HCA  courses
are making a career out  of  Scientology.  They  are  expected  to  keep  on
working at their jobs. This must be stressed. There is no effort  to  follow
medical-psychiatric practitioner patterns and  have  offices.  There  is  an
effort to work evening and  weekends  running  small  organizations  of  co-
audits. The effort is to make  Scientologists,  not  have  "patients".  This
dictates the length of the HQS course as people can seldom get off work  for
more than a month.

    This does not interfere, however, with  someone  working  full  time  in
Scientology,  or  with  auditors  who  do  want  to  set  up  offices  along
traditional practitioner lines.

    Cost and length of courses rise somewhat as they increase  in  Class  as
the increased ability of the student, if well  processed  on  classification
level processes, commonly  brings  him  or  her  more  income  and  leisure.
Therefore the HCS Course would take at

376

least 3 months and would cost in the  neighbourhood  of  Ј150,  if  the  HCA
course was lasting 2 months and costing Ј78.

    As stated in  previous  issues,  holders  of  a  Founding  Scientologist
Certificate may have the right to use all  processes  up  to  and  including
Class IV if they were trained before 1964, and have the right to be  audited
on everything up to and including Class IV if they were not.

    It is reiterated that no classification for Class VI is  now  obtainable
except by training, and no actual GM may be run by  any  auditor  until  the
full technology is released and the classification is earned.

    At present, Classes V, VI and VII may be earned only at Saint Hill.

    The intent of this programme is to

    1 Open the road for everyone

    2.      Provide wider dissemination

    3.      Guarantee an increase of knowledge to keep pace with increase of
    ability

    4.      Provide the cheapest possible processing

    5.      Regulate processes by Class Level to guarantee a more real
    advance

    6.      Steer around rough spots found in the past in technical,
        administrative and personal areas.

    There is no effort to decrease the income or  present  activity  of  any
auditor or organization but only to widen the sphere of action.

    This policy has been  formulated  with  the  consultation  and  majority
agreement of organizations and field auditors all over  the.  world  and  is
final.

    The effective date is now 15 April 1965.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.rd Copyright Q 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Added to by HCO P/L 18 June 1964, Professional Route Classification
Requirements, page 378.1

377

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 JUNE 1964

CenOCon

               PROFESSIONAL ROUTE CLASSIFICATION REQUIREMENTS
                (Addenda to HCO Policy Letter of 5 May 1964)

    The requirements for Classification under the Professional Route are as
    follows:

    On completion of a Level up to Certification the student is required  to
work as an interne in the HGC-auditing those processes on which he has  been
trained. When he/she has completed one month  satisfactory  service  in  the
HGC he/she does a retread of the level in the academy.  This  should  occupy
half the time of the original course and the fee is half of the fee for  the
original course. At the end of this retread he/she must pass an  examination
on the whole of the material taught. This examination should be of about  25
questions. Many of the questions (say about a third) can be of the 'True  or
False' type. The remainder designed to bring out specific  pieces  of  data.
Over 90% correct answers is a pass subject to the student going and  finding
the correct answers to the questions he had wrong. Over 80%  but  below  90%
is a flunk but entitles the student to take the exam again after a lapse  of
one day. Under 80% is a flunk and the student should be  returned  to  study
for at least one week before taking the exam again.  The  questions  on  the
examination should be varied frequently to avoid  students  swotting  up  on
just the questions on the examination.

    During the student's  period  as  an  interne  his  progress  should  be
carefully supervised by the D  of  P  and  a  report  submitted  as  to  his
competence or otherwise to the Examiners. Until a report  of  competence  is
received the student may not enter the Retread Course.

    If at any time during his internship he is continuing to make  GAE's  he
must be returned to Course for further study and practice.  The  student  is
not eligible for pay during his internship.

Issued by:  Reg Sharpe, D.Scn.
      Dissemination Secretary
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD

Authorized by: L. RON HUBBARD

LRH.jw.rd Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

378

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 JULY AD 14

Rernimeo Franchise Saint Hill

GRADATION PROGRAMME, REVISED

    The Gradation Programme directives violated a broad, longstanding policy
of mine: That all Dianetic and Scientology materials were  for  the  use  of
all Dianeticists and Scientologists.

    Although I have  received  no  complaints  from  anyone  about  this,  I
nevertheless do not feel right about telling Scientologists that  there  are
certain materials they cannot use or be audited on.

    I would rather leave this matter wholly to personal experience of others
and make the Gradation Programme only a recommendation not a directive.

    Accordingly, therefore the following policy is issued:

    I .     Any and all materials of Dianetics and Scientology may be used
       or received by auditors and preclears regardless of any assigned
       level or grade;

    2.      That classification and certificate issue remain based on  these
        levels  to  indicate  relative  skills  and  state  of  training  of
        auditors, and give them  the  most  case  wins  for  their  auditing
        training level;

    3.      That all preclears only be advised that they will make best
        progress through following these levels in upward progress;

    4.      That the Gradation Programme remain as it is but without any
       enforcement or discipline for failing to follow it;

    5.      That the Gradation Programme. is only a recommended route for
    best results.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:nb.cden Copyright@ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

379

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I DECEMBER 1964

Rernimeo
BPI
Franchise

FULL TABLE OF COURSES AND CLASSIFICATION

                       Classification Correction

    Due to various recommendations of  National  Committees  it  has  become
necessary to maintain a sliding scale of fees  for  training  and  for  more
vital reasons, to make HAS a fully accredited Academy Course.

    This alters recently released Classification data.

    There is a Class Zero. Examination for Classification will take place on
the same basis as for any other class.

    This   makes   the   following   complete   training   certificate   and
Classification Schedule. This changes conflicting  policy  earlier  released
and finalizes certification and classification.

                     Course Calculation All Courses

    An "Academy day course" shall be four weeks long, five days per week,  8
hours of on course time per day minimum.. (Excludes lunches and breaks.)  An
evening course must contain 160 hours of  actual  course  time,  (no  breaks
included). This means 52 evenings of three hours each or any other means  of
getting 160 hours of instruction in evenings.

    A weekend course must contain 160 hours of course time.  (No  breaks  or
lunch or dinner time included.) This can be 16  weekends  of  10  hours  per
weekend or any other multiple that gives 160 hours on weekends.

    An organization may not have both an evening and a weekend course unless
they have 300 students routinely in their Academy. They have to  choose  one
or the other by local choice. Weekend courses are  usually  more  successful
than evening courses in terms of student ability as the student  is  fresher
and has more consecutive class hours. A  day  course  is  usually  far  more
productive of student skill.

                          Course Defined

    An Academy Course then hereafter means 160 hours of Class Instruction to
Certificate for all Levels Zero to IV.

                  Certification and Classification Table

    The PE Course is not an Academy Course. It however may continue to be
    taught.

    First enrolment, Level Zero. No  prior  examination.  160  course  hours
duration. Certificate  Hubbard  Apprentice  Scientologist.  Awarded  without
examination.

    First Classification: Prior to entering the next course (hours or  weeks
or months before) the student must take a written and practical  examination
for  CLASS  ZERO.  If  the  student  passes  he  is  at  once  awarded   his
Classification by HCO and it is sealed on his HAS Certificate  or  given  by
letter and then sealed.

    Second Course. Level I. Hubbard Qualified Scieritologist. Pre-requisite,
HAS course and certificate. No prior  classification  required.  160  course
hours duration.

380

Certificate awarded without examination: Hubbard Qualified Scientologist.

    Second Classification: Prior to entering the Level 11 course,  hours  or
months, the student must  take  his  written  and  practical  Classification
examination for Level 1. On passing he  is  at  once  awarded  his  Class  I
Classification and it is certified by HCO letter or stamped  and  sealed  on
his certificate. If the student has not passed a prior  classification  exam
and is not Class 0 yet, this second examination is the Class  0  examination
and on passing it he has Class 0 awarded by HCO by  letter  or  stamped  and
sealed on his highest certificate. He may also take his Class I  examination
as soon afterwards as he sees fit.

    Third Course Level 11. 160 Academy hours. At course end,  regardless  of
class as usual,  he  is  awarded  his  certificate  without  examination  as
Hubbard Certified Auditor.

    Third Classification, Class 11. Prior to  entering  his  fourth  course,
hours or months, the student may take  his  Classification  examination  for
Class IL If passed it is signified as usual by HCO. If the  student  has  no
classification up to this point, this examination is for Class 0. If he  has
no Class  I  yet,  it  is  for  Class  1.  He  may  take  the  other  higher
classification examinations as soon as he wishes.

    Fourth Course, Level 111. 160  Academy  hours.  On  completion,  awarded
certificate without examination as Hubbard Professional Auditor.

    Fourth Classification, Class III. Prior to entering  his  fifth  course,
Level  IV,  hours  or  months,  the  student  may  take  his  classification
examination for Class 111. If he has no classification  to  this  time,  the
same procedure as earlier is followed.

    Fifth Course, Level IV. This like  all  other  courses  may  be  entered
whether the student has passed his examinations or not.  After  160  Academy
Course hours,  the  student,  without  examination,  is  given  his  Hubbard
Clearing Scientologist Certificate.

    Fifth Classification, Class IV. Prior to his entering  an  R6  course  a
student, after January 1, 1968, must bring all I-Lis classifications  up  to
Class IV  before  entering  an  R6  course,  whether  this  is  done  at  an
organization or at Saint Hill, and no matter where the R6 course is taught.

    Sixth Course, Level VI. Without training hours limit, but with a minimum
of 400 course hours, the student completes the course  by  a  completion  of
all check sheets or additional work assigned, and results  in  an  award  of
Hubbard Senior Scientologist.

    Sixth Classification, Class VI. Examination given before the end of  the
Sixth Course and if passed, an award of Provisional Class  VI  is  given  by
notification permitting the student to audit  Class  VI  materials.  When  a
successful  period  of  observed  auditing  ensues,  the  Classification  is
confirmed as Class VI and the fact is attested by letter or by  sealing  and
stamping the certificate. If the auditing period is not  successful  or  for
any  other  detrimental  reason,  the  provisional  classification  may   be
retained.  If  the   reasons   are   very   detrimental,   the   provisional
classification  may  be  withdrawn.  This   however   cancels   no   earlier
classification.

                     Table of Authorized Courses

    Field Auditor: PE Course. Curriculum as taught in Central Orgs over  the
years, based on the Dublin Personal Efficiency Course.

    Franchise Holder: PE Course. Already granted permissions  to  teach  HAS
and HQS expire on January  1,  1966.  Curriculum  until  then  must  exactly
follow recent HCO Bulletins outlining these two courses. HCO must  give  all
Classification examinations to Franchise Holder students.

    City Office: PE Course permitted but not required.  HAS,  HQS  and  HCA.
Permission to teach HCA  expires  January  1,  1966,  at  wl-dch  time  City
Offices will teach only HAS and HQS.

381

    Central Organizations: PE Course may be taught but  is  not  recommended
for Central Orgs. Must teach HAS,  HQS,  HCA  and  HCS  Courses.  A  Central
Organization will be reviewed on its student record on January  1,  1968  to
establish the possibility of its teaching an HSS Course but  permission  not
guaranteed and only one will be granted in a national area, if granted.

                         Obvious Conclusion

    From the above it  will  be  obvious  that  active  Field  Auditors  are
expected to become Franchise Holders in the future, that  Franchise  Holders
will  become  City  Offices,  that  City   Offices   will   become   Central
Organizations and the  national  headquarters  will  become,  eventually,  a
university. Aside from an expectancy that Field Auditors  will  continue  to
become Franchise  Holders,  no  drastic  upgrade  is  expected  until  after
January 1, 1966.

    Auditors equipped to do so, on  becoming  Franchise  Holders  may  still
apply for permissions to teach HAS and HQS but these permissions all  expire
for Franchise Holders on January 1, 1966. On or before that date a new  type
of PE Course will be released for Franchise Holders to teach. And  there  is
a possibility that Franchise Holders may  be  newly  granted  permission  to
teach HAS on January 1, 1966 depending entirely upon their  teaching  record
with HCO WW.

    As Field Auditors were teaching only a PE Course as an HAS Course,  this
is more a change of name than a refusal to permit them to  teach.  They  may
go on teaching the same course, but must call it a PE Course  and  must  not
call it an HAS Cours~;.

    Whether or not a City Office goes  on  teaching  the  HCA  Course  after
January 1, 1966 depends entirely upon its  activity.  This  matter  also  is
subject to review on January 1, 1966.

    Franchise Holders who are behind-hand in their contributions to  HCO  WW
are, as always, subject  to  franchise  suspension  or  cancellation.  If  a
franchise is suspended, teaching in  progress  may  go  on  but  no  further
students may  be  enrolled.  If  a  franchise  is  cancelled,  the  existing
students may be graduated, but will  be  very  vigorously  examined  as  low
teaching quality or a poorly scheduled and careless course can be a  grounds
for cancellation if  not  mended  when  called  to  the  Franchise  Holder's
attention.

    A Central Organization or City Office, until January 1, 1968, may  teach
any course they are  allowed  to  anyone  enrolling,  regardless  of  former
certification. This is to the end of  improving  auditing  skill.  They  may
not, after January 1, 1965, teach any special or  data  courses  other  than
their regular Academy Courses at the specified rates.

    Until January 1, 1968, then, the policy of not  retraining  auditors  is
waived. Until January 1, 1968 any student enrolling for any  course  in  the
period from January 1, 1965 to  January  1,  1968,  regardless  of  training
prior to January 1, 1965, may  be  directed  into  any  lower  course  being
taught at the Academy wholly and only at the discretion of the  Director  of
Training. This is to  resolve  the  impossibility  of  teaching  someone  at
current Level IV who has not been well  grounded,  for  instance,  in  Level
111. Adjustment of training will have to  be  done  until  January  1,  1968
certainly, until the bulk of training activities have cared for gaps  in  an
auditor's education prior to January 1, 1965.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.cden Copyright (D 1964 by L Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

382

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 MARCH 1965

Gen Non Rernimeo
Sthil Students
BPI

CLEARING AND TRAINING

    In the not too distant future, certainly within a  couple  years,  being
clear will be a requisite to being accepted for any training.

    The book auditor will be back with us in full swing.  Auditing  will  be
done of a kind. An HAS Course might be given.

    But I feel that from there on up processing comes before training.

    It would go this way. A person is processed up through the Grades, 0  to
IV, getting his preclear grade certificate at each level.  Then  the  person
is accepted for training from Class I to Class VII, class by class.

    People are already causing "problems"  (joke)  today  in  Academies  and
HGCs. They are also going clear before they have finished all  their  grades
as pcs and in Academies before "they can be  audited  on  the  upper  levels
(such as III and IV)".

    We're too good suddenly. An auditor might feel his practice would go  to
pieces if preclears only took a few intensives to go through all the  Grades
from 0 to IV. The tendency to slow anyone down must  be  handled  before  it
begins.

    We ought to operate only organizations and have large numbers of  groups
like we used to. Quantities of people is the answer.

    Then as we clear them in HGCs we transfer them over to the Academy to go
on up to Class IV and then to Saint Hill for all the way to OT.

    It's quite a feasible route. Actually very easy if the tech is applied.

    It would be an interesting Academy with the students not being  able  to
audit each other on lower grades, but having to scrounge pcs off the  street
to get their auditing check sheet complete. But with the  majority  of  them
clear they'd whizz through their check sheets  in  less  than  the  allotted
month now allowed for each course between 0 and IV.

    It is surely, surely true that nobody will  make  OT  without  training.
Some auditors (Horner, Berner) are reported to have been trying to put  "raw
meat pcs" on Class VI processes on the sly with what is reported  as  rather
awful results and spins. I hadn't heard about it, being away a bit, and  the
auditors were saved by the recent amnesty, but  what  a  foolish  and  cruel
thing to do when the route Grade 0 to IV is wide open  for  pcs,  with  wins
all the way. Why throw the poor  fellow  in  a  ditch?  The  pcs  of  course
stupidly demand to be OT yesterday, but what's a  few  weeks  processing  on
the grades? Nobody will make OT without training. That's a  technical  fact.
The Level VI processes just don't bite on lower level pes!

    There'd be no tendency to slow up or speed up a pe's progress  if  clear
were required before people were trained.

    They had a crisis on the Saint Hill Course just Monday. Student that was
cleared in Washington DC couldn't be put through her preclearing  for  Class
III and IV as the state of IV had  been  attained  at  II!  So  we  have  to
"solve" how to train clears anyway. We'll have to get a source  of  pcs  for
them to audit as nobody can get a meter to work on a clear,  so  they  can't
be preclears anymore. They're ready for OT as case but can't go  on  because
that requires a full knowledge of auditing  from  0  to  IV  for  OT  to  be
successfully attained.

    What a nice job instructing would be teaching only clears!

LRH:ml.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

Copyright@ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

383

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 MAY 1965
                            REISSUED 4 JULY 1970

                        CLASSIFICATION, GRADATION AND
                               AWARENESS CHART

    You will find a chart enclosed in the Auditor Issue 8. It covers many
    things.

    There are about 52 levels of awareness from Unexistence up to the  state
of CLEAR.

    By "Level of Awareness" is meant that of which a being is aware.

    A being who is at a level on this scale is aware only of that level  and
the others below it.

    To get a case gain such a person must become aware  of  the  level  next
above him. And so on up in orderly sequence, level by level.

    If you skip a person on one level several levels  up,  he  or  she  will
experience only an unreality and will not react. This is expressed  as  "no-
case-gain". On the E-Meter it registers as  "No  Tone  Arm  Action"  meaning
there is no meter registry of change on the meter control lever (tone arm).

    A person audited a bit below or at his level of awareness gets "Tone Arm
Action", Case Gain and has cognitions (new concepts of life).

    A principal contribution of Scientology is the technology  necessary  to
change people so that they progress  into  higher  states  of  ability  when
processed on the  exact  processes  required  by  an  auditor  qualified  by
training to apply the processes expertly.

    It  is  not  only  general  ability  that  increases,  but  IQ,  renewed
livingness and the skill and ability to better self and conditions.

    The state of homo sapiens runs from around -4 down to the bottom. Normal
is probably much lower.

    As you study the chart you will see it is a road map upward.

    On the left we see the Class of the Auditor necessary to take the person
up as well as the Grade the preclear reaches.

    In the next column we see his certificate  name,  obtained  through  his
training at an Academy and, later, Saint Hill.

    Then we see a very general description of the processes used on that
    grade.

    The next column shows what pcs a classified auditor can  audit.  He  can
audit anyone at his Class numeral or  below.  He  cannot  audit  pcs  higher
because of course he has not been trained to do so and  is  likely  to  have
upset pcs.

    The final column shows where the certificate and class is obtained.

384

                          THE BRIDGE

    This is the famous bridge mentioned at the end of Dianetics  the  Modern
Science of Mental Health.

    It is now  complete  and  is  functioning.  The  being  enters  it  from
somewhere in the minus regions as a Beginning  Scientologist  and  moves  on
up. At about Grade Il he has definitely reached Homo  Novis.  He  becomes  a
RELEASE somewhere between 11 and V. And he becomes CLEAR at the top  of  VI.
The state of Operating Thetan is attained above VI and is a Grade VII.

    For Man to have this at all is quite remarkable. He never had it  before
since we find him improving but still, on the average well below -4.

    By following this chart one can make RELEASE and then CLEAR.

    Up to Grade  V  one  of  course  has  help.  But  above  that  technical
limitations bar completely the  idea  of  CO-auditing.  Some  auditors  will
attempt it, themselves very far from there case-wise, and  some  have  tried
to show untrained pcs how to "solo audit" with a meter.  The  common  result
is that the pcs eventually collapse in a total overwhelm  as  they  are  not
trained to handle such forces and so it is a cruel thing to do.

    The preclear moves safely on the proper bridge and somewhere  along  the
line must be trained in the classifications that match his Grade. Then  (and
only then) can he make it all the way.

    One can be audited quite a ways. Then he had better get trained from
    zero on up.

    You see here some new certificates. These were made necessary by the gap
which existed between the higher toned public person (-5) and the  beginning
of the span. We had to have a longer approach to the bridge. And so  we  put
a certificate ladder there.

    Beginning Scientologist is given for a PE and so on up as the chart
    shows,

    The Class material has not been changed. If anyone has a Class  Zero  he
is still a Class Zero but we will give him a new certificate to replace  his
old one. And so on. There is no  change  in  Grades  and  Certificates  from
Class 11 up. Class V has been blank  for  years.  Thus  there  is  a  proper
certificate there, the HUBBARD VALIDATED AUDITOR. It says this  auditor  has
been through a review of all his lower skills plus new  ones  and  can  jump
off now for Solo and CLEAR.

    Previously we not only did not reach  into  the  average  homo  sapien's
awareness but we also had no means of touching cases much below -4,

    You are probably intrigued- by Class VIL These Power Processes are  what
the CLEAR (or Auditor almost there)  audits  on  low  level  lies.  Auditors
below that case level can of  course  run  them  a  bit  but  the  processes
shortly cave him in. These processes are only available  at  Saint  Hill  as
they have just recently been perfected and an auditor  to  do  them  without
danger to himself or the pc has to have interned at Saint Hill  as  a  Saint
Hill HGC staff auditor, not the same as a Class VI Saint Hiller.

    The thing to do is start in your local Academy at zero on the chart  and
move on up.

    Today that is faster and less expensive than you would think.

    There are two courses to one  class.  First  one  does  the  Certificate
Course (Theory) and gets his certificate. This takes  the  average.  student
about two weeks. Then one takes the Classification  Course  (Practical)  for
that class and gets his Provisional Classification. Every  auditor  must  be
classified now. This again takes the average student about  two  weeks.  All
the courses from Class 0 up to IV are arranged that way.

385

The material has been streamlined. Class  V,  obtained  at  Saint  Hill,  is
longer (and remains the same price as always) as it reviews all the  classes
and retrains where necessary and awards  permanent  classification  for  all
the lower certificates as well as Class V.

    Some auditing occurs in the classification course and group auditing
    occurs daily.

    An unclassed auditor cannot charge a fee for auditing a grade he is  not
classed for and if he is turned in to HCO because of it the  pc  can  regain
all the fee from him. We must make it  a  safe  bridge.  Our  entire  Ethics
system is formed just to make it a safe passage for the pc and to  hold  the
bridge together so it can be crossed by Man.

    Auditors routinely make Releases with Academy courses today.

    Auditors graduated from the Saint Hill course can then  take  the  final
steps to make themselves clear and Saint Hill Interns are  trained  to  make
Releases of the lowest cases.

    Training fees are uniform in the US now at $100 for each course. In  all
commonwealth countries the cost is Ј28 a course sterling (convert  to  local
currency). There is one course for  Certificate,  followed  by  another  for
Classification.

    Field auditors can charge anything  they  like  for  HAS  and  Beginning
Scientologist courses. And Hubbard Book  Auditors  can  become  HQS  through
extension courses. Your org may possibly give'the  lowest  course  free  and
charge very little for the HAS.

    My job is to give you the materials to make Releases and  the  skill  to
make Clear. I have done and will do everything I can to help  anyone  attain
these hitherto unreachable heights of life and ability.

    The bridge is not only in, it is functioning every hour.right now.  Book
early. The traffic is heavy already. And auditors are the scarcest and  most
valued beings on this planet.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:nt.aap Copyright (D 1965, 1970 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

386

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIO
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinste

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10
                 (Revised and reissued on 19 S

Remirneo
Issue.a.copy
to every Person
attaining Release
Qual Pets Hats
Tech Pets Hats
Students    RELEASES

                          VITAL DATA

    Persons who have attained Grade V and VA Release may not be  audited  on
any processes except assists, By Passed Charge,  Assessments,  Present  Time
Problems, and missed withholds until they are trained up  to  Level  VI  and
started on R6 processes unless a lower level including Dianetic Release  was
later found to be missed.

    Although  the  training  of  the  Release  is  necessary,  and  auditing
knowledge of lower level process is vital, the  Release's  case  as  a  case
must be left alone except as above.

    The only thing left is the R6 bank itself and low level auditing becomes
unworkable on a person already Released up to Grade V.

    When we called a Release a "Keyed out Clear"  we  erred  in  giving  any
further casual auditing. It was this which made the state  of  Release  look
unstable when it seemed so-the person was further audited to relieve him  or
her of locks, secondaries and engrams which had ceased to exist.

    Withholds may be pulled, present time problems may be  lightly  handled,
even By Passed Charge Assessments may be run,  touch  assists  and  ordinary
brief repair processes may be used on a Release.

    The Release can audit lower level processes than V with complete safety.

    Auditing a Release on repetitive Comm processes, etc.,  etc.,  or  doing
any continued sessioning will only key in the only thing left-the R6 bank.

    A Release is stable as long as he or she is not pushed into the R6 bank.

    The next step for a Grade VA Release in auditing is R6 EW.  However  the
Release may not begin this until auditing skill is  acquired  by  coming  up
the levels.

    It will now become quite common for a student to be Released by a  Clear
and then study and audit his way up the grades to VII.

    Nobody can do the VII clearing job for him but himself, and  fragmentary
auditing training will only lead him to mess up his case when  he  comes  to
Grade VI and VII auditing.

    On the other hand a Release with his high IQ and ability  can  scoot  up
the Classes at considerable speed if not stopped by having to be audited  as
part of his training.

    There is no special concession made to a Release by way of check  sheets
or a different kind of Course. The Release  must  move  on  up  through  the
Classes course by course like any other student.

    There are two saving graces to being a Release as far as training is
    concerned:

387

    1.     The Release ordinarily experiences a heightened ability to put
        his life to rights economically; and

    2.      The heightened IQ and ability reflects in speed of study and
    comprehension.

    A person does not have more Scientology data just because he or she is a
Release. The Release simply acquires it much faster and exhibits more  skill
doing it.

    For example, a student able before Release,  to  get  only  one  or  two
passes a week on a Course should be able, when Released, to  get  ten  times
that.

    The Release is cautioned not to fool about with the R6  materials  until
fully trained and to pay no attention to suppressive persons  who  "seek  to
show him in an hour or two how to audit and run R6 and be clear."

    The safe way is the correct way. Leave the Reactive mind alone until one
is fully trained as an auditor. Then go on to Clear.

    A Release is also  warned  that  he  becomes  a  particular  target  for
suppressive persons who seek to invalidate his auditing  and  gains  and  to
report them promptly to the  nearest  Hubbard  Communications  Office.  Such
people become afraid when they  see  another  get  better  and  are  usually
psychotic.

    The next action for a person who has attained Release  is  to  take  the
next Course in Scientology and move on through to Clear  properly.  This  is
shown on the Gradation Chart issued in May 1965, and later issues. There  is
no other way to Clear.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
                                             Founder

LRH:mh.jp.rd Copyright @ 1965, 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: This 19 Sept 1967  issue  contains  the  following  changes:  (1)  in
paragraph 1, addition of "unless a lower level  including  Dianctic  Release
was later found to be missed-, (2) in paragraph 3, addition  of  phrase  "up
to Grade W', (3) in paragraph 10, word "grades" used instead  of  "Classes",
(4) in paragraph 11, "Grade VI and VII auditing" instead of "Class W'. 1

                               388

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER CORRECT COLOUR FLASH RED ON WHITE

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

BPI   HCO BULLETIN OF 28 JUNE AD 15
Franchise
Sthil Students
Sthil Staff
Remirneo
      RELEASES, DIFFERENT KINDS

    There are different kinds of Releases.

    They all have the similar meter phenomena; floating  needle  and  on  or
near clear read on a calibrated Mark IV or Mark V.

    There is the plain First Stage Release. This occurs in  auditing  up  to
Grade IV. It is not very stable. The person is very well off and  definitely
a Release. But he or she can now  postulate  and  in  postulating  sometimes
gets into the R6 Bank. The First Stage Release is eased out of the bank  but
subject to call back.

    Then there is the Power Process Release. This is very stable and  should
be called a Second Stage Release  or  a  Power  Release  to  be  technically
exact. You can run only Power Processes on  a  First  Stage  Release.  These
knock out all factors of the track that force a  person  back  into  the  R6
Bank and leave the person able to go into or get out of the R6 Bank  easily.
This Second Stage Release is definitely Homo Novis.  The  person  ceases  to
respond like a homo sapiens and has fantastic capability to learn and act.

    The Third Stage Release (called for a few days  a  Second  Stage  before
terminology was firm) is an improved Second Stage Release in that  selective
areas of learning are handled to return special skills to  the  person.  The
case state does not necessarily improve but certain zones of knowledge  have
been polished up.

    There is another state near  that  of  Release.  This  is  a  Keyed-Out-
Operating Thetan. At this time it occurs  sometimes  by  accident  in  Power
Processing, but I think I will be able to process a Second Stage Release  to
it directly some day. The pc is still a pre  clear  though  a  Keyed-Out-OT.
This really isn't a Thetan Exterior. The Thetan Exterior is  quite  unstable
and can be attained below an ordinary First Stage Release.

    A real Clear is of course on the other side of  the  Reactive  Bank  and
above all these states. It is completely stable. One needs to  know  how  to
audit to get there.
    A real Operating Thetan is of course a Clear who has  been  familiarized
with his environment to a point of total cause over Matter,  Energy,  Space,
Time and Thought.

    This accounts  for  all  states  of  being  discussed  in  Dianetics  or
Scientology. They are all attainable and only one, Keyed-Out-OT is not  done
by routine auditing, being an offshoot of it  that  happens  sometimes.  The
First Stage Release is as high as we got in Dianetics, so  you  can  see  we
are five states of being above where we first arrived.

    We are doing these today on a routine assembly line basis on all  cases.
Orgs do a lot of First Stage Releases. Saint Hill is  doing  Power  Releases
and moving people up to Clear through Academy and Saint Hill training.

    A lot of cases would have to spend a lot more time in  Power  Processing
if they weren't already successfully processed in Grades 0 to IV.

    The majority of cases even when trained, will not be able  to  go  Clear
without being Released.

    And of course nobody is going to go OT before they  have  been  Audited,
Released, trained and cleared, all of which are currently  standard  actions
in Scientology today.

    We are definitely on our way.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.cden Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

389

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               CORRECT COLOUR FLASH RED ON
                                               WHITE
      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
Rernirneo
BPI   HCO BULLETIN OF 5 AUGUST 1965
Certs & Awards
issue to all new
Releases
      RELEASE STAGES

    Once a pe has begun to come out of his bank, he either continues to come
out or goes back in a bit.

    He (or she) does not remain in status quo (unchanging state) while a
    Release.

    A First Stage Release often pulls further out to First Stage Released OT
after processing.
    Similarly a Second Stage Release may become a Second Stage Released OT.

    In their understandable enthusiasm-they feel so much better  and  bigger
and  stronger-a  release  sometimes  seeks  additional   acknowledgment   by
requesting a further release check.

    A pc who has attained a First Stage can go First Stage Released  OT  but
cannot possibly go Second Stage without  Power  Processing.  In  short,  one
can't upgrade stages 1 to 2, etc without the actual processing.

    Why? Because a key out is just that, a key  out.  Just  because  one  no
longer has a tiger in his lap does not. mean the tiger  has  vanished.  He's
merely stepped out into the hall. In the course of life  somebody  is  going
to leave the door open. The tiger won't come back into one's lap  but  he'll
sure sit on the rug and sneer. Key out means there's still a tiger.  Release
means he's away. One First Stage can be more  released  than  another  First
Stage. The tiger is further off.

    But when you start upgrading numbers (I  st,  2nd,  3rd,  etc)  you  are
talking about less tiger.
    There's less bank.

    First Stage removes a few tiger whiskers and the sneer. That's the locks
going. The tiger is near or far-that means more  or  less  I  st  Stage,  it
doesn't mean there's less tiger.

    Second Stage removes the tiger's misemotion and  his  front  claws.  The
tiger can now be near or far but he is that much tiger. He  can  be  so  far
away one is sure he has vanished. But he's just far. He  remains  that  much
tiger (minus whiskers,  sneer,  temper  and  front  claws),  he  just  isn't
evident.

    Third Stage pulls the tiger's ability to paralyze one's wits. In  effect
Third Stage removes impediments to one's ability to know. The tiger,  though
now minus whiskers, sneer, temper, front claws, and the ability to  paralyze
is still about. He may at this stage walk off so far that  one  is  positive
there is no more tiger. But it's early to break out the champagne. Maybe  he
won't be back for years, even centuries, but he still exists.
    Fourth Stage Release removes the tiger's claws all about and blunts  his
teeth. And causes him to hide in closets. But  though  he  hasn't  whiskers,
sneer, claws, or his frightening effect, or the old sharpness, he  is  still
a tiger. One can gambol about in the sun cheerily, feeling quite sure  there
is no tiger at all. Only the locks on the R6 bank are gone. That R6 bank  is
still there.

    At this stage the pc feels he can move mountains single  handed  and  is
given to chest thumping. That he still depends upon a body gets overlooked.

    But ahead of him is the BIG job. There is still a tiger. This  tiger  if
not vanished utterly will sooner or later creep up and eat up the goodies.

    So one has to handle Mr. Tiger once and for all, run the total  R6  bank
and become a 5th Stage Release.

    Now, and only now, with a bit of reorientation can one be CLEAR. No more
tiger. He is not near or far. He doesn't exist. And one can go  on  for  the
trillions.

    Early on my pes went keyed out clear and went away. They stayed that way
a long time.
    They were sure they had attained the zenith.

390

    Today we are going to have the same problem.

    A Release is going to feel sure he has gone up in number of Release when
it's only the tiger out for lunch.

    I am the last one to throw cool water over anyone's head about  Release.
But I have a passion for stating truth as I know it when I know it. You  can
always depend on that. It's not always popular but it's honest.

    Therefore these are the only ways to go up in number as a Release.

    To obtain FIRST STAGE RELEASE, one must have had lower grade auditing of
some sort. This removes the locks (the distressful moments of life) off  the
Reactive Mind. As these pinned one to it, one can now get out of it.

    To obtain SECOND STAGE RELEASE one must have been run on the highest  of
the Power Processes. This gets  rid  of  the  secondaries  (misemotions  and
upsets) and the engrams (moments of pain and unconsciousness). And as  these
pinned one to the Reactive Mind one can now move out  of  it  and  isn't  so
likely to go back into it as he has no secondaries and engrams to  call  him
back.

    To obtain THIRD STAGE RELEASE one has to tackle the beings,  places  and
subjects one has long detested. And when these are gone one isn't likely  to
be called back into the Reactive Mind very soon as bits of  his  daily  life
don't remind him of beings, places and subjects he once detested.

    To obtain POURTH STAGE RELEASE one has to take the lock  end  words  off
the R6 bank. He has to be an R6 Auditor himself to do  this  properly.  With
these gone, the R6 bank is left on its naked basics  and  one  can  be  very
free of it for quite a while.

    But now we are down to the concrete and bedrock.

    To obtain a FIFTH STAGE RELEASE, one has  to  have  run  out  the  whole
remaining Reactive Mind. We are awfully lucky to  have  the  combination  to
the vault as it's been shut thoroughly for the trillions. That's done  by  a
process known as R6-GPMI-or GPMs by Items. And I assure you

    I . It can be done and

    2. It was pure hell going it blind when I was trying to find it. It took
several years and thousands of hours of research auditing to just  find  the
pattern of it. This is the longest job (R6-GPMI) and requires now  at  least
14 months of daily solo auditing. And then one is 5th Stage and ready for  a
polish and Clear.

    Now understand, at each of these stages one has to go unrelease to  make
it to the next stage of  release.  This  requires  guts-and  faith.  One  is
feeling GRAND. The world is  beautiful.  The  unbrave  get  nervous  at  the
thought of diving back into the asphalt or,  to  keep  our  metaphor,  about
deliberately whistling up  the  Tiger-"Here  Tiger!  Here  Tiger!  Come  out
wherever you are!" So a way that is cooked up to avoid this  further  combat
is to pretend an upgrade in number of release  without  the  hard  work  and
scratches necessary to honestly achieve it.

    Add to all this that one has a present time, and a body to  receive  the
slings and arrows and one sees that it is a complex picture.

    But we have the way. It is the way.

    Many will come along selling the frightened the idea  one  can  leap  up
through the numbers without pain or toil or auditing by flexing one's  chest
or eating wheaties or praying. But that isn't the  WAY.  There's  no  bridge
there.

    The main point that will be stumbled on is. this: Nobody  has  any  real
reality on how high up these states are or how  utterly  tall  Clear  really
is.

Well, that's the score. Does it help?

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd
Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

391

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 AUGUST AD 15

Remimeo

CLASSIFICATION AT UPPER LEVELS

     TEMPORARY MEASURE

    Classification for Levels 11, 111 and IV may be obtained by presenting
evidence of skillfully applying one of the processes below rather than
grade processing to the Examiner.

The Examiner must be satisfied as to the general skill of the auditor.

    Auditing By List, R2-12, R4H can be run on a person who went Ist Stage
Release on Comm Processes. (Warning-R2-12 is too fast and got us into
trouble by releasing too quickly and was grossly overrun by all. It was
withdrawn but now its fault has been found. Of all processes it releases
most quickly.)

    The following can be run on any pc:

            1.    ARC Breaks
           2. PTPs
           3. Withholds
           4. Any Continuing Overts
           5.    Release Rehabilitation.

    In fact these must be covered in reviewing cases.

1.    No-one must be audited while ARC Broken but the ARC Break ran be
    found, located and indicated.

2.    A PTP drives the pc into back track in an effort to avoid it.

3.    TA ceases to increase or declines in the presence of a missed
    withhold (particularly one missed when the TA ceased to increase or
    declined).

4.    A pc continually committing hidden overts in PT won't advance at all.

5.    You can always rehabilitate a moment of former release.

    Therefore any of the above 1 to 5 can be run on any release of any
    stage.

    Thus an Examiner can require one of the above processes demonstrated for
the level they match in lieu of grade processing for the classification
requirement.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.pp.rd Copyright Q 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

392

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER CORRECT COLOUR FLASH
                               RED ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 HCO BULLETIN OF 30 AUGUST 1965

RELEASE STAGES

    There are five stages of Release. When one of these is attained the next
one up can be run.

    A preclear who has attained a stage of Release may not be run further on
the processes of that stage or below or he will go back  into  his  Reactive
Mind.

    All Releases however can have their problems  handled,  their  withholds
pulled, their ARC Breaks repaired and  any  Release  at  any  stage  can  be
audited on the exact processes of Release Rehabilitation.

    The states of Release differ in that one is more stable than another.

    The Reactive Mind (known also as the R6 Bank) can only be audited out by
someone who is trained up to Class VI.  When  the  Reactive  Mind  is  fully
audited out (erased completely), one has a Clear.

    When.a Clear has been refamiliarized with his capabilities, you have  an
Operating Thetan (an OT).

    A Release, then, is pulled OUT of his Reactive Mind.

    A Clear has fully erased his Reactive Mind.

    An Operating Thetan is one who is Cause over Matter, Energy,  Space  and
Time and is not in a body.

    The degree and relative permanence of being pulled out of  the  Reactive
Mind determines the state of Release.

    There are numerous things that can pull one back into the Reactive Mind.

    These are (1) Locks (2) Secondaries (3) Engrams (4) The Whole Time
    Track.

                             LOCKS

    By reducing looks as in Levels 0 to IV, we then remove  the  ability  of
locks to pull the being back into his R6 Bank.

    Locks  are  mental  image  pictures  of  non-painful,   but   disturbing
experiences, the person has experienced. They  depend  for  their  force  on
secondaries and engrams.

    Thus, one who has had his locks reduced is a FIRST STAGE RELEASE.

                    SECONDARIES and ENGRAMS

    When a being has had the secondaries and engrams reduced, he is far less
likely to be pulled into the Reactive Mind than if he  has  just  had  their
locks reduced.

    Secondaries are mental  image  pictures  containing  misemotion  (grief,
anger, apathy, etc). They contain no pain. They are  moments  of  shock  and
stress and depend for their force on underlying engrams.

                              393

    Engrams are mental image pictures of pain and unconsciousness the person
has experienced.

    When these are reduced, one has a SECOND STAGE RELEASE.

                        THE WHOLE TRACK

    Bits and pieces of the whole track remain after the locks, secondaries
and engrams are reduced. These bits inhibit the being from recovering
knowledge.

    The Whole Track is the moment to moment record of a person's existence
in this universe in picture and impression form.

    When these bits are cleaned up, a being is a THIRD STAGE RELEASE.

                       THE REACTIVE MIND

    When the pc has taken the locks off the Reactive Mind itself, using
R6EW, he attains Fourth Stage Release.

                       THE REACTIVE MIND

    When the entire Reactive Mind has been erased and the person is again
wholly himself, one could call it a Fifth Stage Release.

    But that is really CLEAR.

                       OPERATING THETAN

    When a being once more has recovered his full abilities and freedom, a
state much higher than Man ever before envisioned is attained. This state
is called OPERATING THETAN.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

394

                                               NO
                                               cc

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO BULLETIN OF 22 SEPTEMBER 1965

Remimeo
All Scientology
Staff URGENT URGENT URGENT

                              RELEASE GRADATION
                            NEW LEVELS OF RELEASE

    Further research has revealed additional data concerning Releases  which
makes it necessary to re-name the types of Release, or else  deny  preclears
all the benefits available from states of Release.

    As mentioned in earlier lectures there are several  intermediate  stages
of Release between Level Zero and Level Five. I have finally isolated  these
and they agree with the Gradation Chart of Levels.

    This changes also in some degree the upper levels  of  Academy  training
materials  without  actually  adding  any  but  only  reassigning  the  same
materials to different levels.

    This discovery came out of a survey of the only things that could balk a
case. These also are the main things an auditor has to be careful  about  in
pcs. Further study revealed the state of Release to be available on each  of
these points and that therefore, both to make Releases  and  better  trained
auditors, these were fitted in to the Gradation Chart  in  natural  sequence
as the dominant points stressed on each level.

    The points are the same as those  covered  in  the  current  "Out  Tech"
Bulletins and lecture.

    They are:
        Communication
        ARC Breaks
        PTPs
        O/Ws
        Continuous Overts

    So as to minimize any upset in introducing these  additional  levels  of
Release we will cease to call Release by stages and call them by Grades.  In
earlier material and lectures the terms  "Ist  Stage  Release"  indicated  a
person released anywhere between Level Zero and Level IV,  a  "Second  Stage
Release" indicated a Power Process Release, a "Third Stage Release" was  one
made by orientation processes and a "Fourth Stage Release"  meant  one  made
by R6 EW. This was before I found that the additional levels were  important
or obtainable. Without wiping out the meaning of  these  "stages",  we  will
simply cease to use them to designate Releases and designate by  GRADES.  We
will then use the exact processes of the grades that  obtain  the  state  of
Release for the preclear and thus keep things straight.

    This then is the new Grading:

    Type of Release    Type of Process

    Grade VII - CLEAR

    Grade VI Release - R6 EW

    Grade V Release - Power Processes

    Grade IV Release - Service Facsimiles

    Grade III Release - ARC Break Processes (old R-4-H renamed R-3-H)

    Grade Il Release - O/W Processes (including the "Joburg")

    Grade I Release - Problems Processes (such as Probs Intensive or CCHs)

    Grade 0 Release - Communication Processes

395

    Any one of the above group of processes can (and should  be)  run  to  a
Floating Needle (and not one command beyond it).

    With auditors warned of the consequences of running beyond the state  of
Release and people easily rehabilitated to the state even if it is  overrun,
it will be found that the state is attainable  at  each  level  with  smooth
auditing.

    This ties smoothly into training as a class of  auditor  is  capable  of
making a class of Release.

    Knowing why people Roller Coaster (Potential Trouble Source) and what an
SP (Suppressive Person) is and by carefully handling  training  of  auditors
in accordance with the "Out Tech"  materials  we  can  easily  attain  these
states for preclears.

    The discovery is actually contained in the first  material  issued  that
calls attention to not further auditing Releases. They could have their  ARC
Breaks, PTPs and Overts handled. This when I  followed  it  up  showed  that
additional Release states existed for these types of phenomena.

    There are some additional processes that can be run  at  certain  levels
and as these are proven out they will be added  as  alternate  processes  to
the level. However, it will be found that when a preclear goes Release at  a
Grade, it will not be advisable to further audit him or her  in  that  grade
on an additional process once the phenomena of  Release  has  been  attained
for that grade. It may  be  that  if  a  pe  fails  to  go  Release  on  the
recommended process for that grade, another  processfor  thatgrade  included
under the type of process for that grade  may  be  used.  For  instance,  on
Problems, the pc does not go Grade I Release in the  regular  buttons  of  a
Problems Intensive. Other buttons may be found and  used.  Or  the  preclear
may be run on "Rising Scale Processes" or another process  listed  for  that
grade, all toward the goal of making the pe a  Release  from  P~vblems.  You
don't run a pe on the next grade just because you couldn't  Release  him  on
the lower grade. You run the  additional  processes  of  a  grade  until  he
releases at that grade.

    At Grade Zero you run Comm Processes of whatever kind until you  have  a
Grade 0 Release. That means a "Communication Release". Then you do the  same
at Grade I and run any  version  of  problems,  that  affects  the  person's
problems until you have a Grade I Release, a "Problems Release".

    Therefore you are releasing the  person  on  certain  subjects  at  each
grade. The scale can then be written like this.

    Grade VII CLEAR - Bank Erased

    Grade VI Release - Whole Track Release

    Grade V Release - Power Release

    Grade IV Release - HABIT Release

    Grade III Release - ARC Release

    Grade 11 Release - Overt Release

    Grade I Release - Problems Release

    Grade 0 Release - Communication Release

    You can readily spot that under each of these headings we  have  several
effective processes in addition to a principal process.

    The most indicated processes for these levels are listed  in  the  first
list of grades above.

    If a former Release went Release on, let us  say  Problems,  he  can  be
rehabilitated on the Problems Release and then audited on any of  the  other
grades from IV down. In short, anyone who  went  Release  on  one  of  these
Grades from IV down may not be audited further on  that  grade  but  can  be
released on any one of the other grades  0  to  IV  omitting  only  Grade  I
Release, Problems.

396

    Of course from V (Power Processes) on up it becomes improbable to run  a
lower grade but it possibly could be done on some cases.  However,  a  Grade
VI Release (R6 EW) can't possibly be run below Grade VI.  And  on  a  Clear,
there's no bank at all, only freedom.

    It's also noteworthy that it's all but impossible to do Grade  V,  Power
Processes, on a former release that has not been fully rehabilitated on  the
lower grade.

    In training it is therefore necessary to put a Meter in the hands  of  a
student at Zero and have him able to clean Tone Arm action well at Level  I,
be able to detect and clean reads at II and not clean  cleans,  be  able  to
assess at III and find Service Facs at IV.

    This  means  also  that  at  Zero  you  teach  the  student  all   about
Communication, its formula and the Comm  Cycle  and  TRs.  At  I  you  teach
repetitive  commands,  problems  intensives  (assessed  by  an  upper  class
auditor as we used to do) and  the  CCHs  (which  pull  the  person  out  of
problems and into PT). At II you teach a student all about STUDY (the  genus
of overts is the misunderstood) and O/Ws. At III you teach the  student  all
about ARC and ARC Breaks and assessment and how to do old R-4-H in full  and
expertly. And at IV you teach the student all  about  "Deds"  and  "Dedexes"
(History of Man) and justified O/Ws and Suppressives and  PTSs  and  how  to
find and run Service Facs. And at V you  review  the  student  and  classify
fully all lower grades. And at VI you teach the student  all  about  R6  and
how to do R6 EW and as the student moves to VII you teach  Power  Processing
and give the student the final materials to go on to Clear himself.

    As I promised to do some time ago, that neats up  all  training  into  a
form that can be firm, finally published in eventual book  form,  and  which
puts the stress on the most important data in auditing.

    Parts of the mind, Codes, scales, other background  data  can  be  woven
into the proper levels without overloading any.

    Obviously then, you teach the student the theory  in  the  Certification
course and the drills and key processes for the grade in the  Classification
course of the proper level.

    This neats up both training and processing, releasing and clearing.

    This does not prohibit one from handling ARC Breaks or PTPs or overts in
rudiments at any level, really. Handling a rudiment is just getting  the  pc
going. It puts the heavy processes that handle ARC Breaks in  life  and  the
past, the problems, etc each in its proper level.

    The rule applies that you must not overrun  one  of  these  heavy  grade
processes and must halt it the moment a free needle appears  on  it.  Or  if
the TA goes out of it and it hasn't released the pc and hasn't been  overrun
another process can be run for that grade to  handle  the  subject  of  that
grade.

    But I think you will find that the primary process of the grade will  do
it uniformly if well audited,

    Here then is the additional data that belongs on  your  Gradation  Chart
and modernizes it.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

397

                                               NO
                 co
                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
                HCO BULLETIN OF 27 SEPTEMBER 1965
Remimeo
All Scientology
staff
All Students     RELEASE GRADATION
      ADDITIONAL DATA
                    (Supplements HCOB 22 Sept 65)

    The Grades of Release as covered in HCOB 22 Sept 65 have been named and
will be found, with auditor classes, in the ROUTING CHART of 26 Sept 65
being issued with "Auditor 10" in October 65.

    These Grades and names are final, and they designate what is to be run
on the pc to obtain the various states of Release.

    A table follows:

      Grade      Name        Materials  FormerName Where Done
Grade VIII  Operating Thetan RI Drills  Operating Thetan Saint Hill
Grade VII   CLEAR      Clearing Course  Clear      Saint Hill
                                                         Solo
Grade VI    Whole Track      R6 EW      Stage 4 Release  Saint Hill
      Release          Release                                      Solo
Grade VA    Power Plus Added Power      Stage 3 Release  Saint Hill by
      Release          Release          Process                     Class
VII
                                                         Auditor
Grade V     Power Release    Power Processes 2nd Stage   Saint Hill by
      Release                                      Release          Class
VIIs
Grade IV    Ability Release  Service    None Saint Hill or
      Release                     Facsimiles                  HGCs-Any
                                                         Class IV or
                                                         above
Grade III   Freedom Release  R3H  None  SH or HGCs
                             ARC Breaks                  Any Class III
                                                         or above
Grade 11    Relief Release   O/W Processes   None  SH or HGCs
      Release                     Missed w/hs                       Any
Class 11
                             Joburg                      or above
Grade I     Problems Release Probs Intensive None  SH or HGCs
      Release                     Any Problems                      Any
Class I
                             Process                     or above
                             Hidden Standard~
                             Book of Case
                                  Remedies
Grade 0     Communications   Level 0 Processes     Keyed-Out Clear  SH or
HGCs
      Release          Release          (0-0, O-A, etc)       Book I Clear
      Any Class 0
                                                         or above
Ungraded    Scientologist    Assists of all  None  Anywhere-any
                             types                       Qualified
                                                         auditor or
                                                         Scientologist

    It is obvious then that GRADE CERTIFICATES FOR PRECLEARS lapse and are
no longer issued and are replaced by Release awards, awarding "Grade-
Release" when attained.

398

    It is also obvious that as these states all  existed  before  they  were
discovered  then  REHABILITATION  OF  FORMER   RELEASE   is   addressed   to
rehabilitating these grades. When  rehabilitation  is  done  and  the  state
recovered for the pc a "GradeRelease" for the Grade  actually  recovered  is
issued.

    The SAME rehabilitation processes as issued are used for every type of
    Release.

    Preclears were sometimes released in more  than  one  grade  and  Former
Release is rehabilitated (and sold) for  each  grade  the  pc  was  formerly
released on.

    All grades formerly  attained  must  each  one  in  turn  be  found  and
rehabilitated and each  one  is  separately  declared  by  Certs  &  Awards.
Therefore a pc going release on a simple Qual. Division cheek  out  must  be
urged to get a rehabilitation as there may be other  former  release  states
there and for anyone rehabilitated as a former  release  many  other  grades
(as per chart above) are available to be audited up to.

               REHABILITATION OF FORMER RELEASE

    Technically you will find just these phenomena as given in  the  Routing
Chart of Auditor 10 and the 22 Sept HCOB were the subjects of release.

    Sometimes a pc was according to him  released  formerly  on  some  other
process or subject than those given on the  Chart.  You  will  however  find
that it relates to one of the  Grade  Subjects  (Comm,  Problems,  O/W,  ARC
Brks, Service Facs, as the total of the Grades up to IV).

    Example: Pc reads as Released on CCHs. OK, that was a Problems or a Comm
Release. Why? It was because pc came to PT away from  his  problems  of  the
past or because pc got into comm with the universe. Just decide which.

    Example: Pc checks as  Released  on  the  button  "Importance",  run  in
brackets or concepts. This wasn't any Grade  VI  Release!  It  was  probably
Problems that were cleaned up or even O/Ws; therefore it was a  Grade  I  or
Il.

    You have to see which Release Grade it was and that's easy since the  pe
will tell you even without your asking that he "got over his ARC Breaks"  or
"His problems didn't worry him".

    On old time processes, R2-12, Rising Scale,  even  Engram  Running,  the
point where Release was attained was because a Comm  block,  a  Problem,  an
O1W, an ARC Break cleaned up. It wasn't the old process that determines  the
Grade the pc was formerly  released  at  so  much  as  which  of  the  Grade
subjects were relieved at the time.

                            ERROR

    The biggest error you can make in rehabilitation of a former release  is
to grade him too high and by-pass available charge for further releasing.

    In the earlier grades you can go  from  Grade  IV  Release  to  Grade  0
Release to Grade 11, etc.

    They are not entirely consecutive from 0 to IV. They are from V up.

    For instance you rehabilitate a pc  as  Grade  11  Release  (overts  and
withholds) by standard rehab approach.  He  is  then  declared  a  Grade  11
Release of course. However he can be run on Comm Processes to  obtain  Grade
0 Release or on Problems to obtain Grade I Release and better had be.

    As we have formerly released so many on so many different processes  the
background for rehabilitation is ragged at this time.

    New  people  can  be  moved  up  smoothly  from  Zero   to   IV.   Older
Scientologists will go up and down from Zero to IV.

    You will find at times that somebody  you  are  trying  to  audit  to  a
certain Grade suddenly recalls being released  at  that  Grade.  The  proper
action then is rehabilitation of  the  Grade,  not  continuing  to  run  the
Grade.

399

    All this is really quite simple.

    The BIGGEST error is and will continue to be not  noticing  a  state  of
Release occurring while running  a  process  and  then  overrunning  it  and
engulfing it. You don't always see the free, floating needle-it is at  times
brief.

                            NERVES

    For a while auditors  will  be  very  nervy  and  err  by  under-running
processes and failing to flatten them. Some auditors  will  see  a  floating
needle everywhere. Some will remain blind to them and grind on and on.

    The thing to do is eventually find the happy medium. Don't under-run  or
overrun. Just notice when the process has produced  a  floating  needle  and
carry on when it has not. And listen for those big pc upsurges in  tone  and
halt there. And watch for the rising Tone Arm that goes to  5.  Mostly  it's
an overrun. But some  pes  who  always  were  at  5  weren't  ever  formerly
released  and  will  need  Power  Processes  to  get  them  started.   Power
Processing also combines a lot of lower grade results also. But it  is  hard
to Power Process pcs who have never had lower  grade  releasing.  The  Power
Processing becomes very lengthy. However,  real  tough  cases  can't  attain
lower grade release states and  so  have  to  be  Power  Processed  at  once
instead of after properly attaining the lower grades. These "at once"  Power
Process cases, who have had no former release grade are pretty  Suppressive.
However, some pcs' Tone Arms can be at 5 and the pc can act  Suppressive  if
it all stems from unnoticed lower Grade releasing that  was  never  observed
or rehabilitated.

    It is  interesting  that  a  Grade  V  Release  (Power  Process)  cannot
thereafter be  processed  below  his  Grade.  But  this  is  a  new  set  of
processes. You won't find any Former Release Grade Vs. They just never  made
Grade V before, even by accident.

    Grade VI Releases (R6 EW)  don't  easily  respond  thereafter  to  Power
Processes. But remember, that's a Grade VI Release, not  somebody  who  came
up with a few bits of R6 EW.

    You can't run a Grade VII (Clear) on anything but he can be  drilled  on
getting about the universe and getting familiar with  himself  and  what  he
can do.

    Grades VI and VII  really  cannot  be  successfully  audited  except  by
oneself-solo. If somebody else did audit them on a  pc,  the  pc  would  not
prosper. He'd be a fool and  quite  confused.  These  Grades  (VI  and  VII)
require knowledge. Without it it's  pitiful.  Auditors  who  have  tried  to
audit raw meat pes on these Grades have gotten into serious messes not  with
us but in their own activities-all stemming from trying to make  a  baby  be
vice president in six easy lessons. Two such auditors blew  Scientology-they
themselves had no real data or release grade or  even  case  gain  yet  they
tried to use VI materials on raw meat and it all  went  wrong  and  the  pcs
today mostly snarl and natter. Their way is barred by their antagonism.

    It takes a real thetan to stand up to VI and VII. Ask somebody  who  has
been there.

I trust these new Grades I found will help straighten out a lot of things.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden
Copyright@ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

400

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 NOVEMBER 1969

Remimeo Tech Secs Qual Secs Registrars Fraruchises

GET THIS REMIMEOED AND ISSUED TO YO UR STAFF A T ONCE

                 URGENT-IMPORTANT

         DIANETICS AND SCIENTOLOGY SERVICES
                         This Policy Letter cancels:
               HCO Policy Letter 5 May 1969 "Sub Zero Grades"
    HCO Policy Letter 17 May 1969 "Dianetic Auditing of Scientology Pcs"
             HCO Policy Letter 26 Oct 1969 "Class VIII and HDG"

    Dianetics is not a prerequisite for pes to be audited on Scientology
    grades.

    On the contrary. PCs CAN BE STARTED ON SCIENTOLOGY GRADES.

    LRH ED 13 June 1969 states, "But mainly don't  abandon  any  Scientology
actions. Keep on doing these.  Put  somebody  in  charge  of  the  Dianetics
Programme and keep Scn going."

    It is TRUE that pes who are trying  to  handle  psychosomatic  illnesses
with grades, wind up at "OT" still trying to cure a headache. But what is  a
psychosomatic illness? What does that mean? Migraine headaches  and  chronic
pains. How many pes are like that? Only a small percentage,

    It is TRUE that pcs who need medical treatment should get it and then be
audited on Dianetics.

    It is TRUE Dianetics handles aches and pains, accidents and illness  and
is a vital auditing tool.

    BUT IT IS ALSO TRUE THAT A LARGE PERCENTAGE OF PCs CAN  GO  STRAIGHT  TO
SCIENTOLOGY GRADES.

    Every test case of the original Dianetic programme was already  a  Grade
IV or even VA release. This  means  Dianetics  was  done  after  Scientology
grades.

    It is TRUE that a Class VI auditor also has to be an HDC. This has  been
policy for the last five or six years.

    An HDC is not really a prerequisite for a Class Zero. It looks that  way
on the chart. It is true he'll be a better zero (or 1, 11, 111, IV) if  he's
first an HDC. BUT IT ISN'T REQUIRED.

    Many pes find Dianetic auditing too steep a gradient and start better on
level zero. When they are Grade IV they run fine on Dianetics  and  Dianetic
Triples.

    One way to do it is Scientology single grades, Dianetic triples,
    Scientology triples.

    An HAS or the lower level Scn basic courses start people off great.

    Now because you are  being  told  you  shouldn't  drop  any  Scientology
actions DON'T now drop all your Dianetic actions.

401

    Follow LRD ED 16 INT 13 June 1969. Put your Dianetic  actions  in  as  a
Dianetic  Programme  under  an  appointed  person  and  get  on   with   the
Scientology actions that never should have been dropped.

    Sign up new people on this basis.

    I .     "If you have psychosomatic illnesses sign up for Dianetics.
        We'll get you examined by an MD and handle it."

    2.      "If you are not physically ill, sign up for Scientology."

    . sick pc is channeled by the registrar and Tech See into Dianetics.

    . fairly healthy pc is channeled by the registrar and  Tech  See  direct
into Scientology grades.

    On a pc who is signing up for Power, if earlier Sen results  were  poor,
put the pe onto Dianetics as this is a hidden psychosomatic illness.

    . healthy pe can go from Sen grades to Dianetics to Power.

    . student can start on level zero. Or if the centre doesn't teach levels
then he can go onto the Dianetics course.

    If the Dianetics course is widely taught by groups and  Franchises  most
students will already have had it when they get to an  Academy  or  a  Saint
Hill.

    Really good auditors are good on Dianetics. If they can audit  Dianetics
they will be good Sen auditors. So it is a good  point.  The  techniques  of
Dianetics are very simple and show up the auditor as good or poor. But  this
doesn't stop you from entering an applicant in an org straight onto  Academy
Sen courses.

    Without creating any confusions or  difficulties  each  and  every  Org,
Centre, Franchise and group must get this implemented fast.

    YOU CAN SIGN PEOPLE UP DIRECTLY FOR SCIENTOLOGY  AUDITING  OR  TRAINING-
Allowed Services Policy still applies,

    Dianetics is designed to care for psychosomatically ill people or to get
charge off a case before or during upper level actions.

    The intention of the whole Dianetic programme was to reach out,  putting
a type of training in  the  field  and  to  handle  cases  of  psychosomatic
illness.

    You can put a pc on Dianetic  singles  or  triples  anytime  during  his
auditing career. It will have to be  sometime  but  his  physical  condition
says when. There is no other policy on this.

    An, auditor can be trained on Standard Dianetics anytime in his  career.
The only policy on this is that an auditor must be an HDG  before  Class  VI
and every VIII must be also an HDG. Dianetics training to HDC  can  be  done
in the field if the Supervisor is an Sen org HDG.  Only  official  orgs  can
train to HDG. Just like it said on the Dn
Graduation tape.
      Don't now drop Dianetics. Get Scientology back IN.

      Brian Livingston
      CS-1
LRH:BL:rs.hw.rd  From notes by
Copyright @ 1969
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

402

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 MAY 1970
Remimeo
ALL TECH
AND QUAL    URGENT
HATS  IMPORTANT

                        SINGLE DECLARE

                              Multiple Declare
                                  Cancelled
                  (This cancels HCO PL 6 Aug 1966, Declare,
                Multiple, which permitted a pc to be run from
                Grade 0 to IV and declare them all at once.)

    Policy: Only one grade of auditing may be declared or attested to at one
    time.

    Many pcs have been found not to have attained the End Phenomena of  each
lower grade as per both the 1966 and 1968 Classification Charts.
    Unless a pc directly attests the end phenomena to an Examiner the  Grade
cannot be awarded and the pe may not proceed.

    The examiner is permitted to ask the end  phenomena  question  for  that
grade. If the pe cannot attest he has attained it, he must  be  returned  to
session to have the process completed, additional processes  of  that  grade
run.

    The Triple Grade and its havingness is run.

    There are many other processes for each grade which help attain that End
Phenomena.
    The condition has arisen where the lower grades have become slighted  in
orgs and the pc is not being set up well for a stable gain.

    For instance Grade III can be repeated a dozen times.

    The CCHs and others listed on the "Process Taught"  Training  Column  of
the 1966 and 1968 Classifications Chart have become neglected  YET  ARE  ALL
VALID FOR THAT GRADE AND SHOULD ALL BE RUN, FOR A GRADE.
    The Abilities Attained Column, Processing section of the 1966  and  1968
Classification Chart give the question  that  must  be  answered  positively
before the pe is let have the Grade or to have further grades.

    The huge version of the Classification Chart should be republished in  a
huge format modified in text only as it extends upwards into OT grades.

    These Classification Charts,  particularly  the  Column  under  Training
"Processes Taught" and under  Processing  "Abilities  Attained"  are  valid.
"Processes  Taught"  should  also  appear  as  "Processes  Used"  under  the
Processing side. Other Class VI Processes may also be used to  attain  these
abilities.

    IT IS POSSIBLE TO HAVE SEVERAL F/Ns PER GRADE.

    It is Policy NOT to downgrade Scientology lower grades just for the sake
of speed and Admin flows.
    TRs (0 to 9) are curing some drug addicts. They belong before Dianetics.
    Probably the main trouble orgs have had recently has come  from  tossing
aside all Lower Grades. Thus the route to Total Freedom became impeded.

  . The Multiple Declare PL and any other advice from anyone permitting pes
to escape direct attestation of lower grades and Power  are  NOT  VALID  AND
ARE CANCELLED.
    You will note that even the Multiple Declare Pl, (6 Aug 66) was SH  Only
and was intended only for rehabilitation of  already  run  grades  so  Power
could be run.
    DON'T DOWNGRADE LOWER GRADES.

LRH:nt.rw.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1970 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               403

                 HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 JULY 1962
Sthil

Student    SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE

    The Saint Hill Special Briefing Course has certain distinct purposes.

    The course was begun to do two things:

    1. To study and resolve training and education;

    2. To assist people who wanted to perfect their Scientology.

    There has been no change in these purposes.

    The first is succeeding very well. The second is  achieving  world  wide
recognition through people who have been here.

                      OPERATING PRINCIPLES

    The Scientologists studying here are supposed  to  concentrate  on  only
three things:

        (a) The acquisition of the ability to achieve a rapid  and  accurate
           understanding of data given to them for study and  to  put  that
           material into effect;

        (b) To achieve auditing results;

        (c) To get a reality on the achieving of auditing results  by  exact
           duplication of current  methodology  and  not  by  additives  or
           extraordinary solutions.
    If  a  course  attendee  can  achieve  these  things  Classification  is
inevitable. If all three things are not achieved,  I  refuse  Classification
on these grounds alone.

    If an Instructor ever wants to know what he  should  be  doing,  examine
(a), (b) and (c) above, regardless of any other policy or sheet. This is  so
thoroughly the case that an Instructor should not feel called upon to  solve
any student's problem by any other action than referring the student to  the
exact bulletin, tape or policy letter or  advices  covering  the  question's
data, and by checking out the student's data, drill or action in  the  three
course sections. To do more  is  to  defeat  the  course  purposes  for  the
students.

    All student difficulties and even depressions and threatened  departures
stem not from failure to handle the student, but failure  to  get  (a),  (b)
and (c) into exact and forceful effect.

 - The student who wants to know how to complete this  course  easily  need
only understand and perform (a), (b) and (c) above.

    Every time a student violates one of the three requisites above, I  take
special note of it and even if the student's check sheets were crowded  with
passes, given enough violation of (a),  (b)  and  (c)  I  will  not  finally
classify that student, for to classify such a student would be an overt.

    A student  who  never  misses  on  the  E-Meter,  can  do  the  standard
requirements of a session, gets fine results. Thus  every  time  I  see  (c)
violated I know that (a) has also been violated and act accordingly.

    If I see a pc looking bad, I know that (a) has been violated and (c)  as
well and always find this to be the case every time I look into it.

    The student should realize there is no "getting by" and no "fair"  grade
on this course. The Instructor who accepts less than perfect in  all  Theory
and Drills and Auditing is setting up personal problems and blows.  And  the
student who protests against perfect performance required is committing  his
own subtle suicide.

    This is a tough course. Only become upset if it is  anything  less  than
tough. A lot of future depends on it.

LRH:dr.oden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
                               404

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 NOVEMBER AD 12

Sthil
CenOCon

PURPOSE OF THE SAINT HILL SPECIAL

        BRIEFING COURSE

    The purpose of the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course is first, foremost
and only to make Clearing Auditors.

    Clearing the student is incidental to teaching the student.

    This to some degree is a shift of emphasis. It is made  to  reduce  time
spent on course.

    It is impractical to treat this course as an HGC as clearing can be done
more easily off the course under less hurried conditions.

    Were we to turn Saint Hill into an HGC Scientology would bog down
    everywhere.

    I agree it is desirable to have a cleared auditor. It is also true  that
auditors' cases get in the way of auditing. It is also  true  that  clearing
can happen, is  happening  and  will  continue  to  happen  without  cleared
auditors.

    At Saint Hill our responsibility is to train auditors.

    It is the students' responsibility during and after Saint Hill to get
    clear.

    By treating Saint Hill as an HGC, we could clear every student  present.
But also, by treating Saint Hill as an HGC we  would  bog  down  Scientology
everywhere.

    Training is hereafter limited to 16 weeks with one month's extension  in
special cases. Students are now arriving better prepared  and  the  clearing
technology being taught at Saint Hill is now standardized.

LRH:gl.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I MAY 1961
Sthil

                              STUDENT TRAINING
                            AUDITING HAS PRIORITY

    Auditing the student in the Saint Hill briefing takes priority over  all
other activities.

    No auditing period assigned may be postponed or altered for  any  reason
such as training, giving assessments to others, etc.

LRH:jl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
                               405

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 OCTOBER 1961

Sthil Briefing Course only

    EXAMINATIONS

(Effective until further notice)

    Beginning October 23rd, 196 1, all students are expected  to  pass  five
examinations per week.

    In the event that a student does not pass five examinations  in  a  week
his or her  daytime  processing  (but  not  evening)  will  be  omitted  the
following week.

    There is no limit on the number of examinations a student can  have  and
fail or pass. However,  a  student  seeking  to  learn  the  examination  by
continually taking it will, on such finding, be given a special  examination
at the discretion of the examiner.

    The whole effort of this  proceeding  is  to  raise  auditing  skill  by
raising auditing knowledge.  And  if  a  person  cannot  keep  up  with  his
studies, his or her processing is omitted to give him or her  more  time  to
study, as it is obviously lacking.

    It may not be a sin to audit to a lose. But it's surely one not to  know
and be able to communicate the data of how to do it correctly,  particularly
after being at Saint Hill.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:imj.cden

  HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 25 OCTOBER 1961

Sthil

NEW STUDENTS SEC CHECK

    All new students arriving at Saint Hill shall be given an appropriate
Form 7 before final acceptance on course.

    An Instructor is to administer it.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ph.rd

406

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 DECEMBER 1961

Assn Secs HCO Secs

                             SAINT HILL TRAINING
                        CANDIDATES FROM ORGANIZATIONS

    Persons being sent by organizations  (Central  Orgs,  City  Offices)  to
Saint Hill for training should be selected on the basis of:

    1 . Past Training. The more the better.

    2.      Seniority. Must have been with the org a long time.

    3.      Contract. Must be under long term contract to work with the org
       on return-2 years.

    4.      Executive status. Must have had and successfully held executive
    status.

    5.      Auditing Record. Must have had a good record as an auditor.

    It takes a lot of hard work at Saint Hill on my part, Mary Sue's and the
Instructors to make auditors out of those sent.

    In four cases, the student sent felt he wanted no training really,  only
the Importance of it.

    In all persons sent, no visible signs of any prior sec checking could be
found. Their Joburgs (Form 3), Form 6 and Childhood Form  had  no  signs  of
ever having been done.

    To get an organization person to Saint Hill  and  home  again  with  any
despatch, the organization should, on that person before leaving  for  Saint
Hill:

    1.      Get a Joburg (Form 3) FLAT.

    2.      Get a Form 6 FLAT.

    3.      Get a Childhood See Cheek FLAT.

    4.      Get E-Meter Essentials 100% perfect.

    5.      Get the TRs FLAT.

    These items are taking the most time. Then we can get the person back
    sooner.

    Without these and a Problems Intensive, general O/W and ARC  Process  61
all flat, a student cannot be assessed accurately or easily.

    1 must pass on, well in advance, any application to  send  a  person  to
Saint Hill and 1 must have:
    1.      Evidence of the above.

    2.      The person's auditing record.

    3.      The person's folder (synopsis of) as a pc.

    Any reason for a City Office's or a Central Org's difficulty  in  making
it, if any, is howlingly evident in the Joburg and Form 6 Sec Cheeks  we  do
on them, and in their general low level of skill  in  handling  meters,  TRs
and Model Session. It's pretty wild. It's a 'How on  earth  can  you  walk?'
attitude here. It's that bad as seen in their see cheeks and  basic  skills.
You can improve this by stressing Class II and you should.

    And before you send anyone to Saint Hill, cover essentials, please.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:esc.bp.cden Copyright Cc) 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

407

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 DECEMBER 1961

Sthil

TRAINING ACTIVITIES

   (Effective at once)

Students: A student on arrival will be assisted in  finding  quarters,  will
be given a See Check and will be assigned to auditing in Class 11 skills  in
a common room.

    As soon as proficient at Sec Checking and other Class 11 skills and  has
been classified, the student  will  be  permitted  to  assess  a  31)  under
supervision.

    Regardless of classification when a student has received in  the  common
room all preparatory steps as a  case  to  be  assessed,  the  student  will
receive a 31) assessment and run.

Conditions of departure: When the student has passed examinations for  Class
II and has received a 31) assessment and has been run on it sufficiently  to
secure his case from relapse, he or she may be considered course  completed.
The student may or may not classify for Class Ill award on departure.

Instructors: There will be an instructor in charge of the  common  room  who
will supervise all basic auditing.

    There will be an instructor in charge of all bulletin and  tape  studies
and examinations.

    There will be a case supervision  instructor  for  31)  assessments  and
runs. This instructor does 31) item checks and incoming See Cheeks.

Administrator:  There  will  be  an  administrator  who  will   answer   all
correspondence, see to all room bookings,  preparation  of  student  packets
and inimeos, care  of  auditing  room  assignments,  case  folders,  student
messages and related matters.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:esc.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

408

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 FEBRUARY 1962

CenOCon

      RESTRICTION ON SAINT HILL AREA
(Amends HCO Pol Ltr of 20 December 1960, same title)

    It is laid down as a general policy that no professional  auditor  shall
set up a full time Scientology practice,  or  remain  in  active  full  time
practice, within a radius of 20 miles of Saint Hill.

    This is now specifically intended to apply to auditing of whatever  kind
within this area.

    If any auditor has a good and valid  reason  for  auditing  within  this
geographical area, he or she should seek prior permission and approval  from
me in writing, informing  me  fully  of  the  circumstances  which  make  it
necessary.

    No such auditing may be done without my prior permission and approval.

    Permission will not be unreasonably denied to bona fide auditors who are
in good standing with HCO.

    This also applies to Saint Hill Briefing Course Students on  other  than
fellow students.

LRH.jw.rd        L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard      [Note: The amendment was the addition of the last
five
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    paragraphs.]

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 FEBRUARY 1962

Sthil

                      3D CRISS CROSS ITEMS

    All items found by 3D Criss Cross must be  checked  out  for  consistent
read by an Instructor before being placed on a pc's Line Plot.

    The item must be checked out by the pe's auditor first as  usual  before
being checked out by an Instructor.

    An Instructor is only to see if Item reads consistently on meter and  to
instruct student appropriately if it does not.  The  Instructor  is  not  to
find the correct item but direct that it be found.

    Completeness of list is not to be otherwise checked or checked
    separately.

LRH:sf.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

409

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 FEBRUARY 1962

Sthil
HCO Secs
Assoc Secs

        SAINT HILL RETREADS

(Amends HCO Pol Ltr of December 19, 1961)

    If a student has exceeded eight weeks initially on the Saint Hill
Special Briefing Course, he or she must pay for weeks of retread, if
returning to Course for further training, at the rate of S50.00 or f 18.0.0
per week, which is half the weekly cost of the original course,

    When a student has been terminated he or she has the right to extend by
paying the weekly retread fee from the date of termination.

LRH:sf.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: The amendment is the addition of the last paragraph. -Ed.]

 HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 MARCH 1962

Sthil

STAFF TRAINING

    HCO WW qualified Scientologists will be rotated through the Special
Briefing Course, one month at a time unless individual protests are made.

    It is my aim to get all qualified personnel a full Class 11 at this
    time.

    This can only be done by actual course attendance. Pay is not affected.

    This also gives me an opportunity to give course instruction personnel a
break and get them their classifications as well as administrative
experience.

    An Income Division personnel should be acquired to give us the extra
person needed.

LRH:jw.rd   L, RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

410

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 JULY 1962

Sthil

COURSE ROTATION

    Saint Hill staff will not now be rotated through the course.

    Instead, Reg Sharpe has signified he will check them out on HCO
Bulletins, Tapes and Practical.

    Further, we are looking for a Class III Auditor to clear Saint Hill
    staff.

LRH:dr.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Sthil HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 JULY 1962

Sthil Staff instructors
                   MIMEO AND MAGAZINE DISTRIBUTION, STHIL
                                   COURSE

    All HCO Bulletins and Information Letters issued, and any Policy Letter
marked Sthil, Student, go to instructors and students, one copy to each.
There are no excepted HCO Bulletins or Information Letters in this regard.

    A supply of HCO Bulletins but not Information Letters are given to the
Theory Supervisor in the training office.

    The Theory Supervisor should inform Mimeo routinely each week of the
number of students on course and instructors and the extra bulletins
needed.

    This order back dates to the last six HCO Bulletins issued.

              OFFICE, DOMESTIC AND GROUNDS STAFF

    Office, Domestic Staff and Grounds Staff receive one copy each into
their baskets of all Policy Letters marked "Sthil" but no others, and one
copy each of every Information Letter issued, and one copy each of every
Certainty to be mailed.

                       SCIENTOLOGY STAFF

    Scientologists on staff receive, into their baskets, one copy each of
every Policy Letter and every HCO Bulletin, every PAB and every Certainty.

                          LRH BASKETS

    I receive one copy of everything issued by mimeo or mailed by reception.

    There are no exceptions or further issues than the above.

LRH:dr.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               411

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
                       (Re-issued from Washington DC)

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 SEPTEMBER 1962
                                  Issue 11

CenOCon

SAINT HILL GRADUATES

    This is repeated policy on the  subject  of  Saint  Hill  Graduates  and
Administration and an extension of that Policy.

    No Saint Hill Graduate  may  be  used  in  an  Administrative  position.
Amongst administrative positions are included those of Director of  Training
and Director of Processing.

    A Saint Hill Graduate may be a Technical  Director  to  an  Organisation
only until such time as the individual skill of the various auditors in  the
Organisation is improved to a point of high effectiveness. After that  point
is reached it will require special  permission  from  me  personally  before
Saint Hill Graduates may be continued on the post of Technical Director.

    I will not grant permission for a Saint Hill  Graduate  to  be  used  as
Director of Processing or Director of Training at this time.

    If a Saint Hill Graduate is occupying the post of Organisation Secretary
or Association Secretary this post must be combined with  a  certain  amount
of auditing, namely goals checkouts.

    The auditing of a Saint Hill Graduate may not be sold as  such  for  the
entirety of an auditing course.

    The activity of a Saint Hill  Graduate  at  this  time  in  any  Central
Organisation shall be related  entirely  and  strictly  to  the  finding  of
goals, either as Staff Goal Finder or HGC Goal Finders.  There  will  be  no
relaxation of this policy.

    At once if above policy is being violated in any  way,  reorganise  your
staff to comply.

    A Saint Hill Graduate may not be used to list  goals  on  someone  aside
from the few goals listed in the term of a Dynamic  Assessment.  Nor  may  a
Saint Hill Graduate be used to list items on  a  preclear  after  goals  are
found. These actions must be undertaken (the listing of the first 850  goals
and the listing of items on  multiple  lines  to  the  state  of  clear)  by
qualified HCAs only,

    For the time being until  further  notice  no  Saint  Hill  Graduate  is
considered other than a Goals Finder and a Class III  auditor  is  qualified
to find goals on a temporary status of Class IV until such  time  as  he  or
she has proved himself or herself  as  a  goals  finder  and  the  class  is
confirmed or has not proven himself or herself as a goals finder.

    These policies are the result of numerous conditions and omissions  that
have come to my attention in recent weeks wherein Saint Hill  Graduates  are
being used wastefully and where clearing is not being made to  progress  and
where Organisations are not giving any attention at all to clearing  in  its
furthest finest sense for HGC preclears and Staff Members.

    Other Policies of  similar  date  or  near  date  cover  Staff  Clearing
Programmes and will cover HGC Clearing.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRH:jw.rd
Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
                               412

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 SEPTEMBER 1962

sthil Students

CO-AUDIT UNIT

    Those terminated from the Saint Hill Special Briefing  Course  may  join
the Co-audit Unit, listing their goals to clear.

    They keep usual class schedule in auditing but attend no other classes.

    One of themselves is to be in charge of the Unit and will  be  known  as
the Auditor-in-Charge of Co-audit. This carries no pay.

    Reg has volunteered to pass them on bulletins if they will study
    evenings.

    They may be admitted to lectures and TV demonstrations.

    They  are  not  otherwise  enrolled,  are  no  longer  bound  by  course
regulations, and may depart when they like or when terminated from  the  Co-
audit.

    From the state of those in the field whose  goals  were  not  listed  to
clear before departure,  I  would  say  this  action,  done  here,  is  very
desirable.

    Once having departed from the Co-audit, after an absence  of  one  week,
the student may not return to course or  Co-audit  without  enrolling  on  a
retread basis.

    A member of the Co-audit may find goals on pcs  outside  Co-audit  hours
for classification.

    There is no folder supervision on the Co-audit except by the Auditor-in-
    Charge.

                         CLASSIFICATION

    Those who have found a goal on another, have their  own  goal  and  have
completed check sheets on departure from course  or  the  Co-audit  will  be
classified as Class IV.

    Those who have had their own goal found and  have  completed  the  check
sheets designed by HCO Board of Review will be awarded Class III.

    There are no other designations  now  except  in  special  cases  at  my
discretion. All  students  not  classified  are  otherwise  given  a  Course
Incomplete.  Those  who  left  without  my  permission  are  designated   as
Departure Unauthorized.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.oden
Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[See also HCOPfI, 2 October 1962, Temination &Classification, page 415.1

                               413

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 SEPTEMBER 1962
                                  Issue 11

Stbil Students

PAY FOR GOALS FINDING

    If a Co-audit ex-student is finding goals for classification, any
received pay for the auditing renders the finding invalid so far as
Classification is concerned.

    In short, paid-for auditing does not count toward the goals necessary
for Classification.

LRH:dr.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (Z 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 SEPTEMBER 1962

Central Orgs Franchise

                         SAINT HILL BRIEFING COURSE
                                TERMINATIONS

    When a student is terminated from Course he or she comes under the HCO
Board of Review for classification. Then follows a provisional period
whilst the student's progress and results on Course are reviewed.

    The following is pertinent to classification: state of Check Sheet,
student's own case, results of student as an auditor.

    Further, during the provisional period students will go into the Co-
audit group where their auditing ability and case advancement will be
further reviewed.

    No student will be classified until his/her case is in good shape.

Issued by:  Reg Sharpe
      HCO Board of Review
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.cden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

414

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 OCTOBER 1962

CenOCon Sthil

     TERMINATION & CLASSIFICATION

            (Clarifies but does not change HCO Policy Letters of
             Sept 20 and Sept 28, 1962 and changes all previous
            Policy Letters on Classification including Policy Ltr
                             of Sept 20 AD 12.)

Classifications and designations given at Saint Hill are as follows:-

Class IV with Honours-check sheets complete, student clear, three goals
found on others (including refound goals).

Class IV-check sheets complete, new first goal found on another by Dynamic
Assessment, goal found on self and proven by listing.

Class 111-check sheets complete, goal found on self and proven  by  listing,
good case condition.

Course Completion-complete check sheets.

Course Incomplete-incomplete check sheets or too many infractions on
record.

Departure Unauthorized-incomplete check  sheets,  case  in  poor  condition,
permission to leave not granted by myself personally.

                   Complete Check Sheets

A student must have complete check sheets for any classification.

                         Goal Found on Self

    The goal found on self must be proven by listing to be the goal.

    In some cases this may be extended,  for  political,  auditing  or  case
reasons, to the second or even the third goal.

    It is almost certain, in a matter of too many infractions and especially
infraction of Rule 28, to refuse classification on the  basis  of  only  one
goal found on self.

                       Goals Found on Others

    A fresh first goal must have been found on the pc, not refound, to award
a Class IV in addition to the other requirements above.

    This goal (or goals) must prove out by listing. If a goal fails to prove
out, it does not count and, if Classification has been granted on the  basis
of it, the Classification may be reduced.

                            Judgment

    Certain leeway may be granted by the HCO Board of Review and  myself  in
the requirements of Classification. As turning out a bad auditor will be  an
overt on many pes this leeway is more likely to be advanced  than  relented.
More requirements may be asked than the above for Classification  or  Course
Completion to assure us of actual skill or case condition.

415

                          Co-Audit Status

    Termination means in fact that the student has passed out of the  course
but under HCO  for  the  purposes  of  completion  of  requirements,  excess
requirements or examination. As no further meeting of requirements  may  now
be undertaken  after  the  student  has  left  this  vicinity,  it  is  very
advisable to complete all classification requirements before  departure,  as
the classification, dictated by the above policies  and  judgment,  will  be
that student's classification until retreaded at Saint Hill.

                           Termination

    Termination does not mean Classification.

    A student may be terminated from the Course and transferred to  the  Co-
Audit Unit (see HCO Policy Letters of 20 Sept and 28 Sept 1962) at any  time
after he or she has completed 16 weeks on course. Any additional  weeks  are
granted by special permission.

    Extension of time after sixteen weeks is by opinion of Mary Sue  Hubbard
and Instructors  and  must  be  finally  granted  by  myself,  but  only  if
requested by Mary Sue and/or Instructors.

    There are two conditions of continuation:

    (a) continuation at additional fee per week and,

    (b) continuation without charge.

    Students who are  doing  badly,  and  especially  those  who  have  many
infractions, should fall under (a) above. Those who  have  been  doing  well
and are without many infractions are ordinarily considered, if continued  by
request of Mary Sue andlor Instructors, under (b) above.

    Termination is not otherwise governed by rules, but is influenced by the
state of the Course, the state of the student's  skill,  the  state  of  the
student's case, and other factors.

    The   fact   of   Termination   does   not   determine   Classification.
Classification  is  a  matter  of  the  HCO  Board  of  Review  and  my  own
determination.

    That Termination has occurred guarantees no award or Classification.

    A period after termination  is  necessary  to  establish  the  student's
status by consolidation of records and a review or examination.

    All records relating to the student, upon Termination, must be forwarded
to the HCO Board of Review by Instructors, with a  recommendation  from  the
Supervisor of each Section and from Mary Sue. No Classification may  now  be
awarded unless these recommendations exist and are in the hands of  the  HCO
Board of Review.

    It is the responsibility of the student that  his  or  her  records  are
complete  and  in  the  hands  of  the  HCO  Board  of   Review,   including
recommendations.

    Mary Sue's or Instructor's Recommendations exist only if it is felt  the
student should be classified. Absence of recommendation can me-an  that  no-
classification will be awarded.

LRH:jw.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

416

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 OCTOBER 1962

Sthil

ROOMS, EMPTYING FOR CLEANING

    Study rooms, the Pavilion, Chapel and Basement, must be emptied of all
students by the respective Supervisors in person at the exact end of period
at the end of the day.

    Cleaning cannot be accomplished unless this is done.

    Students are expected to be out of these rooms at 6.30 on the dot.
Earlier periods get no extension time, why the last period of the day?

    Provision for students eating supper in may be made but may not include
the Theory Room, Pavilion or Chapel or areas that must be cleaned.

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 OCTOBER 1962

Sthil

   Z UNIT
CASE REVIEW

    In view of the fact that auditors leaving here will be auditing without
supervision, it is necessary that their judgment on clearing cases be
increased.

    Therefore, there will be no more daily supervision of Z Unit folders.

    Instead, there will be a weekly or bi-weekly interview of the preclear
and his or her auditor at which time the folder will also be reviewed.

    In the meanwhile the auditor in Z Unit should be guided by the needs of
the case and applicable bulletins and lectures.

    This also serves to provide me with better data on the progress of each
case as the interview will result in a written summary.

    The auditor is responsible for the case in front of him or her in the
session. In the Z Unit this will be the primary point of adjudication in
classification. Did the auditor handle the case according to its needs in
clearing?

LRH:gl.cderi     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

417

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 OCTOBER 1962
                                  Issue 11

sthil

CO-AUDIT SUSPENDED

    The HCO Policy Letter creating the Co-audit of the Saint Hill Special
Briefing Course is cancelled herewith.

    Those auditors now on the Co-audit will be returned to course.

    The auditing quarters used by the Co-audit will become part of the Z
    Unit.

    Auditors who were on the Co-audit should return to regular class
    schedule.

    Future terminations will end the student's time at Saint Hill.

    The reason for this change is the slump in auditing formality by some
auditors and the lack of progress of some cases.

LRH:gl.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (~) 19 62
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 NOVEMBER AD 12

Sthil Course Only

                               DEPARTURE FORM
                             (HCO WW Form Dep/1)

Instructions: This form must be completed by a student before Any  Departure
from the Course. To fail to fill it  out  is  to  risk  being  published  as
Departure Unauthorized, and could mean as  well  certificate  suspension  in
extreme cases. Route in the order below by ordinary despatch lines.  Do  not
bring a body with it. Mark out the first line if it is  being  requested  by
the student.

    Where a student is to  be  terminated  without  request,  this  form  is
circulated by the course supervisor. In which  case  the  Course  Supervisor
marks out the request permission line.

LRH:dr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

418

                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                   BLUE ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

FORM Dep/I

SAINT HILL SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE

    This student is being terminated.

      I herewith request permission to leave course on (date)
because

Name        Date Requested
THEORY SUPERVISOR      I     do (do not) advise the classification of
      this student because

      Theory Classification
      Completed

                                                      initial

PRACTICAL SUPERVISOR              I do (do not) advise the classification
of
                 this student because
      Practical Classification
            Completed
                       Initial

AUDITING SUPERVISOR               I do (do not) advise the classification
of
                 this student because
      Auditing Classification
            Completed
                       Initial

COURSE SUPERVISOR      I do (do not) advise the classification of
      this student because

                       Classification Completed -
                             Initial

HCO, BOARD OF REVIEW   I do (do not) advise the classification of
      this student because
            Initial

L. RON HUBBARD   I hereby authorize the following classifica
      tion Class - and termination.
      I do not authorize departure

STUDENT     I accept the above classification or lack of
      it because
      I withdraw notice of departure

Form must be sent to:
COURSE ADMINISTRATOR   I have issued (have not issued) Classifica
      tions to this student.
FILE        Initial

                               419

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Sthil HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 NOVEMBER 1962
CenO
      TERMINATIONS FROM THE SHSBC

    To Saint Hill Instructors:    I

    Terminations will now be  done  on  a  time  basis  with  classification
matched to check sheets and accomplishment.

    The essence here is-don't try to make an OT all in one course.

    The criteria of an extra month beyond 16 weeks is established by whether
the student has a chance  to  go  clear  in  that  month  and  by  no  other
consideration. The slow student has had it at the end of sixteen weeks.

    In this way we will make more progress.  The  slow  student  can  return
home, use what he or she knows, make some case progress and then return  for
a retread. The bulk of students leaving here get large case improvements  at
home. Therefore their next retread period will count. The fast student  will
probably go clear and more instruction will be available to help him or  her
do so.

    These changes are dictated by increased  effectiveness  of  terminology,
minimal check sheet changes  and  by  our  limited  space.  I  feel  we  can
accomplish our job with a student now in 16 weeks if we  really  bear  down.
Students are arriving well briefed in most cases. Our job gets easier as  we
ship students out and technology accordingly rises in orgs and the field.

    I am also about to condense most of their  study  tapes  into  bulletins
which will save them time.

    Your job is to bear down hard to get them looking good  by  the  end  of
sixteen weeks and getting good results.

LRH:gl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

CenOCon     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 NOVEMBER 1962
Franchise
Field ,
      SAINT HILL RETREAD FEE

fee. The retread fee for Saint Hill Special Briefing Course is 50% of the
regular course

    A retread is sixteen weeks long.
    Weekly retread fees are discontinued.
    Once terminated, a student may only retread.
    There are no special arrangements for retread or less time offered.
    There is no time interval specified before a retread can be had.
    Acceptance of retread on the course follows routine channels just as  in
original enrollment.

LRH:dr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HOD POLICY LETTER OF I DECEMBER 1962
Sthil

                            V UNIT
                         NEW STUDENTS
                     SAINT HILL SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE
                        (Effective December 3, 1962)

    The V Unit is hereby created. It is also called the "2-12 Co-Audit".
    The new students' time is more or less wasted up to the moment they have
had a case gain on R2-12.
    In times past, when we didn't have 2-12, we found  they  couldn't  learn
very much in their first many weeks.
    If they can't learn well until they've had some 2-12, why are we  trying
to teach them 2-12? Our only salvation on this is just make them do 2-12.
    1 can take any group even raw meat and make them audit the most esoteric
processes. Just put their hands on the controls and tell them  to  fly.  And
they will, so long as an Instructor is there to take responsibility for  the
mass sessions.
    Therefore, with this policy letter, we  abolish  all  pre-2-12  training
including training on  2-12.  There  is  no  pre-auditing  check  sheet  for
running 2-12.
    Under the supervision of the Unit Supervisors the new (or  students  who
have not had 2-12 here excepting the Z Unit) students are put on  full  time
auditing on 2-12. Hand them the bulletins referring to it but don't  attempt
any check out. No practical drills. No lectures or group briefing.
    Just put them into teams and crowd them into doing it. When  they  don't
know what to do next, they contact the unit supervisor and  he  tells  them.
And make them get 2-12 done.
    Of course Saint Hill Instructors' confidence in a new enrollee  is  low.
But this mustn't stand in the road of getting 2-12 done.
    We are up against  this  proposition:  before  being  run  on  2-12  the
student's learning rate is shockingly low. Training the student to run  2-12
is therefore a waste of time. However, the student must be run on 2-12.  The
saving grace ties in the virtue of 2-12 itself  which  gets  valuable  gains
even when run clumsily, so long as it is  run  more  or  less  muzzled.  The
solution therefore is to get  2-12  run  without  preliminary  training  but
under the heavy supervision of theUnit Supervisors.
    What space is used? Any space that can be pressed  into  service,  (Town
and Country Planning disallows use of the top floor.) The  far  end  of  the
Pavilion could be used until the new building is  built  as  Practical  will
get smaller for a while.
    What time periods should be used? Two periods of 3 hours each every day.
    The idea is this: the student is enrolled with the usual steps and is at
once put to 2-12 full time. No further preliminaries, no check  sheet,  just
a handful of bulletins, a meter, ballpoint, paper,  a  pc  and  a  place  to
audit.
    As soon as List 1 and List I A are checked out clean  of  reaction,  the
student is placed in W Unit and his training proceeds exactly  according  to
existing pattern. The bulletins, tapes and drills  of  2-12  are  passed  as
part of the usual classes before Z Unit is entered.
    Do not place one examination or requirement prior to doing 2-12 in the V
Unit except enrolment.
    Do not be diffident in making new students get this auditing  done.  And
let nothing stand in the way of actual accomplishment of Clean List One  and
One A.
    The Tiger Drill is a luxury. Ordinary Elimination works if the student
    can't T.D.
    Supervisors are to check out Rls before they are opposed and lists  when
they are pronounced clean by the student. Any list which is found not to  be
clean is greeted with a 200 word infraction.
    We can do this. Anything else puts us into  the  old  merry-go-round  of
slow students and slow-gains, no-gains.

LRH:dr.cden      L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard      421
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 DECEMBER 1962

Org Secs HCO Secs Franchise for Info

SAINT HILL SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE

    The number of students on this course in January AD 13 will be about a
    score.

    In November 25 students were released to Orgs  and  areas  to  help  get
clearing going in the field. These are excellent auditors. One of  them  his
first week in London cleaned up a hang-fire case and found  two  goals.  The
field and Orgs needed these people.

    On the 21st of December we are releasing  almost  another  score,  fully
versed in Routine 2-12, 3GAXX and R3-2 1.

    We have begun to turn out auditors more rapidly. As we  start  them  off
their first day now on R2-12 and  abolish  their  chronic  PTPs,  they  then
learn much faster and graduate sooner.

    We will teach -students now in from 16 to 20 weeks so you  can  send  us
people and get them back as experts.

    Our Instructors are seven in number plus the Course Administrator.

    Clearing anywhere is held up only for lack of Saint Hill graduates.  The
HGC doing the most clearing has the most Saint Hill graduates.

    The time to enroll a student is January and February. The  surnmer  rush
starts in after that.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.cden Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

422   1

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 DECEMBER AD 12

Sthil Students
Academies

            TRAINING
SAINT HILL SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE
      SUMMARY OF SUBJECTS
            BY UNITS

    Please delete on Check Sheets any and all Tapes, HCO Bulletins and
drills that lie outside these outlined subjects. This is a streamlining for
the 16 week course. We assume now that the student can do old Model Session
and a Problems Intensive of sorts when he or she enrolls. If not we will
still omit.

V UNIT

    Nothing but Co-auditing. No  Check  Sheets  beyond  Course  Regulations.
Heavily supervised R2-10 or R2-12 directed toward Results.

    Basis for promotion to next unit-Clean List One on the student  and  has
gotten startling results on a pe. No other  basis  for  promotion.  No  time
limit in unit. Any study time is spent on W Unit Check Sheets in Theory  and
Practical.

                            W UNIT

    Theory-Usual beginning course fundamentals, but only GF  Model  Session.
Lots of B's on Mid Ruds, Big Mid Ruds  and  Meter,  TRs,  havingness,  CCHs,
also HCO Bulletin December 8, AD 12. Assists.

    Practical-TRs, Meter, GF MS only, CCHs. Assists.

    The student must not be dragged out forever in this unit and be made  to
study very hard in it as it is without auditing. This is a sweat it  through
in a hurry unit. If student fails  to  get  5  passes  each  in  Theory  and
Practical per week, is dropped  to  V  Unit  as  low  passes  would  clearly
indicate more gains were indicated in the V Unit.

    When Cheek Sheets for this Unit complete, goes to X Unit.

                            X UNIT

    Theory-Everything relative to  R2-12.  More  data  on  Mid  Ruds.  Tiger
Drilling and Big Tiger.

    Practical-All R2-12 Practical. Any  drills  omitted  in  W  Unit.  Tiger
Drilling and Big Tiger.

    Auditing- Rudiments, Missed Withholds and havingness. See  HCO  Bulletin
December 8, AD12.

    Basis for promotion  to  Y  Unit-Check  Sheets  complete  plus  auditing
requirement of being able to clean a pc's needle, get missed W/Hs and get  a
pc's havingness process.

                         Y UNIT

Theory-Everything relative to finding goals and clearing.

3GAXX, Routine 3-21, etc. HCO Bulletins on Wrong Goals, etc.

                           423

    Practical-All Clearing practical, free needle, etc.

    Auditing- Routine 2-12 and CCHs. Assists. Prepchecking.

    Requirements for promotion to next unit, to srnooth out a pc's line plot
and pilot a pc through R2-12 with no difficulties because of dirty needle,
incomplete lists, overlooking RSing Items, etc.

    Line plot of pc must contain no by-passed Items, needle must be -clean
and specified lists wholly nul.

                             Z UNIT

    Theory-Additional clearing data. Form of the course. Scientology plans.

    Practical- Review of drills, TRs.

    Auditing Requirements-Goal found on self, goal found on pc with all
Check Sheets complete, gives Class IV. If successfully up to date with all
Y Unit Cheek Sheets and requirements passed, Class Ill.

    If successful in auditing requirements of Y Unit but only up to X Cheek
Sheets complete, Class Il.

LRH:gl.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 FEBRUARY 1963

Sthil
Info D of Ts

CURRICULUM CHANGE

    The following change in auditing for Units will go into effect Monday
February 1 lth, 1963.
                             Y UNIT

    Y Unit will revert to Missed Withholds and Prepchecking and will
complete a Goals Prepcheek. All Y Unit auditing will be meterless,
specializing in the observation of the pc, particularly coloration and
apparent age.

    Theory and practical for this Unit will specialize on R3-MX.

Any 2-12A cycle now in progress in Y may be completed by the current class.

R2-12A will be struck from all check sheets as fast as replaced by R3-M.X
data.

R2-12A will be done in V Unit only.

Routine 3-MX only will be done in Z Unit.

LRH:gl.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

424

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 FEBRUARY 1963

BPI

SAINT HILL COURSE GOALS

    Students attending the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course will hereafter
be terminated and returned only when clear.

    As this action, by current technology, is not a lengthy  process,  (only
very exact), it is not anticipated that the course length forecast of  16-20
weeks will suffer any great change.

    Current students are being held to complete  this  desirable  goal.  New
students are some of them even now  being  cleared  in  the  V  unit  before
actually beginning course.

    Any retread student is acceptable on course and can be promised  now  to
begin getting clear the first week on course. Retread is forecast  as  eight
weeks where the student has his goal already.

    The Practical Section has been strengthened to ensure accuracy and  fast
passage. The Theory Section is being simplified as all materials  are  being
converted rapidly to the "act needs of auditing and clearing.

    Saint Hill is gearing up for a busy  spring  and  summer.  We  now  have
around sixty students and seven supervisors and instructors. Most  of  these
students will have graduated, cleared, in March or April. We have  only  two
"hung up" students who have not been able to pass course  requirements  over
a long period, and these are both of them now being cleared  and  should  be
first goal clears by March.

    Morale level on the course has never been higher. Saint  Hill  staff  is
clearing itself on a co-audit basis and all should be first goal  clears  by
mid spring.

    You may have been waiting for Saint Hill to start producing clears on an
everyone basis.

    This is now successfully in progress amongst students and instructors.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright (D 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

425

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I FEBRUARY 1963

Sthil Students

      AUDITING REGULATIONS
    In auditing done on the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course, no matter
    what unit,
the following regulations must be observed:

1.    Ignorance of the student auditor of the rules of the process he is
doing shall not
be taken into account in any or all instances where a  case  is  mishandled,
gotten into difficulty or audited over a  long  period  with  no  gain,  and
disciplinary measures will be taken without any attention to  the  student's
lack of information. 2. Any student auditor, whether or  riot  examined  and
passed on a technique, but
    doing that technique on a fellow  student,  and  failing  to  achieve  a
    result with that technique in a reasonable time, shall be transferred to
    W Unit, and shall have no auditing for two weeks.

3.    Case responsibility shall be exclusively with the auditor and no plea
that contrary
    data was given by an instructor or other person shall act as  a  defence
    in the event of case worsening or case difficulty.

4.    If a student blows session it is wholly his or her current auditor's
responsibility to
    retrieve that student.

5.    A student receives auditing only so long as he or she gives good
auditing.

6.    A breach of the Auditor's Code by a student auditor just before or in
session shall
    be deemed a misdemeanor.

7.    Infractions for breach of auditing regulations may be recommended by
instructors
    but may be given only by the Course Supervisor; the procedure being  for
    the Instructor to pass the Infraction Sheet to the Course Supervisor for
    decrease, increase, cancellation or delivery  to  the  student  for  the
    student's compliance.

8.    Penalties are as follows:

    (a)     Failure to comply with instructions which failure might have
       resulted in slowing or worsening a case: 200 to 500 word Infraction
       Sheet.

    (b)     Departure from standard operating procedure SHSBC in any unit:
       200 word Infraction Sheet to 2 weeks in Unit W.

    (c)     Worsening or drawing out the auditing on a case: 2 weeks in Unit
       W to Being Sent Down.

    (d)     Accumulation of 5,000 words in Infraction  Sheets,  in  which  2
        weeks re-assignment to Unit  W  shall  constitute  1,500  words:  No
        Classification during current course.

    These Regulations  for  Auditing  are  issued  at  a  time  when  2-12A,
Rudiments and Havingness, a Prepcheck, and  3-MX  are  all  of  them  highly
specialized and standardized
with precise rules which if exactly followed, give excellent case gains.
Only departure
from the standard methods of these processes can fail to achieve case
gains.

    As the data is easily available, departures from the rules of  procedure
shall be interpreted as an attempted overt against the  course  and  the  pc
and will be dealt with
assuch.

    Such strenuous regulations and their strenuous application are necessary
    if
students-and you-are to leave here clear.

LRH:gl.rd
Copyright (D 1963      L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

426

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 FEBRUARY 1963

Sthil Amdemies

      V UNIT
(Modifies earlier Policy Letters)

    The purpose of V Unit is to:

1.    Get the student into some kind of shape to finish the course.

2.    Give the student a win as an auditor.

3.    Establish an auditing reality on Scientology.

                       NEW STUDENT'S CASE

    If a new student has been badly audited previously it is up to V Unit to
    smooth
      the case out. An Elementary Prepcheck "In auditing      can be used.

    If the new student is a Rockslarnmer great care must be taken to get a 2-
12A 4 RI Package on the Rockslamming Item. List One Issue  3  is  used.  The
new student is not made to complete the  list.  The  biggest  RS  is  found,
determined as Term or Oppterm, and used. No RSes less than  1/3  of  a  dial
wide are used in 2-12A.

    If the new student has been run on a wrong goal, an "On Goals
    ..............
      Prepcheck or "On the goal (wrong goal)       should be applied.

    These are the only processes used in V Unit. The Instructor must not get
inventive or embark upon R3 or start opposing RR Rls:

1.    The Assist Type Repetitive Prepcheck using Suppress and Invalidate
    buttons only for a specific period of time contained in the command
    "Since ..............

2.    Missed withholds. The elementary "What have we failed to find out
    about you". "Auditors". "I".

3.    A broad prepcheck aimed at remedying messed up auditing. "On Auditing
      ..............   or "In Auditing  followed by the buttons of Big
    Mid Ruds or the 18 buttons.

4.    ARC Straight Wire (never accepting "Yee' only for an answer, please).
    Used on a pc who is spinny or neurotic or feels bad.

5.    General O/W.

6.    2-12A using List One Issue 3,4 RI Pkg. Or a case repair on 2-12 or 2-
12A that has
    been done incorrectly elsewhere.

7.    Wrong goal on a pc who has had a wrong goal run. 18 button Repetitive
      Prepcheck "On the goal      or appropriate wording.

    The V Unit new student must emerge from V Unit in better case  condition
than when entering it, and not a Rockslammer. These are  the  only  criteria
for the new student leaving V Unit. They are demonstrated by.

    (a) Tone Arm Reading now around clear reads.

    (b) Not RSing on List One Issue 3.

                          STUDENT WIN

    The new student probably has no firm reality on auditing wins,  even  if
an older auditor wins may have been scarce.

427

    In V Unit the student auditor must obtain a  win.  The  seven  processes
given above will obtain a win. one of  them  or  any  of  them  on  any  pc,
providing nobody gets fancy. Just use one, or two of the minor ones  on  any
new student. Not all of them. And flatten what you start always.

    On pes who are not Rockslammers and arrive on course in good  condition,
do not run 2-12A. Instead, choose one of the  other  processes  for  such  a
student pc, the milder the better. And flatten it to no TA action.

    Make the student auditor just audit. Totally muzzled. No  rudiments,  no
havingness. Just "Start of Session" and "End of Session". Use a meter.

    Thus, intelligently supervised, the new student will get a nice win.

                      ESTABLISH A REALITY

    The new student, tightly supervised, doing  plain  Scientology  with  no
frills,  will  obtain  a  reality  that  exact   Scientology   works.   This
discourages squirrelling on course and gives the  student  an  incentive  to
study Scientology as it is, not as altered.

    With a case gain, a win and a new reality,  the  student  is  ready  for
upper units and  can  be  counted  on  to  get  fast  passes  and  an  early
graduation.

    All failures to pass HCO Bs and upper  classes  are  traceable  to  Case
(RSing on List One), lack of wins and  low  Reality  on  Scientology.  Thus,
these remedied, you get students graduating, not stagnating on course.

    It is the purpose of the V Unit Instructor to achieve  these  gains  and
pass the new student on.

    The V Unit is a Co-audit, one or two weeks long, three hours of auditing
given and three received daily, 5 days a week.

    In the  remainder  of  the  day,  the  unit  is  part  of  the  W  Unit,
specializing in TRs 0-4 in Practical. The Instructor in the balance  of  the
day fits into other units to assist instruction  there,  usually  Practical,
to supervise the TRs of V Unit students and others, or as assigned.

                           SUMMARY

    We are trying to cure long periods on course. They are best cured by the
use of a good V Unit.

    Students with a Case gain, a win and a good  reality  on  auditing  will
study harder, graduate faster, be better Scientologists.

    All randomity on a course (bad pass-flunk ratios,  enturbulation,  etc.)
comes from Rockslammers. Weed them out at  course  beginning  and  all  gets
very smooth on the main course.

    If a student on arrival is in good shape and not a Rockslammer,  a  week
in V Unit is all he or she should spend.

    The whole plan falls to pieces if a V Unit Instructor fails to make good
the purposes of the unit for any reason.

    The original plan for the first training of an Academy student  is  many
years old and had the above purposes as goals. This became the  Comm  Course
because the purposes were not realized in actual practice and TRs only  were
substituted. New processes, muzzled auditing, and  a  new  understanding  in
general should now realize this earliest goal I  had  for  a  new  student-a
case gain, a win, a reality on Scientology.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.cden Copyright Q 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

428

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                   Saint HUI Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 MARCH 1963

Sthil Students

CLEAR REQUIREMENT

    Regarding getting clear, as a student on the Saint Hill Special Briefing
Course, the following should be noted:

    There is no obligation on the part of the  course  to  clear  a  student
before termination. While everything will be done  to  assist  clearing  the
student and while it is my desire to clear the  student,  this  is  a  favor
extended, not a student's right.

    Some students will not industriously apply themselves  in  their  course
periods and cannot therefore be graduated up through units  fast  enough  to
get them clear before termination.

    The better students are matched in so far as possible in auditing teams.
This leaves the unwilling student  auditor  teamed  with  auditors  of  less
skill. This reduces chances of getting clear  on  those  who  do  not  apply
themselves or will not audit well.

    The Course is not an HGC and those who attend it only  in  the  hope  of
receiving auditing are therefore disappointed as they will receive  only  as
much auditing as they give and only of the quality  they  seem  to  deserve.
The rule of "Help to be. helped" is adhered to in so far as possible.

    While almost all students are people we are proud  of,  some  few  waste
their  case  by  running  up  overts  against   the   course   and   causing
administrative upsets.

    There are then three general categories of upset:

    I . The student who won't study;

    2.      The student who won't audit; and

    3.      The student who causes heavy administrative upsets by spreading
        rumors, writing untrue tales home, constantly nagging instructors,
        etc.

    Among these we do not include students ARC Broken in session, as this is
a fairly routine occurrence and passes away. But included are  students  who
claim they are so ARC Broken in session they cannot study or work.  We  know
this doesn't hold true as others can study and work and audit after  session
ARC Breaks.

    Therefore, the course instructors reserve the right, when authorized  by
the Course Supervisor, to suspend or cancel the  "clearing  requirement"  of
any student consistently falling into categories  (1),  (2)  or  (3)  above,
regardless of explanations given by the student.

    This may or may not affect classification. It certainly does affect  the
amount of time and effort spent by instructors on getting a student clear.

    "Suspension or cancellation of the clearing requirement" means that  the
course resigns any further responsibility for getting the student clear  and
is at liberty to terminate the student at the end of the course period  with
or without classification.

    A student who spends three weeks with minimal study  effort,  a  student
who consistently fails to follow directions in auditing his pc or  who  does
not produce results,  and  the  student  who  consistently  runs  up  overts
against the course, is liable to suspension or cancellation of the  clearing
requirement.

    In short, if a student by studying and auditing won't help us get  other
students clear, or if a student seeks to damage our course and  its  efforts
to clear others, through graduating students, we  cannot  honestly  endeavor
to clear that student.

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

429

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 APRIL 1963

sthil Students

                 FOOD AND CLEANING REGULATIONS FOR STUDENTS
                   EFFECTIVE ON RECEIPT BUT NOT LATER THAN
                                APRIL 3,1963

    The Grounds Manager is in charge of cleaning in the outside buildings.

    Cancelling all earlier directives, the following regulations  now  apply
due to changes in lecture hours.

                 NO FOOD IN CHAPEL OR PAVILION

I     No food may be stored or eaten in the Chapel or Pavilion at any time.
This
    includes tea and coffee and instructors' tea or coffee.

                     VACATING FOR CLEANING

2.    None may remain in or be in the Chapel or Pavilion during  the  hours
    6. 15 p.m. to 7.30 p.m., or  on  Saturdays  or  Sundays.  All  study  on
    Saturday is to be in the basement Theory room or its adjacent rooms.

3.    Food may be stored or eaten in the outside Boiler Room, the cloakroom
    and the basement hall.

4.    The Grounds Manager may turn in names to the Course Secretary for
    Infractions of the above rules.

    Without these regulations we cannot maintain the Pavilion or Chapel  for
instruction and auditing or get them cleaned.

    When violations of the above are flagrant,  the  Grounds.Manager  should
carefully note the identity of the violators and later  have  an  Instructor
identify the students and issue the infractions.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright (D 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

430

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 APRIL 1963

Central Orgs
Sthil Students

ORGANIZATION STUDENTS ON SAINT HILL COURSE

    As the staff of the Org is paying the salary of an organizational
student, it is entitled to know the progress and status of that student.

    Accordingly, a weekly report will be sent to the student's Org.

    This report is to be posted on receipt on the Staff Bulletin Board of
the Org by the HCO Secretary.

    Any dissatisfaction with the student's progress should be sent directly
to the student,

    A student whose progress is unsatisfactory may be recalled by the
    Organization or
Association Secretary.
LRH:gl.rd
Copyright Q 1963 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                                                   ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                                   BLUE ON WHITE
                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                OR GANIZA TIONA L STUDENT REPOR T

TO HCO

From: Saint Hill Special Briefing Course

Post this on your staff (not public) Bulletin Board on Receipt

Course Progress Report on
      for week ending
Student          -week on course
Theory passes    (5 minimum requirement)
Practical passes (5 minimum requirement)
Auditing Unit    (should be

Class Attained

Course Secretary

Comment

Note: Any dissatisfaction felt by org members with this student's progress
should be addressed to the student.

                               431

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 JUNE 1963

Sthil
Students

STUDENTS BLOWING

    It is the general responsibility of all students to prevent other
students from blowing and to bring back on Course any student who has
"blown". It is the particular responsibility of the student's auditor.

    In future if a student "blows" it is up to his or her auditor to get him
or her back and to take the student into the Chapel and pull the missed
withholds.

    Infractions will be awarded to the blowing pc's auditor on the following
    basis:

    Student blowing from a study period but not leaving the premises and
grounds-500 words minimum.

    Student blowing and leaving premises and grounds during course time or
failing to return to Course in the morning, after lunch or after dinner-
1,000 words minimum.

    If auditor fails to get student back within 4 hours (course time) an
additional 2,000 words minimum.

                                Issued by:   Reg Sharpe
                                  Course Secretary SHSBC
LRH:dr.aap  for
Copyright @ 1963 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Authorized by: L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 JULY 1963

Orgs
Sthil
Franchise

RETREADS ON SAINT HILL
SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE

    Students on the Special Briefing Course who require leave of absence for
emergencies may do so under the following conditions, otherwise they will
be charged a retread fee irrespective of the length of time they have
already been on Course.

    2 weeks absence (with permission only)

    3 months (by very special arrangements beforehand).

    Other than that, any student leaving Course for any reason whatsoever
will be charged a retread fee on returning. No part of the original fee is
returnable.

LRH:jw.eden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               432

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

               HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 AUGUST 1963
Students
Central Orgs

                   SAINT HILL COURSE CHANGES

    The following changes in the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course are made
effective 6 August AD 13.

    THEORY SECTION - Jenny Edmonds, HSG, D.Scn. Will specialize in  the  5th
Basic (Ability to Study and Apply Scientology Data),  and  will  handle  any
non-progressing student without regard to  case  reasons  for  inability  to
achieve this basic.  Instead  the  student  will  be  undercut  in  data  in
accordance with the new levels of Scientology (HCO Pol Ltr of  July  30,  AD
13), omitting Level  Two  and  using  Glossary  only  at  Level  Three,  but
treating students that do progress at Level Four with only  a  brief  review
of Levels One and Three.

    PRACTICAL SECTION - H. Parkhouse, HSG, D.Scn. To work out and.  use  the
new Auditing Cycle Data as eight new TRs, one for each Comm  Cycle  and  the
last for consecutive use of all the Comm Cycles contained  in  the  Auditing
Cycle.

    AUDITING SECTION -  F.  Hare,  HSG,  D.Scn.  W  Unit  to  specialize  in
definition of an Auditor "To Listen", To use only the TA of the  meter.  And
to use all former auditing as potential charge to be  taken  off  pc's  case
using mainly only the pe to auditor comm line. X Unit  to  be  divided  into
three parts, X one using MS, ruds, hav and  Comm  Cycle,  X  two  using  MS,
ruds, hav, Comm Cycle and meter, X three using R2H. Z Unit to use  R3N,  R3R
and R3T (dating and comm, 3N and  3R  where  necessary,  the  Case  Level  2
process).

    No other changes are made. All former  check  sheets  and  materials  to
continue as before. The above changes of post are  a  reversion  to  earlier
posts held. The  auditing  change  is  due  to  new  discoveries  about  the
Auditing Cycle and making cases  move  by  TA  action.  Reach  and  Withdraw
processes where used in W will specialize in the pe to auditor Comm Cycle.

    Considerable speed up of length of time on course is expected by  reason
of these improvements.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.aap Copyright @ 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

433

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 OCTOBER AD 13

Central Orgs
Franchise
Field

NEW SAINT HILL CERTIFICATES AND COURSE CHANGES

    Without changing the curriculum, units or instructors, on I st  December
AD 13 the Saint Hill Course will be divided into two certificate levels  and
the cost will be reduced.

    Many Auditors have not been able to take the course because of fear they
will be held over beyond the time they can afford.

    As clearing has returned as a reality at Class III and as this  was  the
basic purpose of the course, two certificates will now be issued.

HUBBARD SENIOR SCIENTOLOGIST (ST. HILL). This certificate will be issued  to
any student attending the course 16 weeks. If all  course  requirements  are
also met a Class III will be awarded. An additional four weeks only will  be
allowed for completion of check sheets, but  no  student  enrolled  will  be
held beyond sixteen weeks or extended on  course  more  than  an  additional
four weeks. The cost of the course  has  been  dropped  to  f  250  Sterling
(8700). The student so enrolled is then assured  of  being  able  to  return
home after 16 weeks of intensive training and is assured  of  receiving  the
certificate of HUBBARD SENIOR  SCIENTOLOGIST  (ST.  HILL).  HPA  or  HCA  is
prerequisite to enrollment. Our experience  has  been  that  nobody  can  go
through the Saint Hill Course, whatever he or she did with  grades,  without
becoming a remarkably superior auditor.

    The second course begins with the  completion  of  the  HSS  (ST.  HILL)
Course, an  HSS  (ST.  HILL)  being  prerequisite  to  it.  This  course  is
scheduled as a 20 week course. It awards the  certificate  HUBBARD  GRADUATE
AUDITOR and, if all check sheets are completed, Class IV  is  also  awarded.
Class III may also be awarded on this certificate.  This  course  takes  the
student from clearing to auditing to OT. Its  subject  materials  are  those
now existing as Level Four. The cost of this course  is  additional  to  the
HSS Course. The cost is;E250 Sterling (S700) with a  f  50  grant  available
from Mary Sue to those she especially wants on this course.

    During the past year the original 20 week SHSBC  has  been  extended  in
subject materials to cover all levels of auditing and as such  has  exceeded
the original requirements.

    Students enrolled before Ist December, 1963 will  receive  the  original
course at the original cost and may extend into the second course at  option
without further cost.

    Retread students will be honoured as having completed the  first  course
regardless of units they are assigned to and their cost will be that of  the
second course.

    Course materials have been stable for some time.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright @ 1963 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

434

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 JANUARY 1964
Sthil

                         HCO (Sthil) LTD

                        CASE SUPERVISOR

    The post of Auditing Supervisor is abolished since all  instructors  are
doing auditing supervision as a training measure.

    The missing action is that of Case Supervisor.

    The  Auditing  Supervision  done  by  all  instructors   quite   rightly
concentrates on student skill in auditing.

    A Case Supervisor is needed, therefore, whose sole interest and  concern
is the advance of cases on  the  Saint  Hill  Briefing  Course  by  any  and
various means.

    The Case Supervisor will be instructed  and  supervised  by  the  Course
Supervisor in the marking of folders and handling  various  cases  and  will
take over the full handling of case folders as soon as feasible.

    All problems having to do with the individual cases of students, any and
all auditing assignments and all individual case problems are to  be  routed
to the Case Supervisor.

    In all questions of what is to be run on a student,  regardless  of  his
situation  in  training,  the  word  of  the  Case  Supervisor,  under   the
Supervision of the Course Supervisor, is final.

                      ENROLLMENT DIVISION

    The extreme importance  of  increasing  enrollment  and  organizing  the
facilities to accomplish it have been a matter of some  concern  to  me  for
the past many weeks.

    The Director  of  Enrollment  is  to  organize  the  Administration  and
Promotion necessary to accomplish the desired results.

    A full Central Files and Address System comparable to that of a  Central
Organization, means of filling it with lists and  providing  address  plates
must be provided whether space exists or not.

    A full comprehensive and carefully cross-checked  system  of  contacting
and handling applicants must be devised and carried forward.

    Effective Procurement activities must be designed, executed and  carried
out oil a continuing basis.

    Good files, lists and addresses, good and intelligent communication  and
a very large  increase  in  enrollment  are  expected  from  the  Enrollment
Division.

    The Director of Enrollment is under the supervision of  the  Saint  Hill
Administrator and The Enrollment Division is part of HCO (Sthil) Ltd.

    Mary  Long  will  continue  as  Course  Registrar,  personally  handling
applicants and the  registration  and  graduation  procedures  and  to  that
extent only is in the Enrollment Division, her  duties  beginning  with  the
scheduling of a student to arrive and the arrival and registration  of  that
student and ending with his or her departure.

    The Director of Enrollment has the full responsibility of filling up the
course and keeping it full. His materiel  and  personnel  requirements  have
first priority.

LRH:dr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1964 Executive Director
by L. Ron Hubbard      HCO (Saint Hill) Ltd
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               435

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 FEBRUARY 1964
                                  [Excerpt]

sthil Instructors Students

REGULATIONS

  COURSE

1.    No Course student may be used for giving assists to any Saint Hill
    staff of any corporation or members of the public.

2.    No student may be used to give ARC Break Assessments  or  assists  on
    another student who is not his or her assigned  preclear.  Any  auditing
    received by a student must be  from  that  student's  assigned  auditor.
    Exception,, instructors or qualified Saint Hill staff members may  audit
    students.

3.     No  student  may  be  audited  above   his   classification   level.
    Classification Policies are in full force on course.  The  only  persons
    who may be  audited  above  their  formally  assigned  Class  level  are
    Founding Scientologists and these may only be audited  up  to  Class  IV
    With the reservation that the processes must fit the case.

4.    Two levels of processing may not be combined, i.e., Class 0 process
    run with Class 111 commands.

5.    Students are to be moved forward through  units  in  accordance  with
    their check sheets only and no opinion is to be interjected  to  prevent
    such progress that is contrary to check sheet evidence. In short,  if  a
    student's cheek sheets call for his progressing  forward  no  instructor
    may by opinion only restrain his being moved up.

6.    A student may not be retrogressed in units. If a student has attained
    X2, for example, he or she may not be returned to W  or  Xl.  Additional
    special check sheets may however be given a student in  any  unit  which
    must be completed before  progressing  to  the  next  unit  or  division
    thereof.

7.    No student may be instructed contrary to existing technology or
    advised to do anything except standard technology.

8.    No student may be accepted on course unless they personally desired
to be here.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.rd Copyright@ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: A complete copy of this Policy Letter appears in Volume 7, page 31.1

436

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East.Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 APRIL 1964

CenOCon Field Auditors Sthil Students

TO THE SAINT HILL STUDENT:

   INSTRUCTION TARGETS

I have only a very few training targets for the Saint Hill student. These
are:

    1.      How to perform flawlessly as an auditor;
    2.      How to run certain exact processes; and

    3.      Obtaining results with those processes by auditing well and
    exactly.

    Your new check sheets for Class IV  are  now  designed  entirely  around
these principles.

    Course conduct is organized entirely to forward them.

    Materials exist for them and are being condensed even further.

    If you wish to know what is expected of y I ou as a student, see the
    above.

                          INFRACTIONS

    All course infractions henceforward will be given solely upon  technical
matters. and results.

    Example: The student has "passed" an HCO B and does not seem to be  able
to apply it in a session. The cause of the infraction will  be  because  the
student is supposed to know it and doesn't and  because  the  student  could
not make it work. The subject  of  the  infraction  will  be  that  material
required, and various allied matters.

                      DURATION OF COURSE

    A student applying himself or herself in the future should  be  able  to
get through to Class IV within 16 weeks.

    On Class VI the student already up on Class IV material should  be  able
to get through the Theory and Practical of Class  VI  in  a  month  of  hard
work.

    Transferred to the Class VI Co-Audit the student should be able to  make
OT in well  under  500  hours,  barring  unusual  setbacks  caused  by  wild
auditing errors.

    A student exceeding these times  in  the  future  is  not  working  hard
enough. There were various other reasons the times were  being  exceeded  in
the past and I have sought to eliminate them.

                        CLASS VI CO-AUDIT

    As the student will be depending on the skill of one auditor it is up to
him or her to make a sufficiently attractive showing as  an  auditor  to  be
able to team up with another well-trained auditor.

    At lower levels of auditing a weekly turn about and non-team (3 or  more
way) auditing rules assignment.

    But at Class VI this is too hard on the auditor. Therefore the Class  VI
co-auditing is co-auditing in truth with a turn about on alternate  days,  5
hours auditing, 5 hours being audited. And the same pair audit each other.

                               437

    Therefore, early on in the Class VI course the student who has not  come
with a Co-Auditor should be considering who he or  she  will  be  teamed  up
with in the Class VI Co-audit and take an interest  in  the  other  fellow's
progress too. The student should choose out his or her co-auditor unless  of
course a pair came from one area for that  purpose  and  will  be  returning
after the Class VI course, It is not required to stay for the Class  VI  Co-
audit unless it is obvious that the student will have  no  auditing  partner
when he or she goes home. In such an event termination will be  refused  for
every one's sake.

                           SUMMARY

    The Saint Hill Course is not designed to be a starting auditors'  course
but only to fill in gaps and polish up to Class VI, to teach people  to  run
GPMs in Class VI course and to audit toward OT in  the  Class  VI  Co-Audit.
These are the 3 stages of Saint Hill training and auditing. No other  stages
are planned.

    Therefore the course cannot help but be a flat out high pressure course.

    You can remain in any course at Saint Hill  as  long  as  you  like.  We
haven't booted anybody out for ages who didn't want to go.  It  is  not  the
Saint Hill staff who holds people on and on except in a few cases  where  it
would have been an overt not to persuade continuance, it is the student  who
continues himself or herself.

    But the pressure is there to got you through-for the  benefit  of  those
waiting for you, for your own economics and for all our sakes. We need  able
people. We can make the able so far more  able  this  spring  that  all  our
concentration is upon getting you moving along and doing well.

    We are on the verge of great social progress for this planet. Nothing we
have done before-and it is greater than others have done-compares with  what
we are doing now.

By being here, you become part of a great team.

We need you.

So do well.

LRH:dr.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 APRIL 1964
Sthil Only

               USE OF RECREATION FACILITIES, 1964

    Saint Hill students and staff may:

        I . Use tennis courts;
        2,  Use croquet green by tennis court;
        3.  Fish in the lake;
       4.  Walk in grounds.

    Specifically withdrawn from use by staff and students this season is the
swimming pool, which is being reserved for the children.

LRH:gl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               438

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 APRIL 1964
                                  Issue 11

CenOCon
Field Auditors
Saint Hill Students

                            SAINT HILL ENROLMENT
                       MATERIALS, COURSES, AND USE OF
                             CLASS VI PROCESSES

    Anyone enrolling in  the  Class  VI  Course  at  Saint  Hill  should  be
accompanied by a co-auditor from his or her immediate home area.

    Two requirements should be made of this person:

    I . That they are not enrolling against their will and

    2.      That they have some comparable auditing skill to the person they
        accompany.

    A person not already trained at Saint Hill can  expect  to  be  enrolled
firstin the Class IV course for  everyone's  sake.  We  have  never  had  an
auditor enrol yet who could match Saint Hill  standards  by  prior  training
and don't expect to.

    But this need not restrain a Saint Hill graduate from bringing on course
a non-Saint Hill graduate as it merely means a few weeks delay in  beginning
to audit at home.

    A person formerly trained at Saint Hill is enrolled directly on the
    Class VI course.

    If a person cannot possibly bring a co-auditor, then he or she should be
prepared to stay on for the Class VI Co-audit.

    Particulars concerning schedules and the current course are contained in
HCO Policy Letter of April 2, 1964.

    A person enrolling without a  partner  to  be  trained  with  should  be
prepared to stay on in the Class VI co-audit for 500 auditing  hours  at  25
hours per week as he or she won't be accepted solo in Class VI  unless  they
can stay on or get somebody to come on.

    Expectancy on course:

    1.      HPA/HCA and other training or certificates but no training at
        Saint Hill and no ro-auditor brought to course:

        To Class IV, 16 to 20 weeks. To Class VI, 4 to 12 weeks. To Class VI
        Co-audit completion, 12 to 20 weeks. Minimum 32 weeks, Maximum 52
        weeks.

    The more ACCs and Retreads attended before  Saint  Hill  shortens  weeks
toward minimum.

    2.      HPA/HCA and other training or certificates but no training at
        Saint Hill but ACCOMPANIED BY A CO-AUDITOR of comparable background:

       To Class IV, 16 to 20 weeks. To Class VI, 8 to 12 weeks.

439

        No Class VI Co-audit. Minimum 24 weeks, Maximum 32 weeks.

    3. Saint Hill graduate unaccompanied by co-auditor:

        To Class VI, 8 to 12 weeks. To Class VI Co-audit, 12 to 20 weeks.
        Minimum 20 weeks, Maximum 32 weeks.

    4. Saint Hill graduate ACCOMPANIED BY A CO-AUDITOR:

        To Class VI, 8 to 12 weeks. Minimum 8 weeks, Maximum 12 weeks.

    If co-auditor is not a Saint Hill graduate the co-auditor only will have
a minimum of 24 weeks and a maximum of 32  weeks  (see  above  No.  2),  but
meanwhile the former Saint Hill graduate may return  home,  the  co-auditing
beginning on the return of the co-auditor.

    The materials of Class VI will not be released for  local  training  for
several years (1968) in the interest of minimal upsets.

    The cost of any one continuous period of training is the  same,  whether
1, 2, 3 or  4.  Discount  and  retread  periods  have  now  expired  to  all
practical purposes.

    The  cost  is  Z275  sterling  payable  on  arrival  without  credit  or
discounts. There are now no grants for Saint Hill Courses.

    Over the years we have found that in practice we gave all  the  training
available to any student enrolled. Therefore the cost  was  in  actual  fact
the same to any student. So 1, 2, 3 or 4 above costs Z275 sterling.

    Retread fees not previously paid are thus the same as any enrollment.

    If a student leaves course for any reason the training period is  deemed
to have expired. Leaves of absence will no longer  be  granted  for  periods
exceeding two weeks. At the  end  of  that  time  if  the  student  has  not
returned he or she is  automatically  terminated.  All  previous  leaves  of
absence have expired.

    After using Class VI materials for co-auditing purposes,  the  materials
are the student's to use  on  individual  preclears  providing  the  student
trains each preclear  individually  for  auditing  purposes  only,  not  for
classification, up to Class V1 level as a preclear. This  is  in  accordance
with  new  classification  policies  adopted  after  a  majority   vote   of
Scientologists around the world.

    Central Organizations, therefore, may also train preclears as individual
preclears for only receiving Class VI auditing, not for use as  an  auditor.
The Central Organization must have on its staff two  Class  VI  auditors  in
order to deliver this auditing in the HGC to outside preclears.

    Auditing  rates  for  Class  VI  preclears  must  realistically  include
training time and must be well in advance of standard rates. Rates  must  be
uniform in the field and the organization of an area.

    An organization has no  responsibility  for  casualties  resulting  from
unauthorized use of  Class  VI  materials  beyond  calling  a  Committee  of
Evidence  on  offenders.  Class  V1  trained  auditors  should   make   this
strenuously plain in their areas and organizations.

    Class VI Preclear training must include:

 1. The ethics and basics of Scientology.

440

 2.   Membership in Scientology official organizations.
 3,   Clay table work and nomenclature.
 4.   Freedom of insanity history.
 5.   Non-membership, under sworn signed oath before a notary, in hostile
    organizations or employment by or devotion to anti-Scientology groups.
 6.   Copies of line plots and goals and auditor's reports must not be given
    any Class VI preclear and no access may be permitted to them by a  Class
    VI auditor doing preclear training.
 7.   No copies of line plots or goals plots may be mimeoed, printed, typed
    by anyone or copied by Class VI preclears or any other person not a
    Class V1 auditor.
 8.   All Line Plots, goals plots and related materials must be  kept  in  a
    safe to which only a Class VI auditor has the combination, whether in  a
    field auditor's home or office or a Central Organization.
 9.   Staff membership in any office does not entitle anyone not a Class VI
    auditor to access to Class VI Line Plots, goals plots or auditor's
    reports.
10.   All Preclears being trained for Class VI shall  be  trained  only  on
    synthetic and non-factual line and goals plots. When auditing begins the
    preclear may be given the line plot sheet but must return it at  session
    end. The auditor alone may possess the goals plot  and  it  may  not  be
    handed to the preclear.
11.   While, some escapement  of  materials  of  Class  VI  is  inevitable,
    continuous vigilance must be exerted to keep it reduced to a minimum. In
    the hands of non-Class VI auditors it could be disastrous to  preclears,
    and in the hands of political or psychiatric groups the materials  could
    be used to produce widespread insanity, as they would not  be  used  for
    auditing but only restimulation.
12.   Any person being audited by  a  Class  VI  auditor  must  pledge  the
    auditor to co-ordinate his actions with us for the greatest good of  the
    greatest number of beings.

    Simplifications and advances in Class VI materials which I have recently
made make it possible for  the  use  of  Class  VI  processes  on  preclears
trained only to be audited without danger to them so long  as  they  are  in
the hands of a Class VI auditor.

    Further improvements or short cuts beyond what  has  already  been  done
cannot be expected or hoped for due to the nature of the GPM and  the  bank.
Thousands of auditing hours and many lucky breaks  have  simplified  matters
already down to the bare bones, a fact observable in the  shortness  of  the
Class VI course itself. But there's still quite enough in Class VI  to  make
it highly dangerous for the non-classified auditor to  use.  We  can  safely
and easily handle this gun. But it is a gun.

                           SUMMARY

    The above is a summary of  training  and  data,  concerning  Saint  Hill
Training as of April 1964. No changes in it are to be expected for years.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

441

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 APRIL 1964

Sthil Students

FOOD AND CLEANING REGULATIONS FOR STUDENTS

                   EFFECTIVE ON RECEIPT BUTNOTLA TER THAN
                                APRIL 20,1964
                        (Cancels previous directives)

The Grounds Manager is in charge of cleaning in the outside buildings.

Cancelling all earlier directives, the following regulations now apply.

                   NO FOOD IN CHAPEL OR HALL

I     No food may be stored or eaten in the Chapel or Hall at any time.
    This includes tea and coffee and instructors' tea or coffee.

                    VACATING FOR CLEANING

Z.    None may remain in or be in the Chapel or Hall during the hours  6.15
    p.m. to 7.30 pan. All study on Saturday and Sunday is to be in the Hall,
    but the Hall is to be vacated at 5.0 p.m. on Saturday. Any student using
    the Hall at 5.0 p.m. on Saturdays. is expected to  co-operate  with  the
    Grounds Manager so that the Hall may be cleaned; such students may  take
    a tape recorder into the Pavilion at that time, but in that case, should
    see that it is returned to the Hall before class begins on the following
    Monday morning or earlier. The Hall is closed on Saturday evenings  from
    5.0 p.m. onwards.

3.    Food may be stored during the daytime in the Cloakroom adjoining  the
    'Ladies Shower Room' only. Food may be consumed in the  Pavilion  during
    the lunch break and dinner break. All waste  wrappings  and  waste  food
    must be taken to and deposited in the outside dustbins before the end of
    the break. No food may be kept anywhere on the premises overnight.

4.    The Grounds Manager may turn in names to the Course Secretary for
    Infractions of the above rules.

    Without these regulations we  cannot  maintain  the  Hall,  Pavilion  or
Chapel for instruction and auditing or get them cleaned.

    When violations of the above are flagrant, the  Grounds  Manager  should
carefully note the identity of the violators and report them to  the  Course
Secretary.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright @ 1964 by, L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

442

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 HCO POILICY LETTER OF 8 MAY 1964

Sthil
Students

TRANSPORT

    Students desiring noon transport week days from Saint Hill to East
Grinstead at noon and return at 12.50 may have it by procuring an invoice
from the Income Section costing 5 shillings per week.

    The invoice should be plainly dated and displayed to the driver on
departure from Saint Hill.

    The reason for the charge is the limited transport space available.

    There is no charge for staff members.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 MAY 1964

Sthil

                                  TRANSPORT
                 (Adds to HCO Policy Letter of May 8, 1964)

    Regarding HCO Policy Letter of May 8, 1964, it should be clearly
understood that there is no contract to carry passengers on the staff bus
for fares.

    The 5/- payment by students should be invoiced by Accounts as a
contribution to the upkeep of the bus. The student is then privileged to
ride on the bus as and when available for one week.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd Copyright Q~ 1964 by L. Ach Hi~bbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

443

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
            Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 25 MAY 1964
Sthfl
      INSTRUCTOWS CONFERENCE REPORT FORM
WEEK ENDING:

SUPERVISORS:     Complete your own section below before Conference on
              Friday and read and hand to Conference Chairman. Leave other
              sections blank.

THEOR Y AND PRA CTICAL REPOR T.(Cross out one) Total Checkouts: Total
      Passes: Total Flunks: Number of students with less than 10
      passes:Names of Students with less than 5 passes:

Number of Pink sheets given: -Names of Auditors giving poor quality
auditing:

Sign.

CASE SUPERVISOR REPOR T.-
    Total T.A. Course Unit: Total T.A. Co-Audit Unit: Names of Students
    personally audited:

Names of Preclears; with less than 15 T.A. Average:

Sign.

CO URSE SECRETAR Y.Names of Students leaving Course:

Names of new Students for next week:

TN. Demo results:

    Number of Students on Course: -Number of Applications on hand:

LRH:dr.rd        Sign.
Copyright Q 1964 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
                               444

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I JUNE 1964

Sthil Students

                              NEW STUDENTS DATA
                         STAR RATED FOR NEW STUDENTS

                           Tape Passes

    On those  live  lectures  you  hear,  when  you  take  the  Friday  tape
examination and keep your exam paper when it is handed back, and present  it
to Theory as evidence, any live lecture you have so  heard  is  credited  on
your cheek sheet by Theory where the lecture appears on the check sheet.

    Not all the lectures 1 give appear later on cheek sheets but many do and
you should get credit for those you have heard.

    If you have a Friday exam paper on any lecture you have heard  live  and
the grade is above 90% for star rated and above 75% for a 75, any grade  for
a zero rate, if the lecture appears as a tape on your check sheets  it  will
be marked off as passed and initialled by a Theory Instructor.

                        Auditing Assignments

    In auditing before the Level V1 Co-audit, it is customary  to  split  up
teams that will eventually co-audit to OT.

    The reasons for this are

    1  .      Auditing  skill  tends  to  become  adapted  to  one  pc  and
        deteriorate. This does not make a good pro,  it  makes  only  a  co-
        auditor. I'm making you into a pro, not a co-auditor  regardless  of
        classification status. I can't do that by giving you just the pc you
        are already educated to run. You'd be a one pc auditor.
    2.      Mutual withholds develop in teams and restrain auditing
    results.

    3.      Your auditing skill tends to look better or worse than it is.

    We don't even wholly guarantee you and your co-auditor that you will co-
audit in the Level VI Co-audit for one team member rnay be Case type  A  and
the other B. A Case type A can run through anything. A Case type B stops  at
a comma. Thus one gets too far out of pace with the other and it's just  too
hard on one member of the team who would be,  of  course,  the  Type  B  and
already in trouble. It would be selfish indeed of a Type A to force  a  Type
B to run GPMs far beyond where he or she has had them run. We  will  try  to
put the team together in the Level VI Co-audit and mostly  do  but  this  AB
factor is a technical one and we can't do anything about it  short  of  good
auditing.

                           Student Rules

    A lot of students come a cropper on  the  rules  and  try  to  carry  on
without concurrence.

    You are only here for a few months. In your hands is  your  next  multi-
trillion years.

    The rules are there to get you through. Breaking them, in my opinion, is
too pricey.

                         Rapidity of Progress

    A few new students arrive here in a high state of  "know  it  all,  just
want a few new gimmicks".

    Students who have this state of mind just don't learn or  progress.  And
they really get stuck in. We're not doing it to them.  They  are  trying  to
learn over the top of their own postulate that they already  know  it  (when
they don't) and so get into a  ridge.  They're  not  stuck  in  the  course.
They're stuck in this conflict.

445

    In the first place, no new student at Saint Hill has ever been known  to
give a standard session on arrival, despite all the  data  being  available.
But they don't know enough about auditing to  know  whether  they're,  doing
well or not, much less know  how  to  audit.  Factually  they  usually  look
pretty  pitiful.  There  they  are  making  Gross  Auditing  Errors  in   an
avalanche, missing comm cycles, feet in  the  pc's  face  with  their  meter
upside down, telling the Class VI auditor who is his Instructor "I know  all
about it. We had a course in Slobovia much better than  this  one.  The  pcs
audited the auditor and it ........

    Well you can't blame the instructor if he seems to be having a hard time
to keep from laughing in the new student's face. It's  only  their  courtesy
that keeps them from reaching over and connecting the unconnected cans  this
new genius has failed to plug into the meter as a fitting touche.

    Some auditors trained elsewhere with great ARC but precious  little  "do
it", don't have enough training  to  know  they  aren't  trained.  And  it's
always the very worst trained auditors who howl the loudest about  how  they
don't need to know. The majority relaxedly study and  improve  their  skill,
get results and there it is.

    I myself periodically study auditing and put a polish on my own skill. I
don't have to say "I don't know", but I'm not so arrogant as to believe  I'm
above knowing how to do things. So if every year or two I can study  how  to
audit without going into a long rigmarole about how I'm above  all  that,  I
can reasonably expect others to have a sane view of  their  own  skill  too.
Any skill can be improved-one can know more  about  any  subject-unless  one
has already decided he or she already knows all about it.

    The successful progress of a student is inversely  proportional  to  the
student's preconception of knowing it already.  An  arrogant  assumption  of
total knowing without inspection is the surest way to make no progress.

    One does or does not know the data before him.  That's  elementary.  Why
should it become involved with emotionalism?

    The fast student is not concerned with necessities to maintain status by
asserting how much he or  she  already  knows.  The  fast  student  is  only
interested in knowing what he does not know, studying it  and  then  knowing
that he knows it.

    The slow student is so busy putting on that he knows that he never finds
out he doesn't in fact know. To do this before a  lot  of  experts  such  as
Saint Hill Instructors seems pretty pointless.

    Results today are by the text book. Lack of results are always  attended
by departures. One can or cannot get results with auditing. This means  that
one is or is not doing a text book job,

    In our case the text book has 14 years of hard won experience behind it.
So text book auditing gets the best results. It's that simple.

    The statement "I know all about Scientology but I don't  get  very  good
results" is a pretty silly statement today. It's saying in fact  "I  pretend
to more than I know and the flubs show up in my results".

    Well, that's getting right down to the reasons  for  slow  progress  and
calling a spade a spade, but it's awful true. It's really the  o,nly  reason
back of slow progress on course.

    The speed with which you complete your course and get to OT is  entirely
regulated by the speed with which you discover  there's  something  here  to
learn.

    Most students handle this very early. I'm sure you will.

    I give you my good wishes for a fast progress.

L RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.eden Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

446

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 SEPTEMBER 1964
Sthil Only
Sthil Students
Post Student Board     TERMINATIONS

                       EFFECTIVE A T ONCE

    Final Classification is not automatic with Termination.

    The student may be terminated with a Provisional Classification.

    On terminations student classifications are confirmed as permanent or
    withdrawn.

    A review of a student's  work  before  termination  must  be  undertaken
before classification is given. This  is  in  addition  to  the  Provisional
Examination and is in addition to Instructor or  Supervisor  recommendations
and is the responsibility of the HCO Board of Review which may  not  now  be
part of the Course.

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (R) 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Remimeo     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 SEPTEMBER 1964

Franchise
Sthil Students
                            FINAL CLASSIFICATION
                       ON TERMINATION FROM SAINT HILL
                             (Effective at once)

    As of now, when a student has passed the Prov. Class  VI  exam  he  will
officially be "In Training for Class VI".

    This means only that he is thereby permitted to run R6 under supervision
while  on  the  Saint  Hill  Special  Briefing  Course.  It  has  no   other
significance  and  does  not  guarantee  a  Class   VI   classification   on
termination.

    Since there will be no "provisional" certificates awarded in  future,  a
student who has not earned a Class VI certificate will be  awarded  a  Class
IV or any lower level certificate-depending on the state  of  completion  of
his check sheets and his level of auditing ability.

    In future no student will be awarded a higher certificate after  he  has
left Saint Hill than that received on termination unless he/she retreads  at
Saint Hill for higher classification.

    Any student who has already left the Saint Hill Special Briefing  Course
with a Prov. Classification should apply to HCO Board of Review for  a  full
classification before the  31st  of  December  1964-submitting  evidence  of
their  claims.  This  should  include  a   dispatch   from   their   nearest
Organization.

    If no such evidence has been submitted by the 31st of December 1964, the
student will automatically be granted a Class IV.

LRH:jw.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
(Cancelled by HCO P/L 13 November 1964, Provisional Class V1
Classification, page 448.1

                              447

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 NOVEMBER 1964

Rernimeo
Franchise
Sthil Students

        PROVISIONAL CLASS VI CLASSIFICATION
              (Cancels HCO Policy Letter of 18 September 1964.)
    (Confirms HCO Bulletin of I November AD 14 by stating it as Policy.)
                            (Effective at once.)

    1.Re: HCO Policy Letter of 18 September 1964

    Provisional Class VI Classification will again be awarded.

    In  future  no  student  will  be  awarded  a  higher   certificate   or
classification  after  he  has  left  Saint  HID  than  that   received   on
termination unless he/she retreads at Saint Hill for higher  classification.
This does not cancel the clause that "any student who has already  left  the
Saint Hill Special Briefing Course with a -Prov Classification should  apply
to HCO Board of Review for a full  classification  before  the  3  1  st  of
December 1964."

    2. Re: HCO Bulletin of 1 November AD14

    THE MOMENT A STUDENT PASSES HIS PROVISIONAL CLASS VI CLASSIFICATION  AND
GOES ON TO ROUTINE 6, HE OR SHE MUST ONLY SOLO AUDIT.

    The Term Provisional Class VI means hereafter only  "HAS  THE  RIGHT  TO
SOLO AUDIT ON CLASS VI MATERIALS AND MAY NOT  CO-AUDIT  ON  R66R  AUDIT  PCS
ONR6."

    The only exception to this is the use of  L6  Auditing-by-List  and  ARC
Break Assessments. These may be co-audited.  But  no  administrative  system
may be set up which automatically assigns students to do  L6  work  on  each
other at regular intervals such as "Every Friday"; as it is needed  when  it
is needed and never when it isn't needed.

    This HCO Policy Letter applies also to any student who has already  left
the  Saint  Hill  Special  Briefing  Course  with  a  Provisional  Class  VI
Classification.

    Violation of  this  Policy  may  result  in  the  Provisional  Class  VI
Classification being revoked.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.rd Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

448

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 FEBRUARY 1965

Gen Non
Rernimeo
Sthil Scientology Staff
Sthil Students
Franchise

      COURSEPATTERN
(Effective March 6, 1965)

The Saint Hill Special Briefing Course is to be organized as follows:

It will be divided into four units. These units are:

        Unit A covering Level 0. Unit B covering Levels I and II. Unit C
        covering Levels 111 and IV. Unit D covering Level VI.

    One Chief Instructor is in charge of each unit. He or she is responsible
for the theory, practical and auditing supervision and  folder  marking  and
all other training and case and discipline matters relating to that  student
for the duration of his progress up  through  the  levels  covered  by  that
Unit.

    When the student's theory,  practical  and  auditing  check  sheets  are
complete for a level, he or she is examined by  the  HCO  Board  of  Review.
This will consist of one or more examiners for Levels 0 to IV inclusive  and
a special examiner for Level VI. Classes for the auditor are awarded on  the
successful completion of each level up to IV and  Provisional  Class  VI  is
granted so that the student can then begin  auditing  at  that  level  while
still on course. Those students auditing at Level IV  while  waiting  to  be
Provisionally Classified to VI so that they  can  audit  at  Level  VI  will
audit and be audited in the same classroom as in  other  lower  units.  When
Provisionally Classed and are auditing on Class  VI  they  report  to  their
unit half days for study only and do their  auditing  off  premises  in  the
balance of the day, submitting their reports to their instructor.

    Therefore  there  is  no  Class  VI  audited  on  premises,  but   final
classification depends on their folders being  accurate  and  showing  gain.
When it is seen by periodic checks that their tone arm is high or they  look
bad when looked over, a co-audit patch up is assigned to work in the D  Unit
classroom with the D students and the full day is spent on premises.

    In all units A to C a student must be provisionally classed before being
permitted to audit in that unit. Until so  classed  all  time  is  spent  on
study or in occasional patch up  sessions  as  assigned  using  assist  type
processes. Provisional Classification is awarded by the HCO Board of  Review
after making sure that key materials, vital to the processes to  be  run  at
that level, have been checked out. Auditing on the level processes  is  then
begun. However, all students on entering a unit  are  assigned  as  Co-audit
for assists and Twin Check-out. A D  unit  provisional  is  of  course  more
thorough.

    A student in a unit is classed for the level he or she has completed but
the student in a unit is designated for the classes  being  studied  for  as
follows:

        A 0 Class Zero Unit A     Chapel

449

B I   Class I    Unit B      Chapel
B 11  Class 11   Unit B      Chapel
C III Class III  Unit C      Pavilion
C IV  Class IV   Unit C      Pavilion
D VI  Class VI         Hall
E VI  Class VI   Study Hall
      Class VI   Auditing.   Off premises.

    A Chief Instructor is assigned to each of A, B,  C  and  D,  four  Chief
Instructors in all. The course is headed by the Course  Supervisor  and  the
title "Supervisor" is no longer otherwise used.

    While progressing toward his Classification for each level  the  student
is under only one instructor.

    On enrolling the student is not given an examination for  placement  but
is checked for valid enrolment pro-requisites (which  remains  HCA)  and  is
entered into Unit A which consists of a cheek sheet  for  theory,  practical
and auditing. He is assigned  to  a  Co-audit  team  for  assists  and  Twin
checking and a Practical team. Materials include orientation at Saint  Hill,
vocabulary materials, etc., to safeguard  against  previously  misunderstood
words.

    When the student has passed his cheek sheet in Theory and  Practical  on
key materials vital to permit auditing at that level, he goes to  HCO  Board
of Review for his Provisional Classification. Looking over his  cheek  sheet
and making sure he knows what he has passed  by  random  cross  checking  on
twin check basis, HCO Board of Review decides on  his  qualification  for  a
Provisional Classification. HCO Board of  Review  examinations  occur  daily
and are not  scheduled  for  a  certain  day  of  the  week.  Promotions  to
Provisional or to Classification can occur on any day of the  week  and  the
students can pass to the next unit on any day. When Provisional  is  awarded
only then the student is audited or audits on the Zero processes,  all  this
under one instructor and then is examined by an HCO Board of Review  Officer
and classed finally for that level if passed.  He  and  his  Instructor  are
informed of his classing and it is posted at once.

    This same procedure  is  followed  t~rough  all  the  levels  on  upward
provisionally classed, then classed at each level.

    A Grade Certificate is also  furnished  to  show  he  has  been  audited
through the Level.

    The Grade Certificate states that the student has received all processes
in the level just gone through and is ready for his  next  grade.  It  reads
"This will certify that
      .......... has received all required processes of Grade       and,
having completed
      Grade      as a preclear is ready for the processes of the next
grade." It is signed by
the HCO Board of Review after inspection of the case folder of the student.

    Saint Hill is a briefing and review course and the cheek sheets are  not
the check sheets of an Academy for the  same  class  and  grade,  containing
only vital materials.

    A student can have a classification examination for IV or below any time
he or she wishes, regardless of course status or unit.

    Any existing classification is laid aside for course  duration  at  this
time (but is  reinstated  at  course  end,  even  though  the  student  will
probably be well above it) as the final materials now in existence  are  new
and quite stable and students need the briefing.

450

    On termination the highest classification obtained on the course will be
actually made up in full and signed. This is usually Class VI.  However  the
student is owed  only  the  highest  certificate  attained  as  classing  is
entirely optional with the HCO Board of Review always.

    Examination by HCO Board of Review Officers  consists  of  checking  the
auditing folder and rechecking randomly on the check sheets  of  Theory  and
Practical.

    A student may go as high as he likes on this course but must be a  valid
HCA to enroll. However, our oldest rule holds. Anyone can have  an  HCA  who
can pass the HCA examination, which today is the examination for  Class  11.
But it would be a good idea for anyone trying  for  an  HCA  by  examination
only to be examined for it by his nearest HCO first.

    It is the full intention of the course to round out all those small bits
missed in former  study  and  to  get  comfortably  flat  all  the  required
processes of a level the student, as a preclear, might have had left  unflat
up to Level IV and thereby launch the  student  comfortably  into  Level  VI
materials.

    Time on course largely depends on excellence of former study,  processes
amongst those required already flat and  the  length  of  time  the  student
wants to spend. A large number of those who remain at Saint Hill do  so  out
of their own wish to be at Saint Hill, course  or  no  course,  not  because
they don~t progress. The glittering goal of OT, attainable  demonstrably  as
it is, the atmosphere and people here, the  excitement,  are  far  more  the
cause of long stays. Well grounded  auditors  have  completed  in  under  12
weeks. But some well grounded auditors are still  finding  reasons  to  stay
after eight months even when they could have graduated months before.

    Previous estimates of time on course may have to be revised.  Amount  of
materials from Zero to IV have reduced and the length of time to finish  off
a reactive mind has dropped from several years to  a  potential  hammer  and
tongs few months due to recent developments. Level VII is in sight  and  may
be a contributing factor in the future, but  is  not  part  of  the  present
course and will not be, constituting another course since it  will  have  to
be taught under entirely different conditions.

    Academies will probably be following this same pattern up to  IV  except
that each level will be separately enrolled for and delivered in the  longer
period of one month. Therefore the Saint Hill  Course,  originally  designed
to improve auditing over the world, having done so has to be taught  now  in
this fashion to give old auditors a look in at each level so they can  audit
and teach it and newer ones a chance to be thorough  and  catch  up  on  any
bits skimped.

    Training is otherwise  unchanged,  consisting  of  three  check  sheets,
theory,  practical  and  auditing.  And  the  materials  of  VI  have   been
relatively stable for nearly a year and IV and  below  complete  and  stable
for many months. Therefore, shifting  technology  is  no  longer  a  student
problem, for there is no reason to shift it when it's  the  shortest  proven
way. Printed texts  will  take  a  long  time  to  prepare  and  issue.  But
meanwhile, it's all here at Saint Hill.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:j,,V.cden Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[modified by HOD P/L 2 April 1965, Star-rate  Checkouts  for  Process,  page
453, and amended by HCO P/L 14 October 1965, Course Pattem, page 464. )

451

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 MARCH 1965

Sthl

                    FACULTY MEETING REPORT

                                            Week Ending

Chief Instructors:     Complete your reports below before the Faculty
               Meeting on Friday, read and hand to Faculty Chairman. Leave
               other sections Blank. This is a weekly report.

 Level New Total No Prov CL Full CL THEORY PRACTICAL No. of T.A. . No.
    Students     Of    of
           Students Grads Grads Passes/Flunks Passes/Flunks Auditors
           Average Bl(ws

      0
      1
      2
      3
      4
      6
            Signed
                 Act. Chief Inst.
Course SuPervisor
      Total
Definite Students booked
Indefinite Students booked

                    Total

Course Income Sterling

           Dollars

Disbursement     Ј
Graduates CL VI
T.V. Demo Results:-

Names of New Students for next week
Number of Students on Course
Signed Course Sup.

LRH:wmc.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL, RIGHTS RESERVED

452

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 APRIL 1965

Gen Non Remirneo
Sthl Scientology Div III
staff
SthlStudents
Board of Review  STAR-RATE CHECKOUTS FOR PROCESS
           (Modification of HCO Policy Letter of 27 February 1965
            "Course Pattern")

    It has been found that permission to audit at a level on  the  processes
of that level when  granted  only  after  a  provisional  certification  has
resulted in students having to spend all their time in  auditing,  in  order
to get their auditing checksheet completed prior to classification for  that
level, thereby resulting in no further theory or practical periods  for  the
student and a disruption of course scheduling.

    To remedy this and therefore assist in more rapid  student  advancement,
the student may audit on a process of a certain level  when  he  has  passed
all theory and practical checkouts for that process. While  the  student  is
getting his auditing  checksheet  complete  for  that  process,  he  can  be
studying and getting theory and practical  checkouts  on  the  next  process
requirement for that level and can begin auditing with that process when  he
has flattened the earlier process and has passed all checkouts for the  next
process on his theory and practical checksheets.

    This, therefore, means that the Board of  Review  need  no  longer  give
provisional classification examinations, but need only  ascertain  that  the
student has passed all theory and practical checkouts for the  next  process
to be run for a particular level.

    We will call this a STAR-RATED Board of Review Checkout. We will have to
star-rate, therefore, each and every HCOB and tape that is required  to  run
an exact process. As this is not done on your  bulletins,  instructors  must
comb out the HCOBs and tapes relating to the processes  in  the  levels  and
Star-Rate them.

    The system then consists of the student doing the theory  and  practical
for a process, getting a Star-Rated PASS from the Board of  Review  on  that
process. The student can then audit on that  process  on  his  course  while
getting remaining theory and practical for that course and getting ready  to
get STAR-RATED for the next process he is to run on his pc in that level.

    Future HCOBs and tapes will adhere to this design.

    POLICY is that a student may not audit  a  process  he  has  not  passed
theory and practical for in the HCO Board of Review.

    POLICY is  changed  in  that  there  is  no  provisional  classification
required for a student on course in order to run the processes of the  level
he is being trained on.

    This POLICY applies also to R6 where R6EW  is  the  first  process,  but
requires knowing quite a lot about the bank to be given a  Star-Rated  R6EW.
R6EWS and R6EWP would require two more STAR-RATED PASSES from the  Board  of
Review.

    POLICY is that a Star-Rated Board of Review Pass is not a classification
and permits no rights as a Classification and applies only  to  the  student
while on course.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mb.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

453

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Sthil       HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 APRIL 1965

Sthil Students
      COURSE R6 AUDITING

    Outside, off premises 'auditing is cancelled herewith and  all  students
on R6 will do their auditing on premises.

LRH.jw.kd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

               HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 APRIL AD 15
Gen Non Rernimeo Issue 11
Post Staff Board
Post Student Board
      CLASSIFICATION ON GPMs
      Effective June 1 1965

    All Saint Hill Classification  for  running  GPMs  will  be  granted  as
PROVISIONAL on termination and will become permanent only  when  the  holder
is checked out as a total Clear at Saint Hill.

    This of course does not affect earlier classifications.

    Classification is an award and is not owed anyone, It is for proficiency
    only.

    Permanent Classification in the level below GPMs  may  be  obtained  and
used to audit for a  fee,  an  entirely  practical  matter  as  one  is  not
supposed to use GPM materials on the public anyway and auditing another  GPM
Provisional would be a turn-about Coaudit just to Audit by List  any  charge
accumulated during solo.

    In any re-numbering of levels the Classification for the Level which has
changed number is also changed. Example: Level I  becomes  by  rearrangement
of levels Level II. If this occurs, the Auditor  Classified  as  I  may,  by
application to his training org,  have  his  class  changed  to  11  without
further examination.

    Such a change is about to occur as I have found two  lower  levels  than
those already numbered and V has been left empty.

    Similarly, pes may be regraded up providing they have  the  lower  level
processes completed, a brief action for the most part.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jw.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

454

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

               HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 APRIL AD 15
Gen Non Rernimeo
Sthil Execs Tech Division - TR
Sthil Students
Tech Sec HAT     GPM UNIT
D of T HAT
GPM Unit Instructor HAT      Examiners: Check out
All GPM Unit Students  all Hats marked on this
Ist Issue to all new   HCO Pol Ltr.
GPM Unit Students
      ORGANIZATION GPM UNIT
      (Effective Monday 19 Apr 65)

    The organization and conduct of Unit D will now be similar to the  other
lower Units.

    The same auditing, theory and practical times will be kept as in other
    units.

    Processes Star-Checked may be run as soon as checked out on the student.

    The Twin Checking and coaudit teams will be used.

    Due to the powerful nature of the materials no departures from schedule,
procedure or policy will be tolerated.

    Any "advices" required by the student from the GPM Unit Instructor  must
be answered entirely  and  only  by  directing  the  student  to  the  study
materials themselves to find the answer there. In this  the  twin  can  work
with the other on (preferably) misunderstood  words  in  the  text,  getting
them fully understood, or (secondarily) finding the past  subject-Remedy  B-
which has the other hung up or (thirdly) working it out on  clay  table,  in
addition to the assigned CT exercises.

    The GPM Unit Instructor similarly is expressly forbidden to seek  advice
from "superiors" or  unusual  solutions  or  variations,  and  is  bound  in
general by the same rules that bind every other instructor-no  alter-is,  no
unusual solutions, no toleration of non-compliance in auditing  by  students
and no toleration of alter-is by student auditors. The reply to  "It  didn't
work" is always "What did you do?" To afford unusual solutions  to  students
or to the GPM Unit or any other instructor, or to vary or negate  technology
or policy is a serious offence.

    In the GPM Unit the materials misused and altered can be very  damaging.
Therefore in this Unit above all others the observance of  this  policy  has
no leeway of any kind. Any Instructor or Student  or  superior  negating  or
interpreting or "advising" on GPM policy  or  materials  of  study  will  be
promptly charged.

    Any Instructor receiving  into  the  GPM  Unit  students  not  generally
qualified in the ,lower levels, who commit  the  Gross  Auditing  Errors  or
whose cases have not shown marked improvement on lower levels  may  likewise
be charged if failing  to  report  it  within  one  week  of  the  student's
entrance into Unit D.

    Skimped check sheets, incomplete check sheets  or  careless  passes  are
also chargeable.

    It must be thoroughly  understood  that  the  student  is  there  to  be
instructed on the exact materials furnished and  that  the  Unit  is  to  be
conducted exactly in accordance with policies governing the handling of  its
materials.

    Any senior advising the Instructor of  the  GPM  Unit  differently  than
policy is  endangering  the  job  and  reputation  of  the  Instructor.  The
Instructor may therefore ask for a Comm Ev on that senior up  to  the  level
of Secretary. Any student given "interpretations" of the material or  policy
by an Instructor has his repute and future endangered by the Instructor  and
may therefore request a Comm Ev of that Instructor. While this  is  true  of
all course units whether at Saint Hill or an Academy it is  to  be  entirely
energetically followed up on the GPM Unit of the Special Briefing Course.

    Because of its very strict and exact demands in following technology and
policy the GPM Unit Instructor will receive a small bonus for every  student
who successfully qualifies for Provisional at Class VI. But conversely,  for
every student disqualified for

455

good  and  distinct  cause   by   the   Director   of   Examinations   after
recommendation of the student by the GPM  Unit  Instructor  for  Provisional
Classification, the Director of Examinations will  receive  a  small  bonus.
The bonuses are payable monthly. It is the  responsibility  of  the  parties
claiming the bonuses to submit the Purchase Order themselves.

    Further, students disqualified by the Director of Examinations from  the
GPM Unit pass directly into the Department of  Review  or  the  HGC  at  the
student's own cost before leaving Saint Hill or being classified.  Both  the
HGC and the Department of Review make charges as the service  is  costly  to
give and the student must not have taken advantage of the course  facilities
or must have failed to report "interpretations" of technology or  policy  or
their negation or must have sought unusual solutions from others instead  of
doing what is given on bulletins and tapes.

    Every effort is being made by  myself  to  give~  the  material  to  the
student and get it safely and beneficially applied. On my part all I ask  is
adherence to the technology and policy of the GPM  Unit  and  their  correct
application. Any variations or new materials or new texts  will  be  written
by myself when found necessary after thorough Review of existing  materials.
Suggested corrections or expansions should be reported in writing with  full
details and  references  and  accompanied  by  copies  of  the  material  in
question to the Department of Review  but  the  person  reporting  and  that
Department may not relieve anyone  from  compliance  with  the  material  on
which the change is requested until it is changed by HCOB or  HCO  Pol  Ltrs
or is placed on tape by myself.

    No other issue or "interpretation" has any validity and the course,  the
seniors, the instructors and  the  students  are  entirely  responsible  for
holding firmly to the policy officially released by HCO  Policy  Letter  and
following exactly the technology released by HCOBs and on my tapes.

    The material is powerful. It will make a real Clear for the  first  time
in,the history of Man, and thus opens the further way to OT.

    All I want is good auditors and cleared people.

    I fully intend to have them, if necessary at any cost.

    In accepting the GPM Unit Instruction post on the Course the  Instructor
agrees to these terms.

    In entering that Unit, the student agrees to these terms.

    If not agreed with, then there are other posts and there is the HGC.

    Here is where we separate the men from the boys, the ladies from the
    children.

    Up to now it was maybe an unserious affair.

    It takes guts to go through the bank, it takes steady  good  instruction
and earnest bright study and exact text  book  auditing.  The  tolerance  of
sloppy auditing in this level is nil. One mistake is too many.

    This is the Road out that must be followed. I didn't build the bridge to
have people knocked off of it.

    So that's policy on the GPM Unit.

    I rather think it will be followed.

    For if it isn't the way is barred for the next eternity.

    We aren't playing now.

    That's the way it is.

    Let's get the show on the road.

LRH:ml.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (a) 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: Paragraph regarding bonus has been corrected  per  HCO  PL  23  April
1965, Issue 11, adding specific of who gets bonus.

                               456

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 MAY 1965
Gen Non Rernimeo
Sthil Staff
Sthil Students   URGENT

                                 SHSBC UNIT
                                 GRADUATION

                       (Effective 17 May, 1965)

    The Instructors of Units C & D  need  not  accept  on  their  units  any
student from a lower unit who does not have an adequate. meter and needle.

    Students whose meter responses and TA position are non-optimum have been
demonstrated by recent survey to be incapable of absorbing the  material  of
the Levels Orientation, Understanding and  Enlightenment  and  stack  up  in
Classes III and IV with increasing frequency.

    This is therefore a matter forced upon us  by  the  states  of  case  of
people. At the same time we are  fortunate  to  have  the  technology  which
handles all this.

    A student whose meter is non-optimum (high TA, very low TA  sluggish  or
pulsing or RSing needle, or "dead thetan") just wastes time  when  he  moves
above the level of his case.

    Classes 0, 1 and Il are perfectly capable of improving meter  conditions
on the average pe when processing is properly applied and the Case  Cracking
Section can do the job quickly for those whose cases are in  rougher  shape,
and more cheaply than a student's living costs for the period he  would  lag
on course.

    Instructors who do not graduate students from their units into the  next
unit are of course subject to down statistics and therefore Emergency.

    This discovery of how and why some students took so much time on  course
makes it necessary to lay down the policy contained herein:

    Units C & D may not accept students whose meters show poor case
    condition.

    The Director of Examinations may not pass for graduation or  termination
students whose meters show non-optimum case condition.

    Getting his case in shape is a responsibility of the student.  When  the
student fails to take responsibility for it, course  personnel  may  act  to
get it done.

    The Saint Hill Course is a Course, not a clinic. It is the  business  of
the course to produce auditors who can audit. Little attention need be  paid
to cases or auditing schedules or auditing check sheets except as above  and
to give the student a chance to demonstrate his skill as an auditor.

    Case  is  no  excuse  for  not  auditing.   It   can   however   prevent
classification  if  not  cared  for  by  the  student.  No   one   is   owed
classification. It is an award.

    The Director of  Examinations  or  any  examiner  may  demand  Auditor's
Reports of the student to prove his or her ability as an  auditor,  and  may
demand a session be given
so that it can be observed.
LRH:wme.rd
Copyright (D 1965      L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

4.57

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 MAY 19 65

Sthil Staff Sthil Students

      HCO SPECIAL BRIEFING COURSE

STUDENT GUIDE TO ACCEPTABLE BEHAVIOUR

GENERAL

I     Adhere completely to the Code,of a Scientologist for the duration of
the course
    and behave in a manner becoming to a Scientologist at all times.

2.    Get sufficient food and sleep. Always eat breakfast before class and
    morning sessions.

3.    When being a preclear, be one, not a student or auditor.  When  being
    an auditor, be an Auditor, not a student or preclear. When in class  and
    lectures, be a student not an auditor or a preclear.

4.    Get off all your known  withholds.  Know  definitely  that  you  have
    absolutely no hope for case  advancement  unless  you  get  these  known
    withholds off to your auditor. Any violation of  Course  rules  must  be
    reported by the auditor on the auditing report for that preclear so that
    they are no longer withholds from L. Ron Hubbard, Mary  Sue  Hubbard  or
    Supervisors.

5. . Students are seated during lectures according to  units,  the  highest
    unit in the front, the lowest unit in the back.

6.    When you are requested to ask questions during a lecture, raise  your
    hand and receive permission first before stating  your  question.  Never
    speak out unless permission has been granted.

7.    Be as quiet as possible during  lectures.  Laughter  or  applause  is
    perfectly all right. The sounds  not  desired  are  rustling  of  paper,
    scraping of chairs, coughing, clicking of ball point pens in and out, or
    any other such noises. If you  can't  prevent  yourself  from  coughing,
    please leave the lecture as  quietly  as  possible.  You  can  hear  the
    lecture later from the tape. If you do have a tendency to cough or clear
    your throat, please sit to the  back  of  the  lecture  room  as  it  is
    farthest from the microphone.

8.    If you don't know something or are confused about course data, ask  a
    Supervisor or send a despatch. Do not ask other students as this creates
    progressively worsening errors in data. Also dispatches from you  to  L.
    Ron Hubbard will be relayed if you place all such in the  basket  marked
    "Students Out".

9.    Students may only use the coin box telephone during non class
periods.

10.   Be polite and courteous to the children.

11.   You must get the permission of L. Ron Hubbard to leave course  before
    you are allowed to leave. You won't be released if there  is  any  doubt
    that you are inadequate technically or your case is considered  in  poor
    condition. Give a three  week  advanced  warning  as  to  when  you  are
    leaving.

12.   All these rules  and  regulations  are  inflexible,  and  are  to  be
    followed by all students during the course unless  permission  has  been
    previously received from a Supervisor.

458

A VDITING ,

13.   Do not consume any alcoholic beverage between 6 a.m. on Sundays and
    after class on Fridays.

14.   Do not consume or have administered to yourself or any other  student
    any  drug,  antibiotics,  aspirin,  barbiturates,  opiates,   sedatives,
    hypnotics or medical stimulants for the duration of the  course  without
    the approval of the Course Supervisor.

15.   Do not give any processing to anyone under any circumstances without
    direct permission of the Course Supervisor. (Emergency assists
    excepted.)

16.   Do not receive any processing from anyone under any circumstances
    without the express permission of the Course Supervisor.

17.   Do not engage in any "self-processing" under any circumstances during
    the course at any time.

18.   Do not receive any treatment, guidance, or help from  anyone  in  the
    healing arts, i.e. physician, dentist, etc., without the consent of  the
    Course Supervisor. (Emergency treatment when the  Course  Supervisor  is
    not available is excepted.)

19.   Do not engage in any rite, ceremony, practice, exercise,  meditation,
    diet,  food  therapy  or  any  similar  occult,   mystical,   religious,
    naturopathic, homeopathic, chiropractic treatment or any  other  healing
    or mental therapy while on course without the express permission of  the
    Course Supervisor.

20.   Do not discuss  your  case,  your  Auditor,  your  Supervisors,  your
    classmates, L Ron Hubbard, HCO WW personnel or HCO WW with anyone. Save
    your unkind or critical thoughts for your processing sessions  or  take
    up complaints with any Supervisor.

21.   Do not engage in any sexual relationships of any nature or kind or
    get emotionally involved with any classmate who is not your legal
    spouse.

22.   Follow the Auditor's Code during all sessions when being the Auditor.

23.   Follow all auditing directions given you on report forms for your
preclear.

24.   Follow technical procedure as outlined on the course exactly and
precisely.

25.   Be honest at all times on your auditing report forms.  Stating  every
    process run, Tone Ann changes and times, Sensitivity setting, cognitions
    of your preclear and any  changes  of  physical  appearance,  reactions,
    communication level, or otherwise what you observe in your preclear.

26.   Place all reports in the folder of your preclear after each session,
    and place all folders in the basket marked for such.

27.   Students must not read their own report folder or that of another
    student, unless he is auditing that student.

GROUNDS AND PREMISES

28.   Do not make any undue noise in the evenings either indoors, in the
    grounds, or when leaving class.

 29.   Use the correct entrances for entering and leaving the premises.

 30.   The Hall and only the Hall is open on Saturdays and Sundays and
 students may
       come to study and listen to tapes on those days from 8.00 a.m. to
 5.00 p.m.

459

31.   The Manor is out of bounds to students without permission of a
Supervisor.

32.   Look over the grounds, by all means, but do not pick the flowers.  You
    may use tennis courts and croquet green by tennis  courts  and  you  may
    fish in the lake. The use of the swimming pool is not allowed as  it  is
    reserved for the children.

33.   During the week all class buildings are closed at 6.30 p.m. unless
    otherwise assigned.

QUARTERS

34.   Do not put cigarettes out in the plastic waste baskets or on the
floors.

35.   Keep all your bulletins, supplies and personal possessions in the
    space allotted to you and keep your space neat and orderly.

36.   Do not use lecture platform in the Chapel to work on or to put things
on.

37.   Auditors and preclears are  not  allowed  to  smoke  during  sessions.
    Students are allowed to smoke during breaks only and always outside  any
    study or auditing quarters.

38.    The  basket  marked  "Student   In"   is   the   basket   where   all
    communications, bulletins or mail to students are placed.  Always  check
    this basket daily to see if you have received any communications.

39.   Report and turn in any damaged property or goods used on the Course.
    Protect and keep the premises in good condition.

40.   No food may be stored or eaten in the Chapel or Hall at any time.

41.   Food may be stored during the daytime in the Cloakroom adjoining  the
    'Ladies Shower Room' only. Food may be consumed in the  Pavilion  during
    the lunch break and dinner break. All waste  wrappings  and  waste  food
    must be taken to and deposited in the outside dustbins, adjacent to  the
    garages, before the end of the break. No food may be  kept  anywhere  on
    the premises overnight.

SCHEDULES

42.   Be on time for class and all assignments.

43.   Buy any books you need from the invoice clerk from 12.00 - 1.00 and
    2.50 -3.00 and at no other time.

44.   Follow all schedules exactly.

45.   Study and work during your class periods and over weekends.  You  have
    a lot to get checked out on in order to get  a  course  completion.  You
    can't afford to waste time.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.rd
Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

460

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO, POLICY LETTER OF 3 JUNE 1965

Saint Hill
Grads after
Jan 64

ALL GRADS SINCE JAN 64

Tech Div

 R6 EW

    The R6 EW materials and L4 & L6 ARC Break Lists have been sent to all
SHSBC grads since Jan 1964.

    These materials are issued to them for use on their own cases.

    They may have the Solo Audit HCOBs as well.

    They may not use these materials on the public. Serious damage has been
done by two US Auditors defying policy on using R6 on raw meat with
resultant spins and illnesses.

    Do not print or publish or give it to others.

    Read the material carefully and follow it exactly.

    Those SHSBC grads who have used it report remarkable success with it and
I am happy to have trained them well enough to make it possible to use it
on themselves.

    There is not and never will be a public application to pe by auditor use
of clearing. The nature of the process forbids it. Releasing is for the
untrained. Clearing can be attained only through training as the pcs don't
know enough about life to know how to handle their bank in any way.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:wmc.rd Copyright Q 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

461

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 JULY 1965
                                  Issue III

Sthil
Sthil Students

COURSE R6 AUDITING

    The HCO Policy Letter of 13 April 1965 which restricts the auditing of
R6 to training premises is cancelled.

R6 auditing may be conducted either on the premises or off the premises.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.kd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 AUGUST 1965

Saint Hill Executive Staff only

TECHNICAL QUERIES FROM R6 GRADUATES

    Letters from R6 Grads concerning technical reports on their auditing and
technical queries concerning  R6  EW  should  be  routed  to  the  Technical
Secretary for answering. These letters may be typed in typing pool  if  Tech
Division has no typist of their own.

    In answering these letters, the Technical Secretary should follow Policy
on the answering of Technical queries. The  Technical  Secretary  must  take
care never to ignore any expressed want in  the  letter  and  to  refer  the
graduate  wherever  possible  to  the  Advanced  Scheduling  Registrar   for
scheduling for HGC Saint Hill, retread or interneship.

    If there is an expressed want to set up a City  Office  or  forming  Org
this should be referred to HCO for handling.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright@ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

462

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 SEPTEMBER 1965

Saint Hill only
SHSBC Students

                    CLASSIFICATION REQUIRED BEFORE MOVING
                                TO NEXT LEVEL

    The Saint Hill Special Briefing Course Levels 0 through IV is  a  Review
Course at a high professional level.

    Although Classification is an award, because of the degree of excellence
of auditing required at Level VI, Saint. Hill students are required  to  get
classification at the lower levels.

    Students are required to complete the Theory Checksheet  at  each  level
and attain certification before going into the Practical  Section  for  that
level. Students MUST complete the full Practical requirements including  the
auditing requirement and attain Classification for that level before  moving
on to the Theory Section of the next level up. This  makes  for  an  orderly
progression through the course and will be found  to  be  to  the  students'
advantage to not be tied up in incomplete cycles of action while  trying  to
study for higher levels.

    If a student flunks his classification written exam or  the  examination
of his auditing via his auditing reports,  the  student  is  to  review  his
theory, then his practical, as well  as  submit  further  auditing  evidence
(auditor's reports) before re-examination,

    In the Practical Section of  each  level,  the  student  is  to  do  his
auditing requirement on  his  own  responsibility  during  the  evenings  or
weekends and have the auditing requirement completed  by  the  time  he  has
completed his practical checksheet. If the student has failed  to  do  this,
he will have to review the Theory for that level, as well as the  Practical,
as it will be conceived that the student's confidence in  his  material  for
the level is lacking to the extent that he has not reached  for,  found  and
audited a preclear.

    The student is expected to complete the theory checksheet for each level
in two weeks. He is expected to complete the Practical checksheet  for  each
level in two weeks. Any student failing to do this has a down statistic  and
is to be sent to Cramming. Any student who flunks an axamination is sent  to
Cramming. Any student who fails to have the  auditing  requirement  done  by
the time his practical checksheet is done (and thus must review  the  entire
level) is sent to Cramming.

    Any student, who, at the date of this Policy Letter has been working  at
a level that he or she is not Classified up to  the  next  level  below,  is
given a grace period of two weeks exactly to 'catch up'  on  Classification.
Student attention is called  to  HCO  Policy  Letter  of  23  August  AD  15
-Classification at Upper Levels-Temporary Measure.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

463

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 OCTOBER 1965
Gen Non-Renrimeo (Amends HCO Policy Letter of
Sthil Scientology Staff      27 February 1965)
Sthil Students
Franchise
      COURSE PATTERN

    The Saint Hill Special Briefing Course is to be organized as follows:

    It will be divided into four units. These units are:

                 Unit A covering Level 0 Unit B covering Levels I and 11
                 Unit C covering Levels III and IV Unit D covering Level VI.

    One Supervisor is in charge of each unit. He or she is  responsible  for
the theory and practical supervision and all other training  and  discipline
matters relating to that  student  for  the  duration  of  his  progress  up
through the levels covered by that Unit.

    A student in a unit is classed for the level he or she has completed but
the student in a unit is designated for the classes  being  studied  for  as
follows:

                 A 0   Class Zero Unit A      Pavilion
                 B I   Class I    Unit B      Chapel
                 B 11  Class II   Unit B      Chapel
                 C III Class III  Unit C      Pavilion
                 C IV  Class IV   Unit C      Pavilion
                 D VI  Class VI         Hall

    A Supervisor is assigned to each of A, B, C and D, four  Supervisors  in
all. The course is headed by the Director of Training.

    While progressing toward his Classification for each level  the  student
is under only one supervisor.

    On enrolling the student is not given an examination for  placement  but
is checked for valid enrollment prerequisites (which  remains  HCA)  and  is
entered into Unit  A  which  consists  of  a  check  sheet  for  theory  and
practical.  Materials  include  orientation  at   Saint   Hill,   vocabulary
materials, etc, to safeguard against previously misunderstood words.

    When the student has completed his theory check sheet, he is  routed  to
the Director of Examinations, Qualifications Division,  to  attest  that  he
has done so. He then  receives  his  Certification  for  the  level  and  is
promoted  to  the  Practical  work  of  the  Level.  Once  he  has  received
Certification for a Level, he  is  permitted  to  audit  an  outside  pc  to
Release on that Level.

    When he has completed his Practical check sheet and achieved the Release
of his pc, lie presents his auditor's report to Dir Exams. When this  report
has been accepted as satisfactory by Dir Exams,  the  student  may  sit  for
written examinations on the Level.

    If  the  examination  is  not  passed,  the  student  remains   in   the
Qualifications Division in the Cramming Section at a charge of f.2  per  day
until he is able to pass an Exam on the Level.

464

    When the Examination is passed, the student receives Classification  for
the Level just completed and moves into the next level.

    This same procedure is  followed  through  all  the  levels  on  upward,
Certified, then Classed at each level.

    Saint Hill is a briefing and review course and the check sheets are  not
the check sheets of an Academy for the  same  class  and  grade,  containing
only vital materials.

    A student can have a classification examination for IV or below any time
he or she wishes, regardless of course status or unit.

    Any existing classification is laid aside for course  duration  at  this
time (but is  reinstated  at  course  end,  even  though  the  student  will
probably be well above it) as the final materials now in existence  are  new
and quite stable and students need the briefing.

    On termination the highest classification obtained on the course will be
actually made up in full and signed. This is usually Prov Class VI.  However
the student is owed only the highest certificate  attained  as  classing  is
entirely optional with the Dir Exams always.

    A student may go as high as he likes on this course but must be a  valid
HCA to enroll. However our oldest rule holds. Anyone can  have  an  HCA  who
can pass the HCA examination, which today is the examination for  Class  Il.
But it would be a good idea for anyone trying  for  an  HCA  by  examination
only to be examined for it by his nearest HCO first.

    It is the full intention of the course to round out all those small bits
missed in former study.

    Previous estimates of time on course may have to be revised.  Amount  of
materials from Zero to IV have reduced and the length of time  spent  on  R6
materials and solo auditing is only a few weeks. Level VII is  not  part  of
the present course and will not be. It constitutes another course, since  it
is taught under entirely different conditions.

    Academies will probably be following this same pattern up to  IV  except
that each level will be separately enrolled for and delivered in the  longer
period of one month. Therefore the Saint Hill  Course,  originally  designed
to improve auditing over the world, having done so has to be taught  now  in
this fashion to give old auditors a look in at each level so they can  audit
and teach it and newer ones a chance to be thorough  and  catch  up  on  any
bits skimped.

    Training is otherwise unchanged. And  the  materials  of  VI  have  been
relatively stable for over a year and IV  and  below  complete  and  stable.
Therefore, shifting technology is no longer a student problem, for there  is
no reason to shift it when it's the shortest proven way. Printed texts  will
take a long time to prepare and issue.  But  meanwhile,  it's  all  here  at
Saint Hill.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

465

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 FEBRUARY 1966
Applies to
Sthil only

Exec Sees   Qual and Tech Divs
Tech See
D of T
Course Supervisors
Mimeo SH
Qual See & Qual Staff  CHECK SHEETS, COURSE

                        THEORY COURSES

    The check sheets of  the  Saint  Hill  Special  Briefing  Course  Theory
Courses will be changed as fast as is feasible to The Library Lists HCOB  30
November 1965.

    These will be on a Zero rate.

    Only the vital points like Axioms, Scales and key  processes  and  Model
Session are Star-Rated and these must be picked out and pointed  up  on  the
Check Sheets by the Tech Sec.

    The Tech Sec is responsible for making up check sheets from the  Library
List omitting only any totally irrelevant HCOBs or books  or  pamphlets  but
keeping the amount of material as large as possible.

    Obviously a student cannot have a copy of each bulletin or  pamphlet  so
they are made up into sections of the level in  a  folder  and  the  student
hands it in when he has read it and it is reused. Students  may  buy  copies
of bulletins they want at the usual price and must pay for any they lose.

    Tape check sheets will remain as they are at this time but will be added
to when the Tape Library List is completed.

                       PRACTICAL COURSES

    The Practical Courses will include the  use  of  a  doll.  All  auditing
actions must be  letter  perfect  using  the  doll  before  the  Auditor  is
permitted a live pe.

    A Grade Released pc for the level is required for the Classification to
    be assigned.

                           LEVEL VI

    Level VI  must  include  the  entirety  of  the  Whole  Track  materials
assembled by M. Routsong and boxed.

    These are Zero rated.

    Practical for the Level consists of finding and running late implants on
another pc for which the plot is known and given.

    Solo Auditing Theory materials are then studied.

    Practical is completed by Solo Auditing to Grade VI Release.

    Persons taking this course with no earlier training must be given an  E-
Meter Cheek Sheet, rudimentary TRs and some Model Session before  doing  any
of the above.

                           WARNING

    There are two kinds of theory training. One  is  to  go  over  a  little
material but very thoroughly. We have lately  been  doing  this.  The  other
method which 1 favour and have the best success with, is to go over LOTS  of
material lightly and swiftly and then go over a very small  amount  of  very
important material thoroughly.

466

    Thus this is a shift in gears for Course Supervisors and they  must  not
get in the students' way in going over lots of material  beyond  being  sure
it is actually covered and no misunderstood words  exist  in  it.  And  they
must be plain murder on the small bits that are Star rated. Axioms by  heart
mean Axioms by Heart and no "Ah -- er -".

    Remember that anyone  enrolling  in  the  SHSBC  has  been  through  the
featherweight, small cheek sheet Academy Courses. These people lack a  broad
command of the subject. So we will give it to them.

                       EXAMINERS
                        STUDENTS

The method of student examination is changed herewith.

                        THEORY

The Certificate Exam shall consist of:

I . Assurance the student has covered the broad body of data;

2.    Assurance the student can parrot the Star Rated bits quickly, and

3.    The student is not all at sea about the principles of the level and
    why it is a level.

4.    The student can demonstrate the principles.

                           PRACTICAL

    The student examiner on a Classification Exam must be sure the student
    can

    1 . Go through the motions of an auditor for that level;

    2.      Answer up to some practical questions about what to do;

    3.      Show evidence of having released a pc at that level and in a
        very proper, uncopied report.

    The 5 GAEs if they appear at any time at any level constitute a flunk of
the examination.

    Examinations should only be carried on to a  point  where  the  Examiner
knows whether the student doesn't know or knows but  examination  should  be
quite pitiless.

    An Examiner finding a student is obviously too bad  should  always  send
the student to Review for an Assist before sending to Cramming.

    The Assist should handle ARC Breaks and misunderstoods before anything
    else.

    Only flunking incorrectly or passing incorrectly  upsets  students.  The
truth leaves them cheerful. Whatever else happens.

    These changes are not so much changes as you think. The original  method
of teaching the SHSBC is being resumed.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright & 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

467

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 AUGUST 1966

Sthill only
All Staff

ROUTING AND HANDLING OF SHSBC STUDENTS

 ANY STUDENT ON THE DAY SHSBC IS FIRST AND FOREMOST A STUDENT.

    This rule is true regardless of what other activities they undertake  on
their own time.

    No student may hold a post on the Foundation, if, in the opinion of  the
Supervisor, it interferes with the student's progress on course.

    Any student holding a Foundation post must be  immediately  replaced  if
course progress is being impeded.

                      ORDERS AND ROUTING

    Any orders or routings given to a student by another section of the  Org
which will interfere with course hours must be done via the Tech Sec,  D  of
T, and the Course Supervisor of the student concerned.

    The  sole  intention  of  the  latter  is  to  prevent   students   from
"disappearing" from course into the HGC, Review, or anywhere  else,  without
the Supervisor having directly sent the Student.

LRH:ec.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (~) 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 SEPTEMBER 1966
Ramimeo All Staff and Students

                  REQUIREMENT FOR TERMINATION ON THE SHSBC
                        AND ENROLMENT ON SOLO COURSE

    It has been observed that among the early Clears Grade VA Release was an
important gradient toward the achievement of Clear.

    This Grade is no longer to be omitted by those who wish to enrol on  the
Clearing Course.

    It is now required that all students achieve Grade VA Release as well as
Grade V before they may terminate  from  the  Saint  Hill  Special  Briefing
Course.

    It is also a requisite that all students enrolling on the Solo Course be
Grade V and Grade VA Release.

    The gradient from Grade V to Solo Auditing and then the Clearing Course
    will
then be much smoother and easier.

      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:lb-r.cden.rd Founder
Copyright @ 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

468

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 OCTOBER 1966
Unit Supers
students
SH Only
Ad Council
Qual Sec
Tech Sec    STUDENTS TERMINATING

                       LEAVE OF ABSENCE

                        BLOWN STUDENTS

L     Students Terminating

    Any student terminating  the  SHSBC,  the  Solo  Audit  Course,  or  the
Ministers Course is to get an end of course clean-up by a  qualified  fellow
student on a June 26 Form run as Auditing by List.

    The D of T is responsible for seeing that this policy letter is put into
    effect.

    Any student routing form now in use should be modified to  include  this
step. The Unit Supervisor is to sign in the proper place.

    In case of difficulty in the cleaning up of the form, the student should
be routed to the Dept of Review for a formal review session.

    Ethics cannot OK the termination without the form  signed  by  the  Unit
Supervisor, whether a review session occurred or not in the Dept of Review.

11.   LeaveofAbsence

    (a) Any student wanting to leave course should be treated as a  kind  of
blow and sent to Review. Only after a review can any  leave  of  absence  be
granted by the Tech Sec, on D of T's advice and after an  Ethics  clearance.
Valid evidence of the necessity  for  a  leave  must  be  presented  by  the
student. In no case can it exceed  two  weeksexceptional  leave  of  absence
exceeding a two week period can only be  granted  by  the  Ad  Council  upon
presentation of strong evidence of  the  necessity  for  such  and  afterthe
above routine has been gone through.

    (b) A short leave of absence of a day or so can be granted by  the  Unit
Supervisor without any further okay than by the Dir of Training.

Iff.  Blown Students

    Blown students are handled as per HCO Pol Ltr  of  April  5,  1965,  HCO
Justice Data re Academy & HGC-Handling the  Suppressive  Person,  Volume  1,
page 381 -"The Blown Student", and any other  policy  letters  dealing  with
suppressive acts.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:lb-r.rd Copyright@ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

469

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 OCTOBER 1966
                                   Issue V

Remirneo SHSBC Students SOLO Students Franchise FSMs BPI

        DURATION OF SHSBC AND SOLO COURSE REQUIREMENTS

    The following requirements will assure a fast flow through the SHSBC and
Solo Course, and will result in well grounded auditors and solo auditors
who can really handle the materials covered.

                      SHSBC REQUIREMENTS

    Certification for Level 0, including the Dianetic Course and Dissem
Drill, to be completed in 7 weeks and Classification in 2 weeks.

    The other Levels up to Level VI are to be completed within 3 weeks for
each Certification and 2 weeks for each Classification.

    Both the Certification and Classification requirements for Level VI must
be completed in a period not exceeding 5 (five) weeks for each.

                   SOLO COURSE REQUIREMENTS

    Solo Course Students, by the nature of their course, are to complete a
minimum number of actions within a specific time, to wit:

                     Zero checkouts     25 daily
                     Star-rated checkouts     2 daily
                     Tapes to be listened to  2 daily.

    These are minimum requirements only and a fast student will discover
that he can complete much faster. This is the road to freedom and OT, and
the faster we move, the sooner we'll have a clear planet.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:rd.cden Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

470

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 DECEMBER 1966

Students Foundation Training

WHAT THE SHSBC STUDENT NEEDS TO KNOW ABOUT FOUNDATION

    As part of your requirements  as  a  student  is  auditing  the  general
public, you need to know the following:

I .   Having disseminated and found your pc, before you audit  him  on  any
    process, put in a good  Reality  Factor  on  the  Gradation  Chart,  the
    various levels he will be audited through, and the  fact  that  he  will
    have to come to the Organization for a Release check. Also you must tell
    him that it might be necessary for him to have Review auditing, and this
    costs money; so bridge him in on this point.

2.    After auditing your pc to Release, you bring him into  the  Reception
    in the Foundation either in the weekdays  between  7:30  p.m.  to  10:00
    p.m., or weekends from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. It is necessary  that  you
    accompany him into Reception and take his folder in with you.  You  also
    wait in Reception until he has had his declare. If all goes  well,  that
    is the end of that cycle. If not, he will not be too  surprised  at  the
    Review action as you have explained it to him in the beginning.

3.    The best dissemination is books. If your pc has read something, he
    will have more reality on the auditing and the Organization. Get him to
    buy a book.

4.    Take or send your pc to a PE Course. This is a free service and will
    not lose you your pe. You may continue auditing him up to Level IV.

5.    When your pc has come up through the grades and has become interested
    in going further in Scientology Training or Processing, you  select  him
    for the rest of the Services he requires.

Dalene Regenass  D/Qual F
Julia Galpin     D/HCO F
Julia Galpin     Ad Council F
Julia Galpin     LRH Comm F
Jill van Staden  Ad Council SH
Otto Roos
Ken Delderfield  LRH Comm SH
Leon Steinberg)
J.J. Delance     Ad Council WW
Philip Quirino   LRH Comm WW
        Mary Sue Hubbard
        The Guardian WW
        for
        L. RON HUBBARD
        Founder

LRH.jp.rd
Copyright (E) 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

471

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 FEBRUARY 1968

Gen Non-Rernfinco SHSBC Students SH Tech & Qual Staff SH Foundation

FAST FLOW FOR SHSBC STUDENTS'PRECLEARS

      Amends HCO Pol. Letter 30 Dec. 1966

1.    The supreme policy being: RAPIDITY OF PARTICLE FLOW ALONE DETERMINES
    POWER, it is imperative that the preclear, once the completion is
    reached, immediately continues the routing on lines and finishes the
    cycle he is on.

2.    Therefore, any stops put forward by the insistence that a SHSBC
    Student's preclear should wait until the evening or even the week-end
    for the Declaration of his grade or grades on foundation lines, instead
    of day lines is a violation of the Fast Flow System and constitutes use
    of policy to stop a flow.

3.    Therefore in future preclears are to be put on lines for declaration
    of a grade or grades without any delay on lines whatsoever.

                               Blanka Annakin      - Public Exec See SH
                               Edie Hoyseth  - Qual See SH
                               Bene Neal     - HCO Area See SH
                               Monica Quirino      - HCO Exec See SH
                               Herbie Parkhouse    - Org Exec See SH
                               Ken Urquhart  - LRH Comm SH
                               Anne Tampion  - D/HCO Exec See WW
                               Allan Ferguson      - Org Exec See WW
                               Tony Dunleavy - Public Exec See WW
                               Ken Delderfield     - LRH Comm WW
                               Joan McNocher - Dep Guardian WW
LRH:jc.rd        Mary Sue Hubbard - The Guardian WW
Copyright   1968       for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

472

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 25 OCTOBER 1965

Remimeo

                                  Tech Div
                                  Qual Div
                                 Dissem Div

       SAINT HILL SOLO AUDIT COURSE

           (Effective 1 November 1965)

                 OF PARTICULAR INTEREST TO POWER PROCESSING
                                  PRECLEARS

    Solo  Audit  Course  is  inaugurated  at  Saint  Hill  for  those   non-
professional preclears who, obtaining Grade V Release,  wish  to  go  on  to
Grade VI and Grade VII.

    It is to be fully understood that this course applies only to solo audit
and gives no auditor certificate but only a  grade  of  Release  certificate
when complete. A person taking this course is not to audit others above  any
auditor class the student actually holds.

    It is further to be fully understood that any trouble the  solo  auditor
gets into must be resolved by a proper Class VI auditor in  an  organization
and that such assistance is at the student's own expense and is not part  of
the offered courses. Such help is  called  A  SOLO  AUDITOR  ASSIST  and  is
charged at existing auditor rates by the whole hour for all  hours  and  any
part of an hour. Such  SOLO  AUDITOR  ASSISTS  are  normally  given  by  the
QUALIFICATIONS DIVISION. They consist of by-passed charge assessments  using
standard lists, track analysis to find where the solo auditor has gotten  to
and  case  analysis  to  discover  what  is   wrong.   They   also   include
rehabilitation of a release state overrun. They do not consist  of  auditing
the.materials for the grade.

                              SOLO AUDIT COURSE
                                  GRADE VI

    Prerequisite: Grade V Release. Full and unqualified Ethics Clearance.

    This course consists of the following:

    The parts  of  life-thetan,  body,  mind,  physical  universe,  engrams.
    Vocabulary for parts of the E-Meter.
    Elementary E-Metering.
    Elementary Solo Auditing on PTPs, etc. Keeping an Auditor's Report.
    The history of Dianetics and, Scientology.
    Vocabulary for the bank as used in the film The Pattern of the Bank.
    The film The Pattern of the Bank and any other pertinent film with  full
    checkouts (in its data (not just viewed).
    Whole track data.
    R6  EW  technology.  Solo  Auditing  to  Grade   VI   Release.   Release
    Certification when attained.

    When this course is completed, the  Grade  VI  Release  is  eligible  to
enroll on the Saint Hill Clearing Course on a solo  audit  basis  for  Grade
VII Clear. No other certificate will be given than a grade certificate.  And
the person is given no right to audit others.  But  the  person  may  attain
Clear by this route.

    (Note: This is the  non-professional  route  specified  in  the  earlier
Gradation programmes.)

473

                         ARRANGEMENTS

    The Solo Audit Course Grade VI will be taught in the Technical  Division
Department of Training Saint Hill. It will be called Unit E-One and will  be
handled by the E-Unit Course Supervisor who, in case of  numbers,  may  have
an E-One Supervisor under him to handle this course.

    This course absorbs the R6 EW Short Course taught to org executives  who
were not properly classed for the Saint Hill Course. All students of the  R6
EW Short Course are transferred to the  Solo  Audit  Course,  the  materials
being similar.

    The course has already been piloted and was found to be successful.

    This course in no way supplants the Saint Hill Special  Briefing  Course
or Academy Courses O-IV and  the  student  is  warned  that  the  course  is
designed to make him or her only a solo auditor and in no way  prepares  one
to  audit  others  or  handle  others  with  Scientology  and  that  if  any
certification or Classification  or  full  understanding  of  technology  is
required the student of the Solo Audit Course will have to begin with  lower
classification training. It is however admitted  that  a  Grade  VI  Release
would have little trouble with the lower  levels  of  training  and  that  a
Clear would have no trouble at all.

                     SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS

    Where a person has gone Grade VI Release by reason of  earlier  auditing
on goals as happened occasionally prior to 1965 (they had  gone  up  through
all grades unknowingly and these were  rehabilitated  after  the  fact)  the
student yet must successfully complete the Solo Audit  Course  in  order  to
qualify for the Clearing Course and in no case will anyone  be  enrolled  on
the Clearing Course unless the Solo Audit Course has been passed,

    Persons enrolled on the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course take a longer
professional version of the Solo Audit Course as part of their training  and
as covered by their enrollment fee at this time.

    The price of the Solo Audit Course is f 275.

    An additional fee of f 275 is required for the Clearing Course.

    An HCA certificate from an Academy is required to enroll  on  the  Saint
Hill Special Briefing Course.

LRH:ml.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 NOVEMBER 1965
St Hill only

          TRANSFERS FROM SHSBC TO SOLO AUDIT COURSE

    Students wishing to transfer from the SHSBC to the Solo Audit Course may
do so only with permission of LRH.

    Full credit is allowed for any sums  not  consumed  by  the  Saint  Hill
Special Briefing Course.

    Compute as follows-Number of weeks on SHSBC times  f  11.9.2  subtracted
from ~C275 equals amount to be credited toward the Solo Audit Course.

LRH:ml.kd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               474

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 SEPTEMBER 1967

Tech Hats
Qual Hats

SOLO AUDITING FOLDERS

    After  completion  of  the  student's  solo  auditing  requirements  his
auditing folder is not to be given to the student to take away  or  keep  as
it is the record of a student's Grade VI auditing and as  such  must  remain
at Saint Hill. The folder must be filed safely at Saint  Hill  by  Technical
Services as the folder contains confidential data and  also  could  at  some
later date be needed for reason of review of the Grade.

    A student's solo audit course examinations  may  not  be  given  to  the
student to take home but must be kept in the  Qualifications  Division  Dept
of Examinations. The examination is handed back to  the  student  after  the
examination has taken place  for  reference  but  must  always  be  promptly
returned. It is the responsibility of the examiner  to  see  that  Level  VI
exam sheets are returned by the student.

                                         Written by a Board of
                                         Investigation:
                                         Chairman - Monica Quirino
                                         Secretary - Dalene Regenass
                                         Member - David Ziff

LRHjp.rd         Mary Sue Hubbard
Copyright (D 1967            The Guardian WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for   L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          Founder

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 NOVEMBER 1967

Solo Course Students Level VI Students

R 6 MATERIALS

    THE MATERIALS OF R 6 ARE TOTALLY  CONFIDENTIAL.  THEY  ARE  TO  BE  KEPT
SECURE AT ALL TIMES
    This means that the only people who may  talk  about  or  be  talked  to
about, or may see these materials are those  people  who  are  on  the  Solo
Course or Level VI and those people who are already Grade VI or Class VI  or
above. No one else may see these materials. If left at home, they are to  be
kept under lock and key.
    Responsibility for these materials lies  completely  with  the  students
they belong to. Violation of this policy in any way, such as losing  any  of
these materials or leaving them  lying  around,  will  incur  severe  Ethics
action.

                                Chief Solo Course Sup    Malcolm Cheminais
                                Director of Training     Dalene Regenass
                                Tech See SH   Allan Ferguson
                                Qual See SH   Helen Pollen
                                HCO Area See SH    Bene Neal
                                Chairman, Ad Council SH  Helen Pollen
                                Exec Council SH    J.J. Delance
                                   Barbara Gentry
                                Pub Exec See SH    Rosalie Vesper
                                LRH Comm SH   Irene Dunleavy
                                Chairman, Ad Council WW: Mike Davidson
                                Exec Council WW    Leaks Marinko
                                   Tony Dunleavy
                                LRH Comm WW   Ken Delderfield
                                D/Guardian WW Joan McNocher

LRH:jp.rd        Mary Sue Hubbard
Copyright @ 1967       The Guardian WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for   L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          Founder

475

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 DECEMBER 1965
Saint Hill only
      STAFF ON SAINT HILL CLEARING COURSE

    In accordance with long standing solo audit policy:

    At least 5 hours of auditing must be done a week by the Saint Hill Staff
on the Clearing Course. The reports and materials of these sessions must be
handed to the Clearing Course Supervisor each week.

    Failure to comply with this will result in being sent to review at own
    expense.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRH:emp.kd
Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 JANUARY 1966

Remimeo
Dist Staff
Students

                      REGULATIONS FOR AUDITING OF STAFF
                                AND STUDENTS

    In HCO Pol Ltr of 24 May 1965 Student Guide to Acceptable Behaviour,  it
states under #  15,  "Do  not  give  any  processing  to  anyone  under  any
circumstances without direct permission of the Course Supervisor  (Emergency
Assists excepted)", and :# 16, "Do not receive any  processing  from  anyone
under any  circumstances  without  the  express  permission  of  the  Course
Supervisor" (now D of T).

    In HCO Pol Ltr of I April 1960 Regulations for  Staff  Members  and  Ex-
Staff Members, # 2, "Any Staff Member of the organization may not audit  any
current preclear or student unless that preclear or student has been  signed
up for processing in the Hubbard Guidance Centre by the  Registrar  and  has
been assigned the auditor by the Director of Processing" (now HGC Admin).

    These policies are still in effect. Any Staff Member, student or Interne
requiring an assist or Review (unless an Emergency) must notify  their  Dept
Head who arranges with Qualifications Div, Dept of Review for an  assist  to
be given if the Dept Head deems it necessary.

    The only exception  is  the  Clearing  Course  Student  who  is  handled
entirely by the Clearing Course Supervisor and may not be audited,  sent  to
Review, or given an assist (except  in  an  Emergency  like  an  Injury)  by
anyone. The Clearing Course Supervisor is  notified  if  a  Clearing  Course
student is having difficulty with their case at home, at work, etc  and  the
Clearing Course Supervisor handles it.

LRH:ml.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

476

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 FEBRUARY 1966

Clearing Course
Students

      CLEARING COURSE
SUBMISSION OF FOLDERS

    Every Clearing Course Student away from Saint Hill must send their
folder, or a written report about their auditing, to the Clearing Course
Supervisor, Saint Hill. This information must be received once a month.

    Non-compliance will result in the Student being classed as a blown
Student and he or she will be handled as such.

LRH:ml.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 FEBRUARY 1966
                                  Issue Il

Clearing Course Students

   CLEARING COURSE

WEEKLY AUDITING HOURS

    All non-Saint Hill Staff Clearing Course Students who are working at
Saint Hill as Internes, or in any other post, before returning to their
countries, must complete 5 hours of auditing a week.

    Non-compliance will result in the Student being sent to Review at his or
her own expense.

The folders must be given to the Clearing Course Supervisor every Thursday.

LRH:ml.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Cancelled by HCO P/L 14 October 1966, Clearing Course Folders, page 481.1

                               477

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 MARCH 1966
Rernimeo
Franchise
Auditor 14
BPI   AMNESTY

    Celebrating the First real Clear made on the Saint Hill Clearing Course,
a general amnesty is ordered.

    Any and all persons who have been dead filed or declared suppressive are
included in this amnesty providing they report to the HCO Area Secretary  in
their nearest organization and obtain a clearance from her and  an  auditing
check in the Department of Review.

    I have no wish to have any organization stand in  anyone's  way  on  the
Road to Clear. The complete route is available and proven.  It  is  time  to
settle all differences for the day of total freedom is here.

    With this amnesty I wish to thank from the bottom of my heart those  who
helped, and I wish to hold no rancor for those who in ignorance of  what  we
sought, may have hindered  us-the  time  is  long  over  when  we  could  be
stopped.

    All actions or intentions before this date are freely forgiven.

LRH:ml.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright(~j) 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 APRIL 1966

Gen Non-Rernirneo
St Hill
Clearing Course
Students

ETHICS: CLEARING COURSE

    Whenever a Clearing Course Student is found guilty by Ethics of  serious
non compliance of Clearing Course instructions, blowing from Course,  Misuse
of Clearing Course material, communicating  about  the  Clearing  Course  to
anyone (which includes Clearing Course students)  other  than  the  Clearing
Course Supervisor or a Review auditor properly assigned to the  case  or  of
any action resulting in action having to  be  taken  by  Ethics,  an  Ethics
investigation is to be ordered immediately by the HCO Exec Sec, St  Hill  to
find who was responsible for  allowing  such  a  security  risk  on  to  the
Clearing Course and make recommendations.

    The Clearing Course Supervisor may demand of the HCO  Exec  Sec  that  a
Committee of Evidence be called  if  he/she  is  of  the  opinion  that  the
security of the Clearing Course is threatened and no action is being taken.

                                             L RON HUBBARD LRH:lb-r.cden
Copyright @ 1966 by L Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Revised to include Advanced Courses by HCO  P/L  12  August  1971  issue  V
(corrected & reissued 24 October 1971), Ethics:  Advanced  Courses,  in  the
1971 Year Book.]

                               478

                       HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS. OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 4 AUGUST 1966

Rernhneo

         ETHICS

CLEARS, INVALIDATION OF

    Spreading false tales to invalidate Clears is a High Crime.

    Anyone found spreading libelous  and  slanderous  statements  about  the
alleged behavior of Clears shall be declared  Suppressive  at  once  by  the
first Ethics Officer so hearing of the  matter.  Investigation  should  take
the form of looking for a criminal background on the person  spreading  such
rumours.

    For sixteen years I have been subjected to this type of attack.  Now  it
is being transferred to Clears by Suppressive Persons.

    Such attacks are born out of terror of having anyone better or stronger.
This is the basic motivation of any SP.

    It has been a hard task  to  bring  the  shreds  of  civilization  to  a
scientific barbarism known as "Western Culture".

    Quite obviously it will require a long time to get  Ethics  in  on  this
society. We have not been tough enough.

    So get tough.

                                             L RON HUBBARD LRH: lb-r. cden
Copyright @ 1966 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 AUGUST 1966

Gen -Non Rernimeo

   OT COLOUR FLASH
COLOUR FLASH ADDITION

    Clear is a green flash mark or green envelope, confidential to keep
people from looking at the contents and getting sick or worse.

    OT (Operating Thetan) Course materials AND COMMUNICATIONS shall be gold
striped on white or manila or gold envelopes. The clue is GOLD.

    Clear-Dark green stripe or envelope.

    OT-Gold stripe or envelope.

    Communications so marked MUST NOT BE OPENED by any but Clearing Course,
OT Course or OT Base Personnel.

LRH:lb-r.bh L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

479

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Gen Non-    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 AUGUST AD 16
Rernimeo
OT Course Students     Issue 11
Clearing Course Students
All Staff
Post Public Bull. Board      THE OPERATING THETAN COURSE
      in Each Org
    The OT Course has started. It is available by invitation by  Part  only.
Once a person has attained the State  of  Clear,  he  does  not  immediately
become eligible to enrol on the OT Course. He  or  she  may  be  invited  to
enrol in Part 1.
    The OT Course is divided into levels.  Each  level  is  called  a  Part.
Enrolment in each Part will be by invitation only.
    The reason for this is that for the first time in this universe  we  are
making real cleared (not keyed out) OTs. The power of these beings  will  be
unlimited. This whole operation must be done in an organised manner, and  it
is expected of the beings on the OT Course  that  Scientology  Ethics  Codes
will be always applied and  followed.  For  example,  an  OT  or  OT  Course
Student would be expected never to attack  another  being  or  group  unless
that being or group had been formally declared  suppressive  by  our  Ethics
Section. Also it is intended that there will be no leakage  of  upper  level
confidential materials which could  be  used  destructively  by  suppressive
persons or groups.
    If a person has shown by his past actions that he cannot be  trusted  to
follow the Ethics Codes of Scientology, he will not  thereafter  be  invited
to enrol on Part I of the OT Course, for it would be to invite  disaster  to
do so.
    We intend to "Bring Order" to this universe. And we shall do so.

LRH:lb-r.bh L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Remirneo    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 AUGUST 1966
Ethics Hats Issue II
Clearing Course
      Super
Clearing Course  CLEARING COURSE SECURITY
      Students
    If any Ethics Officer receives a report that a Clearing  Course  Student
is engaging in activities such as to indicate that he or she is a  potential
security risk with regard to Clearing Course materials, the  Ethics  Officer
must immediately cable the Clearing Course Supervisor at Saint  Hill  giving
brief details, and airmail full details immediately.
    Any sort of squirrel activity, contact with declared SPs: or Suppressive
Groups, entheta about or enturbulation of Scientology Orgs,  or  failure  to
report  or  communicate  promptly  to  the  local  Ethics  Officer  when  so
requested, would be grounds for suspicion. Unsolicited receipt  of  mailings
from a Suppressive Group would not, particularly if turned in unread to  the
Ethics Officer.
    The Clearing Course Supervisor, on receipt of such a report, immediately
cables the Ethics Officer to collect the  student's  materials  and  forward
them to Saint Hill. The Ethics Officer may deputize any person qualified  to
handle such materials, but must comply immediately.
    Meanwhile a full investigation into the allegations against the Clearing
Course student is done and speedily completed. The findings are reported  by
airmail to the Clearing Course Supervisor.
    If the allegations are found to  be  totally  untrue,  then  the  person
making them is subject to severe  Ethics  action,  since  he  has  wasted  a
Clearing Course student's auditing time and slowed him down on the  road  to
Clear.

LRH:ec.bh   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               480

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 OCTOBER 1966

Clearing
      Course
      Students

                           CLEARING COURSE FOLDERS
                      (This Pol Ltr cancels the Pol Ltr
                    of 3 February 1966, "Clearing Cour.-,
                           Weekly Auditing Hours")

    All Saint  Hill  Staff  and  Internes  for  Saint  Hill  and  all  other
organisations who are on the Clearing Course, must bring  their  folders  in
on Tuesday to Reception at 9.30 AM. Their folders will be returned  to  them
later that same day.

    All other Clearing Course students who are living in the East  Grinstead
area and who are not  staff  members  must  bring  in  their  folders  every
Thursday to Reception at 9.30 AM. Their folders will be returned to them  at
2.30 PM in Reception.

    A student may, of course, bring in his folder for  the  Clearing  Course
Supervisor, to the  Reception  at  9.30  AM  any  day  when  he  needs  more
materials or is in trouble.

    All students must complete 5 hours of auditing a week.

    Non-compliance will result in the student being sent to Review at his or
her own cost.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:lb-r.aaP Copyright @ 1966 by L.Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

481

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 7 NOVEMBER 1966

Remimeo
Clearing Course
      Students
Clearing Course
      Personnel
Clear Checkers
Div Organizer
      Qual WW

CLEAR CHECK-OUTS IN CONTINENTAL ORGS

    The Clearing Course is available ONLY at Saint Hill. However, a  student
who comes to Saint Hill to enrol in and start the Clearing Course  may  then
return to his home and continue it by  correspondence.  He  may  then,  when
Clear, obtain a Clear Check at his appointed Continental Organization.

    In order to speed up the  checking  out  of  Clears  residing  in  other
countries and to handle the tremendous flow of  Clears  that  is  occurring,
and in the interest of economy for students, personnel have  been  appointed
in certain Continental Orgs to perform this duty.

    When an overseas student sends in his  folder  to  the  Clearing  Course
Supervisor WW requesting  a  Clear  Check  the  Clearing  Course  Supervisor
examines the folder, and if satisfied that the student is ready for a  Clear
Check, initiates a Routing Form for a Continental Clear Check, This  routing
form then goes airmail immediately with the  student's  complete  folder  to
the Continental Clear Checker concerned and the Clearing  Course  Supervisor
at the same time writes to  the  student  informing  him  that  he  will  be
contacted by the Continental Clear Checker.

    The Continental Clear Checker, upon receipt  of  the  routing  form  and
folder, telegraphs the student to come in for a Clear Check.
    Upon arrival at the  Continental  Org  an  amount  of  E27.0.0  (or  the
equivalent in local currency) must be paid in to the  Area  Cashier  by  the
student. f 12.0.0 must be transferred IMMEDIATELY to  Saint  Hill  to  cover
the postage and handling costs that have been  incurred  in  airmailing  the
student's complete folder to the Continental Organization and  f  12.0.0  is
retained to cover the Continental Org's expenses in returning the folder  to
Saint Hill. Balance  of  Z3.0.0  comprises  the  Continental  Organization's
Clear Check fee.
    When the Checkout has been completed and the student has been  announced
Clear, a cable is sent to the Clearing Course Supervisor WW  announcing  the
following facts:

   . 1. Name of Clear.
    2.      TA position.
    3.      Where the Clear received his early training.

    The Continental Clear Check routing form is then completed and  sent  to
the Clearing Course Supervisor  WW  complete  with  the  student's  complete
folder and all reports and materials used in the Checkout.

    Every Continental Clear Checker must have completed the following  steps
before being allowed to check out a Clear:
    1.      Checked out thoroughly on all Clearing Course Tech Materials.
    2.      Checked out on the Clearing Course remedies.
    3.      Checked out on the Clear Check Hat.

    Training of a Clear  Checker  is  done  under  the  Supervision  of  the
Divisional Organizer, Qual WW.

    Having been checked out Clear, if the person is invited on the OT Course
Part One, enrollment can be handled by mail from Saint Hill.

LRH.jd.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

482

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 NOVEMBER AD 16
              (Replaces HCO Policy, Letter of 12 August AD 16)

Rernitneo

OT COURSE

    The OT Course has been inaugurated as of 10 August AD 16.

    This Course is by invitation only and by invitation to each separate
part of the Course.

    It is only open to Clears who must have been checked out Clear by the
Saint Hill Qualifications Division or at the appointed Continental
Organization authorized to give Clear Checks.

    The invitation to the Course or to any succeeding part depends on
    several factors:

    I . Security of R6EW, Class VII and Clearing materials in the student's
    hands.

    2.      Degree of participation the being has engaged in in Scientology.

    3.      The general character of the being as a Scientologist, based on
        his Ethics record.

    4.      The ScientologY technical proficiency of the being.

    If an invitation is not received a petition may be submitted to the
Office of LRH, setting forth evidence as to why one should be invited.

LRH:jp.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1966  Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note; The 14 Nov '66 revision was inclusion in third paragraph of Clear
Checks given at authorized Continental Organizations. This PIL was later
revised and reissued as HCO P/L 12 August 1971 Issue IV, OT Courses, in the
1971 Year Book.1

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 DECEMBER 1966

Sthil only WW and SH Execs Ethics Cent Clear Checkers Cl Cse Personnel Cl
Cse Students

CLEARING COURSE REGULATION

    A Clearing Course student is not officially Clear before being
pronounced so by a qualified checker and Qual and may not announce the fact
as a fact until so checked by an authorized Clear Checker who has actually
officially checked him out and until he/she has been declared Clear by
Qualifications Division SH.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:jp.rd   Founder
Copyright Oc 1966
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

483

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER~OF 17 JANUARY 1967

Rernimeo
Franchise
FSMs
AllStudents
All Preclears
BPI

AN OPEN LETTER TO ALL CLEARS

    You are a Clear. Well done and congratulations.

    This state has not previously been attained in this universe and we must
all work towards getting more people-many  more  people-up  to  this  level.
Essentially, you are clear on the Ist Dynamic and still have a lot  of  work
in front of you to attain OT, which is to say the  remaining  dynamics,  but
nevertheless you will find you have many abilities  hitherto  undreamed  of.
An ethical code already exists for OTS so at the state of Clear  one  should
not assume that one has a license to do just whatever one  will.  You  still
have the remaining dynamics to go  so  don't  use  the  abilities  you  have
attained already to enslave others, or indeed, yourself.

    With freedom comes responsibility and with responsibility comes the need
to assess one's actions and to  take  only  such  actions  as  will  do  the
greatest good over the greatest number of  dynamics.  So,  the  Policies  of
Scientology which have enabled you to reach the state of Clear  still  apply
to all Clears. In fact they apply more  because  you  have  the  reality  of
their value and the necessity of seeing that they are followed.

    Those who have not yet attained Clear will be  watching  you  with  some
awe, so you have the duty of setting an example of  exemplary  behaviour  in
all aspects of your life. As a Clear you have  no  privileges  beyond  being
declared Clear.

    As a result, bigger responsibilities will be given and expected  of  you
so you must be prepared to responsibly educate yourself where  necessary  so
that you can do whatever is assigned to you in a proper  manner  in  keeping
with the main goals and aims of Scientology.

    So for you there is no sitting down and resting upon  your  laurels,  no
waiving of policy,  no  promiscuous  2nd  Dynamic  activities,  no  improper
assumption  of  power,  control  or   influence   or   assuming   that   you
automatically know best in every situation. It is a crime to invalidate  the
state of Clear-see to it that you don't do this in your conduct as a  Clear,
particularly as regards yourself. You still have the rest  of  the  dynamics
to go.

    You have now  become  more  than  ever  a  part  of  a  team.  Obsessive
individualism and a failure to organise were  responsible  for  our  getting
into the state we got into.

    As soon as you have gone the rest of the way this will become abundantly
    plain.

    1 expect and need your help to  carry  out  the  broad  mission  of  de-
contaminating this area of the universe. If you wish  to  help,  your  first
duty is to protect the repute of the state of Clear  by  exemplary  conduct.
Your second duty is to attain OT as soon as possible.  Your  third,  if  you
still wish to help, is to become part of the  endeavour  to  clean  up  this
sector of the universe and make it safe  not  only  for  ourselves  but  the
billions of others who have been harmed.

    As a Clear you are welcomed and honoured. Don't do  anything  that  will
wear out your welcome or bring dishonour on yourself or upon other Clears.

    Thank you for what you have done so far.

    Thank you for what you will do in the future.

    1 know I can count on you.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD
                                             Founder

LRH:jp.eden Copyright@ 1967 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               484

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I APRIL 1967

All Adv Cse Students
Registrars all Orgs

SECTION III OT PREREQUISITE

    It is required that by the time of completion of Section 11 OT Course or
before Section III OT Course the student must have completed the Saint Hill
Special Briefing Course.

    The reason for this is that the skill and general command of Scientology
required to get through Section III is well in advance of lower grade
demands upon the student. He or she must be a thoroughly good auditor to be
able to handle Section III.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jp.rd   Founder
Copyright (D 1967
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 APRIL 1967

Saint Hill
Only

STAFF ON SAINT HILL ADVANCED COURSES

    HCO Policy Letter of 13 December 1965, "Staff on Saint Hill Clearing
Course", which states that "at least 5 hours of auditing must be done a
week by the Saint Hill staff on the Clearing Course" is hereby cancelled as
an arbitrary.

    Students who have ceased to audit on the OT Course are in trouble case-
wise and shall be sent to Review.

                                             Executive Council WW
                                             Mary Sue Hubbard
                                             The Guardian WW

LRH.jp.rd   for
Copyright Oc 1967      L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard      Founder
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

485

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                 HCO POLICY LETTER OF I MAY 1967
Limited Non-Remimeo SH Staff WW Staff Advanced Courses
 students   ADVANCED COURSES ADMINISTRATION

   , Advanced Courses, including the Clearing  Course  and  OT  Course,  are
under the regulation of the Executive Council  WW,  just  as  any  other  WW
activity. They remain in the Office of LRH WW.

                       ISSUE OF MATERIALS

    Only course materials and matters of regulation of  Course  or  students
may be mailed out by the Course. All other matters proceed on  Org  channels
and are forwarded to LRH on channels for approval.  In  being  forwarded  to
LRH, they may be stopped or handled at any point upward.

                                             Executive Council WW
                                             Mary Sue Hubbard
LRH:jp.bh   The Guardian WW
Copyright @ 1967 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

            HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 JULY 1967
Limited Non-Remimeo
SH Staff
WW Staff
      ADVANCED COURSES SUPERVISORS' STATISTIC

    In accordance with an order of the Founder that  the  Advanced  Courses'
statistic is Number of Hours Audited by  Students,  the  following  policies
shall apply to the Advanced Courses.

    Each ADVANCED COURSES Supervisor is now allotted his own Clearing or  OT
Course students whose auditing he/she supervises.

    Students on the OT Course are divided  equally  between  the  OT  Course
Supervisor and Assistant Supervisorls.

    Students on the Clearing Course are divided equally between the Clearing
Course Supervisor and Assistant Supervisor/s.

    When new Assistant Supervisors are added, re-adjustment is to be made so
that the new Supervisor has his own students.

    The Statistic for each Supervisor and Assistant Supervisor shall be  the
"Number of Hours Audited" by his/her students.

    The  main  Advanced  Courses'  overall  Statistic,  and  therefore   the
Statistic of Chief Supervisor of Advanced Courses, is total number of  hours
audited by all students.

                              Executive Council WW:      Fred Hare
                                  Joan McNocher
LRH:jp.bh   Mary Sue Hubbard
Copyright @ 1967 The Guardian WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                               486

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 SEPTEMBER 1967
                  (Replaces HCO Pol Ltr of 30 Sept 1966 and
                combines it with HCO Pol Ltr of 28 Sept 1966)

Sthil Only WW & SH Execs Ethics Cl Cse Personnel Cl Cse Students OT Cse
Students

CLEARING AND O.T. COURSE REGULATIONS
CLEARING AND O.T. COURSE SUPERVISION

    The answers to all contingencies are contained in  the  Clearing  Course
materials. Therefore the following regulations apply: -

1 .   No off-line advice may be sought in cases of students on the Clearing
    or O.T. Course.

2.    All problems arising with cases, if the case does not  resolve,  must
    be reported to ES Comm Qual WW who may then only order check-outs on the
    Clearing and O.T. Course Supervisors.

3.    Any "unusual solution" sought must be answered on ly by check-outs of
    the Supervisors of the Clearing and O.T. Courses.

4.    Check-out of states of case by Qual must be done by a Clear member of
    Qual staff and the student's complete folder must be submitted  to  such
    an examiner at the time of examination for his inspection.

5.    Any person examining in Qual for attained states of  case  must  have
    been checked out on all technical materials of  the  Clearing  and  O.T.
    Courses and especially any remedies.

6.    Any examiner checking out states of case in Qual must be Clear.

7.    All Clearing and O.T. Course personnel must be Clear to be Clearing
    Course personnel or to help on the Clearing or O.T. Course.

8.    No person may be admitted on the Clearing Course who has a bad Ethics
    history or a this  lifetime  suppressive  order  or  a  criminal  record
    without a special Board of Investigation convened by  the  Exec  Council
    WW.

9.    No person with a record of using Clearing Course materials
    suppressively may be admitted on the O.T. Course.

10.   Persons who have been careless  or  insecure  in  their  handling  of
    Clearing Course materials or who have made them available to another may
    not be admitted on the O.T. Course regardless of  action  taken  at  the
    time or Clearing Course restoration.

11.   All Clearing Course  Auditors  and  O.T.  Course  Auditors  who  have
    materials to be exchanged bring their folders to Reception 9.30 a.m. Non-
    staff members will have folders returned  at  2.30  p.m.  in  Reception.
    Staff members folders will be brought to them during the day.

12.   When a Clearing Course or O.T. Course Student wishes  to  communicate
    in any way with the Supervisors, he  must  do  this  through  Reception,
    either by sending his folder or by a letter.

                               487

13.   If a student needs any advice he must always send his folder to the
    Course Supervisors. If in emergency, a cable may be sent also.

 14.   No alcohol may be consumed within 24 hours before a session.

 15.   Auditing must be done every day.

16.   Clearing Course and O.T. Course students are not to discuss  Clearing
    or the O.T. Course or their case with ANYONE except with the Clearing or
    O.T. Course Supervisors and  then  only  through  their  folders  or  by
    written  report,  unless  they  are  called  in  specifically   by   the
    Supervisors.

    When a student is in Review he may discuss  his  case  with  a  properly
    assigned Review Auditor only.

17.   Students who have ceased to audit on the Clearing Course or O.T.
    Course are in trouble case-wise and shall be sent to Review.

    Violations of these regulations must result in a Committee of Evidence.

LRH:lb-r.jp.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1966, 1967 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Note: This revision changed Ad Council to Exec Council and substituted  No.
17 above for the 5 hour per week rule. it was later cancelled by HCO  P/L  9
January 1968, page 491, and then revised and reissued as HCO P/L  12  August
1971 Issue 111, Advanced Courses Regulations-Advanced  Courses  Supervision,
in the 1971 Year Book.]

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 NOVEMBER 1967
WW & SH Execs
Ethics
Advanced Courses Personnel
CC Students
OTC Students

                     CLEARING AND OT COURSE REGULATIONS
            (Continues HOD Pol Ltr of 30 Sept 1966 of same name)

18.   Clearing and OT Course students' worksheets and auditor reports must
    be legible; otherwise it will be considered a No Report.

19.   Clearing Course students are expected to remain on location until
    given permission to go home in writing by their Clearing Course
    Supervisor.

                              Ch. Super Adv Courses      Janet Guilford
                              Qual Sec SH    Helen Pollen
                              HCO Area Sec WW      Len Regenass
                              Exec Council WW      Tony Dunleavy
                                  Eunice Ford
                              LRH Comm WW    Ken Delderfield
                              D/Guardian WW  Joan McNocher
      Mary Sue Hubbard
LRH:jp.cden The Guardian WW
Copyright @ 1967 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                               488

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 NOVEMBER 1967
Remimeo
HCO Div I
Dir I & R
Ethics
HCO Area Sec
Advanced Courses Hats
Security Checker Hat

ADDITIONAL POLICIES ON ADVANCED COURSES SECURITY

Mixed Practices and Clearing Course Security

    Any applicant for Advanced Courses (Solo Audit Course,  Clearing  Course
or OT Course) discovered or known  to  have  any  current  record  of  mixed
practices may not be accepted on such until he has had a thorough Review  in
Qual with the matter handled and passed a probationary period  of  at  least
three months.

    The PURPOSE OF THIS POLICY is to ensure that it  be  ascertained  beyond
any shadow of a doubt that the  person  has  truly  left  former  practices,
because a 'mixed Practice Case' is a risk to Advanced Course Security.

  ADDITIONAL POLICIES ON ETHICS CLEARANCE FOR CLEARING COURSE

    When passing on Ethics Clearance for the  Clearing  Course,  the  Ethics
Officer must examine the Applicant's Central File Folder and  Org  Personnel
File in addition to his Ethics File.

                   SUMMARY OF ETHICS RECORD

    The Ethics Officer WW is to check the Advanced Scheduling Book on the  I
st of every month for anyone who intends enrolling  on  an  Advanced  Course
the following month (i.e., on the first of January the book is  checked  for
applicants in February). When such a name is found, the  Ethics  Officer  WW
is to contact Airmail the Continental Org concerned for  a  summary  of  the
person's Ethics Record. The Ethics Officer of the Continental Org  concerned
fills in the following form:

                   SUMMARY OF ETHICS RECORD

TO:   ETHICS OFFICER WW

FROM: ETHICS SECTION

APPLICANT'S NAME:

LOCAL ADDRESS:

 1. Was the applicant ever ORG STAFF    PRECLEAR

    STUDENT -

 2. Number of chits in Ethics File

 3. Number of Ethics Orders issued on the Applicant

 4. Nature of Ethics Orders

489

Has the Applicant ever been:

      5. Subject of an SP Order   Yes - No -
      6. Subi . ect of a Non-Enturbulation Order   Yes - No
      7. Subject of a Type 111 Ethics Order  Yes - No
      8. Dead Filed    Yes - No
      9. Guilty of writing Entheta comms to the Org      Yes -      No
10. Guilty of a Criminal Record   Yes - No
11. Guilty of Breach of Security  Yes - No
12. Guilty of a badEthics Record  Yes -      No-

    IF THE ANSWERS TO ANY OF THESE POINTS 5 to 12 is 'Yes' then  the  Ethics
Folders and other supporting data or documents must be forwarded at once  by
Airmail to the Ethics Officer WW. In carrying this out  the  Ethics  Officer
must make reference to all files in the Continental Area of the Applicant.

    This form can only be filled out by an Ethics Officer properly appointed
by the Office of LRH WW.

                                     Attested
                                                    Ethics Officer
                                      Location

                                      Date

                          DEADFILING

    ANY record of the applicant being deadfiled must  be  considered  a  bad
Ethics Record and a special Board of Investigation must  be  called  for  by
the Ethics Officer WW per HCO Policy Letter of Sept 30, 1966, "Clearing  and
OT Course Regulations". In such a case, all the files of the person must  be
called for, including the C/F Folder from any  outer  Org  as  well  as  any
Ethics Files so that the Board of Investigation has these  folders  at  hand
in its investigation.

              ONLY DULY APPOINTED ETHICS OFFICERS

    Only a properly appointed Ethics Officer (authorized by  the  Office  of
LRH WW) who has checked out on all of the Ethics Officer  checksheet,  which
must include pertinent policies  on  Advanced  Courses  Security,  may  give
final Ethics clearance  for  entry  onto  an  Advanced  Course  (Solo  Audit
Course, Clearing Course and OT Course).

                                     Written by a Board of Investigation
                                     CHAIRMAN Monica Quirino
                                     SECRETARY Dalene Regenass
                                     MEMBER David Ziff

LRH:jp.rd   for  Mary Sue Hubbard
Copyright @ 1967       The Guardian WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for   L. RON HU13BARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          Founder

[Note: HCO Policy  Letter  of  21  November  1967,  Additional  Policies  on
Advanced Courses Security, is cancelled. - LRH. HCO P/L 28 January 1968.1

[This Policy Letter was later revised and reissued  as  HCO  P/L  12  August
1971 Issue 11, same title as above, in the 1971 Year Book.)

                               490

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 JANUARY 1968

Remirneo

CANCELLATION OF HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 SEPT 1967
      AND HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 SEPT 1967

    HCO Policy Letter 13 September 1967, "Clear Check Outs", and HCO Policy
Letter of 12 September 1967, "Clearing and 0. T. Course Regulations,
Clearing and O.T Course Supervision", are hereby cancelled as both policies
contain inspection before the fact and therefore violate the Fast Flow
System of Management.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:jp.rd Copyright (j) 1968 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 DECEMBER 1969

Class VIII
Level V1 SHSBC
MEW Solo Course

SOLO AUDITING AND PREGNANCY

    Solo Auditing from the Clearing Course upwards is not permissible for
pregnant women.

One may proceed with solo auditing after the baby is born.

Quentin Hubbard Class VIII for L. RON HUBBARD Founder

LRH:QH:Idm.rd Copyright @ 1969 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

491

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

AOs   HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I AUGUST 1971
SHs   Issue V
Tech Hats
Qual Hats   (Replaces HCO P/L of 10 Nov 66)
Ethics
ROW, CC &
OT Course Packs  ADVANCED COURSES MATERIALS

                       SECURITY OF DATA

    Issued with a small amount of R6 data in 1964,  three  or  four  persons
promptly used it on pcs knowing well it was forbidden. The  pcs  became  ill
or misernotional toward us. And just the day I write this (original  writing
4 October 1965) 1 myself encountered a  pc,  very  ill,  who  had  had  some
original R6 data misused on her and did not suspect why her case and  health
had worsened. She was not ready for it at all.

    The issue earlier was a trial balloon,  in  a  sense.  I  found  certain
persons (a small minority) were not up to responsibility  for  the  material
of April 1964.

    Therefore our firm action will be that the moment we find  the  material
of the Clearing Course or OT Course has escaped  or  been  misused  we  will
quickly trace the person who was insecure and cut off  all  further  or  any
future Clearing  or  OT  data  issue  to  that  person.  The  likelihood  of
independent discovery even with clues  has  proven  to  be  non-existent  by
actual review of auditors trying to find pieces of it  when  they  had  over
half of the answers already.

    You must realize that we suffer, all of us, from the misuse of knowledge
concerning the mind at a very early period. To place  this  data  near  such
people as psychiatrists or even states places them in a position to  enslave
people or repeat the original action  and  cave  people  in.  A  very  small
minority, receiving incorrect data did promptly use it harmfully  on  others
after April 1964.

    Until we ourselves have climbed well out of the hole, we must  safeguard
the materials. Our case gains depend  on  it.  And  others  could  make  our
salvage of people impossible.

    We do not safeguard these materials from any  commercial  consideration.
Our futures, those of each of us and those of all Scientologists, depend  on
our keeping this material under lock and safeguarded  from  abuse  until  we
are well away as a group and can handle  things  better  as  individuals  as
well as a group.

    The road is wide open to anyone to come up the grades and  obtain  them.
But it is shut to any who misuse them or injure their security.

    Students  of  the  Advanced  Courses,  the  Advanced  Course   C/S   and
Supervisor, Ethics Officers and all HCO and  Org  staff  have  it  in  their
personal interest to enforce security of materials to the limit.

    These restrictions apply to no data up to Grade V.

    From Power Processing on up the data is confidential. Up to  there,  you
can release Scientology data as you always have-freely and to everyone.  But
this last bit is dangerous in unskilled or uneducated or unscrupulous  hands
and it is purely ours. It belongs to the Scientologists who  keep  the  show
on the road and must be available to
them when they are ready.
      Reissued by
      Flag Advanced Courses Supervisor
      for
LRH:BW:LR:sb.rd  Training and Services Aide
Copyright @ 1971 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

                               492

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 OCTOBER 1968
                                  Issue 11

Remimeo
Class VIII Course

CLASSIFIED MATERIALS

    Class VIII students are taught the following classified materials:

    Power Processes.

    Section IV OT.

    Class VIII graduates can NOT NOT NOT offer these to the public  or  sell
them to the public.
    Class VIII students are only taught these as they often have  to  REPAIR
them, and to repair them, they must know all about them.

    This, however, does not give  them  the  authorization  to  do  them  on
anyone, nor to offer them for sale, nor to give this processing  to  others.
Saint Hill and the American Saint Hill Organization are the only  authorized
places where the Power Processes  can  be  run  and  the  Sea  Org  Advanced
Organizations are the only authorized places where  Section  IV  OT  may  be
run.

LRH:ew.ei.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1968 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 3 SEPTEMBER 1969
      Issue Il
Remirneo
BPI   SUCCESSFUL CLASS VIIIs

    Any Class VIII auditor may have the new Standard Dianetics  Course  free
of charge at his nearest org or an AO.

    The additional certificate of HDG is required of Class VIIIs so they can
handle Case Supervision and Standard Dianetic  Auditing  as  well  as  audit
well in Standard Dianetics.

    The certificate of HDG is a prerequisite (along with a Class VI) for all
new AO Class VIII enrollees  after  the  date  of  receipt  of  this  Policy
Letter.

                      STANDARD DIANETICS

    The Course is. available at AOs and SHes.

    It has been found that the ability to audit Standard Dianetics; well  in
its simplicity speeds Academy, VI and  VIII  training  greatly  and  reduces
failed students in the Academy, VI and VIII Courses to zero.

    It is not the intention of this  Pol  Ltr  to  interrupt  the  plans  or
activities of Scientology Classed Auditors or applicants  and  all  possible
adjustment will be made in orgs to accommodate Scientology Classed  Auditors
to quickly obtain their HDG during this period of adjustment.

    We now have a smooth flowing tech training line and have found there are
no failed cases where training is'good and which follows this gradient.

LRH:Idm.ei.rd    L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1969      Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               493

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 OCTOBER 1969

Remimeo

    CLASS VIII & HDG
(Modifies Earlier Requirements)

    No Class VIII Auditor may have his final certificate until he has also
acquired his HDG.

    All Class VIII enrollees are required to have an HDG before being
admitted to the Class VIII Course.

    Requirements for course enrollments are

    HDC required for HDG Course.

    HDG required for Class 0-1-11-111-IV.

    HPA-HCA required for Class VI Course.

    HDG and Class VI required for Class VII.

    HDG-Class VI required for Class VIII.

LRH:nt.ei.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1969 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

fCancelled by HCO PIL 17 November 1969, Dianetics and Scientology Services,
page 401.1

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 JANUARY 1970

Remimeo
Registrar
Qual Secs
Tech Secs

CLASS VIII REQUIREMENT

    The requirements for enrolment on the Class VIII Course are HDG, Class
VI and enrolment and successful progress on OT 111. It is not a requirement
that one has to have completed OT III but his III Solo Auditing must be
successfully in progress before beginning Class VIII studies.

                                             Lt. Nate Jessup
                                             CS-4

LRH:NJ:jz.ei.rd  for
Copyright Q 1970 L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard      Founder
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

494

                                     NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR
                                     FLASH NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                                   LONDON

Extracted from CLINICAL PROCEDURE OF 20 MAY 1954

ATMOSPHERE OF THE CLINIC

    The atmosphere is a most important part. It should be business-like and
friendly. By no means should any person be allowed on the premises who does
not have business there. There is nothing so disturbing to a preclear as to
have a bunch of auditors hanging around discussing techniques and their own
cases or seeking to recruit clinic preclears.

THE AUDITORS OF THE CLINIC

    The auditors of the clinic should have their own bulletin and schedule
board, but this is not to be in the reception room.

    Auditors must not congregate in the reception room and should not talk
to preclears except in session.

[Unsigned]
Issued by HCO London in Digest I re-issue of 18 March 1958.

                                NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                   NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 20 Buckingham Street, Strand, London W.C.2

 HCO BULLETIN OF 26 SEPTEMBER 1956

     ORGANIZATIONAL BULLETIN

REGISTRAR

    The Registrar has responsibility for procurement, interview, signing up,
legal and finance. The Registrar is directly responsible for all students
and pc procurement and keeping place full.

    The Registrar is not responsible for auditing rooms, auditors,
assignment of pes to auditors or states of cases. These are the function of
the Director of Processing.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ebh.rd

495

                                     NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR
                                     FLASH
                                        NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
           20 Buckingham Street, Strand, London W.C.2, Gt. Britain

ORGANISATIONAL BULLETIN OF 26 SEPTEMBER 1956

PROCEDURE FOR PUTTING AUDITORS ON STAFF

AUTHORITY -DIRECTOR OF PROCESSING

EMERGENCY - Bring auditor on, put on the pc, assign room, advise Accountant
at once by slip he has been hired. Do not give him any advice. Brief later
when finished with case if auditor to be retained.

HIRING AUDITORS ON STAFF - This assumes always that Auditor is an HCA (HPA)
at least. Hire one to two weeks before needed. Give him incidental
Organisational duties-correcting tests, mailings, 'phone, anything so he'll
have 8c on Organisation itself. Have him attend auditors' conferences.

    Let him observe staff auditors at work.

    Have a set of Briefing lectures on tape for him to listen to between
3.30 and 4.45 p.m. daily. (Machine with Earphones.) Have him listen to each
about three times.

    Give him High School Indoctrination.

    Make him define Staff Auditor.

    Have a staff auditor patch him up with a small amount of evening
auditing on handling preclears.

      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:ebh.rd

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                                  NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE 1812 19th Street, N.W.,
                Washington 9, D.C.

                HCO BULLETIN OF 15 NOVEMBER 1956

HGC PRECLEAR COMPLAINTS

    On any HGC preclear complaint, we will give more auditing for cash, and
tear up any old HGC note (requisite: real complaint grounds).

      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:mek.rd

POLICY LETTER OF 17 MAY 1957

c to London

    The Hubbard Guidance Center is primarily a service unit.

    Priority on Auditors is this:
    I . Outside preclears including complaints and extra weeks.

    2.      Staff in general.
    3.      Staff Auditor processes Staff Auditor.

    Categories 2 and 3 must have the permission of the Organizational
Secretary before any processing can be done.

Richard F. Steves
Organizational Secretary

496

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
      NOT GREEN ON WHITE

(FOR LONDON AND WASHINGTON)

HCO PROCESSING BULLETIN OF 10 JUNE 1957

                      WHAT TO TELL NEW HGC AUDITORS TO
                            PROCESS ON PRECLEARS

    When a new auditor is taken on at HGC we do not

    1.      Train him while he is processing his first preclear.
    2.      Tell him what process to run.
    3.      Add to his already tense confusion of being on staff by
       unstabilizing all his stable auditing data, too.

    We Do this:

    1 . We ask him what process he has the greatest certainty on.
    2.      We tell him to audit the pc with that process and no other.
    3.      If he has certainty on several we have him select one best
       suited to pc and have him use that.

    Then we train up the new staff auditor by auditor's conferences and HCO
Board of Review at a leisurely pace.

    STABLE DATUM:

    It will be found that any auditor using a process on which he has high
reality will obtain high results with a pc using that process.

LRH:md.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
6-10-57

      THE FOUNDING CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY
      1812 19th Street N.W., Washington, D.C.
      FOUNDING CHURCH POLICY LETTER OF 10 JULY 1957

                   HIRING OF STAFF AUDITORS

    Before a staff auditor may be hired it is necessary that he have an
interview with me.

LRH:md.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

                               NOT HCO POLICY I-ETTER
                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                  NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                              WASHINGTON, D.C.

HCO BULLETIN OF 2 SEPTEMBER 1957

    When a verbal direction is given to the HGC  Staff  Auditors  concerning
the processing of preclears, such as what process is to  be  run,  etc,  the
auditor is to write out verbatim the order and have it initialed  by  myself
and present it to the Director of  Processing  immediately.  The  processing
directions are to be followed exactly without  variation  until  ordered  to
change.

    This is the Stable Datum: If given an  order  by  myself  and  it  isn't
written, you are to write it out.

LRH:md.nm   L. RON HUBBARD
9-2-57      497

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

HASI POLICY LETTER OF 5 SEPTEMBER 1957

All preclears are expected to:

             1

    1 . Attend the evening PE Course

2. Work the Handbook for Preclears evenings while being processed at the

    HGC.

Effective at once.

L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1

HASI POLICY LETTER OF 16 SEPTEMBER 1957

To: Tech Dir
Assoc Sec
Director of Processing
Registrar
All Auditors

H.G.C. POLICY

RESULTS OR ELSE

On preclears, call them back where they felt no gain occurred.

Clean up all flubbed cases.

LRH:rd      L. RON HUBBARD

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
      NOT GREEN ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

HASI STAFF NOTICE OF 16 SEPTEMBER 1957

    Please note that our Clinical activities are dealt with by the Hubbard
Guidance Centre (see the Organizational Board). Therefore this title should
be used in reference to that service.

Jack Parkhouse

498

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                        37 Fitzroy Street, London W.1

                    HASI POLICY LETTER OF 8 FEBRUARY 1958
                           (Issued at Washington)

    Since people will begin to expect being cleared, all processing must  be
sold on basis of estimate to clear.
    Therefore the pkgs are now as follows:
        I week -  50 gns.    Pro. 25 gns.
        3 weeks - 125 gns.   Pro. 75 gns.
        5 weeks -            Pro.
        7 weeks - Pro.
   these prices to be issued at a later date).
    The conditions monitoring acceptance or establishment of number  of  wks
are as follows:
    One wk.-Would show up top of graph, high on meter, no  field,  generally
nul on needle, no psychosomatic or visual difficulty. IQ above 125.
    3 wks.-Middle range of graph, IQ above 100. No psychosomatics. No field.
    S wks.-Middle lower range of  graph,  IQ  above  80.  Psychosomatics  or
visual difficulty. Some field.
    7 wks.-Lower area of graph. Psychosomatic or visual difficulties.  Black
field. Mental problems.
    Unacceptable. Psychotic persons who would  require  institutionalization
to be processed.
    A person is disqualified  from  processing  by  severe  medical  illness
needing a doctor's care.
    There is no guarantee of clearing or even case gain.

    All state of  case  is  established  by  Dir  of  Processing,  never  by
Registrar. The above tests are all made by Dir  of  Pr  after  pc  has  been
signed up by Registrar for something and has been given written tests.  Then
person goes to Dir Pro and is looked over,  and  accepted  or  rejected.  If
rejected on grounds not enough processing is bought person  is  returned  to
Registrar to buy it.
    We do not care what initial hours the Registrar sells.
    We do not care when the person receives the processing or even  when  he
pays for additional weeks required by Dir Pro. We do care that a reality  on
number of wks bought exists. Otherwise we will be giving away too many  free
wks. The pe must know what to expect.
    Change in Release. All papers signed must reflect that acceptance of the
pc for processing is also contingent on an interview with Dir  Pr  and  that
signing up with the Registrar does not commit org until  also  accepted  and
signed up with the Technical Division.

rs.18.2.58/rd    LRH

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                                 NOTGREEN ONWHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                  HCO BULLETIN OF 4 MARCH 1958
              Addition to HASI Policy Letter of Feb 8, 1958

    The following are prices of auditing "packages" to be sold on the basis
of estimate to clear.
       I week -  50 gns.    Pro.  25 gns.
       3 weeks - 125 gns.   Pro.  75 gns.
       5 weeks   -     Jf,200     Pro. ,     125 gns.
       6 weeks   -     f 240      Pro. 150 gns.
       7 weeks   -     f 275      Pro. 175 gns.
       8 weeks   -     f 300      Pro. 200 gns.

                                             HCO

                               499

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                               NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                         WASHINGTON, D.C. HASI, L.A.

   HCO BULLETIN OF 9 JULY 1958

STAFF CLEARING

The Director of Processing is in charge of Staff Clearing.

LRH:bt.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                                   LONDON

HCO TECHNICAL POLICY LETTER OF 25 NOVEMBER 1958

          ACADEMY TRAINING BULLETIN

All Area
Offices

                   TECHNIQUES TO BE USED ON HGC PRECLEARS
                 Effective Dec. 1, 1958 in all Area Offices

    The following techniques are the only  techniques  to  be  used  on  HGC
preclears, effective Dec. 1, and continuing. These  produce  clears  in  the
hands of most auditors.

    Deviations by Director of Processing or staff auditors are violations of
the Code of a Scientologist under No. 2 and Auditor's Code under No. 3.

    Where needed:

        CCH 1 CCH 2 CCH 3 CCH 4.

    On all other Pes:

    1 . Rudiments (not CCH 0) Establish: Auditor, pc, room, session to
    start.

    2.      Start-Change-Stop on a person or object.
    3.      Factual Havingness.

    4.      What can you confront? (Repetitive Command)
    5.      You make a mock-up for which you can be wholly responsible.

    6.      General help; Help on the Rock.
    7.      Step 6 of Clear Procedure.

    Exception: Only where staff auditor has been trained in an ACC given  to
running engrams only (1 st such ACC was 5th  London  October-November  1958)
may the staff auditor run engrams or use CCH 0. Early Dianctic auditors  are
not, repeat not, included in this exception. It  is  a  matter  of  judgment
here that in event  of  question  about  engram  running  the  auditors  not
specially trained in 1958 or later to do so will make  more  clears  by  the
above than by "running engrams". The  running  of  engrams  by  Scientology,
rather than Dianetics, is  splendid  and  speeds  clearing  but  only  where
specially trained. There is too much new  data  about  it  for  assimilation
short of an engram running ACC. 20th ACC graduates are not qualified to  run
engrams.

L. RON HUBBARD

500

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

                    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 DECEMBER 1958
                    HCO SEC'L LETTER OF 23 DECEMBER 1958
                            Issued at Washington
To All HCO Personnel
      QUALIFICATIONS OF HGC STAFF AUDITORS

    Effective 2 April 1959, HCO must pass on all auditors employed by an HGC
from technical qualification standpoint only.

    The following criteria only will be used.

    I Auditor must have a certificate HPA/HCA or above in force and in good
        standing.

    2.      Auditor's certificate must have been Validated for CCH 0 to 4
        and TR 0 to 9.

    3.      Auditor's OCA/APA profile and IQ must comply with staff
        acceptance requirements.

    4.      Auditor must have had run on him at least 50 hours of ARC  Break
        Straight Wire plus Factual Havingness (See HCO Bulletin of Dec.  22,
        1958) and the auditor who did it must furnish a certificate that  it
        has been done.

                      HCO BOARD OF REVIEW

    The HCO Bd of Review shall keep files relating to any auditor passed for
HGC employment including  miscellaneous  data,  a  profile  copy,  IQ  final
score, Validation slip, etc.

    The HCO Bd of Review may issue a letter on HCO stationery  stating  that
the auditor named has been passed for employment on staff at the HGC of  any
central organization. The letter should be sent to LRH for  signature  after
being counter-signed by the Area HCO Bd of Review. A copy must  be  kept  in
the auditor's files.

    The HCO Bd of Review should encourage the  D  of  P  to  have  in  field
auditors every Thursday night to teach them the routines and  activities  of
an HGC and to get them up to HGC qualification level.

    After the effective date no auditor not so passed can be used by a D  of
P.. Therefore, the program should begin at once and  all  possible  auditors
should be included.

    The HCO Secretary and the HCO  Bd  of  Review  of  any  given  area  are
responsible for this program.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

Convert to  HCO POLICY LETTER OF 2 JUNE 1959
Sec ED

      CORRECTION OF HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 DECEMBER 1958

              QUALIFICATION OF HGC STAFF AUDITORS

    The following criteria only will be used:

    4.      Auditor must have had run on him at least 50 hours of
            "From where could you communicate"
        and the auditor who did it must furnish a certificate that it has
        been done.

LRH:gh.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

501

NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
   NOT GREEN ON WHITE

HCO SECRETARIAL LETTER

    December 31,1958

ROUTING OF PROFILES

    HGC profiles are to be sent at once after viewing by auditor, D of P and
PC via HCO to L. Ron Hubbard directly, by air mail.

    They will be returned to D of P via HCO Area Secretary for her  interest
and any needful interview with D of P to clarify points.

    The profile used is to be OCA for sterling area, APA for S areas. The IQ
grades are to be contained on it.  The  profile  only  is  to  be  specially
printed locally in two forms. One on Airmail  weight  paper,  the  other  on
regular paper. When profile is drawn  two  more  copies  are  made,  one  on
featherweight for L. Ron Hubbard and  one  on  regular  paper  for  CF.  The
original is filed with case reports. This  means  when  a  profile  is  made
there will be also made two added copies.  The  profile  original  is  drawn
first and the copies are made by use  of  a  pin  piercing  through  needful
points.

    The profile is accompanied by a Case Analysis report made by D of  P  or
Case Analyst. This is to be printed on featherweight paper.  There  is  only
one copy of this. It is pinned to the profile copy for L.  Ron  Hubbard.  (A
Case Analysis form is attached hereto.)

    The packet of profiles is  accompanied  by  a  D  of  P  report,  saying
whatever he cares to say about  week's  work.  Every,  case  in  an  HGC  is
reported on every week with a profile for each week to L. Ron  Hubbard.  The
responsibility for this action is primarily the Processing Administrator's.

    If we do this we can improve processing results in general. We can  also
say with truth that all cases are reviewed  by  L.  Ron  Hubbard  personally
when they are processed in an HGC.

    This will  apply  at  once  to  Washington,  London  and  Melbourne  and
eventually Johannesburg, Los Angeles, and New Zealand. Do not  wait  to  get
new report forms printed to get into action.

L. RON HUBBARD

502

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 AUGUST AD9
                                  [Excerptl

CenOCon

PROMOTIONAL FUNCTIONS OF THE HGC

    The promotion function of the HGC consists of  turning  out  cases  that
rave about their auditors and the HGC. It is unfortunately true that an  HGC
is not as well attended as it  gets  results.  Indeed  a  good  HGC  from  a
standpoint of results is often less  well  attended  than  one  that  really
chews PCs to ribbons. This is because of the victim complex in the  society.
But good or bad-which is after all a technical,  not,promotional.  question-
the results of the HGC MUST include enthusiasm on the part of PCs for  their
Auditors and the services rendered. Handling the private  lives  of  PCs  is
forbidden by the Auditor's Code when done directly. But sometimes  this  has
to be done to get the  case  upscale.  The  best  promotion  of  an  HGC  is
interest in the PCs in or out of session. And this is furthered by  the  HGC
use of tests. An Auditor must not evaluate for a PC. This does  not  include
the D of P. A good D, of P evaluates as harshly as an  instructor  and  more
or less follows the Instructor's Code. An  overbearing  evaluating  D  of  P
always has more PCs than a meek and mild one. The sending of  tests  to  the
PC after he gets home, the hounding him afterwards for reports on  what  and
how he is doing, is all a promotional function of the HGC. There is  a  five
year standing order that a PC must,be written to three times  after  leaving
the HGC, the first letter one week after he leaves, the  second  letter  one
month after that, and the third letter three months after that. An HGC  that
doesn't stay in communication with the PCs never has very many. It's not  up
to PrR to stay in communication with the PCs who had Intensives even  though
the PrR does. It is up to the D of P to stay  in  communication  with  these
PCs.

LRH:brb.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q1959
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Excerpted from HCO P/L 26 August  AD9,  Promotional  Functions  of  Various
Depts. A complete copy is in Volume 7, page 135.]

503

                                   NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR
                                   FLASH NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                    SECRETARIAL TO THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
                               Applicable to:
                     Founding Church - Washington, D.C.

                                   No. 150
                              3 September 1959

                 DIRECTOR OF PROCESSING - HAT

           The, Purpose of the Hubbard Guidance Center is to do more for
           people's health and ability than has ever before been possible
           and to give the best auditing possible. To Help People.

An Outline of the Duties of the Director of Processing

 I . He accepts all preclears for processing.

 2.   He releases all preclears from processing.

 3.   He interviews all incoming preclears and all outgoing preclears.

 4.   He interviews all persons interested in processing who have first seen
    the Registrar.

 5.   He interviews and has -interviewed all persons receiving group
 processing.

 6.   He gives Case Analysis interviews.

 7.   He gives estimates for clear.

 8.   He gives tests for clear.

 9.   He maintains his schedule.

10.   He is responsible for his part in the proper routing of preclears.

11.   He is responsible for the proper routing and handling of dispatches.,

12.   He is responsible for answering all mail properly routed to him.

13.   He is responsible for the proper routing of new personnel in his
    department and for the proper routing of personnel leaving his
    department.

14.   He is responsible for knowing and being able to properly interpret
    tests and test results.

15.   He is responsible for the proper maintenance of his department.

16.   He is responsible for knowing his hat and the hat of each person in
    his department.

17.   He hires and dismisses all personnel in his department subject to the
    okay of the Organization Secretary.

18.   He is responsible for handling all personnel in his department.

19.   He is responsible for getting the people in his department to get the
job done.

20.   He is responsible for training auditors.

21.   He attends meetings of the Technical Council and the Advisory
Council.

22.   He promotes and sells processing in the HGC.

23.   He maintains the Code of a Scientologist.

24.   He follows all organizational policies.

                               504

The Acceptance and Release of all Preclears in the HGC

    The Director of Processing accepts all preclears for processing  in  the
HGC. His acceptance  of  them  becomes  official  once  he  has  placed  his
signature on the Contract for Processing, which  Contract  is  sent  to  him
immediately after the preclear has been signed up by the Registrar  and  the
preclear has completed all financial  arrangements  with  Accounts.  He  may
never refuse preclears  because  he  does  not  have  enough  auditors.  The
Registrar signs them up and he handles.

Who Cannot Be Accepted for Processing in the HGC (Refer to Sec'I ED 153)

    It is a long standing policy of the Board of Directors of the  Founding-
Church that certain persons are ineligible for  processing.  These  policies
are our law, not the law of  society,  as  we  can  legally  give  spiritual
guidance to anyone. Our law must be strictly, adhered to.

I .   The Director of Processing may not and must not accept any psychotic
    persons for processing.

2.    The Director of Processing may not and must not withhold a pupil from
    school for processing without a letter from that school  so  authorizing
    his absence and stating he is to come to us, not an un-named agency.

3.    The Director of Processing may not and must not process in the HGC
    any student with a psychotic or institutional background.

4.    The Director of Processing may not and must not process in the HGC
    any person who is chronically ill.

    Definitions

I .   Insane: Having been pronounced insane by a psychiatrist or being
    incapable of. any responsibility for social conduct.

2.    Institutionalized: Having been committed- to a public or private
    institution for theinsane.

3.    Ill: Being medically diagnosed as suffering from a known, well
    defined physical illness susceptible to medical care and relief.

Rights of the Director of Processing Concerning the Acceptance of Preclears

    Although. all incoming preclears are signed up for  processing  for  the
number of weeks of processing which it is estimated that he will  clear  in,
some preclears for various reasons may  not  be  able  to  take  in  a  full
package all the weeks necessary; therefore, the Director of  Processing  has
certain rights governing the  preclears  already  registered.  They  are  as
follows:

1.    He may refuse a preclear on the grounds that the preclear's low
    profile or connections may bring a risk to the HGC.

2.    He may refuse to accept a preclear who cannot take enough weeks of
    his estimated time to clear.

3.    He may refuse to accept a preclear on the grounds of the non-payment
    of former debts to the HGC.

4.    He may refuse to accept a preclear on the grounds of poor financial
    arrangements, past and present, by the preclear.

In all cases of -refusal, he returns the preclear to the Registrar.

The Release of Preclears from Processing

    The Director of Processing is responsible for releasing  preclears  from
processing. He may refuse to release a  preclear  from  processing  whom  he
considers in further  need  of  processing.  In  which  case  he  sends  the
preclear to the Registrar and informs the Registrar of such.

                               505

 The Acceptance of Staff for Processing

    Before the Director of Processing  can  accept  any  staff  member  for
 processing, he must have received a dispatch containing the  permission  of
 the staff member's Department  Head  and  the  Executive  Director  or  the
 Organization Secretary. In  the  case  of  a  Department  Head's  receiving
 processing, he must have received a dispatch containing the  permission  of
 the Executive Director or the Organization Secretary.

    On Staff processing,  outside  preclears  in  every  case  always  have
 priority; therefore, a staff member may not be processed at any  time  when
 by being processed it would necessitate the hiring of an extra  auditor.  A
 staff member may have only twenty-five hours of processing at any one time.

 Interviewing

    The Director of  Processing  interviews  all  incoming  preclears,  all
 outgoing  preclears,  all  persons  interested  in  processing   who   have
 previously seen the Registrar, all persons applying for a  clear  estimate,
 all persons applying for  a  clear  test,  and  the  auditor-preclear  Case
 Analysis.

 Policy on the Director of Processing's Interviews

    It should be made plain by the Director of Processing to all persons he
 interviews that he is not processing them, but is only asking questions  or
 obtaining information.

    During all such interviews the Director of Processing  should  remember
 that he is not an Auditor and  as  such  does  not  have  to  maintain  the
 Auditor's Code; quite to the contrary, the Director  of  Processing  should
 never permit the preclear to retain any idea which is not  correct.  It  is
 the job of the Director of Processing to evaluate for the preclear  with  a
 reality and with truth.

    The approximate length of time for all interviews is about twenty
    minutes.

 Interviewing Incoming Preclears

    The Director of Processing  goes  over  briefly  with  the  person  the
 preclear's profile and other  test  scores.  He  then  obtains  information
 needed from the preclear and as contained in the proper interview form  for
 incoming preclears.

    In the case of a preclear having been processed previously in  the  HGC,
his folder in Testing Files is  pulled  and  reviewed  by  the  Director  of
Processing prior to the  'interview.  In  the  interview,  the  Director  of
Processing does re-check the preclear with the interview sheet in  order  to
find out what has happened to the  preclear  since  the  time  of  his  last
processing.

 Interviewing Outgoing Preclears

    The test results of the American Personality Analysis, the IQ test, the
 Tone Scale Test, and the Aptitude test should be gone  over  thoroughly  by
 the Director of Processing with the preclear. All his questions  concerning
 these test results and the tests should be answered. Of main importance  is
 whether the preclear knows he has obtained results and whether he is  happy
 with his processing. In this interview the Director of Processing uses  the
 interview form for outgoing preclears.

 Case Analysis Interviews

    The purpose of this interview is to check and help improve the progress
 of the preclear. The preclear is interviewed with the Auditor  present.  It
 is conducted with the pre.clear on the E-Meter.  All  points  on  the  Case
 Analysis Report are covered. When this  has  been  done,  the  preclear  is
 requested to leave the room  and  the  Director  of  Processing  gives  his
 instructions to the Auditor.

 Interviewing Persons who Apply for Clear Estimates or Clear Tests

    Many people apply for Clear Estimates and for Clear Checks who have not
 signed up for processing or who have not been processed  in  the  HGC.  The
 Director of Processing conducts these,  but  at  the  same  time  tries  to
 interest the person in processing at the HGC.  It  may  be  that  some  ARC
 breaks exist and if handled, the person will sign up for processing.

                               506

Post Group Intensive Interviews

    The Director of Processing should interview and have interviewed all
persons completing group processing after the tests have been given all of
them.

Scheduling

    The Director of Processing is responsible for seeing to it that the
routine Auditing schedule is maintained by the auditors and that preclears
who have been signed up for auditing by the Registrar on a different
auditing schedule get audited on that schedule.

    The Director of Processing is also responsible for seeing to it that all
personnel in his department maintain the organization's routine working
schedule.

    The Director of Processing also schedules Congress group interviews or
any group intensive. Group processing is always scheduled on the basis of
one hour of group processing alternating with a fifteen minute break.

Present Schedule
Monday
      8:00 - 9:30 a.m. Clear Estimates.
      9:30 - 12:00 NoonMaking Auditor preclear room assignments, Case
Analysis
                  interview Schedule, and giving instruction to Auditors con-


           tinuing on a case.
12:00 - 1:00 P.M.      Lunch
      1:00 - 2:00 p.m.      Interviewing incoming preclears.
 2:00 - 2:30 p.m. Auditor briefing in general and on new preclears in
 specific.
 2:30 - 3: 15 p.m. Routine duties.
 3:15 - 5:30 p.m.      Possible Case Analysis of difficult cases, otherwise
                  Routine duties.

Tuesday

 9:00 - 10:30 a.m.Routine duties.
      10:30 - 12:00 Noon     Case Analysis interviews and possible routine
duties.
      12:00 - 1:00 P.M.      Lunch
      .1:00 - 3:45 p.m.      Checking sessions and routine duties.
      3:45 - 4:15 p.m. Interviews with auditors or routine duties.
      4:15 - 5:30 p.m. Routine duties.

Wednesday
      9:00 - 10:30 a.m.Routine duties.
10:30 - 12:00 Noon     Case Analysis interviews and routine duties.
12:00 -     Afternoon off.

Thursday and Friday

      9:00 - 12:00 Noon      Routine duties.
12:00 - 1:00 P.M.      Lunch
      1:00 - 3:45 p.m. Routine duties.
      3:45 - 4:15 p.m. Interviews with auditors or routine duties.
      4:15 - 5:30 p.m. Routine duties.
Saturday
      9:00 - 9:30 a.m. Clear Estimates.
      9:30 - 12:00 Noon      Interviews with outgoing preclears.
12:00 - 1:00 P.M.      Lunch
      1:00 - 1:30 p.m. Clear Estimates.
      1:30 - 5:30 p.m. Interviews with outgoing or incoming preclears or
routine
            duties.
                 507

Tests and Their Interpretation

    The  Director  of  Processing  should  be  familiar   with   all   tests
administered in the Testing Section. In particular he  should  know  how  to
read and interpret them. He should thoroughly read and know the  Manuals  on
the American Personality Analysis, the Tone Scale Test, the  Aptitude  Test,
and the IQ test.

    In interpreting tests he should be thoroughly  familiar  with  the  Four
Points of Error and How to Read Profiles  on  APA:  Comparing  Current  Week
Profile with Week Before.

Clear Estimates

    The Clear Estimate is conducted by the Director of Processing. There  is
a Clear Estimate Form which he uses to help him administer the estimate  for
clear. One section of the estimate involves placing the individual on the E-
Meter, and the other section involves the use of a block test. The  bulletin
covering  the  administration  of  the  Clear  Estimate  should  be  studied
carefully by the Director of Processing.

Clear Tests

    The entirety of the Clear Test is conducted with the testee  on  the  E-
Meter. The Director of Processing should study  carefully  the  bulletin  on
How to Test for Clear. A  Clear  Test  Form  is  used  by  the  Director  of
Processing. The Director of Processing only conducts the E-Meter Clear  Test
and forwards all tests up to the HCO Board of Review.  He  cannot  tell  the
person he is Clear.  Only  the  Executive  Director,  L.  Ron  Hubbard,  can
finally say whether a person is Clear.

Maintenance

The Office of the Director of Processing

    The Director of Processing keeps his  own  office  in  a  neat,  cleanly
condition and sees that all supplies and equipment are kept  in  clean  neat
condition. Any repairs or maintenance problems should be brought by  him  to
the attention of the Director of Materiel.

Supplies

    The Director of Processing looks over the supply needs of his department
and originates a purchase request or okays the purchase requests  of  people
in his department according to the policies laid down.

Hats

    The Director of Processing keeps his own hat up-to-date  and  sees  that
the personnel in his department keep theirs  in  the  same  fashion.  He  is
responsible for issuing a proper hat to each of his personnel.

Bodies

    The Director of Processing keeps his own person in a neat,  professional
presentable condition and sees that his personnel do likewise..

Personnel

    The Director of Processing in hiring auditors  must  be  sure  that  all
Auditors hired are above the center line of the graph on the  APA  and  have
an IQ of 120 or more. And as of April 2, 1959, all  Auditors  employed  must
be passed by the  HCO  from  a  technical  qualification  standpoint.  These
qualifications are covered  in  a  Secretarial  to  the  Executive  Director
Number 26.

    In the hiring of personnel for his department the Director of Processing
uses the Personnel Routing and Check Sheet.

    He should keep himself infornied of good  field  Auditors  and  of  good
students who may be developed into staff auditors on graduation.

                               508

Dismissal of Auditors

    The Director of Processing should dismiss those auditors  on  staff  who
have been found guilty of  direct  insubordination,  flagrant  violation  of
organizational policies, or for continued bad results  with  processing.  He
must follow, however, policies concerning how personnel  are  dismissed.  He
also handles auditors who leave staff without being dismissed  according  to
the policy of technical staff leaving a technical post.

Handling of Auditors

    The Director of Processing checks each auditor's skill to audit via  the
intercom system installed, in the organization. Notes  should  be  taken  by
him  on  certain  points  where  auditors  are  falling  down  in   auditing
procedure.

    The Director of Processing also checks daily  all  auditor  reports  and
makes his comments and suggestions to auditors on the reports.

    The Director of Processing also gives his instructions  to  the  auditor
after the Case Analysis interview and notes his  instructions  on  the  Case
Analysis Report form.

Routing

    The Director of Processing is responsible for  seeing  to  it  that  the
routing procedure of preclears is properly followed.

The Routing of Dispatches and Mail

    The Director of Processing sees  that  communications  coming  into  his
department and communications leaving his  department  follow  the  policies
established concerning the proper form of dispatches,  the  proper  handling
of dispatches, and the proper usage to the  Comm  Center.  The  Director  of
Processing sees to it that all mail coming into his department and all  mail
leaving his department follow the policies laid down concerning the  routing
of mail.

The Routing of New Personnel

    The Director of Processing in the hiring of staff  auditors  makes  sure
that the Personnel Routing and Check Sheet is properly handled.

Personnel Leaving Staff

    The Director of Processing sees that personnel  leaving  his  Department
are routed to the proper terminals.

Routing of Tests

    The Director of Processing routes the original profiles, auditor  report
sheets and the  Case  Analyses  to  the  Executive  Director  after  he  has
finished interviewing outgoing preclears. When  the  Executive  Director  is
not present in the area, the Director of Processing routes the light  weight
profile, the light weight Case Analysis form and any comments  he  may  have
of the processing to the Executive Director. When the original profiles  are
returned and all written comments by the Executive  Director  to  individual
auditors about their  preclears  are  received,  these  are  routed  by  the
Director of Processing to Test Files  after  he  has  reviewed  and  handled
them.

Routing of Preclears

    All persons involved with the routing of preclears see to it that bodies
are properly routed in their department and in agreement  with  the  routing
of bodies as established by other departments and  where  bodies  pass  from
his department into other departments.

Preclears are routed according to the following procedure:

 1. The preclear sees the Registrar for signing up.

 2. The preclear goes to the Director of Processing for a clear estimate.

                               509

  3.   The preclear goes to the Registrar for the completion of the
    processing contract on the basis of the clear estimate.

  4.  The preclear goes to Accounts for the invoicing and payrqent of his
  account.

  5.  The preclear goes to the Testing Section for his tests.

  6.   The preclear sees the HGC for obtaining an appointment with the
    Director of Processing.

  7.   The preclear sees the Director of Processing for his incoming
  interview.

  8.   The preclear reports to the auditor for his processing.

  9.   The preclear is released by the auditor at the end of his week of
  processing.

 10.  The preclear is routed by the auditor to testing.

 NOTE: Steps 8, 9 and 10 are repeated from week to week for  the  number  of
 weeks the preclear continues.

 11.  The preclear sees the HGC Administrator for obtaining an end of
    intensive interview with the Director of Processing.

 12.  The preclear reports to the Director of Processing for his interview.

 13.  The preclear goes to the Registrar for a final interview.

    All persons involved in  this  routing  procedure  are  responsible  for
seeing to it that the preclear has reported to the proper terminal and  that
that terminal has initialed the Body Routing Sheet which  the  preclear  has
been given by the Registrar. If any terminal  has  not  initialed  the  Body
Routing Sheet, the preclear should be returned to that  person  for  getting
the Body Routing Sheet properly initialed. Only after this has happened  can
the next terminal on the routing procedure handle the preclear.

The Training of Auditors

Training of Auditors on New Material

    It is up to the Director of Processing to train Auditors on new material
issued to the HGC as instructions  on  the  procedure  to  be  used  in  the
processing of HGC preclears. Such information  is  normally  issued  in  HCO
Bulletins. It is not the job of the  Director  of  Processing  to  interpret
these Bulletins. It is his job to see  that  Auditors  are  trained  in  the
procedures or processes. If the Director of Processing finds that  there  is
needed further information he should dispatch the Executive Director to  get
that information. The main thing that can happen wrong in  the  training  of
Auditors is for the Auditor  or  the  Director  of  Processing  to  place  a
totally wrong interpretation on the usage, the purpose, or the  clearing  of
some command or procedure.  That  is  the  reason  he  should  dispatch  the
Executive Director if further information is needed.

    Sometimes training tapes are sent  by  the  Executive  Director  to  the
Director of Processing. In such instances the tape  should  be  played  many
times for the Auditors. Also the Director of  Processing  may  upon  request
play certain tapes to his Auditors. He must never, however,  play  a  MASTER
tape. He can only play copies of tapes.,

Retraining of Auditors

    The Director of Processing must  see  to  the  continual  retraining  of
Auditors. It is normally the basics of Auditing of which Auditors get  slack
in performing. The Director of Processing should go over with  auditors  the
basic fundamentals of Auditing, such as the Auditor's Code,  definitions  of
Affinity, Reality, and Communication. Training Sessions should be  conducted
on all Training Drills. Auditors who, in spite of  this  retraining  in  the
processing department, still continue to get bad auditing results should  be
suspended until they have been retrained, at  no  charge  to  them,  to  the
satisfaction of the Director of Training in the Training Department. If  the
Auditor is getting poor results because of his own case level he  should  be
recommended to auditing at staff rates. If he  does  not  avail  himself  of
this auditing, he should be suspended  from  staff  until  he  has  obtained
auditing. If he gets-audited by an auditor not on staff, he  must  have  his
Auditor send a report of  the  processing  to  the  Director  of  Processing
stating what processing was given and how many hours  it  was  given.  Until
such a report is received by  the  Director  of  Processing,  he  cannot  be
placed back on staff.

                               510

The Assignment of Auditors to Preclears

    The Director of Processing  should  know  his  Auditors.  Some  Auditors
cannot handle certain kinds of people. One Auditor does not do well  with  a
teenager; another does not do well with an  elderly  woman.  Therefore,  the
Director of Processing has to use judgement in the  assignment  of  Auditors
to preclears.

Promotion and Sales

    The Director of Processing does his utmost to promote all activities  of
the organization. If he sees to it that his department is well run and  that
it gives good effective service to the public, he  will  greatly  assist  in
the promotion of the organization.

    He should make certain that all the activities  of  his  department  are
advertised  in  Ability  magazine.  He  writes  advertisements  for  Ability
magazine and submits them at least twice a month to  the  HCO  Secretary  to
the Executive Director.

    The Director of Processing should submit to the  Organization  Secretary
promotional mailing pieces, projects, and other ideas in order to  keep  the
inflow of preclears up.

Sales

    The Director of Processing sells processing to  people;  he  sells  more
processing to people. He should consider everyone as  a  potential  preclear
of the HGC.

Reporting

Technical Council Report

    The Dire~ctor of Processing in conjunction with the Director of Training
are to hold a meeting once a week prior to the Advisory Council meeting  and
are to submit their report to the Advisory Council. The information  usually
required in such a report of the Director of Processing is the following:

1 . The number of preclears processed in the previous week.
2. The number of preclears who completed processing in the previous week.
3. The number of preclears in for the current week.
4. A general statement as to the condition and activities of the Processing
    Department.

Advisory Council

    The Director of Processing attends or  sends  a  representative  to  the
Advisory Council once a week when all department heads meet.

Other Reports

    The Director of Processing sees to it that any other reports that may be
required of him are submitted by him to the proper terminals.

Reports to the Executive Director

    The Director  of  Processing  submits  to  the  Executive  Director  the
profiles and other material  including  the  Case  Analyses  and  the  daily
auditor reports to the Executive Director when he  is  present,  immediately
after outgoing preclears are interviewed. When  the  Executive  Director  is
not present, the Director of Processing routes the light weight profile  and
the light weight Case Analyses with any comments  he  has  to  make  to  the
Executive Director.

           I.,   L. RON HUBBARD
      .     0    Executive Director

- . 4 : .   . '.7 . *.
   . rrjVP01?Ar$-, C- I
      40'

   0 . ...............
    ...'44 IFORTk\,0~

      "I   11    I

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 9 OCTOBER 1959

CenOCon

STAFF AUDITORS

    Staff Auditors may not audit more than twelve consecutive weeks  without
being given a two week assignment to another Org post.

    The arrangement of this rotation is up to the Assoc Sec with the  advice
of the D of P.

    The assignment of a staff auditor to another post for two weeks must not
deny his services to the organization. Therefore I would suggest  that  some
post be nominated to be held by staff  auditors  and  filled  thereafter  by
rotation of auditors through that post.

    This scheduling must be worked out  according  to  the  spirit  of  this
directive, which is that staff auditors should get a  two  week  break  from
auditing every twelve weeks. They should not be pulled back on  post  simply
because there are too many pes. Adequate auditors should be  taken  on  from
Academy and field sources. Too few staff auditors are being  taken  on  from
Academies to the end result  of  overworking  existing  staff  auditors  and
denying the organizations trained personnel. Therefore  part  of  the  sense
behind this consists of compelling D  of  Ps  to  increase  their  available
staff.

LRH:ph.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1959 Executive Director
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                                  NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                                  ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                  GREEN ON GOLD
HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 16 OCTOBER 1959

Cen(DCon

           HANDLING STUDENTS' AND AUDITORS' REPORTS
               (Cancels all previous directives on this subject)

    Directors of Training are not to abbreviate their students'  reports  in
any way. They are to send the full reports by surface mail to Ron  at  Saint
Hill, and these will be returned.

    Anything startling or dangerous that shows training improvement or decay
should be briefed by the HCO Area Secretary in the Training Digest, so  that
it can be handled speedily.

    All HCO Communicators are required  to  make  sure  that  the  students'
reports are sent by surface mail  and  not  by  airmail.  They  are  further
requested to see that the students write legibly.  If  they  do  not,  issue
them infraction theses. Also see that they use flimsy paper to save bulk.

    All Directors of Processing are to see that their auditors  use  airmail
weight paper for their reports.  Because  of  the  weight,  money  is  being
wasted on airmail goods.

LRH:NW:dd.rd     HCO Secretary WW
Copyright Q 1959 for
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

                               512

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HOD POLICY LETTER OF 16 OCTOBER 1959

D of Ps
WW and HCO Area Secs

HOW TO PREPARE HGC WEEKLY REPORTS FOR REVIEW

    HGC reports should be submitted every week by the Director of Processing
to L. Ron Hubbard, as follows: -

    I PC's graph showing before and after test results, on flimsy paper.

    2.      PC's case analysed on flimsy paper.

    3.      PC's end of intensive report, where applicable, on flimsy paper.

    4.      Original copies on flimsy paper of auditor's reports for every
    session.

    5.      Attach drawings to auditor's report, if PC drew answers to the
        commands of comm process.

    6.      Director of Processing's comments on PC's case and results.

    The above 6 items should be stapled together for each individual
preclear and be forwarded under cover of apierno from the D of P stating:-

    (a) Date of report for week ending
    (b) Number of PCs in the HGC for the week this report covers, and their
    names.
    (c) Which preclears received an intensive.
    (d) Which preclears received an assist.
    (e) Summary of week's results and any general comments.

    Always note which processes were run on which PC and how many hours of
processing each PC received.

    Please write all reports neatly and legibly at all times.

Staff Research Auditor WW for L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dd.cden Copyright @ 1959 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

513

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF I JANUARY 1960
Fran Hldrs  (Reissued from St Hill)
HCO Sees
Assn Sees
HCO & Central Org Staff

ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE FOR REDUCING OVERTS

    This Policy Letter is to be followed in HGCs, Co-Audits, and with  staff
and field auditors and PCs as far as it can be practically applied.

    It is a breach of the auditor's code to audit without  establishing  two
way communication with the PC. This cannot be established  while  there  are
still overts and withholds on the part of the PC  in  present  lifetime  and
sometimes from earlier lives. Thus two way  communication  cannot  exist  so
long as withholds and overts are still unreduced.

    As PCs are sometimes afraid to disclose their private lives to  auditors
and as the PC will  eventually  want  a  wider  relief  of  his  overts  and
withholds, insofar as practicable, whenever a PC discloses important  overts
and withholds to the auditor, the auditor should have him write  these  down
and sign them and send them to me. The auditor  should  then  flatten  these
with a responsibility process. The PC can then be assured that his  data  is
not privately retained and the auditor is then to some  degree  relieved  of
the secrecy involved, a thing which has  caused  some  auditors  discomfort.
Any overt the PC considers to be involved in  voicing  these  overts  or  in
sending them to me should also be flattened as we don't want PCs to wind  up
with a new overt in their own consideration-though factually it's no  overt,
let me assure you, for me to know that somebody else is en route to clear.

    In those cases where  this  is  done  by  correspondence  the  following
procedure is to be followed. All carping  and  critical  letters  containing
imagined  wrongs  should  be  answered  by  all  persons   responsible   for
correspondence as follows: "Write down your  overts  and  withholds  against
Scientology, its organizations and all connected personnel and send them  to
me so that I can forward them to HCO WW." When  this  list  is  received  or
when any such list is received, the reply to the  person  writing  the  list
should be as follows: "Make restitution where you  can.  Inform  me  of  the
steps taken. Write down a long list of what responsibility  you  could  take
for these various overts and send them to me so they  can  be  forwarded  to
HCO WW." Mary Sue's name may be added in any of the above.

    Whenever such  lists  are  received  by  HCO  WW  I  will  endeavour  to
acknowledge the receipt. To assist this a complete address should be put  on
each list.

    Persons calling  in  person  on  HCOs  or  Central  Orgs,  with  carping
criticism, should be set at once to the above tasks as outlined.

    Do not take action on or report to police any unconfessed  crimes  found
in this activity. You will find that police are themselves  too  bowed  down
with their own overts to be able to handle any part of this.

    The full extent of our justice will be to demand that persons guilty  of
severe crimes shall be audited at their own expense until checked out  clear
on them and earlier sources.

    HCO Sees are authorised to E-Meter check out any and all such lists on
    staff

514

members or important field auditors and to send the  result  of  such  check
outs to be for the file. Without such  HCO  check  outs  my  files  will  be
incomplete.

    Any person  still  withholding  after  every  effort  to  free  him  and
discovered  later  to  have  been  guilty  of  serious  crimes  he  has  not
volunteered may be dealt with in any way Assn Sees or HCO Sees may  see  fit
as they have not availed themselves of our gssistance.

    My total use of all such lists and files received by me will be to  keep
them under lock and key and to see that they  are  eventually  completed  in
terms of responsibility and to utilise the data in advising  the  processing
of persons.

    Should any person aver he has already done this with another auditor  he
may pay  the  expense  of  cable  query  and  reply  to  HCO  Sthil  for  my
verification or denial or further advice.

    We are going to clear more than you think.  So  a  tight  administrative
procedure is indicated.

    I contemplate only one punitive action in any of this and  that  is  any
action necessary to prevent any such  disclosed  data  from  being  employed
against the disclosing person in any way to  the  profit  of  any  receiving
person, organization or criminal or political group.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRH:js.rf.cden
Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 JANUARY 1960

CenOCon

REQUIREMENTS FOR HG4C AUDITORS

    The 21st ACC in Washington and the special HCA/HCS Course held in
Washington in July and August of 1959 did not teach the CCHs.

    Therefore it is recommended that any auditor who received his validation
or HCA certificate at one of those courses be checked out on the CCHs
before being permitted
to audit as a staff auditor at any HGC.

      Peter Hemery
LRH:js.eden HCO Secretary WW
Copyright (D 1960
by L Ron Hubbard for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

515

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 AUGUST 1960
1 copy to
Assn Sec
HCO Sec
Registrar
D of P      REGISTRAR LOST LINE

    Once again the key line is lost in some Central Orgs  between  Registrar
and D of P. This costs us about Ј25,000 a year internationally.

    The Body Registrar drops the ball. The D  of  P  doesn't  locate  it  or
insist on, it. Then 1 get letters from whining pcs or D of Ps  start  giving
free weeks of processing.

    The line has been going out every three months for years. So please keep
    it in.

    Proper sign-up includes this line. Check sheets exist for  it.  Pcs  not
signed up this way are improperly signed up.

    Line: Reg signs up pc fully. Pc is taken to D of P  at  once  (not  next
Monday). D of P checks out pc. Says, "I will not take  you'unless  you  have
signed up for enough weeks to clear you. 1 don't care whether  you  pay  for
them or take them ever. But you have to sign for  them  anyway."  He  cheeks
out pc without graphs or 1Qs.  Only  a  meter.  He  says,  "Seven  weeks  to
clear." Pc goes back to Body Reg. Signs up for seven weeks. Pc doesn't  have
to take them now or ever. Pc doesn't have to pay for them. Then pc  is  told
to come in for testing and processing.

    This is the line. It has no exceptions.

    Failure to hold that procedure in results in horrible flukes. Reg has no
right to do a technical survey of pc. Only D of P has that  right.  D  of  P
can simply refuse to process pc as a psycho if pc is psycho.

    NO D OF P MAY ACCEPT A PC FOR PROCESSING IF THIS LINE IS NOT FOLLOWED.

    Why is it only I hold this line in in so many places? Pc signed  up  for
121/2 hours can complain of no results and demand free time. And  we've  got
to give it. A pc signed up for 7 weeks taking  121/2  hours  of  it  has  no
choice but to buy more of his sign-up time.

    You'll clear them now in five weeks if you drill staff  on  Regimen  One
and run help on motion and good 8c and follow the HCO Bulletins.

    You're off to a new start in processing so keep that body-tech line  in!
Help me do it.

    Now just to show you 1 help too,  get  the  Ltr  Registrar  to  go  back
through all contracts signed the past few years for untaken weeks and  write
the person who signed up for them "Ron wants you to come in now  and  finish
getting cleared on your processing contract. We need a clear in your area."

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:js.rd Copyright (Z 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

516

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 SEPTEMBER 1960

D of Ps Assn Secs HCO Secs

GIVING THE PC FULL HOURS

    It has come to attention that pcs are sometimes deprived of  a  part  of
their full 25 hours in an  intensive  by  including  coffee  breaks  in  the
auditing time.

    As this is one of the most fruitful sources of pc  dissatisfaction  even
when unexpressed, the practice is forbidden.

    If the pe demands a break or if the auditor declares one,  the  time  so
spent is added to the 25 hours, which is to say, the  time  is  made  up  in
actual auditing in the same day it occurred. Careful count must be  kept  of
a break since it  must  be  added  to  session  time  and  given  in  actual
auditing.

    Auditing time is very precious to pcs. Please don't waste it.

                     HAVINGNESS INJUNCTION

    No pe may be run on two-way comm, confront, help or other process  until
a process has been found that remedies his havingness and  brings  the  tone
arm to clear read.

    Overt-withhold on the auditor or other  terminal  may  be  considered  a
preliminary process as it assists duplication and therefore  havingness.  It
is not, however, to be considered  a  havingness  process  for  purposes  of
running a case.

    Havingness processes meant herein are those of the Ist  Saint  Hill  ACC
issued in contemporary bulletins.

                         MODEL SESSION

    HGCs will hereafter use Model Session form immediately that a havingness
and a confront process are established for a particular pc.  Thereafter  all
sessions shall be in Model Session form.

    The purpose of this is to get  the  rudiments  covered  to  the  end  of
obviating ARC breaks and present time problems, the only  two  things  which
can stall a case which has once gotten started.

L RON HUBBARD

LRH:dm.oden Copyright @ 1960 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

517

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 JANUARY 1961

Central Orgs
D of Ps

A BRIEF OUTLINE OF AN HGC
      AS CURRENTLY DONE

D of P - Technical Supervision first. Then general supervision.

HGC Admin - Case Acceptances
      Supervises HGC tests
      Report Files
      Auditor Procurement
      Room Procurement
      Comm Centre for HGC
      Reception for D of P

    D of P interviews Pc and. Auditor every 5 hours or thereabouts.

    A leading Auditor is made Training Officer to Auditors (and takes a pc).

    The Auditor brings in the complete pc's file at each interview. These
are otherwise in open files in HGC kept by HGC Admin.

LRH.js.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 MARCH 1961

HCO Sees
Assoc Sees
Ds of P

RESTRICTION ON S.O.P. GOALS PROCEDURE

    HCO Bulletin of February 18, 196 1, S.O.P. Goals, is not to be sent at
present to Franchise Auditors or other field auditors. It must not be
republished as notes.

    Its distribution is strictly restricted to the persons as shown on the
original bulletin, i.e. HCO Sees, Assoc Sees, Ds of P, all HGC Personnel,
all Auditors auditing staff, all 22nd American ACC students, and all 3rd
S.A. ACC Students.

LRH:js.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

518

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 MARCH 1961
                                  Issue 11
CenOCon
D of P
All Staff Auditors
HCO Area Sec: Hat Check
thoroughly and often
and on all new auditors
      BASIC STAFF AUDITOWS HAT
             (This applies mainly to the relationship of the Staff Auditor
             to the pc and the D of P and does not modify existing policies
             but bears directly on Case Assessments and SOP Goals. This hat
             is needed to smooth out its use and Admin of SOP Goals on
             pes.)

    The staff auditor is directly responsible for the HGC preclear  assigned
to him, Results, lack of  results,  ARC  breaks,  recovering  the  pc  after
"blows", getting the pc to the D of P for interviews, getting the pc to  the
D of P and  Registrar  for  after  intensive  interviews  and  handling  all
matters relating the pc to the Org during the delivery of auditing  are  all
up to the staff auditor.

    The staff auditor may refuse to accept a pc and may refuse to release  a
pc from auditing. The staff auditor may also refuse  to  give  a  particular
session if in giving one the Auditor's Code is violated as to the pc's  need
for food, rest or the lateness of the hour.

    The staff auditor is to deliver all the hours of auditing  purchased  by
the pc. Case  Assessments  and  Goals  Assessments  are  part  of  the  pc's
auditing time when done by the staff auditor. No time spent on the  case  by
the D of P in conferences, interviews or assessments are part  of  the  pc's
auditing time.

    Any time missed by reason of auditor lateness, unavailability of  rooms,
breaks, travel to see the D of P, etc, must be made up  on  the  pc  by  the
staff auditor.

                               Case Assessment
                 (See HCO B of Nov 18, 1960 for exact form)

    The first action of an auditor with a pc new to him is to  fill  in  the
Case Assessment Form. This is done on the pc's auditing time.
    If a Case Assessment has already been done  and  is  part  of  the  pc's
record, but was not done by the same auditor, it may be  checked  over  with
the pc by his new auditor. In any event the  staff  auditor's  first  action
with a new pc is Case Assessment, whether done from  an  existing  completed
form or on a new Case Assessment Form. This does not apply to assists.  This
does apply to staff cases as well as outside pes.

                          First Auditing

    The first formal auditing that the pc receives is given at once when the
Case Assessment Form is complete.

    ALL sessions given in an  HGC  except  those  devoted  to  Assists,  CCH
sessions  or  "Coffee  shop"  auditing  (inevitably  done  casually  out  of
auditing rooms by staff on staff or students on friends  and  students  even
when you try to prevent it) are done in Model Session form (HCO Bulletin  of
March 21, 1961). To repeat, Assists and CCHs are not done in  Model  Session
form. ALL Assessments even are done in Model Session form in an WC.  Assists
or CCHs can be explained first and the pc should be started in  such  a  way
as not to cause ARC breaks, but are not Model Session.
    A Goals Assessment should now be done in Model Session. This permits the
auditor two cracks  at  withholds,  PTPs  and  ARC  breaks  twice  in  every
session, using Model Session  HCO  B  of  March  21,  1961,  which  includes
withholds in end rudiments as well as  beginning  rudiments.  This  makes  a
smoother picture than trying to  get  off  withholds  with  no  ARC  and  no
session properly going. Further, even a goals assessment really puts the  pc
in session in Goals SOP, so a Model Session is better all around.
    The first formal session, then, is run by Model Session.

519

    The staff auditor takes off ARC breaks, a few withholds and any PTP  and
then, in lieu of a process, does an SOP Goals Assessment.

    When the assessment is completed, even down to  terminal  Pro-Hav  level
and finding the auditing command that falls, the staff auditor takes the  pc
to the D of P and has the assessment checked. The D  of  P,  at  this  time,
does not touch rudiments, but only sees that  goal  falls  more  than  other
listed goals and that terminal and command fall at  least  as  much  as  the
main goal.

    Unless only a few minutes remain of the day's auditing, the auditor then
takes the pc back to the auditing room and starts the second session.

                          Second Session

    In this session as in all remaining sessions the staff auditor runs  SOP
Goals in Model Session form.

    The auditor must allow, always, enough time to end the session  for  the
day. He makes a nice judgment on this. Half an hour is often  spent  on  End
Rudiments. Early in the first intensive, the withholds and ARC  breaks  take
precedence in End Rudiments. PTPs, ARC breaks and Withholds take  precedence
in Beginning Rudiments.  A  session  cannot  be  gotten  going  with  a  PTP
unhandled. And a session cannot be ended with an ARC break  in  full  bloom.
However, a session can be ended with a PTP unhandled, and this is  the  most
lengthy item usually encountered in rudiments.

    Thus if only one hour remained in  the  first  day's  schedule  for  the
second session, the staff auditor would run beginning  rudiments,  then  end
rudiments with no process run in the middle of the Model Session.

                           Third Session

    This session like any other is run in Model Session form.

    If the pc is still falling on the meter when asked about withholds, even
with sensitivity raised, at least half an hour should be spent getting  them
off. Even if the needle still falls a bit after that half hour, one goes  on
to run the PT Problem and then the  process  of  SOP  Goals,  which  is  run
exactly according to its bulletin. This process occupies  the  bulk  of  the
auditing period. Then in the last half hour one runs the End  Rudiments  and
of course has another crack,at withholds.

                      Fourth Session

Runs the same as the Third Session.

In a 5-day intensive, the 3rd and 4th sessions probably occurred on same
day.

                           Fifth Session

    During this auditing day or before the fifth session, the pc is taken by
the staff auditor to the D of P, who checks the pc out on rudiments.

    The D of P finds out what is being run from the pc, and cheeks  out  but
does not run anything on the Rudiments.

    The whole record of the pc including the Case Assessment and  SOP  Goals
Assessment Sheets are in a  folder  along  with  all  session  reports.  The
folder is in the hands of the staff auditor before the  D  of  P  interview,
the last session report on top.
    The D of P adds any and all advices and comments to the last session
    report.
    The staff auditor takes the pc back to  the  auditing  room.  The  fifth
session is then begun. If the interview took place  after  the  session  was
started, the Model Session was of course completed before the interview.
    The auditor follows the D of P's advices in the next session  after  the
interview. This may be, then, the Fifth Session or the Sixth Session.

    A difficulty may now occur in the next session after the interview.  The
pc, because of D of P altitude, may have "transferred" to the D of P,  which
is to say, may now consider the D of P his auditor.

520

    Therefore, in the next auditing after  this  D  of  P  interview,  heavy
attention must be given to No. 3 of the Beginning Rudiments. A  new  process
could be used here in lieu of TR5N to correct  this~  The  process  is  "Who
should I be in order to audit you?" or "Who am IT' This, run briefly,  takes
off any "transfer" to the D of P and is a good basic rudiment  type  process
anyway. A little of it goes a long way, however..

    The SOP Goals terminal (or the D of P's advice) is run in Model Session
    form.

                        Subsequent Sessions

    In subsequent sessions the case  is  continued  on  up  the  line,  with
reassessments for new level each time the tone arm  stops  moving  well  and
for a new goals assessment, adding to the old list any goals the pc now  has
as a result of auditing.

                     When the First Terminal is Flat

    When the first terminal gets no needle reaction on any part of the  Pre-
Hav scale, it is flat. If needle action is still found, take the level  with
heaviest reaction, put together a command that falls also  and  go  on  with
the terminal at that level. But  when  this  no  longer  occurs,  the  first
terminal is said to be flat. This may take a few  or  many  hours.  But  the
thing is to be sure it's flat.
    Now and now only the auditor is to find the Havingness Process  and  the
Confront Process of the pc in accordance with  earlier  bulletins.  He  then
runs these enough to stabilize them. He now does  his  next  complete  Goals
Assessment.

    The auditor now uses the Havingness and Confront  processes  along  with
his new Goals Terminal. This is like old  Regimen  3except  that  the  Goals
Terminal and Pre-Hav Scale are used instead of help. The  bulk  of  auditing
is spent, of course, on  the  Pre-Hav  Terminal  on  the  Pre-Hav  Scale  in
accordance with SOP Goals.

    The Third D of P check-out occurs when the Havingness, Confront and  new
Goals Terminal are all found. The D of P  cheeks  each  one  of  these  and,
briefly, the Rudiments. The D of P does not run any of these.

    When this is done, the staff auditor goes back to the auditing room  and
starts his  next  session,  remembering  to  again  give  attention  to  the
"transfer" possibility and  to  again  use  at  level  3  of  the  Beginning
Rudiments "Who should I be in order to audit you?" or "Who am IV'
    The Intensive or new intensives continue. The D  of  P  must  cheek  out
rudiments at least every 10 hours of auditing time. and,  until  toward  the
end of the pc's clearing, must check all new goals and terminals.

    The D of  P  is  not  permitted  to  do  goals  assessments  except  for
demonstration or when the staff auditor completely fails. The D of P is  not
permitted to audit rudiments for the staff auditor, only to check them.

                         Pes Priorly Audited

    Pes who have been audited before in the HGC but not by the present staff
auditor are handled much in the same way as a new pc.
    The whole record and all auditor reports are  taken  into  the  auditing
room. The staff auditor looks for the Case Assessment. If he or she  doesn't
find one, a new one is niade. If the Case Assessment is present,  the  staff
auditor reads it all off, verifying each point with the pc.

    This done, the staff auditor cheeks in  the.reports  for  any  terminals
that were run on the pc or any Goals  SOP  run  or  goals  assessments  done
before.

    Only if a goals assessment has been done does he pay much  attention  to
the records. If one has been done (but never run) the staff  auditor  cheeks
it over with the meter. He or she accepts it or rejects it and uses  his  or
her own assessment. If it was ever run, the staff auditor cannot  reject  it
but must carry on.

      If any Goals SOP has been run, the terminal that has been run is
thoroughly meter
      checked on the Pre-Hav Scale. Any reaction ' s found are flattened as
per SOP Goals, in
      Model Session form. In short, the staff auditor, locating unflatness
on the terminal first

521

found by some other for SOP Goals running, starts his  Model  Session,  does
the rudiments thoroughly and then assesses the first terminal  ever  run  on
the Pre-Hav Scale again (as he did before he  started  session),  finds  the
level accurately, gets a command that will work and carries on.

    The new auditor on the old case cheeks out and flattens on the whole Pre-
Hav Scale, as indicated  by  meter  reaction  for  any  level,  every  Goals
Terminal over found by any other  auditor  before  he  does  his  own  goals
assessment.
    If the staff auditor finds a Havingness  and  Confront  process  already
listed as found in the records he or she may use it  or  find  new  ones  as
best judgment seems to indicate on inspection.

    If help terminals or Dynamic Assessment terminals are listed as  run  in
the days before Pre-Hav, they can be neglected.

                             Clearing

    When all terminals seem flat and the assessments find terminals only  to
"blow" almost at once, the pc is near-Clear. SOP Goals is carried  right  on
until no assessments register on the meter, but the meter remains free.

    Old Help and Dynamic terminals from the pc's  file  or  memory  are  now
checked out and run like Goals terminals.

    When all this is done, the pc is Clear.

                     Things That Prevent Clearing

    If the pc is run with a PTP in* full bloom, or if a  goal  is  really  a
long time PTP and is not audited, the  pc  will  not  change  toward  Clear.
Remedy: Reduce any  PTP  that  produces  needle  reaction  during  Beginning
Rudiments. Run as the first goal the one which assesses best on  the  meter,
whether you agree with it or not-if in doubt choose by meter the goal  which
is the reason the pc is being audited according to the pc.

    If the pc has  heavy  ARC  breaks  registering  he  will  not  only  not
progress, he may worsen the graph. Reduce all  ARC  breaks  found  by  meter
falls in the Beginning and End Rudiments of the Model Session.

    If the pc has heavy withholds which register on the meter and yet the pc
will not give them, the case will not progress.

    If a terminal being run on Goals is left unflat (if it registers on  the
needle for any part of the Pre-Hav Scale and  that  is  not  flattened)  the
next terminal addressed will not run well and pc will not clear. Check  over
every level of Pre-Hav by needle reaction and flatten  any  residue,  before
you go on to assessing another terminal.

    Overts or overt thinking on Scientology Orgs or personnel can prevent
    Clearing.
    Always follow the Auditor's Code.

                            Pc Blows

    A pc is most likely to blow (leave) if  withholds  are  not  given  good
attention and pulled. If withholds still  register,  and  pc  after  several
hours of auditing still won't give, run a Joburg Security Cheek  on  the  pc
as part of Model Session Rudiments 4.

    A pc will blow if ARC breaks are not repaired properly when they happen.
An ARC break can be repaired at any  time  in  the  session  by  TR5N.  Only
repair ARC breaks that fall on the meter.

    A PTP unhandled can cause a no-gain and therefore an eventual blow.

    If the pc blows, his or her  staff  auditor  alone  is  responsible  for
getting him or her back into session. If all else  fails  the  D  of  P  can
help. It's a black mark for a staff auditor if a pc blows.
    The whole prevention of blowing is contained in this section if  we  add
that the staff auditor's air of competence and facile command of  his  tools
are sufficient to inspire pc confidence~

                          Auditing Maxims

    Follow the Code. Particularly Clauses 1 and 2.

522

    Get an answer for every question asked before asking another question.

    Ask a question or give a command for  every  answer  you  expect.  Don't
expect two answers for one auditor question or command.

    Assess and run only what the pc says and the  meter  says.  Don't  write
script and try to audit your own troubles out of the pc or  avoid  the  pc's
troubles because you have an aversion for them.
    Follow the Model Session Script and  the  TRs  exactly.  These  are  the
badges of a skilled auditor.

    The clearer you get the better you will audit. But case is no excuse for
bad auditing.

    Always be real. Don't have big withholds on the  pc.  Tell  the  pc  the
truth without violating 1 and 2 of the Code. If you are tired, carry on  but
say so. If the pc wants to see the meter read show it  to  the  pc  briefly.
Only cover a meter during an assessment as pc  will  start  pushing  at  it.
Tell the pc what he wants to know about the meter reads.

    Don't try to educate the pc on Scientology while you're auditing him  or
her. Tell the pc to be sure to take a PE if they haven't.

                           Newcomers

    Getting a pc started who has never been given any data on Scientology is
simple now. Just do the sessions of Goals SOP as given above.  They  respond
to Case Assessment and Goals Assessments with total interest.
    A pc is in session when he or she is interested in own case and  willing
to talk to the auditor.

                       Cases Not On SOP Goals

    About 3 out of 22 cases cannot be started with SOP Goals.

    The test is only this:  Does  the  needle  move  enough,  even  on  high
sensitivity, to do a goals assessment? If it can, do one.

    If totally stuck run the concentrate-shift attention process in  regular
Model Session in lieu of Goals Assessment  until  the  Tone  Arm  is  moving
well, at least 3 tone arm  dial  divisions  per  half  hour.  This  process,
coupled with heavy rudiments, will start most cases so that  they  can  then
be assessed.

    If the case is incapable of answering sensibly  various  questions,  run
the CCHS. By answering sensibly is meant "an intelligible  response  dealing
at least vaguely with the question".
    CCHs are not run in Model Session.

                         Stopping Processes

    Processes are run as long as they produce  Tone  Arm  change.  Processes
which do not produce Tone Arm change are then stopped. If a process  doesn't
produce a Tone Arm change in a half an hour, it must be  stopped.  Processes
which freeze a needle and do not free it must be stopped.
    A process is never stopped on the recommendation of the pc or because of
the pc's objections. Such objections in SOP Goals always precede huge  gains
on the process. A process is stopped only when it no longer  produces  meter
change.
    A process that produces change must be flattened.

    The process that turns on a bizarre or unwanted  condition  will  always
turn it off. If in doubt, flatten the process.

    Don't "Q and A". That is where the change in the pc causes  the  auditor
to stop or change the process. If the pc changes, continue the  process.  If
the pc isn't changing, change the process.

    Stop processes and sessions on the auditor's  determination,  never  the
pc's. The auditor's determination is established by  meter  reaction,  never
pc reaction. If the meter  doesn't  act,  change  the  process  or  end  the
session according to session time. If the meter is acting, don't change  the
process and don't stop the session unless time is up.

523

                          Before Giving Up

    Before chucking in your hand on a trying and unchanging pc  and  leaving
it up to the D of P or the Org, do the following:
1.    Thoroughly cheek rudiments with high sensitivity and get them flat on
    the needle with the Model Session Rudiments Processes.
2.    Run a Johannesburg Security Cheek on the pc and clear every drop of
    the needle fully.
3.    Run Formula 16.
4.    Run Formula 13.
5.    Run Formula 15.
6.    Run "Concentrate -shift attention" process from SOP Goals until Tone
    Arm is very active.
7.    Keep rudiments cleared while doing the above.

    If you do all these and still get no action, see the D of P. Of  course,
it's impossible to do  all  the  above  well  on  a  case  and  not  get  it
going,providing only that you do do them well with good TRs.

                         End of Intensives

    At the end of the intensive be sure, if the pc is continuing,  that  all
is in order with the Registrar and D of P before you continue  on  into  the
next intensive.

 1 At the end of all the intensives the pc has bought, be sure the pc  sees
the D of P and the Registrar before the pc leaves the Org.

    These actions are wholly up to the staff auditor.

                          A Completed PC

    Be sure, when all the intensives given are over, that the pc's  complete
record, with all its papers, assessments and session reports are turned  in,
in a folder, to HGC Admin for filing. You may add  to  this  file  your  own
summary and recommendation on the case if you wish so the next  auditor  who
gets it will be assisted.

                    Additional Staff Auditor Duties

    Other staff auditor duties are assigned by the D of  P  only.  No  other
executive may issue direct orders to a staff auditor  about  his  duties  or
cases.

                            Reports

    All staff auditor reports go to the D of P. Copies go to myself  at  HCO
WW via the HCO Area and HCO WW Technical Secretary.

    Nothing gets as much attention from me as the results,  graphs,  reports
and comments of the staff auditor.
    The whole future stability of the Org rests on the  technical  skill  of
the staff auditor.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jl.rd Copyright Q 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[See also HCOP/L 26 May 1961, Basic Staff Auditor's Hat, page 536.]

524

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIO
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinst

               HCO POLICY LETTER OF 31
Assn Sec HCO Sec D of P All Staff Auditors Mimeo Directions: Mimeo whole
report as a Policy Letter. Then mimeo each form separately for D of P. Then
have them letter pressed on flimsy paper.

THE DIRECTOR OF PROCESSING'S CASE CHECKING HAT

    A system has been set up whereby a double check of  every  case  at  its
most difficult crossroads in processing can be done.

    While  the  staff  auditor  does  all  of  the  basic  work  and  actual
assessments, the D of P thoroughly checks each decisional step  which  would
commit the case to an erroneous track or which  would  permit  the  case  to
continue less swiftly than is possible.

    This  checking  system  does  not  arise  because  staff  auditors   are
unskilled. It arises from the fact that two points of view  on  a  case  are
better than one. As an example of this it can occur  that  a  staff  auditor
has the same withhold as the pc resulting at  times  in  the  staff  auditor
unconsciously avoiding that withhold. As another example,  the  pc  terminal
may be one to which the staff auditor  has  an  antipathy  resulting  in  an
avoidance of that terminal. But in addition to these unlikely instances  the
pe will very often give up something to the D of P,  thinking  in  terms  of
altitude, that he will not say to the staff auditor.

    Our whole interest here is case speed of advance.  The  more  accurately
assessments are done and the more accurately rudiments are handled the  more
rapidly the case progresses.

    The D of P only checks. The D of P does not actually audit  the  pc.  It
can happen that the pc gives up withholds to the D  of  P  rather  than  the
staff auditor. This is quite in order but the D of P may not drum  for  them
the way a staff auditor would.

    There are eight types of checkouts that the D of P does oil a  pe.  Each
one of these as below is the subject  of  a  technical  report  form.  These
forms should be mimeoed out at first and later printed on  flimsy  paper  by
letterpress. They are in red ink on white paper.

    We are not now checking arbitrarily every five hours.  We  are  checking
only when the pc has reached certain stages. Now that SOP Goals  is  proving
itself we must smooth out every possibility of error in its running.  It  is
a complex process but it is invariable. It has  many  steps  but  these  are
unchanging. Very little if anything in it is equivocal. Its answers are  all
in the black and white of being right or wrong once one actually  reads  the
meter with precision.

                        CHECK TYPE ONE

HCO WW FORM CT I

    Pre-Intensive interview and Pre-Goals Assessment Check.

    Before the preclear is audited in an intensive where SOP  Goals  may  be
employed the following check sheet is filled out by the D of  P  and  passed
by pc before a Goals assessment is made.

      Name of Pe       Date

Location of HGC
............................................................................
.............................

    The Pc is put on the Meter.

    The following statement is read to the pc: "You  are  about  to  receive
Hubbard  Guidance  Centre  Processing.  Your  auditor  will  do  your   case
assessment in your first session. All I am going to do  here  is  test  your
meter reaction for technical purposes."

525

TA    Needle Character
Have you ever received mental treatment of any kind?

TA    Needle Character
How do you feel about help9

TA    Needle Character

Do you wish to attain the state of release?

TA    - Needle Character
Does any of your family oppose Scientology?

TA    Needle Character
How do you feel about control?

TA-   Needle Character

Are you prepared to answer your auditor truthfully when he or she  asks  you
questions about your past?

TA    Needle Character

"This is the end of this check out. Please be sure to  get  good  food---and
plenty of rest during the time of your processing.  1  will  see  you  again
from time to time to make certain your processing is  going  well.  Best  of
luck to you."

Adjudication (No other significance than TA and needle  are  given  heed  at
this time): (given to auditor): Did TA move during questioning?

Did needle move during questioning?

If both moved, the auditor is  to  go  right  on  and  assess  with  a  case
assessment and then SOP Goals assessment in accordance with staff  auditor's
partial hat. If TA did not move but needle moved, the auditor is to run  the
concentrate-shift attention process given in SOP Goals  and  come  back  for
this type check again. If neither TA nor  needle  moved  during  questioning
auditor is to run: "How have you tried to change a person?"  "How  have  you
failed to change a person?" "How have you  tried  to  change  yourselM  "How
have you failed to change yourselP" If pc gave no  intelligible  answers  to
the questions, regardless of TA and  needle  motion,  tell  auditor  to  run
CCHs.

      Assess     Attention Process
      Change Process   CCHs
      Signed     D of P.

Repeat this form without reading beginning and end to pc  but  reading  only
questions when the auditor says  TA  is  moving  well  and  comes  back  for
recheck. If CCHs were assigned  tell  auditor  to  now  do  Change  Process.
Auditor returns for recheck when TA moving well. When Change  Process  doing
fine, assign Attention Process. When Attention  Process  doing  fine  assess
for SOP Goals.

Use new cheek type one sheet for every D of P check on above.  Include  this
sheet in pc folder.

                        CHECK TYPE TWO
HCO WW Form CT2
      Assessment Confirmation

      Name of Pc       Date

Location of HGC
................................................................

Cheek by D of P to  confirm  case  assessment,  Goals  Assessment,  Terminal
level and command.
Done before any of these are run on pc. Questions are made. to  pc  with  pc
on the meter.

526

Has the auditor asked you all about your family and former life?
About how many goals did you find?      (Should be 50 or more)
Did the auditor cover secret or withheld goals too?
Did you cover childhood goals as well?
What was the principal goal found?
(D of P looks at assessment sheet): Was the
principal goal found? (Note number of meter divisions it falls)
What was the terminal found for this?
(D of P looks at assessment sheet): Was the
principal terminal found?    (number of divisions it falls on meter).
      If the number of divisions the terminal falls does not equal or
exceed the number of
divisions the goal fell auditor must reassess.
If reassessment ordered end cheek here. Sign and put in folder.
What level of scale was found for this terminal?
(D of P looks at assessment sheet): Was
the level of scale found for the terminal?
      Meter must fall the same number of divisions for the level as for the
Goal and the
      terminal. If this does not happen even when the terminal and level
are repeated by D of
P to Pc, tell auditor to reasses and end check at this point.
What command did you evolve for this?
(D of P looks at Assessment sheet): Was
the command evolved for this? (Notes divisions of fall)
      If the command does not fall as much as the goal, terminal and level
the D of P may
      try a better command remembering to take into account the phenomena
of stuck flows
and putting the pc at cause.
New command evolved which falls as much as Goals, Terminal and Level -

Auditor told to

      Signed     D of P.

            CHECK TYPE THREE
HCO WW Form CT3
      General Check up on a Session
                      May be run at any time or when D of P unconvinced of
                Case Progress

      Name of Pc             Date

Location of HGC
................................................................
All questions are addressed to pc who is on a meter.
What processes are being run on you?

Do you have any ARC breaks with your Auditor?

Are you worried about something in your life?

527

Have you done anytl-dng while you have been in the HGC you shouldn't have
done? -

Do you think what we are doing with you is in error?

Is your auditor doing anything that upsets you?

If needle did a marked dip on any of the above the D of P should continue
the question until the dip vanishes, using various different forms of the
question until he gets the whole story to his satisfaction.

D of P findings:

Recommendation to Auditor:

      Signed     D of P.

      CHECK TYPE FOUR
HCO WW Form CT4
            Rudiments Check

      NameofPc         Date

Location of HGC
................................................................

After eight or ten hours of auditing on processes that were in Model
Session (not CCHs) the D of P checks rudiments to make sure that they are
cleaned up.

Cheek done on Pc who is on a meter.

What goals have you been setting for your sessions?

Do you have any upset with your auditor about anything at all?

Are you withholding anything from us about yourself or your processing?

Do you have any present time problems?

Is there anything you dislike about your auditing?

Is there anything you would like to change about your auditor?

Is there anything it would embarrass you to tell us about?

Is there something you wouldn't want known?

Is there anything in your life right now that is very upsetting to you?

D of P sorts out any needle fall until he is sure that there is something
there that needs attention and either it has cleared by his asking or he
gives the auditor an alert to it so it can be handled.

Recommendation to auditor:

      Signed     D of P.

528

      CHECK TYPE FIVE
HCO WW Form CT 5
            Flat Cheek

When the staff auditor states that the terminal he has been running  is  now
flat the D of P  makes  a  very  careful  check  before  he  permits  a  new
assessment to be started. The TA
      does not have to be on clear read for a terminal to be flat.
      Name of Pc       Date
      Location of HGC
      Terminal that has been run 'flat' according to auditor

Check terminal on every level of the Pre Hav Scale against the needle only.
Cheek from
bottom to top of scale then back to bottom of scale.
Needle changed characteristic or fell on the following levels

If any change or fall noted, send auditor back to  flatten  that  level,  or
those levels and do his own recheck and flattening before returning,

Use this form for D of P recheck.

If no level reacted on the  terminal,  take  the  Goal  which  the  terminal
represented and check it out thoroughly on the meter.

Goal Terminal Represented
Reaction of the Goal:

If goal had a reaction send auditor  back  to  find  another  terminal  that
reacts as much as the Goal reacts, flatten that  terminal  on  any  and  all
levels and return for recheck on
this same form.
I . Return for recheck or
2. Do new Goals, Terminal, Level, Command Assessment

      Signed     D of P.
            CHECK TYPE SIX
      HCO WW Form CT6
            Bog Check
      NameofPc         Date

Location of HGC
................................................................
When the Auditor reports or D of P thinks case is not progressing well the
following
check offs are done: (This is a "When all else fails" check off)
D of P does check type one without the message to the Pe:
D of P does check type three:
D of P orders Johannesburg Security Check. Done:
D of P does check type four
If SOP Goals has been 'flattened' on one or more terminals D of P does
check type five
on all SOP terminals run to date
Only when all of this has been cared for according to each check type
listed and the
Johannesburg Security Check has been fully cleared on all questions does
the D of P
make further recommendation to the Staff Auditor:
Recommendation:

      Signed     D of P.

529

                       CHECK TYPE SEVEN
      HCO WW Form CT7
                      A 'Welease- Cheek Sheet

      Name of Pc       Date
      Location of HGC

The following may be made out on the pc at any time but preferably at a
time when
the pc is to receive no further intensives at the moment or is leaving the
HGC.
This whole check sheet is rechecked by RCO Area as indicatedi
Pc is put on a meter and asked:
Are you happy With the auditing you have had?

D of P      HCO Area See
Do you think you will get any worse?
D of P      HCO Area Sec
Do you intend to get more auditing?
D of P      HCO Area Sec
Did they find your Havingness process?
D of P      HCO Area See
Did they find your Confront process?
D of P      HCO Area Sec

Do you think you can handle life any better?
D of P      HCO Area See
Do you think Scientology works?
D of P      HCO Area See
If satisfactory meter reaction (fairly free needle) and if Tone Arm is not
abnormally
high or low, and if pc answers "Yes" to above, a D of P sends the pc with
this form to
HCO Area, and HCO Area again checks it out, has Address prepare a
Certificate, HCO
Continental gets Certificate and this form and signs, and Certificate is
handed to or
mailed to the pc. A pin is also given or sent when available, denoting pc
is a "Release".
D of P      HCO Area Sec

                       CHECK TYPE EIGHT
HCO WW Form CT8
Clear Check
D of P cheeks out this form and then sends it to HCO Area See for a second
cheek out.
The whole pc file folder with all filed forms, Assessments, various sheets
and auditor's
reports are to hand when this check out is done.
Check over all goals listed on the Goals Assessment Sheet and any
subsequent
additions. Look for a fall of the needle on any of them.
Any fall disqualifies the pc.
Check over all terminals listed in all auditor's reports and note any fall
on any of them
with high sensitivity.
Any fall disqualifies pc.
We find the needle without reaction and pronounce this person to be clear.
D of P HCO Area See
Give letter to HCO Continental and send bracelet to pc.

LRH:jl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard [Modified by HCO P/L 25 April 1961,
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    530   D of P Form-Check Type One, page 532.1

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 APRIL 1961
CenOCon

                       S.O.P. GOALS GOOFS

    Having examined the reports of several HGCs I must assume the following:

     1.     That the many situations arising in Admin and staff in some HGCs
       stem directly from an unconscious avoidance of clearing or of
       running SOP Goals.

     2.     That getting SOP Goals run properly is my one and only goal for
       HGCs at this time.

     3.     That I have no interest in reasons why it is not being run
     properly.

     4.     That all organization and staff problems will resolve with the
       attainment of successful clearing of staffs.
     5.     That problems blow into view as this is being attempted and
       should get no more attention from me than a pc's protests would in a
       session.

     6.     That we can and will win out in getting SOP Goals properly
     applied.

     7.     That sooner or later staff auditors will realize it is a simple
       procedure with many steps and apply it bravely.

     8.     That auditors will suddenly realize it does work and clear and
     is to be used.

     9.     That staff auditors will read and follow the bulletins and
        policy letters on SOP Goals.

    10,     That my job is to insist that it be run, whether people on
        staff are trained or not trained.

    11.     That all difficulty stems from lack of successful technical
        application and that technical, fully repaired, solves all Admin
        problems.

    12.     That we can and will get SOP Goals in proper use, not only
        through existing staff but new staff as they arrive.
    13.     That neither you or I can Q and A with reasons it is not being
    run.

    I am very, very earnest about these matters.

    Typical goofs: Terminal started at Pre-Hav level run for  a  while  with
good TA motion. Motion of TA vanishes (as it should).  Auditor  non-plussed.
Promptly starts attention process and does 20 hours of it, where  he  should
have reassessed same terminal for new level.

    Auditor finds goal dips only  one  division.  Decides  it  isn't  enough
(which it is), runs off and runs change process.

    D of P does assessment in 45 minutes (D of  P  shouldn't,  and  also  it
takes me 2 hours for a goals assessment), gives it to auditor. Auditor  runs
with no Model Session or rudiments for 100 hours  with  pc  going  mad  from
PTPs. Never changes level. Never checks  rudiments.  Nobody  ever  re-cheeks
for level. E-Meter ignored.

    Auditor has goal, terminal, level, command, all set to roll, and D. of P
says, "Needle seems a little sticky, run the attention process".  SOP  Goals
promptly abandoned in favour of wasting 4 days of auditing.

    Goofs like this are just a dramatization of wasting auditing.

    It's in the bulletins. There's no reason to goof. It'sjust a question of
    doing it!
    As soon as somebody, anybody on staff gets clear or near  clear  on  SOP
Goals, this situation will change. The more that get clear  or  near  clear,
the more effective the Org will be, the better SOP Goals will run.

    My policy then is clearly to get SOP Goals run in every HGC on every pc,
staff and outside, not waiting "until staff are trained" or "when we  get  a
new Admin", or "as soon as staff auditors can read an F-Meter".
    My brand new idea on SOP Goals is "Do It". Only familiarity  will  beget
confidence.

LRH:ph.rd        L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    531

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Assn Sec    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 25 APRIL 1961

HCO See D of P All Staff Auditors Mimeo Directions: Mimeo whole report as a
Policy Letter. Then mimeo the form separately for D of P. Then have it
letter pressed on flimsy paper.

                                 D OF P FORM
                               CHECK TYPE ONE
           (Rewritten, Modifies HCO Policy Letter March 31, 196 1)

    In view of improved technology and the fact that I've found there aren't
enough questions to produce a tone arm shift in D of P's Cheek Type  One,  I
have rewritten it as follows. Destroy the first issue of  it  and  use  this
Cheek Type One instead.

                         CHECK TYPE ONE

HCO WW Form CT2

    Pre-Intensive interview and Pre-Goals Assessment Check.

    Before the preclear is audited in an intensive where SOP  Goals  may  be
employed the following check sheet is filled out by the D of  P  and  passed
by pc before a Goals assessment is made.

      NameofPc   Date
Location of HGC ......................................................
      The Pc is put on the Meter.
      TA Reading       Sensitivity Reading

    The following statement is read to the pc: "You are about to receive
    Scientology
      Auditing   1 am  (name) Director of Processing of the
      Hubbard Guidance Centre. Your auditor's name is    All 1
am going to do here is check your case. I am not auditing you. Your auditor
will do
that. We are your friends. We want you to make the fastest possible gains.
Now please
answer the following questions."

TA    Needle Character
Have you ever received mental treatment of any kind?
TA    Needle Character
How do you feel about help?
TA    Needle Character
Do you wish to attain the state of release?
TA    Needle Character
Does any of your family oppose Scientology?
TA    Needle Character
How do you feel about control? -
TA    Needle Character
Are you prepared to answer your auditor truthfully when he or she  asks  you
questions about your past?
TA    Needle Character
Would you be embarrassed if we found out all about you?
TA    Needle Character
Do you realize  you  will  prevent  yourself  from  being  released  if  you
withhold information from your auditor?
TA    Needle Character
Do you realize that if you  indulge  in  alcohol  at  any  time  during  the
intensive you will slow down the results?
TA    Needle Character

                               532

Do you understand that if you get insufficient sleep each night you will
have a harder
time in processing? -
TA Needle Character -
Is it clear to you that you should not stay with antagonistic persons or
restimulative
people while getting your processing?
TA Needle Character
Do you know you should cat breakfast each morning before being audited?
TA Needle Character
Do you understand you could add three hundred percent or more to the time
it takes
to clear you by withholding data from your auditor?
TA - Needle Character
Do you know we will do our best for you?
TA Needle Character
Are you aware that you are one of the people selected to become clear?
TA Needle Character
Will you cooperate with us in every way you can to achieve that goal?
TA Needle Character
"That is the last of these questions. Is there anything you would care to
know before
we end this check out?
TA Needle Character

Thank you. Best of luck in your auditing. You may go now."

                           Adjudication

Total TA Motion (TA Dial Divs)    Average Character of needle -

If average sensitivity knob was above 1.5 to get a 3rd of a dial drop
(regardless of TA motion) run a change process.

If answers didn't make sense, run CCHs.

If needle was sticky and Tone Arm moved less than 1 division of TA dial
during questioning, run Change Process.

If TA moved at least 1 division of TA Dial, begin SOP Goals.

If puzzled or in doubt, run a Change Process.

                     Recommendation to Auditor

CCHs
Change Process
SOP Goals

If CCHs, return for check without pc. Run until pc is intelligible_ If
Change Process, run all but 118 of a TA division out of the TA motion and
then return for ok to do SOP Goals before starting on SOP Goals.

If SOP Goals, do all Assessments and return for Check Type Two when done

      Signed     D of P.

Use new check type one sheet for every D of P Cheek on above.

Include this sheet in pc folder.

LRH:jl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

533

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 10 MAY 1961

HGCs
HCO Sees
Assoc Sees

STAFF AUDITORS

    All day staff auditors must report to HGC Admin at least twice a day  in
person no matter where they are  auditing.  Once  before  beginning  morning
sessions and once after completing the day's auditing.

    In the case of night or week end auditors, the report must  be  made  in
person at least once between broad  auditing  periods  not  to  exceed  five
hours.

    Every staff auditor must have a basket, just as every staff member  must
have a basket. A comm centre in the HGC may be provided for staff  auditors,
with a basket or a 3 basket station for each auditor, but even  if  this  is
done, the staff auditor must also have a basket in the comm  centre  of  the
Org.

    The location of these baskets must be pointed out to each new auditor by
HGC Admin whose responsibility it is to see that  the  auditors  report  and
hand in session reports or pick up all messages for them about the case.

    SOP,Goals is too touchy to run with loose supervision of what is being
    run.

    Ds of P must make every effort  to  keep  themselves  advised  of  every
auditing period being run and to help staff auditors in every  possible  way
to know their technology and keep them out of trouble with pcs.

    We can clear people. This, to be effective. requires communication,  not
only with the pc but with HGC.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jl.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

534

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 MAY 1961

CenOCon

SOP GOALS ASSESSMENTS
   (Effective on Receipt)

    No person signing for auditing in an HGC may be started in an assessment
for SOP Goals unless he or she has 50 hours of auditing time signed  up  and
arranged for ahead of the pc at the moment the assessment is to begin.

    No case may be started on a goals assessment until  the  case  has  been
properly prepared to be assessed by earlier processes as have been  or  will
be issued.

    This is law for the Chief Registrar and  D  of  P  and  staff  auditors.
Violations .an lead to serious consequences for the repute of the  HGC,  for
the preclear and for personnel involved.

    Nothing in this policy letter forbids assessment for  preliminary  steps
such as general assessment on the Pre-Hav Scale.

    The reason for this order is  that  experience  is  showing  that  staff
auditors. are occasionally taking up to  35  hours  to  find  the  goal  and
terminal and be sure  of  them  and  that  pes  who  leave  with  incomplete
assessments for SOP Goals are very unhappy.

                        CHIEF REGISTRAR

    The Chief Registrar should make much out of the therapeutic value of  an
SOP Goals Assessment. If it isn't done  right,  auditing  then  requires  an
infinity of auditing time to clear. Field assessments  are  being  displayed
as careless, dangerous and deplorably wrong. Say it takes as much  as  fifty
hours to know your basic goal and beingness. (See Book One  for  basic  goal
and basic personality.)

    A good goals-terminal assessment almost clears people when done  by  HCO
Bulletin of May 13, 1961, and certainly makes a Release.

                    DIRECTOR OF PROCESSING

    The D of P should make the Central Org specialise in good  and  accurate
assessments, and be the central  authority  on  them.  No  field  assessment
result may be used by a staff auditor or the  HGC.  The  HGC  may  only  run
assessments it itself does and these must be right.

    A wrong assessment robs the pc of all his money and harms his case.

                         HCO SECRETARY

    The HCO Area Sec must hat cheek this HCO Policy Letter on all  technical
personnel on receipt and often thereafter.

    HGCs must become expert in assessment for SOP Goals NOW.

LRH:iet.rd  L. RON HUBBARD

Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

535

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 26 MAY 1961

CenOCon

     BASIC STAFF AUDITOR'S HAT

(Refers to HCO Policy Letter of March 20, 1961)

    This remains the same. But there will shortly be a third form of Check
Type I which has, as one of its possibilities, the makings of a Release.

    Other staff auditor skills include how to do a Security (Joburg) check
and run general pre-havingness scale without a terminal, both as per HCO
Bulletin of May 13, 1961.

LRH:jl.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 AUGUST 1961

CenOCon

HGC ALLOWED PROCESSES

    Until further notice the HGC allowed processes shall be:

           Routine I
           Routine I A
           Routine 3.

    Routine 1 A is preferred on all pes and should be begun as early as
possible and flattened fully before a Routine 3 Assessment is attempted.

    Routine 3 has failed only where rudiments are flagrantly out during
assessment or in running.

    Routine I A inhibits out rudiments and ARC breaks. It flattens in from
25 to 100 hours. It speeds goals assessment to as little as 2Y2 hours if I
A is flattened.

    Routine I A consists of any version of problems and all HCO WW Form
Security Checks.

    Not know, unknown version of problems processes and security checks are
allowed.

    It is policy that no preclear on staff or in the HGC be assessed for
goals or run on goals or run further on goals until Routine I A is flat in
all versions.

    This guarantees clearing if auditors are also technically expert and
flatten all processes begun by them.

    Saint Hill Tapes of recent date and other materials cover and will
continue to cover this subject.

    This is policy. It must be followed.

LRH.jI.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1961
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
                               .536

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 SEPTEMBER 1961

All HCO Secs
All Assn Secs

                            HGC ALLOWED PROCESSES
          (Cancels all previous HCO Bulletins and Policy Letters on
                           HGC Allowed Processes)

HGCs must begin clearing.

All academies must get auditors trained up so their skill is adequate to
clear.

    In an HGC, all auditing is done by staff  auditors  of  course.  But  if
individual staff auditors cannot handle the skills of clearing, no  clearing
will get done.

    Therefore a program of increasing  skills  of  staff  auditors  must  be
undertaken, not just in training but in gradient skills they  are  permitted
to use on pcs. A staff auditor must only use skills he can command and  with
which he can win.

    Saint Hill Special Briefing Course Tape of September 26, 1961 is a  part
of this Policy Letter. It enjoins  that  auditors  increase  and  use  their
skills as follows:

    CLASS ONE: Relatively unskilled. HCA/HPA graduate, field auditor  called
in part or full time or current staff auditor or HGC  or  Academy  personnel
or executive. This auditor is asked what process he has had success with  on
pcs. What process he has confidence in. Whatever it  is,  as  long  as  it's
Scientology, a Class One Auditor is not permitted to use any  other  process
on HGC pcs, regardless of their "case requirements". This is mandatory.

    CLASS TWO: Any auditor auditing  on  staff  who  has  finally  passed  a
perfect score on HCO quizzes on

    I . E-Meter Essentials
    2.      Model Session
    3.      Security Checking HCO Bulletins

    4.      Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
      Tape of September 26, 196 1.
       (these quizzes must embrace the most minute details of these items.)
This auditor is thereafter permitted only to  use  Security  Checks  on  HGC
pcs, either standard  checks  or  checks  combined  with  specially  devised
checks.

    CLASS THREE: Any staff auditor who has graduated up  through  Class  Two
skills and who is having excellent results with Class  Two  skills  and  who
thereafter has been specially trained directly by a person who has  attended
and passed the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course and who has also passed  a
perfect examination by HCO on

    I . All HCO Bulletins relating to Routine 3.
    2.      All Saint Hill Tapes on Routine 3.
    3.      Who has a good grasp of the technical side of auditing and can
        run a smooth session.

537

This Class Three Auditor may use Routine 3 on HGC PCs but may  only  utilize
goals and terminals and levels that have been checked out and verified by  a
person graduated from the Saint Hill Special Briefing  Course.  He  may  not
run engrams on HGC PCs.

    4.      Who can find rudiments when out and get them in.

    CLASS FOUR: Any Class Three Auditor who has achieved  excellent  results
with Routine 3 and who has had his or her goal and terminal found and  is  a
release and who has had engrams run on his or her own goals  terminal  chain
and who has excellent subjective reality on engrams. This  auditor  may  run
Routine 3 and engrams on HGC PCs.

    In an HGC as of receipt of this HCO Policy Letter  there  are  no  other
classes of auditors and no special permissions may be  granted  contrary  to
this policy letter.

    All HCO Area Secretaries are enjoined to make this  program  stick,  get
this HCO Policy Letter immediately hat checked on all Central Org  technical
staff and all executives including the  Association  Secretary.  A  copy  of
this HCO Policy Letter, carrying a list of  all  those  who  have  passed  a
check on it and all who can't or won't should be airmailed back to me.

    This is the first positive  and  effective  step  toward  getting  broad
clearing done in HGCs. This is a very important step. It will be with  us  a
long while. For even  when  we  are  routinely  clearing,  every  new  staff
auditor will go up this ladder.

    Rapidity in getting this into effect will bring the HGC that much closer
to clearing.

    It is not permitted that HGC PCs are security checked or run on  Routine
3 or engrams until the auditor doing so has  been  awarded  the  class  that
permits him to do SO.

    If HCO Area Sees or Assn Sees find anything  else  more  important  than
getting this done, pause a bit and ask why.

    For only broad general clearing in HGCs and training in Academies toward
clearing skills will resolve any and all of a Central Org's problems.

    (Note: PCs who are being run contrary  to  this  Policy  Letter  on  its
receipt and who would be upset by  a  sudden  change  may  be  continued  on
whatever the auditor was running on receipt.)

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:jl.rd Copyright@ 19 61 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

[Added to by HCO P/L 29 November 1961, Class of Auditors, page 541.1

                               538

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 NOVEMBER 1961

Assn Sees
D of P
DofT

HGC PROCESSING LIABILITY

    If every field auditor were trained on Sthil or Special Courses and  yet
HGC auditors remained untrained, only field auditors could  clear  and  HGCs
would suffer badly.

    With the advent of 3D, clearing is placed in the reach of all cases,  as
you will soon see.

    Routine 3D depends almost wholly on accurate and rapid assessment.

    The only reason auditors cannot assess is because they can't read E-
    Meters.

    Therefore your fastest steps to clearing all persons who enter an HGC
    are:

    I . Make sure you have adequate senior personnel trained at Saint Hill;
    and

    2.      Make all HGC auditors excellent Class 11 auditors in practice,
        not just in theory, with emphasis on 100% accuracy in reading
        meters.

    If you will do  these  two  things,  you  will  maintain  excellence  of
auditing and be able to clear people in an HGC.

    In training a Class 11 auditor, while not  skimping  other  necessities,
concentrate hard on the skill of staff auditors in  reading  E-Meters.  Note
the drill in E-Meter Essentials  and  make  them  do  it.  Devise  means  of
getting a staff auditor to recognize all the  various  phenomena  of  needle
action instantly.

    I will try to make some 8mm sound films for you on this. But don't  wait
for them,

    I have a great certainty on what even the early steps of 3D can do for a
case. But they are all assessment steps. They can  be  done  in  error  only
where the auditor cannot, or does not, read an E-Meter. If they are done  in
error, you'll have endless grief, for  an  error  in  3D  is  comparable  to
exploding a mine. It's ghastly.

    Your pes must be able to attain clear and stay clear. The Central Org in
South Africa, with all the clearing, failed to  maintain  sufficiently  high
HGC standards and flubbed on a  few  cases  and  is  now  almost  broke.  So
clearing can occur, but if unstable clearing occurs or errors are made,  all
hell breaks loose.

    Right now the biggest available wins from HGC auditors consist of Sec
    Checking
with no flubs.

    If your pes are being Sec Checked even on just Sec Check Forms 3, 4  and
6, you should be getting enormous wins on all cases.

    If you're not getting those wins, then the staff auditors can't or don't
read E-Meters. That's your gross auditing error.

    A Problems Intensive requires skill in assessing and Sec Checking. Once
    more if

539

you're not getting wild wins on this, your staff auditors cannot or  do  not
read E-Meters well or consistently.

    Doing these items, See Checking  and  Problems  Intensives  as  per  HCO
Bulletin of November 9, 1961,  your  staff  auditors  will  achieve  a  high
enough accuracy on the E-Meter to do Routine 31) easily.

    If 3D is done wrong, it is because the E-Meter was  read  wrong  or  not
read. If 31) is done wrong, you'll have a disaster  that  isn't  limited  to
just one case.

    So be safe. Get your staff auditors able to do Sec Cheeks  and  Problems
Intensives and win with them. If they don't get  wins  with  these,  they're
not reading the meter right. The wins are there to be  had  if  the  auditor
can and does run a session and read a meter. If you're not  already  getting
uniform case wins on Sec Checking and Problems Intensives, the  meter  isn't
being read. It's that simple.

    If an auditor cannot win steadily and well with Class II  skills,  never
trust that auditor with 3D.

    The hidden factor that the D of T and D of P don't  see  is  the  missed
meter reaction. That's where any case trouble is. So work on it,  please.  I
don't care what lengths you go to to be comfortable  that  when  the  needle
reacts the auditor saw it and knew what it was.

    In running any part of an org, if you can lick this, you can  clear.  If
you  don't  lick  this,  you  will  have  endless  trouble  with  cases  and
procurement.

    We can get greater gains with Class II  skills  than  were  ever  before
attainable by earlier processes IF the auditor is reading the meter all  the
time.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ese.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

540

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 NOVEMBER 1961

Sthil
Franchise
CenOCon
BPI

               CLASS OF AUDITORS

(Adds to HCO Pol Ltr of Sept 29, 196 1 -HGC Allowed Processes)

    All auditors shall be considered Class I until validated Class II  by  a
Saint Hill Graduate or a Central Organization or at Saint Hill.

    Classification as Class 11 may not be awarded by any class.  It  may  be
attained only by severe practical demonstration, and oral examination by  an
HCO Secretary or an appointee of HCO.

    Class II auditors trained by anyone may not have pay status as Class  II
in a Central Organization until given a complete examination after going  on
staff by the HCO Area Secretary, regardless of any earlier examination.  The
only exception is a Saint Hill Graduate who has been  specifically  examined
and specifically designated as Class Il by HCO examiners at Saint Hill.

    No auditor may be designated as or draw pay in a Central Organization as
a Class III auditor unless first designated Class 11 and thereafter  passing
all examinations for Class III under the tutelage of a Saint  Hill  Graduate
and operating as a  Class  III  auditor.  A  Class  III  auditor  must  have
successfully and correctly assessed and run preclears.  Class  III  auditors
must be examined and their preclears examined by HCO  before  the  award  of
Class III is given.

    A Class 11 auditor may assess and run advanced procedures only under the
close personal supervision of a  Saint  Hill  Graduate,  and  not  by  mail,
telegrams or long distance telephone, but personally.

    At Saint Hill all enrollees will be trained up to and examined as  Class
II auditors on arrival, regardless of any earlier training by anyone or  any
organization. No assessment or advanced procedures may be run by  the  Saint
Hill trainee before Class 11 classification is awarded -and only then  under
the closest supervision. When examined for Class II  the  passing  grade  is
perfect.

    (It follows that persons earlier classified as Class 11 will be able  to
reach Class Il much more rapidly at Saint  Hill.  It  also  follows  that  a
field classification as Class 11 may be able to reach Class II more  rapidly
in a Central Organization. But prior classification has no  bearing  on  the
Saint Hill Course  and  field  classification  has  no  bearing  on  Central
Organization or City Office classification.)

                       Unauthorized Processes

    Any auditor found using Class III skills in violation of the above shall
be subject to  suspension  of  certificate  and,  if  continuing  in  fault,
subject to public warning and revocation of all certificates and awards.

    Serious damage can be done to Scientology and preclears by  unauthorized
use of Routine 3, 3A and 3D.

While no penalty attaches to a Class I auditor trying to security check and
running

541

problems intensives, he or she should clearly understand that all  pc  upset
in their area is traceable to inexpert handling of security checks.

    Class I auditors are free to handle and use any procedure  earlier  than
security checking  (or  October  1,  1960)  except  'Step  6'  and  Creative
Processes.

    Class I auditors are urged to obtain Class 11 classification as soon  as
possible in order to increase their results and minimize  area  disturbance.
Good use of Class 11 skills gives wins. Use by persons  not  yet  classified
gives loses. Any inexpert use of Class III skills can be ruinous  by  actual
test. We have, in Class III skills, for the first time  violated  the  maxim
that any auditing is  better  than  no  auditing.  This  is  still  true  of
processes prior to  October  1,  1960.  With  clearing  at  speed  has  come
liability of misuse. If we're going to have clears, we  must  have  accurate
Class III auditors.

    Appended to these policies it is understood that Class 11 and Class  III
auditing will be done only on British Mark IV E-Meters or as  improved.  The
discovery that 1958-59-60 and 61 American meters are wholly  unsuitable  for
clearing  and  that  sq,,,irrel  meters  are  even  less  useful,  makes  it
mandatory upon us, in order to guarantee any result to insist upon  the  use
only of meters I have supervised in construction and which have been  tested
after manufacture by HCO WW. The only American meter suitable  for  clearing
was the 1957 blue  meter  I  supervised.  Unknown  to  me  the  pattern  was
thereafter altered. The only suitable UK meters prior to the  Mark  IV  were
the 'Green and Gold' ACC Meter actually used on that London  ACC,  the  Mark
1, the Mark 11, and the Mark III. I cannot guarantee any  meter  I  did  not
check on. This is not  a  commercial  statement.  It  is  a  vital  fact  in
clearing. Therefore Class 11 and III auditors may not be classified as  such
unless they own or are issued  a  British  Mark  IV  (or  improved)  E-Meter
checked out by HCO WW.

    These policies are vital and are binding on receipt.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:esc.cden Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

542

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 DECEMBER 1961

HCO Secs
Org Secs
Ds of P
Tech Depts

HGC ALLOWED PROCESSES

    Directors of Processing are asked to note, and bring  VERY  strongly  to
the notice of Staff  Auditors,  that  the  use  of  'unknown',  'not  know',
'forgotten', 'hidden' etc, is now forbidden under ALL circumstances.

    Instead, for Processing Checks, use varied questions in an impasse;  for
PTPs find the Prior Confusion and use "What did you do wrong  in  that  time
of confusion" and "What did you withhold in  that  time  of  confusion"-each
question cleared separately (as in a Processing Check).

    For chronic PTPs, use the Prior Confusion in the same way in a  Problems
Intensive.

    Also, please note that Routine la is not to  be  used:  run  a  Problems
Intensive instead. NB: In a Problems Intensive  DO  NOT  use  sec-check-type
questions on specific terminals. Keep the  questions  general,  e.g.,  "What
did you do wrong?", NOT "What did you do to Aunt Bessie?".

Issued by HCO Technical Secretary WW for L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ew.cden Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

543

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 5 JANUARY 1962

HCOSecs Assoc Secs Lis of P

REPORTS FROM HGCs

    Effective immediately, HGCs are required to adopt this Policy  regarding
weekly reports to HCO Technical Secretary WW at Saint Hill.

    Each Wednesday (at latest) please send a package consisting of-fn this
    order:-

    1 .     A summary report on all the  previous  week's  auditing  by  the
       Director of Processing-on a form to be  mimeoed  on  white  foolscap
       flimsy paper; (the exact format of this form is given at the end  of
       this Policy Letter).

    2.      All reports on Staff Auditing.

    3.      All reports on Public Auditing.

    The report on each individual Pc is to be made up of-and in this exact
    order:-

    (a)     An accurate copy of the Pc's APA/OCA/SAPA Profile showing
        'before and after' graphs.

    (b)     'Before and after Intensive' D of P checks.

    (c)     '0 & P' Forms, where a Problems Intensive has been given.

    (d)     The pre-processing Sec-Check and any completed Ist Processing
        Check (HCO Form 3).

    (e)     The Auditor's Reports on  EVERY  session  (NOT  INFERIOR  CARBON
       COPIES), with the latest  report  Ist,  and  the  preceding  reports
       appearing in reverse  consecutive  order  below  this  so  that  the
       earliest session-report is last in the package.

    NB: American Orgs: Please staple the APA Profile-sheet by its  top  left
corner to the top left corner of the rest of  the  package;  for  all  other
orgs, the OCA/SAPA profile sheet is to be stapled by its LOWER  LEFT  corner
to the top left corner of the package.

    EVERY Profile-sheet must be marked VERY clearly 'STAFF' or  'PUBLIC'  as
the case may be, AND with the location of the HGC.

    All particulars must be filled out on EVERY Profile-sheet.

    All reports must be on flimsy white paper-to take up less  room  in  our
files-and to save you postage.

When remimeoing D of P's report extend it to a full foolscap  page  omitting
everything marked with an asterisk.* (Extend the report, that is,  by  using
the space to take particulars of 1 or 2 more Pcs.)

544

                                                    (Foolscap)*
                DIRECTOR OF PROCESSING WEEKLY REPORT
                  HGC (location)*
                       WEEK ENDING

TOTAL NUMBER OF PCs AUDITED THIS WEEK

NUMBER OF STAFF AUDITED THIS WEEK

NUMBER OF PUBLIC AUDITED THIS WEEK

LISTPCs: (STATE IF STAFF OR PUBLIC AFTER NAME)

1.    PC's NAME  -AGE-SEX    RUN ON
            (Block letters)             (*eg Routine 1, Probs Int)

    PROGRESS

    AUDITOR-AUDITOR'S STATUS - CLASS
                                (*eg reg. staff, casual, etc)
2.    PC's NAME  AGE-SEX-RUNON

    PROGRESS

    AUDITOR-AUDITOR'S STATUS - CLASS-

3.    PC's NAME  AGE- SEX - RUN ON

    PROGRESS

    AUDITOR -AUDITOR'S STATUS      - CLASS

4.    PC's NAME  -AGE-SEX-RUNON

    PROGRESS

    AUDITOR - AUDITOR'S STATUS     CLASS

5.    PC's NAME  -AGE-SEX-RUNON

    PROGRESS

    AUDITOR-AUDITOR'S STATUS - CLASS-

6.    PC'sNAME   -AGE-SEX-RUN ON-

    PROGRESS

    AUDITOR- AUDITOR'S STATUS- CLASS

           (If there is not room for ail your pes on this form, use another
           one)

D of P COMMENTS

DATE  SIGNED     _D of P

*LRH:EW:esc.rd
Copyright Q 1962 *Issued by:      HCO Technical Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard            for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    545   L. RON HUBBARD

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
Gen Non
Rernimeo    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 JANUARY 1962
Qual Hats   Reissued on 7 June 1967
Tech Hats
Level VI Students
& Above     RESPONSIBILITY AGAIN

    The common denominator of the Goals Problem Mass is "No Responsibility".
This is the end product that continues any circuit or valence.

    This is a  deterioration  of  Pan  Determinism  over  a  game  into  "No
responsibility" as follows:
    No Previous or Current Contact - No responsibility or liability.
    Pan Determinism    -     Full responsibility for both sides of game.
    Other Determinism - No responsibility for other side of game.
    Self Determinism   -     Full responsibility for self, no,responsibility
    for other
            side of game.
    Valence (Circuit)  -     No responsibility for the game, for either side
    of the
            game or for a former self

    The Goals Problem Mass is made up of past selves or "valences", each one
grouped and more or less in a group.
    Therefore,  the  characteristic  of  the  part  (the  valence)  is   the
characteristic of the whole, the collection of valences known as  the  Goals
Problem Mass.

    The way a being is hung with  persistent  masses  is  the  mechanism  of
getting him to believe certain things  are  undesirable.  These,  he  cannot
then have. He can only combat or ignore them. Either way, they are  not  as-
ised. Thus they persist.

    Only undesirable characteristics tend to persist.  Therefore  the  least
desirable valences or traits of valences persist.
    The way not to have is to ignore  or  combat  or  withdraw  from.  These
three, ignoring or combatting or withdrawing sum up to no having. They  also
sum up to no responsibility for such things.
    Thus we can define responsibility as the concept of being able  to  care
for, to reach or to be.  To  be  responsible  for  something  one  does  not
actually have to care for it, or reach it  or  be  it.  One  only  needs  to
believe or know that he has the ability to care for it, reach it or  be  it.
"Care for it" is a broader concept than but  similar  to  start,  change  or
stop it. It includes guard it, help it, like it, be interested in it, etc.

    When one has done these things, and then had failures through overts and
withholds, one cycles down through compulsive and obsessive care, reach  and
be and inverts to withdraw from, combat or ignore.
    Along with ignore goes  forgetting  or  occlusion.  Thus  a  person  has
occlusion on past valences and past lives go out of sight. These  return  to
memory only when one has regained the concept that they can be  reached,  or
that one dares be them again or that one can care for them.
    Herein is the cause and remedy of whole track occlusion.

    There are many uses of these principles.
    See Checking gets off the overts and withholds and opens the gates.
    All chronic somatics and behavior patterns are contained in valences and
are not traceable to the current life  time  since  one  can  reach  present
life, is caring for present life and is being present life, so present  life
is an area of responsibility.
    All real difficulty stems from no responsibility.
    However, one can use these principles even on present life with
    considerable gain.

      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:sf.jp.cden   Founder
Copyright @ 1967
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

546

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 22 JANUARY 1962

HCO Sets
Assoc Secs
Tech Depts

    URGENT

SECURITY CHECKS

    Effective immediately, all Security Security Checks, i.e. HCO  WW  Forms
5A, 7A and 7B etc, when being used specifically as Security Checks, must  be
done in Model Session form.

    This is because it has been found that  bad  security  risks  have  been
passed on these forms due  to  wildly  out  rudiments  nulling  the  needle.
Conversely, good staff members have been flunked because questions  read  on
ARC Breaks etc, rather than on the
question being asked.
      Issued by: Mike Rigby
            Senior Instructor
LRH:jw.pp.kd           Saint Hill Special
Copyright @ 1962             Briefing Course
by L. Ron Hubbard            for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED          L. RON HUBBARD

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 MAY 1962

Central Orgs
Tech Depts

RUDIMENTS CHECKS

    It has been discovered that Rudiment Checking has  become  a  matter  of
form. If an auditor found a rudiment in after a checker had  found  it  out,
it was assumed that either the trouble had blown or  that  the  checker  was
wrong. They overlooked the possibility that the checker had found  a  mutual
rudiment out.

    If therefore an auditor finds a rudiment "in" that the checker had found
"out" he should ask a simple question on the lines of "What  did  you  think
of  when  the  rudiment  checker  asked  this  question  (or  checked.  this
rudiment)?"

    Auditors should regard a rudiments check as a help, not as an attempt to
    put
them in the wrong.

      Issued by: Reg Sharpe
            Course Supervisor
LRH:cw.cden Saint Hill Special
Copyright (D 1962 Briefing Course
by L. Ron Hubbard for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED L. RON HUBBARD

547

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE Saint Hill Manor, East
                 Grinstead, Sussex

                 HCO POLICY LETTER OF I JUNE 1962
Sthil Form
All Academies
All HGCs    AUDITING

                     RUDIMENTS CHECK SHEET
                   (This is the only Rudiments Check Sheet
                   to be used in straightening up HGC pcs
                    or cancelling sessions on Students.)

    The following cheek sheet should be used by Ds  of  P,  supervisors  and
instructors seeking to establish whether or not the, HGC or student  auditor
got the rudiments in during a session.

    This check is not done in Model Session. Only the R factor is put in and
"End of Cheek" is given at end.

    Only a British Mark IV Meter is used. Sensitivity is at 16 throughout
    check.

Note:

    During the first two sessions of a pc by that auditor randomity  can  be
expected And the auditor should not be rebuked, as it  sometimes  takes  two
or three sessions for the rudiments to be put in solidly for an auditor  and
for a pc's needle to get smooth enough to be read by a checker.

Note:

    See HCO Bulletin of May 25. 1962 on needle reading.

    The checker should carefully repeat at least once any rudiment on  which
he or she gets a read, stressing "By the end of your last session".  And  at
first even ask the pc when that was.

    As auditing continues for several sessions, if the  auditor  is  putting
rudiments in every session, the needle will smooth  out  and  checks  become
highly accurate. If this does not take place, then  the  rudiments  are  not
ever being put in by the auditor.

                               RUDIMENTS CHECK
             (Repeat the leading line before each numbered item.
          Mark those that give an instant read [HCO B May 25, 19621

By the end of your last session had your auditor failed to find and clear

     1. A half truth?
     2. An untruth?
     3. An effort by you to impress him (her)?
     4. An effort by you to influence the E-Meter?
     5. Something you were withholdinO.
     6. An unanswered question?
     7. An unanswered command?
     8. An unwillingness to talk to him (her)?
     9. A problem?
    10. An unwillingness to be audited in that room?

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

548

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER.OF 2 JULY 1962

CenOCon

    URGENT

RUDIMENTS POLICY

    On all WC, staff and Academy pcs use only Repetitive  Rudiments  as  per
HCO Bulletin of July 2, 1962 and as outlined in that and  future  bulletins,
combined with Model Session HCO  Bulletin  June  23,  1962  and  its  future
changes.

    It is forbidden to use any other rudiments approach than  HCO,  Bulletin
of July 2, 1962 in an organization and it is  forbidden  to  use  any  other
session form or additional questions.

    Lack of Scientology results has stemmed from out rudiments when  grosser
errors were not present. This rudiments system and  HCO  Bulletin  June  23,
1962 (and as improved) Model Session, properly used, by  auditors  who  know
how to read a meter (HCO Bulletin May 25, 1962) and who do not Q and A  (HCO
Bulletin May 24, 1962) will produce comfortable,  advancing  pes  and,  with
Routine 3GA, clears. I make no reservations on this fact.

    It is incumbent on all Assn and Org Sees, HCO Continental Sees, HCO Area
Secs, Technical Directors, Ds of P and Ds  of  T  to  get  this  HCO  Policy
Letter into full force at once in all organizational  activities.  With  the
above the gTeatest stumbling blocks  to  clearing,  given  Prepchecking  and
Routine 3GA, have been vigorously swept aside. Get  this  policy  letter  in
force!

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.oden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

549

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, Fast Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 JULY 1962

Sthil Students
CenOCon
All Sthil Grads

     URGENT

AUDITINGALLOWED

    I want every auditor auditing to be perfect on a meter. To be  otherwise
can be catastrophic.

By perfect is meant:

I     Auditor never tries to clean a clean read;

2.    Auditor never misses a read that is reacting.

    One mistake on M.S. or TRs may not ruin a  session.  One  mistake  on  a
meter read can ruin a session. That gives you the  order  of  importance  of
accurate never-miss meter reading.

    All bad auditing results have now been traced  to  inaccuracy  in  meter
reading. Other aspects of a session should be perfect. But if  the  session,
even vaguely following a pattern session, comes to grief, IT IS  ONLY  METER
READING ACCURACY THAT IS AT FAULT.

    I have carefully ferreted this fact out.  There  is  only  one  constant
error in sessions that produce no results or poor results; inaccurate  meter
reading. This is also true for student and veteran auditors alike.

    When an auditor starts using unusual solutions, he or she was driven  to
them by the usual solution not working.  The  usual  solution  always  works
unless the meter needle reading is inaccurate.

    If an auditor is using unusual  solutions,  then  THAT  AUDITOR'S  METER
READING IS INACCURATE. Given this, consequent ARC breaks and failures  drive
the auditor to unusual solutions.

    A D of P who has to dish out unusual  solutions  has  auditors  who  are
missing meter reads.

    Meter reading must be perfect every session. What is perfect?

    I . Never try to clean a read that is already clean.
    2.      Never miss an instant reaction of the needle.

    If you try to clean a clean rudiment, the pc has the missed withhold  of
nothingness.  The  auditor  won't  accept  the  origination  or   reply   of
nothingness, This  can  cause  a  huge  ARC  break,  worse  than  missing  a
somethingness. A nothingness is closer to a thetan than somethingness.

    If you miss an instant reaction you hang the pc with a  missed  withhold
and the results can be catastrophic.

550

    If you fumble and have to ask two or thr ee times, the read  damps  out,
the meter can become inoperative on that pc for the session.

    If you miss on one rudiment, the next even if really hot can seem to  be
nul by reason of ARC break.

    A meter goes nul on a gradient scale of misses by the auditor. The  more
misses, the less the meter reads.

    Meter perfection means only accurate reading of the  needle  on  instant
reads. It is easily attained.

    An auditor should never miss on a needle reaction. To do so is the basis
of all unsuccessful sessions. Whatever else was wrong. with the session,  it
began with bad meter reading.

    Other auditing actions are important andmust be done well. But they  can
all be overthrown by one mistake in metering.

    1 . Never clean a clean needle.

    2.      Never miss a read.

    Unless metering perfection is attained by an auditor,  he  or  she  will
continue to have trouble with preclears.

    The source of all upset is the missed withhold.

    The most fruitful source of missed withholds is poor metering.

    The worst TR 4 is failure to see that there is nothing there or  failing
to find the something that is there on an E-Meter.

    This is important: Field Auditors, Academies  and  HGCs  are  all  being
deprived of the full benefit of processing results by the  one  read  missed
out of the 200 that were not missed. It is that critical!

    A good pro, by actual inspection, is at this moment missing about  eight
or nine reads per session, calling one that is clean a read and  failing  to
note a read that read.

    This is the 5 to I ratio noted between HGC  auditing  and  my  auditing.
They miss a few. I don't. If I don't miss meter reads, and  don't  have  ARC
breaky pcs, why should you? With modern session pattern and  processes  well
learned, all you have to acquire is the ability to never miss on  reading  a
needle. If I'can do it you can.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright@ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

551

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 JULY 1962

Sthil Students
CenOCon

CLEARING-FREE NEEDLES

    Any auditor running a Routine 3 process and obtaining a free  needle  on
an E-Meter should, on. the Saint Hill course,  have  an  Instructor  observe
and verify that condition and in  a  Central  Organization  should  have  it
observed by an HCO Area Secretary.

    Any auditor obtaining a free needle on all lines continuously (the state
of a first goal clear) should, on the Saint Hill  course,  demonstrate  that
condition to an Instructor and, in a Central Organization, to  an  HCO  Area
Secretary.

    An Instructor or HCO Area Secretary  should  make  a  statement  on  the
auditing report testifying to the fact and existence of the free needle.

    In short, there are two stages  of  observation-the  first  free  needle
obtained on one line and the state of continuous free needle on all lines.

    No verbal statement by an auditor, not otherwise confirmed as  above  is
to be given credence or be used to establish the condition of a case.

    The early observation on  one  line  being  difficult  to  maintain  for
observation is not mandatory, but if  not  verified  as  above  may  not  be
claimed.

    The state of a "first goal clear" is established by:

    I . A free needle on each line fisted from the goal.

    2.      No reaction of the goal on the meter after a final prepcheck on
        that goal as per HCO Policy Letter 15 July 1962.

    3.      Tone Arm near Clear Read.

    A free needle is not a stage 4 needle or an inverted stage 4. It is
    floating and free.

    In Routine 3GA we have actual, lasting clearing. It is  accomplished  by
expert and exact auditing. There is no  reason  to  fake  the  condition  or
rumour that someone is clear when he or she is not, or to  tell  someone  he
or she is clear when they are not.

    We are on solid ground with technology and procedure. Let's keep it that
way. The goal has been sought on Earth for 2,500 years. We have  achieved  8
first goal clears on the Saint Hill course in the last two  months.  People,
with reason, trust a clear. We have attained the state of clear in  Man.  We
must not upset that Trust.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.cden Copyright (D 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

552

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 AUGUST 1962

CenOCon

CLEARING

    Use of Saint Hill graduates in auditing should be limited to finding
    goals only.

    Regular Staff Auditors not trained at  Saint  Hill  should  do  all  the
Prepchecking and goals listing necessary to  obtain  a  complete  list,  all
under the close supervision of a Saint Hill Graduate.

    The Saint Hill Graduate should then nul the goals by the latest  current
procedure and find the goal.

    The goal found must be  checked  out  by  another  Saint  Hill  Graduate
cleaning it up as needed with Mid Ruds and proving it out conclusively.

    The Saint Hill Graduate should then prove out the four listing lines  so
they can be seen to react on the meter like the goal and can be answered  by
the pc.

    The preclear should then be turned over to a regular staff  auditor  for
the listing of lines.

    After 200 items have been listed on each list a Saint Hill Graduate must
ascertain that pain occurs on lines 1 and 3 and sensation on lines 2 and  4.
Only then can listing continue.

    The regular staff auditor must  clean  up  the  goal  immediately  after
beginning ruds in every listing session and must call for observation  by  a
Saint Hill Graduate of any free needle he declares.

    This arrangement has the force of policy. No other auditing use of Saint
Hill Graduates may be made in an HGC except in demonstration.

    All possible effort must be made to clear  or  advance  toward  clearing
every HGC preclear.

    The HCO Bulletins  of  August  1,  AD  12  and  the  four  lectures  and
demonstration tapes of the week ending August 11,  AD  12,  or  as  amended,
shall constitute 3GA practice on Central Organizations.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright (D 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

553

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 AUGUST 1962

Central Orgs
Tech Depts

HOW TO WRITE AN AUDITOR'S REPORT

    The following rundown, written by Phoebe Mauerer, Director of Processing
in Los Angeles, should be used by all auditors in  writing  their  auditors'
reports.

    1 . Reports are written in duplicate-i.e., one original, one carbon.
    (Original is
       sent to HCO WW, carbon is retained in local org files.)

    2.      Reports should be written clearly and legibly-in ink.

    3.      EACH REPORT SHEET should be filled in at top with:

       (a) Preclear's name (full name)
       (b) Auditor's name (full name)
       (c) Date
       (d) No of intensive hours scheduled (121/2-25-50, etc).
       (c) Time length of session (or sessions) for that day. (Ex: 5 hrs 15
       min.)
       (f) Running total of scheduled hours completed to date.

    4.      LEFT HAND COLUMN should reflect exactly what was done by the
    auditor
       from beginning to end of session, as follows:

       (a) Start of Session (with time, TA read and Sens read noted in
           middle columns).
       (b) Beginning Rudiments (with time, TA reads,and sens at which ruds
           are run (16) in middle columns).
       (c) Any specific rudiments which took some time to clear should be
           written in under Beg Ruds (Ex: Withhold- cleared.)
       (d) Process. (Name the process run and give the process commands  in
           full. If a Havingness Process, specify whi ch Havingness process
           was run)with time, TA reads and sens at which  process  was  run
           noted in middle columns.
       (e) Middle Ruds-with' time, TA reads and sens (16) noted in middle
           columns.
       (f) End Ruds-with time, TA reads  and  sens  (16)  noted  in  middle
           columns.  Again,  note  any  rudiment  which  was  difficult  or
           required unusual amount of time to clear.
       (g) End of Session-with time, TA read and sens noted in middle
       columns.

    5.      RIGHT HAND COLUMN should include:

       (a) Session goals (each one numbered).
       (b) Life& Livingness goals, specified as "L.L."
       (c) Notations as to which session goals pc made.
       (d) Notations as to other gains made in session.
       (c) Notations as to PC's: attitude, emotional changes, physical
       changes,
           somatics, communication changes, cognitions.       I`..
       (f) Auditor comments or opinions- CLEARLY LABELLED AS SUCH.

554

    In other words-each auditor's report should show  at  a  glance  exactly
what was done in the session AT ANY GIVEN TIME DURING THE SESSION.

    TA reads  and  sens  reads  in  middle  column  should  correspond  with
notations in left hand column as to what was being done in  the  session  at
the time.

    It is important that the length of time taken for Beginning, Middle  and
End Ruds is  clearly  indicated-that  the  length  of  time  any  Havingness
Process was run is clearly indicated, or  evident,  from  LEFT  HAND  COLUMN
notations corresponding with time, TA and sens reads in Middle Columns.

    If for any reason a rudiment or Prepcheck question must be left  unflat,
indicate clearly at end of report that  it  is  UNFLAT-so  that  it  may  be
picked up in the next session.

    Completed copies of auditor's reports  for  each  week's  intensive  (25
hours) should be placed in a folder in the HGC  AUDITOR  REPORTS  basket  on
Friday night. They are  then  checked  on  Saturday,  clipped  to  the  pc's
beginning and end profile, and made up into  the  Director  of  Processing's
report to HCO World Wide on HGC preclearswhich report must  be  on  the  Org
See's desk by Monday noon, at the latest.

    Each set of reports for a pc should  be  completed  by  the  auditor  as
follows before it is turned in Friday night to the HGC AUD REPORTS basket:

    1 One set of originals, stapled together; one set of carbons, stapled
    together.

    2.      Each set should read from the last day of the intensive back to
        the beginning day of intensive-i.e., last report is on  the  top  of
        the bunch, first report is on the bottom.

    3.      If there is more than one sheet per  day,  number---the  sheets
        and staple them together, with the last numbered sheet  on  top.  In
        other  words,  the  entire  report  reads  from  end  to   beginning
        throughout.

    4.      Original set and carbon set are identical, and should both be
        in the folder which goes into the HGC AUD REPORTS basket on Friday.

Issued by:  Peter Hemery
      HCO Secretary WW
      for
      L. RON HUBBARD
Authorized by:   Mary Sue Hubbard

LRH:dr.pm.eden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

555

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
                       (Reissued from Washington D.C.)

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I SEPTEMBER AD 12

CenOCon
BPI

     URGENT
HEALING PROMOTION

    One never achieves the high mark without finding something else on the
    way up.

    We have resolved healing.

    Clearing, of course, resolves it, and we can clear. There is  however  a
lower level of resolution of sickness  which  any  trained  HCA/HPA  can  do
easily. Indeed it is about the easiest Auditing that any auditor  ever  did.
The entire technical run-down on it is contained in  HCO  Bulletin  of  July
30, 1962, "A Smooth  HGC  25  Hour  Intensive".  I  will  be  writing  other
bulletins on this. When this was first released reports  began  to  come  in
from various quarters, that it was extremely  successful.  Further  research
reveals that, with the new series of buttons (HCO  Bulletin  of  August  30,
1962) this is an  easily  applied  solution  to  chronic  somatics.  Without
exaggeration, this address to healing is the resolution of illness at  lower
technical levels when properly done.  Fifty  to  two-hundred  hours  can  be
devoted to a case. using this, as. well as twenty-five. Do not confuse  this
with the 1961 Problems Intensive. It has similarities but is new.

    Central Organizations,  Centres  and  Field  Auditors  should  begin  an
immediate programme on this.  By  healing  you  can  graduate  a  pc  up  to
clearing interest and thus we have a lower level  feeder  line,  capable  of
successful accomplishment with normal HCA/HPA training.

    1Iiis programme has the following thought major:

        MAYBE YOU'RE NOT SICK

        MAYBE YOU'RE JUST SUPPRESSED

        SEE US AND FIND OUT

    The phrasing can be more elegant, the message remains the same.

    Legally, this permits us to heal without  engaging  in  healing  as,  in
actual fact, we address no illnesses and indeed, deny  people  are  ill-they
are only suppressed. Sickness occurs, we say,  where  suppression  has  been
too great.

    The argument is-have you been sick? Did you go to doctors to  be  cured?
Did they cure it? Then (as they didn't) maybe you're not sick, maybe  you're
just suppressed. So take some processing and find out.

    And the person gets well! We use on him the exact button he came  to  us
on. So he's never dismayed at any change  of  tack  on  our  part-  Then  we
interest him in clearing.

    This, 1 am sure, is the long sought gradient.  This,  used  right,  will
build our new buildings, use our Academy Graduates and give us a  chance  to
train up auditors to clearing.

    Therefore, 1 recommend you get versions of this on  cards  for  students
and staff to hand out, retail or public literature handouts,  and  even  get
ads as we can in papers and street bus ads. Many  promotion  ideas  leap  to
mind on this.

                               556

    The legal argument is simple, we don't believe in sicknessl we do not
address illness, we do not diagnose, we believe that freeing the human
spirit also incidentally prevents sickness. We are doing prevention. We
also find people do not have to be crazy to be suppressed, that nearly
everybody is suppressed. We do send acutely ill people to doctors. We
advertise to cure no diseases! That last is important legally. We only
infer that people who think they are sick are really not, but only
suppressed.

    Technically we train up our staffs to handle, in addition to other
skills, this new Problems Intensive and we use it in the HGC at all times
except when we are actually clearing-and we use CCHs only to prepare to
deliver a Problems Intensive.

    The Problems Intensive can be many Intensives.       I

    This I recommend. Don't downgrade it. It's a suddenly emerged major
    tool.

    We have at this writing these valid processes:

        CCHs - HCA/HPA
        The New Problems Intensive - HCA/HPA
        Goals Listing - HCA/HPA
        Goals Finding - Sthil Grads
        Item Listing - HCA/HPA

    So let's use our reserves of good HCA's and HPA's and wipe out illness
while waiting for enough auditors to clear them all.

LRH:gl.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
                       (Re-issued from Washington DC)

                   HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 SEPTEMBER AD 12
                                  Issue Ill

CenOCon

AUTHORIZED PROCESSES

    Only the following processes are authorized for use on Staff Members and
on HGC Preclears:

       Assists. Problems Intensives (Modem Version). Ordinary 3GA. 3GA by
       Dynamic Assessment.

    No other processes are to be used on Staff or HGC Preclears.

LRH:jw.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1962
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

557

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 SEPTEMBER 1962

Franchise CenOCon

  VALID PROCESSES
(Changes all earlier Issues)

The following processes should be used by all Scientologists.

    Class 1:      Assists.
    Class 1:      CCHs, Op Pro by Dup and SCS.
    Class 1:      ARC Straight Wire.
    Class II:     Problems Intensives (Modern).
    Class 11:     Prepchecking Auditing, goals, etc.
    Class II:     Goals Listing.

    Class III: 3GA Ordinary.

    Class IV:     3GA by Dynamic Assessment.
    Class II:     Items Listing.

    Classes 11, 111 and IV: Tiger and Big Tiger Drills on goals, items,
    lines, single words, names, persons.

    All except Assists, CCHs, Op Pro by Dup and SCS are done in Model
    Session.

    If a process is not mentioned above, do not use it.

    NOTE: Any of the above Processes, except 3GA ordinary goals finding and
3GA Dynamic Assessment may be done in Co-audits under direct supervision of
classed auditors.

    For the greatest gain achievable by an auditor in his class, use the
above. An auditor attempting processes above his class will have failures
and spoiled cases.

    Use of processes above Classification can result in cancellation of
    certificates.

    We can clear Earth. Why spoil cases in the process?

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright Q 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

558

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATION
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstea

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 OCT

CenOCon
Sthil Students
Registrars
Ds of P
Saint Hill Grads
HCO Secs
Assn & Org Sees  IMPORTANT
                         HGC CLEARING

    The plan of  HGC  Clearing  is  simple  and  direct  but  unless  it  is
scrupulously followed, it will cause upset and dissatisfaction.

    If a Central Org is not clearing the public, the public  will  be  upset
with it. This is the simple matter of the penalty of not-auditing.

    You can make lots of Clears on the staff or in special cases but if  you
do not do routine clearing in an HGC you will continue to have trouble.

    As only recent Saint Hill  Graduates  are  qualified  to  find  goals-in
actual fact, they are the only ones who safely can-the backbone  of  an  HGC
is a Saint Hill Graduate.

    No Saint Hill graduates can be D of P or D of T at this time, and may be
Technical Directors or Association or Organization Secretaries only with  my
specific permission. This will hold true until the scarcity is solved.

    The primary appointment of a Saint Hill Graduate in an  Organization  is
"Goal Finde?' in the HGC. When enough exist in an organization to  fill  the
bare needs of the HGC, then a Saint Hill Graduate will  be  appointed  Staff
Staff  Auditor  as  per  Staff  Clearing  Programme  HCO  Policy  Letter  of
September 10, 1962.

    The HGC system is therefore as follows:

    HPA or HCA Staff Auditors do the following:

    1.      Handle any CCH case.
    2.      Give Problems Intensives.
    3.      Give the "In Auditing" and  "On  GoaW'  and  past  goals  Goals
        Prepcheck (TV Demo tape 3 October 1962 and  other  lectures  of  the
        Saint Hill Special Briefing Course). This  includes  all  old  goals
        that were found or went out hard.
    4.      Do the required 850 goals list.
    5.      List goals to clear.

    At this point, unless the goal was found in (3) above [not  (4)  above],
tile HPA/HCA staff auditor turns the pc over to the Goal  Finder.  This  can
happen at any time that the Goal Finder has time available.

    Once the pc is turned over to the Goal Finder  he  or  she  receives  no
further auditing from other staff auditors, only the Goal Finder.  The  Goal
Finder takes the new pc the moment the last pc's goal was found.

    There is no extra charge for the Goal Finder's Auditing and the auditing
time of a Saint Hill Graduate may not be sold as such by an  HGC.  The  Goal
Finder's Units may be high. The Goal Finder may not take private pes on  his
or her own. There may be no part time HGC Goal Finders. Any Sthil  Graduates
willing to work part time to help the organization  should  be  assigned  to
the Staff training Programme  or  the  Academy  to  heighten  the  level  of
technology. An exception is the Auditing of Staff members,

559

particularly the Organization or  Association  Secretary.  Part  Time  Saint
Hill Graduates may not be used in the HGC.

                              FEES

    A Central Organization or City Office does not sell  auditing  hours  by
the hour ever. It sells (1) Clearing (2) De-Suppression  (3)  Longevity.  It
sells these by Intensives as always. It cannot sell "Ten Hours from a  Saint
Hill Graduate" or  charge  fees  "for  special  auditing  by  a  Saint  Hill
Graduate".

    Goals finding by an HGC is only undertaken as a  part  of  the  clearing
assembly line. One cannot come into an HGC just to  have  a  goal  found  or
checked and get  other  auditing  elsewhere.  The  practice  would  be  very
pernicious and result in few clears and many wrecked cases.

    A Saint Hill Graduate's Auditing time is available in the  HGC  only  if
the pc signs  the  Clearing  Contract  ("We  take  Full  Responsibility  for
Clearing you"). Then the person who  signed  the  contract  is  put  on  the
assembly line for clearing. This policy is not to be varied in any way.

    Casual pes coming in  for  intensives  who  do  not  sign  the  Clearing
Contract must sign up for Intensives as always.

    All former "Estimate of number of hours" procedures  are  now  abandoned
due  to  effectiveness  of  pulling  missed  W/Hs  and  a  modern   Problems
Intensive.

    A pc signing up for health reasons is just given a  routine  Missed  W/H
cheek and a Problems  Intensive.  The  same  is  done  for  Geriatric  Cases
(longevity of life).

    So a pc signs up in the HGC either  for  Clearing  and  is  put  on  the
Assembly Line, or for  Intensives  and  is  given  Missed  Withholds  and  a
Problems Intensive by an HPA/HCA and is made  satisfied  by  good  technical
application in either case.

    Single hours of auditing may not be sold by a Central Organization, City
Office or District Office "to see how it goes". It's Intensives or nothing.

                    CLEARING ASSEMBLY LINE

    Clearing is sold by Intensives, purchased when auditing is available.  A
careful log of time is kept. This is TIME IN THE HGC, not time for  this  or
that.

    The pc buys one or more intensives and is handed over to the D of P.

    The D of P thereafter tells the pc what the pc gets and assigns the pc
    as necessary.

    The line is regulated by the number of Goal Finders and the goal  finder
time available.

    Care is taken not to waste the pc's time. Depending on state of case and
lack of Goal Finder time available, the pc has the following, some of it  or
all of it, done.

    1.      Missed withholds and hav process found.
    2.      Problems Intensive.
    3.      (For a long-time pc, Diancticist or Scientologist.) One or more
        Intensives cleaning up "In Auditing" and "In Self Auditing",
        Prepchecks.
    4.      Do an 850 goals list.
    5.      (For pes who have had former goals found, wrongly or otherwise.)
        Prepcheek on the goal or goals, each one chronologically  cared  for
        (1st one taken up first, etc.)
    6.      (For pes who have been listed on goals or wrong goals and not to
        clear.) Prepcheck on the Auditing of goals, listing, etc.
    7.      Tiger Drill on every button (on suppress has anything been
    suppressed, etc).
    8.      Straighten up pc's HGC time with a Prepcheek.

560

    All the above are HPA/HCA actions. They are not done by the Goal Finder.
If they have to be done, the Goal Finder turns the pc back to HPA/HCAs.

    The mom6nt a Goal Finder has completed finding and checking  a  goal  or
finding one which must wait for checking by another Goal  Finder,  the  goal
finder grabs another pc out of the HGC or has one called in. No Goal  Finder
time is wasted. This may become the source of much sweat and urgency by  HGC
Admin, but Goal Finder time must be salvaged by grabbing up pes for  him  or
her.

    The Goal Finder uses current methods to find the goal and check it out.

    The moment that action is done the pc is returned to an  HPA/HCA  for  a
prepcheck on the goal and listing it.

    The Goal Finder must review the lines and personally see the  goal  fire
before permitting it to be listed and must see the pc's folder routinely  to
make sure it is going well.

    All further Prepcheeking and listing is done by HPA/HCAs.

    The freeness of needle is checked by the D of P.

    The goal is fully Tiger Drilled and Prepchecked after  the  needle  goes
free on all lilies.

    This is the Assembly Line for Clearing. The Goal Finder is on  no  other
line, does no other auditing. The only way the pc can be on this line is  by
signing a clearing contract.

                       AUDITOR'S REPORTS

    All auditor's reports are reviewed by the. Auditing  Supervisor  and  in
them such comments must be made as to guide the judgment of the  auditor  or
remedy his or her misconceptions about auditing.

    Auditor's reports are written in Session not afterwards from a notebook.
They must be placed in the Auditing Supervisor's  basket  15  minutes  after
the session's end. The report is always carried in the pc's  folder  and  is
not handled separately.

                           SUMMARY

    We are making auditors. We normally make good  ones.  While  Theory  and
Practical are  the  backbone  of  the  course,  only  in  demonstrated  good
auditing can we be sure of oul: auditors.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.cden Copyright (D 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

561

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 16 OCTOBER 1962

CenOCon

AUDITING HOURS LIMITED

    A Goal Finder in the HGC may audit no more  than  SY2  routine  auditing
hours per day and 2 hours of check-outs or supervision.  The  Goal  Finder's
routine auditing period should start later in the  day  than  an  HPA's,  to
permit supervision of listing sessions, check-outs, etc.

    An HPA/HCA in an HGC is limited to 371/2 auditing hours  per  week  when
also doing a 121/2 hour week end pc, and to  25  hours  per  week  when  not
doing a week end pc. This time may be extended by the D of P  only  to  make
the staff auditor clean up missed withholds or out  rudiments  left  on  the
pc.

    These limits of auditing hours may not be extended even for extra pay.

    The above applies only to  HGC  auditing  and  does  not  include  staff
clearing or personal auditing of family.

                          PRIVATE PCS

    No auditing for pay may now be undertaken by a staff member on a private
basis or, after the staff member leaves the Org, on students or  pcs  within
two years after the student or pc leaves the Academy or WC,  on  penalty  of
loss of certificates. Note that this states staff member  not  just  an  HGC
auditor. The 8 hour rule is thereby cancelled. If a staff  member  is  given
money for this it is to be paid in full into the organization  so  that  all
may benefit.

    The No Private Pcs for Staff Members we will call the "Johannesburg
    Rule".

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.cden Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

562

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 15 JANUARY AD 13

Central Orgs
All HGCs

ROUTINE 2-12

    When the six lectures of January 8, January 10 and January 15, AD13, are
in your hands and understood by staff auditors, the See EDs banning  Routine
2-12 on HGC pes are at end.

    These lectures alter to some extent the original format of Routines 2-10
and 2-12 by  removing  arbitrary  assessment  lists  and  using  only  lists
completed by the pc.

    All case repair data is also contained in these lectures.

    They also give methods of avoiding endless lists, dead horses and
    skunks.

    HCO Bs will eventually  condense  all  this  material.  However  various
emergencies have inhibited the  condensation  and  correction  of  the  data
except in lecture form.

    The above mentioned lectures take priority over and correct all  earlier
bulletins and lectures, as they contain two months' experience in  observing
errors being  made  in  application  by  auditors,  needful  Indicators  and
correction of points that were giving trouble.

    Routine 2 is being in general  very  successful  and  has  been  getting
better case gains than any earlier process.

    However, Routine 2 is complicated and exact and can worsen  cases  where
applied without complete knowledge. It  is  urgent  that  Objective  One  be
completed and that auditors who have no R2-12 seal have this pointed out  to
them.

    Squirrel versions should be  mercilessly  stamped  on,  as  they  cannot
compete with the thousands of hours of case experience which has  gone  into
creating Routine 2, and can bring disrepute to Scientology.

    Accurate R2 repairs inaccurate R2 and is the only process that will
    repair it.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:dr.rd Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

563

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 FEBRUARY AD 13

CenOCon

URGENT-GOALSCHECK

Issue as Secretarial Executive Director:

    All Goals and Reliable Items found on students staff or HGC pcs must  be
checked out and seen to rocket read by a qualified executive or staff  Class
IV before being run.

    Only Routine 3M is permitted as a  clearing  procedure  and  exactly  as
given in bulletins and tapes.

    All clears must be checked out by a  qualified  executive  before  being
pronounced clear by the Organization or reported to me as such.

    No auditor may be permitted  to  audit  staff  members  or  HGC  pes  or
students who is not a regular staff member.

    No auditor may use Routine three unless qualified by the Staff  Training
Officer ot the Academy.

    No  auditors  not  staff  members  may  frequent  the  premises  of  the
Organization for the purposes of obtaining private preclears.

LRH:jw.cden L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (D 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF I I APRIL 1963

CenOCon

GOALS FINDING AND GOAL FINDERS

    Since finding a right goal has become a matter of routine with recent
improved techniques, and a wrong goal found can be quickly detected before
serious damage is done to a case, any previous policies which granted a
bonus for finding a right goal, or which stipulated a penalty for finding;
a wrong goal, are cancelled herewith.

    The title of "Goal Finder" is changed herewith to "A Clearing
    Consultant".

LRH-.jw.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

564

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 13 APRIL AD 13

CenOCon Franchise

POLICY OF HGCs

    Due to the workability of current technology, the  following  policy  is
laid down for all Hubbard Guidance Centres throughout the world.

                      HGCs MAY ONLY CLEAR

    HGCs WILL ENDEAVOUR TO CLEAR HGC PRECLEARS. NO OTHER
DIRECTION OF PROCESSING WILL BE UNDERTAKEN. ONLY PROCESSES
DIRECTLY CONTRIBUTING TO CLEARING THE HGC PC WILL BE USED IN AN
HGC.

    This should be well disseminated as a policy and should be posted in the
registrar's office and on the public bulletin board.

    The processes envisioned are:

        1 . Preparatory processes to get the pc into session;

        2.  Prepchecking to obtain the pc's goal;

        3.  Obtaining a pc's goal;

        4.  Clearing a GPM;

        5.  Completing a GPM;

        6.  Obtaining new goals;

        7.  Clearing the new GPMs;

        8.  Completing the GPMs.

    Secure and workable technology now exists to accomplish each one of the
    above.

    HGC  Auditors  must  become  expert  at  this  technology  and  be  well
supervised in its execution.

    Any and all earlier Auditing any HGC pc has had is now  contributive  to
clearing, giving many Items on which goals can be found  and  smoothing  the
way.

    No registrar may promise or  sell  any  particular  technique.  This  is
entirely at the discretion of the HGC.

    The prospective preclear must be warned as follows:

    "Clearing is not easy to do and it is not easy on the preclear. We  must
be sure that you realize this before we undertake your clearing."

    Any and all requests for "healing treatment" must be refused. It  should
be made very plain that HGCs only Clear,

    Clearing has been described in various literatures and  the  prospective
preclear should be referred to these or told what clearing is.

    The earliest Earth hopes for clearing were uttered  about  ten  thousand
years ago. For the first time we are able to accomplish this for  all  cases
on whom a goal may be found.

    All clearing is conditional to finding the pc's basic purpose. The
    difficulties of this
should not be minimized.
I-RHAr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1963
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

565

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 MARCH 1964

CenOCon

      HGC ALLOWED PROCESSES
(Cancels previous issues on same subject)

    Effective immediately, the following processes are allowed in the HGC on
any preclear, on the judgment of the Case Supervisor.

    For psychosomatics: ARC '63.

    For clearing: Recall a Terminal and Problems Intensive, alternated with
    R-2H.

    8-C and any older processes the auditor has confidence in are allowed.

    Study and use the materials of the last six tapes of the Saint Hill
Briefing Course, but do not run or list any Goals or Items on any preclear.

    Refresh the Case Supervisor on ARC Break assessments and have ARC Breaks
handled by the Case Supervisor. Clean up all the ARC Breaks in the area.

    Train your auditing staff on the above and on the new "Auditing by
Lists" process, when issued.

    Campaign to the public: "Clean up your ARC Breaks with life."

    The above, with clarifications, will remain standard HGC fare for years,
as it contains the cream of all processes for the last fourteen years, and
actual clearing.

    Avoid advertising Itsa. Relegate it to Co-audits. Avoid R-2-12, R-3 and
R-4 type processes. Advertise and deliver clearing as above.

    Flatten, flatten all processes begun in the HGC.

    Preclear Log Books will conform to this rundown.

L RON HUBBARD

LRH:gf.rd Copyright @ 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

566

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
Remimeo
RAP Hats    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 AUGUST 1964
Tech Hats   Reissued on 7 June 1967
Qual Hats
      STAFF AUDITORS

    All auditors working in an HGC  in  any  Central  Organization  or  City
Office must be full time staff members in the Day Org or full  time  in  the
Evening and/or Weekend Foundation.
    No auditor may be "on call" or "part time" in  a  Central  Org  or  City
Office HGC. An auditor is either a  staff  auditor,  working  full  time  on
units, or he may not audit for the organization.
    There will be no exceptions to this policy permitted.
    Three organizations have at one time  or  another  nearly  gone  extinct
because they employed outside auditors  on  an  occasional  or  "consultant"
basis. They keep several auditors "on call" and when  they  have  a  pc  for
them call them in. This measure is only an effort to preserve units.  It  is
foolish as it eventually destroys units.
    At least three great evils result from "the consultant policy".
1.    There is no way of setting up a staff training programme or a staff
    auditing programme that includes such people.
2.    Technical result suffers because the pc is not really given an HGC
    auditor but someone who is not under direct control of the D of P.
3.    HGC pcs often wander off from the HGC and turn up later in somebody's
    practice-even though the org investment in procuring that pc was great.

    There are other lesser reasons. But there is no point in detailing them.
    Outside (non-staff) auditors have often been of great assistance to orgs
and it is regretted if this seems critical of them. Other outside  auditors,
however, have not been.
    The FIRST REASON AND LAST REASON FOR THE EXISTENCE OF A CENTRAL  ORG  OR
CITY OFFICE IS TO HOLD UP THE TECHNICAL STANDARD OF AN AREA.
    That is POLICY ONE in every Central Org and City Office. I  would  never
have established them except that it became obvious that they were the  only
way to hold  up  and  maintain  the  technical  standard  of  Dianetics  and
Scientology.
    I ran get data to them, supervise their auditing and training and act to
correct technical abuses. I cannot do this in areas where there are no  orgs
that are in effect part of my office.
    The moment an Org passes auditing and training to the field, the field
    is holding
the standard and  I  can  no  longer  directly  maintain  a  high  technical
standard in that area.
    The final test is the actual experience. In an area where  an  org  uses
the field on a casual labour basis to do its technical, I  very  soon  begin
to receive nothing but entheta on my Standing Order j~ I lines (public  comm
lines). The theta comms vanish. There's nothing but natter. So I look and  I
find every time that the  org  responsible  for  that  area  has  ceased  to
deliver tech service through staff members,  but  is  using  a  "consultant"
plan.
    This "consultant plan" seems sound to orgs. In weeks when there  are  no
pcs they don't have to pay the auditors. Sounds good.
    But it is in violation of Org Policy Number One. The org is  only  there
to hold a standard. When it passes that to the  field,  it  isn't  there  at
all. And sure enough it rapidly starts to go broke.
    There is another aspect to this. How about the field auditor who depends
on "an occasional pc in the HGC". It sounds good to be able to  do  his  own
too. But actually he is often merely being denied  his  rightful  job  as  a
staff auditor.
    So there will be no more of this "consultant auditor" idea.
    Hire only full time Auditors. And hire in high ratio to the number of
    admin staff.

LRH:jw.jp.rd     L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1967 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                                567

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 SEPTEMBER 1964

BPI
Remimeo

CLAY TABLE USE

    Clay Table auditing is for use by Central  Organizations,  City  Offices
and field auditors who have received training in it.

    ,Clay Table is for Levels III and IV. Clay Table Healing  is  Level  III
and Clay Table Clearing is Level IV where the auditor  is  also  trained  to
handle ARC breaks.

    Central Orgs are to use only on HGC pes or in the staff co-audit but may
permit use by an auditor only where that auditor has been fully checked  out
on its HCO Bulletins and is supervised.

    Clay Table public use or use on public co-audits  Or  HAS  courses  will
bring about casualties.

    These Clay Table processes are extremely  powerful  and  therefore  very
restimulative. To give lectures on  them  to  uninformed  persons  may  have
repercussions in their cases.

    Clay Table is also deceptively simple. It appears so easy to read  about
that one is likely to miss. It's simple but only  if  you  consider  driving
between two ravines at a hundred miles an hour is simple.

    It looks easy until you run off  the  road  by  failing  to  locate  the
steering wheel before you drive.

    A Central Organization may teach Classification Courses at Level III for
Clay Table Healing as soon as it has Instructors  trained  in  it  at  Saint
Hill. It may  teach  Classification  Courses  at  Level  IV  in  Clay  Table
Clearing to students who took the Class III course.

    Staffs may be trained and checked out in Clay Table work but  preferably
by Saint Hill graduates.

    There is no penalty attached to misusing  Clay  Table  work  except  the
penalty of coping then with a messed up process and messed up pcs.

    Used right Clay Table is the fastest thing we ever had. But  Clay  Table
Auditing  isn't  just  fooling  about  with  Clay.  It's  simple,   powerful
technology and requires expert usage to produce results and protect pcs.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH..-jw.pm.oden Copyright Q 1964 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

568

                        I

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

Gen Non Rennmeo
Qual Div HATS    HCO POLICY LETTER OF 23 MAY 1965
Tech Div HATS    Issue Il
Registrar HATS
ACCTS HATS  REBATES

   No rebate may be given any preclear for any reason on his or her
   processing.
   Some cases are more difficult than others and give auditors more
   trouble.
    A case can be sufficiently enturbulative that an auditor can be diverted
from his task and commit minor errors  resulting  in  an  apparent  loss  of
time.
   The more resistive case also causes a D of P to fumble on occasion.
    The auditors and case  supervisors  try  their  best  and  do  the  best
possible under the circumstances.
    To claim a pc "lost time" in auditing because of an  error  in  choosing
processes or having to reflatten one, is highly fallacious.
   The usual pc does not lose such time under the same auditors and D of
   Ps.
   We do our job as best we possibly can and when we know more we do more.
    We are already the only agency anywhere that can increase IQ and resolve
human problems.
   We handle a living thing-life.
   We do our best.
    Sometimes a pc throws us a curve with a rough case, bad between  session
behaviour, roughing up auditors and D of Ps. It is natural that goofs  occur
on such cases.
    We retrain auditors who are routinely erring and we do  all  we  can  to
ensure good  case  gains.  We  don't  permit  squirreling.  Our  Ethics  are
stronger than any other organization's.
    Pes who claim "lost time" or ask for rebates of part of  their  auditing
time for any reason except no auditing whatever (meaning no session  of  any
kind, no auditor or pc in the room) should be turned over  to  Ethics.  They
are rough cases and tend to be suppressive.
   We are selling hours of auditing and what that is is for us to judge.
    Further, no auditor may rebate any part of a pc's fee personally  or  be
made to rebate it, as to do so is to shatter any possibility  of  delivering
auditing at all.
    Auditing is already the cheapest form  of  treatment  there  is.  It  is
cheaper without any argument in favour of time taken to  get  a  result-that
is bonus. Medicos, surgeon~, psychiatrists, psycho-analysts charge the  Moon
for nothing or even for damage. We are not in their line  of  business.  But
fees can be compared. It is nothing for a psycho-analyst  to  charge  Ј9,000
for a course of treatment! A US surgeon thinks nothing  of  a  $5,000  bill.
The Mayo Clinic doesn't think twice to send a bill for S35,000  or  more  to
the widow of their patient.
   The government pays in some countries. And that too is high.
    By rights our minimum fee for a 25 Hour Intensive should be Ј250  or  in
the US S820. If we only processed, we would have to charge  that.  It  takes
several people to deliver real auditing to a  preclear.  The  field  auditor
usually goes broke even on high fees. He just doesn't  pay  out  the  salary
needed to give the pc proper service.
    How much is a man's life worth to him? How much is it worth not  to  die
at all? I'm afraid it has no price tag.
   We are selling actual salvage from Death itself.
    Rebate. How silly. The person was lucky we were around at all  and  took
an interest. We don't have to do anything for  anybody.  Remember  that.  We
can lose interest in certain people, too, you know.
   No org has to accept anyone it doesn't want to for training or
   processing.
   No Auditor has to accept a pc he doesn't honestly want to help.
   No Supervisor has to train any student he doesn't want to train.
    We sell pearls for pennies already. L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.rd
Copyright (D 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    569

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 MAY 1965
Rcrairneo   Qual & Tech Divs
Sthil Cl V11 Course    All HATS
      Students
Sthil Staff HCO Div
Ethics HATS All HA TS
Star-Rated Check
            PROCESSING

    Since 1950 we have had an iron bound rule that we didn't  leave  pes  in
trouble just to end a session.

    For fifteen years we have always continued a session that found  the  pc
in trouble and I myself have audited a pe for  nine  additional  hours,  all
night long in fact, just to get the pc through.

    Newer auditors, not trained in the stern school of running engrams, must
learn this all over again.

    It doesn't matter whether the auditor has had a policy on this  or  not-
one would think that common decency would be enough as to leave a pc in  the
middle of a secondary or an engram  and  just  coolly  end  the  session  is
pretty cruel. Some do it because they are startled or  afraid  and  "Rabbit"
(run away by ending the session).

    Auditors who end a process or change it when it has turned  on  a  heavy
somatic are likewise ignorant.

    WHAT TURNS IT ON WILL TURN IT OFF.

    This is the oldest rule in auditing.
    Of  course  people  get  into  secondaries  and  engrams,   go   through
misernotion and heavy somatics. This  happens  because  things  are  running
out. To end off a process or a session because of the  clock  is  to  ignore
the real purpose of auditing.
    The oldest rules we have are
    (a) GET THE PC THROUGH IT.

    (b) WHAT TURNS IT ON WILL TURN IT OFF.
    (c) THE WAY OUT IS THE WAY THROUGH.

    These now are expressed as POLICY.
    A falsified auditor's report is also subject to a Court of Ethics.
    Any auditor violating this policy letter is liable to an immediate Court
of Ethics convened within 24 hours of the offence or as soon as is  urgently
possible.

    Auditing at all levels works well when it is done by the book.
    The purpose of Ethics is to open the way for and get in Tech.
    Then we can do our job.
    THERE IS NO MODERN PROCESS THAT WILL NOT WORK WHEN EXACTLY APPLIED.
    Therefore in the  eyes  of  Ethics  all  auditing  failures  are  Ethics
failures-PTS, Suppressive Persons as pes, or non-compliance  with  tech  for
auditors.
    And the first offence an auditor can commit is ceasing to audit when  he
is most needed by his pc.

    Hence it is the first most important consideration of Ethics to  prevent
such occurrences.

    Then we'll make happy pcs, Releases and Clears.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:wme.pm.cden Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               570

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 JUNE 1965

                                  ALL HGCs
                           ALL CASE CRACKING UNITS

Rernimeo
Staff Auditor Hats
Interne Hats
Class VII Internes

FOLDERS, MARKING OF

    No staff auditor or Interne may proceed with the  next  session  on  any
case unless the folder of the last  consecutive  auditing  period  has  been
marked by the Case Supervisor or Director of Processing  or  the  person  in
normal charge of all cases.

    Where two sessions occur in one day, these count as one session and need
only one summary report by the auditor for marking purposes.

LRH:mh.kd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright@ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 JULY 1965

Rernimeo

RELEASES

    When any pc signed up and being audited on any 25 hour intensive reaches
the state of First Stage Release, the processing is immediately ended  (with
a gentle That's It). The intensive is not completed. However,  as  the  goal
of the processing has been  achieved,  the  money  of  the  balance  of  the
intensive is not refundable.

    However, in celebration of  the  person  having  reached  the  State  of
Release, the org may credit the person  with  that  amount  (of  the  unused
balance of the intensive) toward training. If no training  is  going  to  be
undertaken by the person, then, of course, there is no  crediting.  Training
should be heavily encouraged since that is the route to Cl VI and Clear  and
it is not envisioned that there will not be plans on the part of the  person
for training.

    The fact that, in the case of Releasing the person before the completion
of the 25 hours, the money will not be refunded, due  to  the  goal  of  the
processing having been achieved, should be added to the HGC Contract.

LRH:mh.kd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

571

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
Rernimeo
Class V11 Auditors     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 12 JULY 1965
Class VII Internes
Tech Execs
HGC Auditors     RELEASE POLICIES
Review Auditors
Qual Execs  STARTING THE PC

    Due to the vast number of Former Releases and the way the cheek cuts can
hold up case, NO PC  WHO  HAS  BEEN  AUDITED  BEFORE  MAY  BE  ACCEPTED  FOR
PROCESSING (LOWER GRADE OR POWER) WHO HAS NOT BEEN CHECKED  OUT  FOR  FORMER
RELEASE.
    These check outs are done in Review by a Review Auditor. They consist of
doing well the Pol Ltr Form 26 June 1965.
    The pc is then shifted to the HGC for a complete rehabilitation  as  per
HCO B 30 June 1965.
    The HGC auditor must be good on a meter and know a clear condition on  a
meter (floating needle) when he sees one. The meter TA  should  be  anywhere
between 2 and 3 for either sex.
    The HGC auditor is to get the meter to clear condition and then must end
off as per new Model Session at once and send the pc to Qual to be  Declared
a Ist Stage Release or Ist Stage Released OT.
    Great care must be taken by Qual personnel or the Examiner not  to  fool
about with the pc's folder or Review cheek cuts on a  Declare  as  such  can
key the Release back in again and ARC Break the pc by Invalidation.
    The pc may only be audited further on Power Processes but the pc may  be
trained and may audit others. Also ARC Breaks, PTPs  and  withholds  may  be
done on Former Releases but not by repetitive processes.

                       GRADE PROCESSING

    For the purpose of re-establishing Former  Releases  earlier  policy  is
modified, permitting the pc to buy a minimum of 5 hours of processing  which
includes the price of the Review, the time  of  the  Review  being  deducted
from the 5 hours.
    If the pc is raw meat, never before  audited,  the  above  formality  of
Review is dispensed with by the Registrar in registering them and the  rules
concerning intensives apply.
    If the person is not found to  have  been  &Former  Release  by  Review,
whatever is found is handled by the HGC auditor in completing the 5 hours.

                       POWER PROCESSING

    All the above except the 5 hour limit applies to Power Processing.,
    The person is first checked out by Review, then  sent  to  the  HGC  and
rehabilitation of any Former Release is declared when rehabilitated.
    The preclear is then returned to  the  HGC  with  as  small  a  loss  of
scheduled auditing time as possible and is entered into Power Processing.
    The auditing continues until the preclear is a Second Stage  Release  or
Second Stage Released OT.
                                ACTIONS TAKEN
                                  RAW MEAT

    Registrar establishes that the person has never been audited before  and
signs the person up accordingly.
    Person goes straight to HGC and is audited to Release.
    The moment the auditor sees a Floating needle and a TA between 2 and  3,
the auditor stops the session and sends the pc to the Examiner to Declare.
    If the pc looks good and feels okay the Examiner sends through to  Certs
and Awards for Release award.
    Any rebate from any intensive bought is credited to training for the pc.
    The above actions are covered in more detail in Body Routing Forms.

572

                      FORMERLY AUDITED PC

    The Registrar, if the  pe  is  asking  for  Former  Release  check  (the
Registrar must not push it or bring it up but should try to sell a  25  hour
intensive), signs the person up for a 5 hour intensive (if the  person  does
not sign up for 25 hours).
    The preclear is routed to Review for a Form 26 June 65.
    The preclear is then routed to the HGC to complete the time signed up in
rehabilitation of Former Release.
    If the person was not found by Review to have been a Former Release, the
HGC auditor starts the grade applicable to the  pc-Level  Zero  in  pcs  who
have not had it completed on them.
    Every effort must be made to sign the non-Former  Release  up  for  more
processing if not yet Released in the HGC.
    Body Routing Forms will be issued to cover these routes.

                           FREE PASS

    If the pc presents a letter from me for  a  Former  Release  check,  the
check only is given in Review.
    The person is not entitled to rehabilitation of the state in  Review  or
to HGC auditing by reason of a Free Pass.
    If Former Release is  found,  the  person  is  routed  at  once  to  the
Registrar for a sign up for 5 hours to get the state rehabilitated,  the  TA
down and needle floating.
    The person may only be declared a Former Release by Certs and Awards  if
the rehabilitation work is done.
    There is no declaration of Release on a Free Pass to  Review.  The  Free
Pass does not include it.
    Any amount left to the nearest whole hour is applied to training.
    If the needle floats during the Review free check  out,  the  person  is
routed to the Registrar for a 5 hour rehabilitation intensive and  when  the
rehabilitation is done every  effort  is  made  by  the  Registrar  to  sell
training-the only thing that will take the person to Clear.  If  the  person
is an HCA and wants no more local training  the  Registrar  may  select  the
person to Saint Hill as per the  Field  Staff  Member  Programme,  the  org;
being credited with the 10%.
                            SUMMARY

    The Review auditor does the Form 26 June 65 only.
    The preclear is rehabilitated in the HGC.
    Free passes to Review checks open the door to a  5  hour  rehabilitation
intensive that is then sold.
    Reattainment of Release opens the door to selling training at once.
    Raw meat is sold 25 hour intensives.
    Examiners do not key in Releases by heavy handed examinations. They look
for good indicators. If these are present the rehabilitated  Former  Release
is passed through to Certs and Awards. If the person does not  think  he  or
she is released, or bad indicators are in plain view,  the  Examiner  routes
to Review.
    In Power Processing all formerly audited people are begun  by  a  Review
Check. Its cost is included in their intensives. On all persons found to  be
Former  Releases  the  first  few  hours  of  Power  Processing  are   spent
rehabilitating the state of Ist Stage Release. The person is  then  sent  by
the auditor for Declare? First  Stage  Release.  Then  Power  Processing  is
begun.
    In Power Processing Raw Meat, pcs are just entered into Power Processing
without Review but with a pc Information Form done.
    The pc Information sheet is also done on pes  returned  from  Review  as
Former Releases.
    Note: No testing is done now on any of these lines, being abolished.
    This Pol Ltr supersedes or modifies any policy or SEC ED in conflict
    with it. The
 above are the correct actions.
 LRH:ml.rd
 Copyright @ 1965
 by L. Ron Hubbard     L. RON HUBBARD
 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
                                573

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 JULY 1965

Remimeo

Qual Div
Org Div
Tech Div

                               RELEASE CHECKS,
                                PROCEDURE FOR
               (Modifies any earlier policy where in conflict)

    For ANY Release check, free or otherwise the following procedure only is
followed. There may be no deviations.

                        RECEPTION

Pc asks reception for Former Release cheek.

                           REGISTRAR

    Reception sends person to Registrar. Whether pc presents free letter  or
not,  Registrar  says,  "You  may  have  the  cheek  out   itself   in   the
Qualifications Division without charge. However,  you  will  also  want  the
state returned to you if it is found and that is done in the  HGC.  You  can
buy a 5 hour intensive in the HGC to get it done." Signs up pc as usual  for
Rehabilitation Intensive at rates pc is entitled to (student,  professional,
public).

    If person says "maybe they won't find it", Registrar says, "Then  you'll
have five hours of auditing to get closer to it." And signs up.

                            CASHIER

    Cashier accepts payment. Gives pc Invoice. Sends pc to Dept 10.

                          TECH SERVICE

    Tech Service checks pc into  HGC  and  routes  pc  to  Interview-Invoice
Officer of Qual Div.

                            QUAL DIV

    Interview-Invoice Qual Div makes No Charge Invoice. Sends pc  to  Review
auditor direct.

                        REVIEW AUDITOR

    The Review Auditor puts pc on meter (no Itsa from pc, please) and checks
"Former Release" "Former Thetan Exterior" "Sudden Resurgence in auditing  or
afterwards". Notes reads. Sends pc to Interview-Invoice to get out of Qual.

    Note that THE REVIEW AUDITOR DOES NOT DO FORM 26 JUNE 65 OR ENCOURAGE PC
TO ITSA.

    This Review check takes under 5 minutes. There is NO attempt to  restore
the pc's state of Release.

    Only the note saying pc was or wasn't found reading on Former Release is
made or done.

574

    The total allowed time in Qual is fifteen minutes.  If  Qual  can't  get
person invoiced, Reviewed and out in 15 minutes it isn't functioning af  all
as a Division.

                      TECH SERVICE

Interview-Invoice of Qual routes pc to Tech Service.

HGC Adinin assigns an auditor and gets pc to session as soon as possible.

                        AUDITING IN HGC

    The Auditor takes Qual note and whether it  says  pc  was  or  wasn't  a
Release, does fully the following:

    1 . Does the full Assessment Form of 26 June 65 designed for Review (and
being redesigned for HGC by changing captions).

    This form is an assessment form. In HGC it is used as Auditing by  List.
But if there is any read on ARC Break in Sessions, the Auditor does List  1,
Session ARC Breaks, as Auditing by List, cleaning each one he finds BUT  NOT
CLEANING LATENTS OR CLEANS.

    The Auditor completes the Form 26 June 65 and handles anything on it.

    The Former Release question on Form 26 June 65 may prevent  the  Auditor
from going on as this is where pc's interest lies.

    If pc very interested in this and it reads, the Auditor promptly shifts
    to

    2. HCO B 30 June 65 and rehabilitates any and all former release moments
found.

    3. The Auditor's object is to obtain a floating needle. The moment  this
is attained ANYWHERE IN THIS INTENSIVE the Auditor gives a soft  "That's  W'
and that's it.

    4.      The Auditor writes a chit to Qual, giving pc's name and
    "Declare?"

    5.      Auditor routes pc to Tech Service.

                         TECH SERVICE

    Tech Service routes the pe promptly to Qual  with  the  folder  (in  the
hands of a Tech page).

                             QUAL

    Interview-Invoice Qual checks pc in and routes to Examiner.

                           EXAMINER

    Examiner looks at pc,  notes  note  in  folder  from  Auditor.  If  good
indicators in on pc, Examiner sends to Certs and Awards.

    However if pc says he is not now a Release, examiner examines  the  pc's
Form 26 June and routes to Ethics if SP or PTS indicated, to  Review  if  pc
needs smoothing out,

                            REVIEW

    If Review has to smooth out, Review does so at charge. This  charge  can
be deducted from any remaining time pc had. If  no  time  remained  pc  must
pay. Review does Form 26 June 1965 carefully.

575

                       EXAMINER

Examiner sends pc back to Tech Service if pc doesn't believe he was
Released.

                      TECH SERVICE

Tech Service routes to Registrar who sells pe more auditing.

                            ETHICS

    If Examiner sent pc to Ethics, Ethics examines for SP or PTS and handles
accordingly.

                              HGC

    If HGC gets the pc again, it is up to the Case Supervisor.

                       CERTS AND AWARDS

    If the pc (as will be usual) has good indicators  in,  whether  just  in
from HGC or just back from second Review, the  Examiners  whisk  the  pc  to
Certs and Awards.

    Certs and Awards writes a  Declared  Ist  Stage  Release  or  Ist  Stage
Released OT, writes the certificate letter, logs it and calls HCO.

                          HCO COURIER

    An HCO Courier conies down from HCO to Certs and Awards.

    Certs and Awards gives the Courier the  papers  and  pin  and  the  pc's
folder which it got from the Examiner.

    If the pc is not paid up, the Courier takes the pc to  Cashier,  to  pay
and leaves the pc.

    The Courier then gets a signature  and  seal  on  the  Declaration  from
authorized HCO, personnel at  once  and  rushes  the  declaration,  pin  and
folder to the Registrar (Dept 6).

    The Courier has finished all required actions.

                           REGISTRAR

    The Registrar at once accepts the paid invoice from  the  pc  and  hands
over the Declaration and pin and congratulates the pc.

    The Registrar then sells the person training as the only road to Clear.

                           PAID UP PC

    The route of the Courier is varied for a paid up pc. The  Courier  drops
the person off in the Registrar waiting area, gets the  signature  and  seal
and pops back with them.

    If you don't have all these posts, if some are doubled, still the pc has
to go through all these points.

    Body Routing Forms will cover this route of PC to Release
    Rehabilitation.

    You can go broke if you don't follow it. These lines must flow and fast.

LRH:ml.rd        L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    576

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

             HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 NOVEMBER 1965
Remimeo Students SH & Academies All Auditors

                       AUDITING REPORTS

    An auditing report is the report of a session given, written during  the
session, on the session.

    It is not a copy of the report of a session given.  Or  a  report  drawn
from notes taken on a session given.

    Auditing reports and work sheets should be neat as  possible  under  the
circumstances of a session.

    They must contain pertinent data of the session given, i.e. BDs noted TA
and time notations etc. These should be entered  on  the  worksheet  at  the
time they occur.

    Later entries done to clarify bad writing where one was rushed or  where
a shorthand was done that is not clear to the D of P or Examiner, should  be
indicated as a later entry by using a different colored pen etc.

    A made up report, or one done later to obtain neatness  or  completeness
by an auditor who failed to keep a good session report at the  time  of  the
session, will be disqualified as evidence of auditor ability when  presented
to the examiner and chitted by the D of P when turned in by an HGC auditor.

    The whole idea of requiring an auditor report of a session is to have  a
record of the session for the D of P or Examiner, upon which  to  adjudicate
what is going on with a PC. And a report done later is NOT a report  of  the
session given.

    The Summary Report, done after the session should be a 15 minute  or  so
summary and should be done immediately after the session, not a  day  later,
and should be done as per policy on summary reports.  A  Summary  cannot  be
substituted for the actual auditing report.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ep.rd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

577

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 DECEMBER 1965

Gen Non-Rernimeo

PTS AUDITING AND ROUTING

    A PTS CANNOT BE AUDITED OR TRAINED UNTIL THE PTS SITUATION IS HANDLED.

    The handling of PTS cases will remain  with  Ethics.  Ethics  may  do  a
casual location of SPs or may order a Stabilization Intensive  in  the  HGC.
(See below.)

                     SEARCH AND DISCOVERY

    In cases  where  a  handle  or  disconnect  does  not  resolve  the  PTS
situation, or in auditing  a  preclear  to  maintain  stability  of  Release
Levels, the action follows Search and Discovery technology.

    This will be called a Stabilization Intensive  and  may  be  ordered  by
Ethics in severe cases or may be sold by the Registrar. This  intensive  may
be sold only as a five hour package, continued in 5  hour  minimum  amounts,
delivered by the HGC as a  special  action  and  sold  for  S100.00  or  its
Sterling equivalent. It will be done in the HGC, and  may  not  be  done  as
part of Power Processing.

    A Stabilization Intensive may not be concluded, whether bought  casually
to assist reaching more Release Grades faster or ordered by  Ethics  without
the Ethics Officer passing upon the Suppressive Person or Group  located  as
being correct.

    If Ethics declares the Suppressive Person or  Group  is  incorrect,  the
preclear must be sent to Review, not back to  the  HGC,  and  a  more  basic
(earlier) Suppressive or Group found,  with  Ethics  passing  on  the  final
result.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright Q 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

578

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

              HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 OCTOBER AD 16
Gen Non
Remirneo
Applies to
Saint Hill
      SH STAFF AUDITOR'S PURPOSE

                  TO HELP RON AUDIT SAINT HILL
             PRECLEARS PRECISELY TO RELEASE GRADES

                       SH Staff Auditor's Code

     1. Follow the Auditor's Code.

     2. Don't commit the 5 GAEs.

     3. Give no late or premature acks or encouragements.

     4. Deliver crisp auditing commands.

     5. Use precise, swift auditing command duplication.

     6. Precisely start and stop sessions.

     7. Take no breaks.

     8. Use excellent auditor deportment, very model.

     9. Keep the battery of your E-Meter charged and check it before each
     session.

    10.     Be totally honest with TA.

    11.     Precisely keep your Auditor Report Form.

    12.     Write legibly.

    13.     Report everything that happens in a session.

    14.     Use only Saint Hill Model Session.

    15.     Use only Saint Hill auditing style.

    16.     Get enough sleep before an auditing day.

    17.     Eat well and don't audit when hungry.

    18.     Dress well (remember we issue clothes).

    19.     Refuse to audit a pc you detest or dislike.

    20.     Never blow a session.

    21.     Keep calm and neverblow up ata pc.

    22.     Never audit a process beyond a floating needle.

    23.     Follow auditing instructions exactly without any worry about
    consequences.

    24.     Never apologize for having to carry out auditing instructions.

    25.     Never sympathize, never agree or disagree with the "bad
        treatment" a student or pc has received to the student or pc.

    26.     Don't Q and A.

    27.     Make certain pc is on time for session.

    29.     Do not audit a pc who has not slept.

    29.     Do not audit a pc who has not eaten.

    30.     Do not audit a pc who is acutely ill.

    3 1.    Do not enturbulate students by detailing to them higher level
        processes, thus making them unhappy with what they are doing and
        achieving.

579

32.   Do not overwhelm students and other pcs with your ability or position-
    do what I do and just be pleasant to them.

33.   Don't try to run a Level V course in your lodgings, in cars or coffee
shops.

34.   Don't try to instruct students or the Course Supervisors will be
    unhappy with you.

35.   Insist students hold to their own level and classification skills in
    their own auditing and not try to up-grade themselves by using your
    processes.

36.   Don't audit Power Processes or assists outside your auditing room or
    on East Grinstead people-make them come to Saint Hill.

37.   Be a credit to Scientology and Saint Hill.

38.   Obtain results.

LRH:lb-r.rd L, RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1966 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                     HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 APRIL 1970
                                  Issue 11

Rernimeo
All Auditors
All Students
Level 0 Checksheet

AN AUDITOR AND "THE MIND'S PROTECTION"

    No Auditor should audit with the fear that he will do  some  irreparable
damage if he makes an error.

    "Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health" provides the answer  to
the question, "What happens if I make a mistake?"

    The following extracts are from "Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental
Health", Book 3, Chapter 1, "The Mind's Protection":

    "The mind is a self protecting mechanism. Short of the use of  drugs  as
in narco-synthesis, shock, hypnotism or surgery, no mistake can be  made  by
an Auditor which  cannot  be  remedied  either  by  himself  or  by  another
Auditor."

    "Any case, no matter how serious, no matter how unskilled  the  auditor,
is better opened than left closed."

LRH:nt.ei.rd     L RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1970
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

580

                                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER CORRECT
                                               COLOUR FLASH
                                                       RED ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                  HCO BULLETIN OF 5 MARCH 1971
Remimeo
                          CIS Series 25

                  THE FANTASTIC NEW HGC LINE
                 (A marvelous new CIS Auditor line has just
                         been piloted in for HGCs.)

    In the new CIS line the Auditor, in his Admin time at  the  end  of  the
day, or when he has no preclears, does Folder Error  Summaries  or  Progress
and Advance programs for his pcs and does the CIS form for the Tech  CIS  as
well as adds the day's process and the length of the session and  amount  of
Admin time on that folder to the inside front cover of the folder, with  the
process run and result.

    If his programs and C/Ses are acceptable to the Tech  CIS,  the  Auditor
gets full Well Done Auditing Hour credit on his stat.

    The Auditor logs his sessions for the day in the general  HGC  Auditor's
log and his Admin time is also logged.

    This Admin time is subtracted from the bought  hours  of  the  pe  where
auditing is sold by the hour.
    Where Auditors are so engaged and the new folder routing line is in use,
this CIS form is used:
    Full blank page.

    PC's Name (Red)          Date
    Auditor's Name (Red)     Class of Auditor required next sess.

    (Session Grade) left blank

    Auditor's comment (Red) or think about the case if he wishes.
    The next CIS

    I Blue
    2.      Blue
    3.      Blue
    4.      Blue

                                              Auditor Signature (Red)

    The Auditor does not grade his own session. He leaves this blank.

    The correctly Admined folder is then given to Tech Services which routes
it (usually with the Auditor's other folders for the day) to the CIS.

    The CIS looks it over (it is HIS final responsibility for the case being
    run right).

      The CIS looks to see if the Examiner form taken by the Examiner at
session end
F/Ned. If it did not he leaves the grade line blank as it is a no Grade
session (see FIN
and well done hours) as the Auditor gets no hour credit for the session. If
the CIS and
other admin is ok he writes OK with his initial in the session grade space.
If no , ne of it
is okay he leaves it blank and does the CIS form or programs completely
new. In this
last case he enters a subtract figure in his log for the auditing time for
the week Against
that Auditor's name.
    If the Exam form F/Ned, but the  Admin  is  not  okay  and  the  session
actions were not okay the CIS writes "Well Done by Exam" on his own new  CIS
in its. proper place and ignores the form and subtracts the  Admin  time  in
his book to subtract the Admin from the Auditor's week's stat.
    If the session was not okay with no FIN at Exams yet the Admin and  next
CIS are ok, the Auditor loses the session time  in  the  CIS  but  gets  the
Admin time credited to his week's stat. The CIS subtracts the  session  time
in his book, not the Admin time.
    Of course, as we hope is usually the case, if the Auditor did  the  CIS,
did a correct session, got an FIN at Exam and did the Admin and next CIS  is
correct, then the CIS

marks "Very well done" in  the  blank  space  for  session  grade  with  his
initial. After inspection,  this  would  be  the  sole  action  of  the  CIS
regarding that folder.
    By the CIS writing in the session grade (Very well done, well done,
    okay, flunk,
to cramming) the Auditor is receiving acknowledgement for his  work  and  is
not just acking himself.
                          THE NEW LINE

    The Ideal Folder-C/S line can shift the number of well done hours from a
    ceiling
of 250-300 to 600-800 with one CIS. No mat ter  how  many  Auditors  an  org
has, older lines put a 250-300 top ceiling on the org's well done hours.

    When hours could go above 600 due to the available Auditors, (20 or 30)
    a new
parallel line has, to be manned by a  new  CIS,  new  D  of  P  and  another
Examiner and more Tech Services personnel.

    Despite how hard the CIS and anyone else in tech works, a line not so
    run will
ceiling at about 250 hours, no matter how many Auditors are hired.

    A CIS using the old lines can CIS for about 5 working Auditors only with
    the line
running any old way. And even so will work himself half to death.

    In trying to get pes handled, Auditors will be added. The CIS will not
    be able to
handle his job. The line, being faulty, gets pegged at about  250  hours  no
matter how hard the CIS and Admin people work.

    With the same CIS and Tech Services people, and a correct new line 24 to
    30
Auditors will be kept busy at their 5 hours a  day  (given  auditing  rooms)
and the stat will be able to rise to 600 to 800.

                         NEW SEQUENCE

 I .  Auditor picks up his pc folders and his pc schedule list at Tech
    Services at the start of his day from the LEAVING rack.
 2.   Tech Services (having a duplicate list) begins sending pcs to him
    (using Tech Pages).
 3.   The Auditor gives the session.
 4.   The Auditor leaves the folder in the Auditing room at session end and
    takes the pe to the Examiner.
 5.   The Examiner simply does the Exam form on a meter with no folder. He
    sends the Exam form (hand route) to Tech Services.
 6.   The Auditor returns at once to his auditing room and a Tech Page has a
    pc there waiting for him.
 7.   Having done all his pcs for the day, the Auditor carries his folders
    to the Auditor Admin Room.
    Tech Services has placed the Exam forms in the Auditor  Admin  Room  and
    sees they get into the Auditor's basket and the folder.
 9.   The Auditor does the complete Admin of the session.
10.   The Auditor does any program needed for future sessions.
11.   The Auditor C/Ses the folder for the next session.
12,   The Auditor marks in a box (2 columns) on  a  sheet  stapled  to  the
    inside front cover the process, the Exam result, the  session  time  and
    the Admin time he has just put in.
13.   The Auditor hands his completed folders in to Tech Services.
14.   Tech Services gets the folders to the CIS using a Folder Page who
    comes on late and works the CIS's hours.
15.   Fed the folders rapidly by the Folder Page who is standing in the CIS
    area, the CIS does his CIS work. If the Folder Page  is  fast,  removing
    folders and putting the new one in, chasing up data and other  bits  for
    the CIS, the time of C/Sing even when done very carefully will be  found
    to average 3  to  5  minutes  a  folder  even  when  some  require  full
    programming, (but not FESing). This makes a ceiling of about 100 folders
    (sessions) a day for the CIS, an output of 30 Auditors. Needless to  say
    the CIS and the Auditors have to know their business and  Qual  Cramming
    is used extensively both for new material and for flubs both in auditing
    and C/Sing by Auditors.
16.   The Folder Page gets the Folders over to the D of P office preserving
    the piles per auditor as much as possible.
    The CIS posts the data he wants Auditors to know or do on the AUDITORS'

582

    BOARD of the Auditors'Admin Room. He turns in his Cramming  Orders  into
    the D of P basket. This finishes his actions.
    Where there is a senior Review C/S there is a hot spur line from the C/S
    to the senior C/S and back to  the  C/S.  This  is  not  necessarily  an
    instant line. It can be a 12 hour lag line. In orgs where a C/O or  Exec
    Dir or Product Officer or Org Officer is also a very  skilled  C/S  this
    hot line would probably be in. New tech in  use,  fantastic  completions
    and utter dog cases nobody can make anything out of go  on  this  senior
    C/S hot spur line. There are very few of these, only two or three a  day
    in a very busy org. The senior C/S "does" these and sends them  back  to
    the C/S. They are then sent on as usual to the D of P.
17.   The Director of Processing comes on duty very early. The C/Sed
    folders will all be there. The D of P has assignment master sheets that
    are kept up by the D of P.
    The D of P does the day's schedules, a list for each auditor. The  lists
    preferably have a few too many pcs on them.
    The D of P can tell what Class of  Auditor  is  required  for  the  next
    session because the Auditor has marked it in in  the  upper  right  hand
    corner of the C/S for the next session.
    When the D of P has the  lists  done  the  folders  are  placed  in  the
    "leaving" rack of Tech Services and Tech Services, now up and about,  is
    given the lists and gets to work on the  scheduling  board,  moving  the
    names about to agree with the lists.
    Tech Services does any room shifts or handlings at this time.
18.   The D of P now goes to the Auditor Admin Room and begins to muster
    Auditors from her muster list as they come in and gets them over to Tech
    Services.
19.   A Cramming personnel will be in there trying to get any crammings
scheduled.
20.   Tech Services hands out folders (which are in  neat  piles  for  each
    Auditor) and schedules to the Auditors as they turn up and handling  any
    arguments or shifts in sequence.
21.   Tech Pages are on phones or running to round up pcs and get them
    going to sessions, which work continues all day.
22.   The D of P interviews.any hung up or curious pcs or as  requested  by
    the C/S or gets new Auditors or keeps up Admin. This goes on  until  the
    C/S comes in when the D of P is off.
23.   The Auditor picking up his folders begins the cycle all over again at
(1) above.

                           ABOVE 600

    When the well done hours go above 600 a week, A WHOLE NEW HGC is put  in
duplicating the first, with its own C/S, D of P,  T/S,  auditing  rooms  and
Auditor Admin Room. It would be HGC Section Two or HGC2  with  the  original
being HGC 1.
    A special second cramming would have to be provided in Qual for it.

    At first they would share new hours and  build  up  independently.  More
HGCs are added to the Department at each multiple 600 wd hours.

                            SENIORS

    The two chief seniors in the area are the C/S (for tech) and the D of  P
(for Auditors and bodies).

    It is the D of P who must see that Auditors exist and are on post.

    It is Tech Services who sees pcs are rounded up and audited.  The  D  of
T/S is actually in charge of pcs and all folder files and all board keep  up
work.

    The D of P should have some tech training. The D of T/S  need  not  have
any. The C/S of course is the Tech Expert and should be an HSST.

    If there are no Auditors it is the D of P's neck.
    If there are no C/Ses it is the C/S's neck.

    If there are no folders it is the D of T/S's neck.

    And if there are no auditing rooms it is the D of T/S's neck.

    If signed up scheduled pcs don't get to session it is the D of T/S's
    neck.
    If there are no NEW pcs it is the D of P's  neck  who  should  begin  to
shoot Dissem Sees and registrars and procure new pes on a  by-pass  for  the
org.

583

    From this a table of seniors and duties can be made.

                           CRAMMING

    You will notice no pcs are sent to  Review  on  this  new  line.  Review
actions are done in Tech as a patch up in Tech. The Qual See is  responsible
for overall tech quality BUT DOES IT BY CRAMMING C/Ses or Auditors.

    Thus Cramming is a busy street.

    Cramming must be good, check outs excellent.
    If an Auditor doesn't grasp a C/S he has received he gets help from
    Cramming.

    Auditors new to the HGC are given a fast hard grooving in in Cramming or
a Qual Interne Course. (New Auditors never audit until grooved in.)

    Tech will be as good as the Cramming Officer can cram.
    This line is grooved in by the HAS and kept in by Qual. Or if  there  is
no Qual, it is kept in by the HAS who will find no Qual very embarrassing.

                          DUMMY RUN

    The line should be dummy run by folders, "pcs" and Auditors  until  they
understand it.

    People are often totally unaware of lines and get very sloppy.

    Thus this line has to be drilled hard on old and new tech personnel. All
must know this exact line.

    It is a good line.

    Fully in, it raises the well done hours stat from 250 per  week  maximum
at total overload to an easy 600 to 800.
    Auditors must audit five hours a day, 25 minimum per week of  well  done
hours for any bonus to be paid at all. In the SO they  get  no  pay  at  all
much less bonuses if short on their 25.
    Tech Services and an unenergetic  D  of  P  or  a  bad  Dissem  See  and
Registrar set up can cause a no pe situation. And often do unless pushed.

    But counting FESes and Admin in on an  Auditor's  wd  time  helps  slack
periods to even out. And one Auditor can FES and program folders for  others
or from files if he is left adrift and short-timed by the D of  P  or  D  of
T/S or until the Tech Division forces the Dissem Div  and  Distribution  Div
to really get on the ball andwear their hats on pc flow.
                         PROCUREMENT

    The D of P has always had new pe  procurement  responsibility  when  all
else failed or even when it didn't.

    Old folders, for example, are a marvelous source of new auditing repairs
and intensives. An FES done on an old folder and a letter to  "come  in  and
get audited before you fall apart"  is  excellent  pc  procurement,  usually
neglected by Registrars. Any procurement by a D of P is legitimate.
    Auditors who have no pes can write procurement letters and have for 20
    years.

                           SUMMARY

    This is a beautiful line. It has been piloted hard.
    It will serve as well as it is checked out, drilled in and used.
    This line is the key to affluence from pes alone.
    (But if the org isn't training Auditors heavily,  you'll  soon  have  no
Auditors to be on it and the org will not gain  its  high  income  low  cost
cushion from training.)

    This line is the answer to really getting auditing done in an area.

      L. RON HUBBARD
LRH:nt.rd   Founder
Copyright @ 1971
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

584

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 MARCH 1971
Remimeo
Prod Org Hats
Tech Hats   Org Seties No. 24
Qual Hats
      LINE DESIGN
      HGC Lines, An Example

    The present lines for the HGC in any org are the  subject  of  HCO  B  5
March 71, C/S Series 25, "The Fantastic  New  HGC  Line",  which  is  to  be
considered part of this policy letter.

    This modifies early Tech Org Boards to some extent.

    The old line in,'65 policy did not include a Case Supervisor as such and
shunted failed pes to Qual Review.

    Today Tech does its own pe repairs and Qual concentrates on Cramming HGC
auditors as well as students. Qual can also cram the Tech C/S.

    It is completely amazing that a statistic ceiling on well done  auditing
hours delivered could not have exceeded 250-300 well done hours  a  week  no
matter how many  auditors  were  hired  or  posted.  The  post  of  the  C/S
overloaded and the D of P post could not function well without overload.

    The new line is capable of a statistic ceiling of 600 to 800  well  done
hours a week, After that a new second HGC is  manned  fully  and  given  new
space.

    The importance of a properly formed line, traveling in correct  sequence
is then driven home.

    An Improper line will reduce the statistic ceiling by 1/2 to 1/3 of what
can be achieved by the same number of people.

    The overload of seniors usually occurs because of improperly set up
    lines.

    Lines are invisible to most people and they are unable  to  conceive  of
them until given full drills.

    Unless this new C/S line is used you will not be able  to  average  more
than 250 well done hours a week no matter how many auditors you put  in  the
HGC. The auditors will be idle, confused and causing upsets.

    If an org cannot get more than 250 well done hours a week, it will  find
that it cannot really make money from processing.

    Thus the new line will give volume, quality and viability in processing
    pcs.

    Advantages of the line are that one HSST can handle up to  30  auditors.
The earlier ceiling was eight or ten auditors.

    With higher volume, backlogs vanish rapidly.

    The Admin personnel in the line can be afforded.

    Line design, then, is a strong and unsuspected cause of low statistic
    ceilings.

    Product and Org Officers must be intimately familiar with this HGC line.
And they must be aware of the fact that faulty line design  can  cripple  an
org's income and overload its posts and excellent  line  design  can  double
the stat ceiling in any department while lightening the load.

LRH:mes.rd  L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1971 Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
                               585

NOT HCO POLICY ~.ETTER CORRECT COLOUR FLASH RED ON WHITE

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

 HCO BULLETIN OF 25 AUGUST 1971

Remimeo

CIS Series 56

                             HOW TO GET RESULTS
                                  IN AN HGC

    Obtaining excellent case results  is  an  ADMINISTRATIVE  not  a  wholly
technical function.

    Auditors and C/Ses are often weak on Administrative. They think  general
tech results improve only by more tech study.  If  they  continue  to  think
this way they wind up squirreling. For they are working on  a  wrong  target
for improvement, a wrong WHY or reason.

    Auditing is a team activity. The day of the individual country doctor is
dead. Even if an individual field auditor starts out  as  an  individual  he
goes one of two directions-he overworks and squirrels himself  into  failure
or he builds up a team-may only be a receptionist and an apprentice  auditor
but he is still building up a team. I have never  seen  individual  auditors
succeed over a long period. Failing to form or become part of a  team,  they
eventually fade out or squirrel.

    The reason is simple enough.

    These rules apply:

    TO IMPROVE TECH RESULTS YOU MUST IMPROVE ADMINISTRATION.

    And I don't mean just writing better in folders.

                          DEFINITION

    ADMINISTRATION consists of the formation and handling of the  lines  and
terminals involved in production.

    Unless an auditor understands this fully, he will never insist on a Tech
Sec, a Tech Establishment Officer, D of  P,  C/S,  Examiner,  pages,  Folder
Admin and himself will begin to omit keeping a folder summary and then  omit
the session actions and then, with big loses, retire from it all.

    If I were an auditor and saw some of these things missing, I'd be liable
to say, "Are you guys kidding? I thought we were here to audit pcs."

    Without the correct  pattern  of  lines  and  terminals  YOU  DON'T  GET
RESULTS, you get headaches, mad neighbors and refunds.

    Auditing on lines, an auditor should regard himself as a highly  skilled
expert, a technical specialist whose work requires respect and service.

    And Case Supervising on lines, a Case Supervisor should consider himself
a sort of Czar whose word is so law even the Exec  Director  thinks  several
times before he approaches-duly servile of course and bowing the  prescribed
three times as he exits.

    A Class XII on Flag is listened to by others with a hush even if  he  is
only commenting on the weather.

    These are the stars of the team. Their worldwide reputation  for  smooth
flubless auditing is an administrative result!
           .     I

    Short of space, overloaded, short of admin personnel, turning out the
highest well done hours in the world, Flag's Div IV produces because of an
Admin system.

    The highest of these C/Ses and auditors goes to cramming if he misplaces
a comma or drops a TR I.

    If the sessions' exams at Examiner drop from 90% F/N the whole place
gets overhauled.

                               586

    Folders are Folder Error Summaried by an FES section. The Folder Summary
is kept up each session (or Cramming). The folder is studied and C/Sed.  The
D of P assigns the sessions. The C/S is done correctly  (or  Cramming).  The
folder travels on its lines. The tests are done.

    In short it is a complex but constantly flowing pattern of  moving  pes,
folders and examinations interspersed with testing and  interviews  and  re-
registration.

    There is a right way to do it.

                            RESULTS

    If an org has only 65% of its sessions F/N VGIs at  Examiner  the  right
answer is to organize the place.

    Why?

    Well, the first answer is that the third dynamic is stronger than the
    first dynamic.

    An auditor auditing alone is a first dynamic. The pc is a first dynamic.
As it is the auditor plus pe that must be greater than  the  reactive  mind,
one can easily work the rest out.

    If the auditor is part of a  functioning  third  dynamic,  not  just  an
individual, the auditor plus pe versus the bank  is  a  LOT  more  than  the
bank.

    Another answer is that an auditor  knows  the  pc  if  only  because  of
sessions and personal opinion enters into it. That is not a  pure  technical
view as a C/S's must be.

    Another answer is that an auditor in a group gets more auditing done.

    Individually practising auditors often fail  because  nobody  is  taking
care of the auditor as a person. Further they get loses. No one  sends  them
to cramming. When they get loses they often  start  squirreling.  Then  they
really get loses.

    That ends them as auditors.

    An auditor working in a good on policy organization is given service. He
does get sent to cramming. He does keep his  tech  updated.  He  gets  wins.
When he doesn't he's put back on standard tech. So he  happily  keeps  going
and makes lots of happy people.

    So if I were auditing in a group I would insist as a condition  of  work
that Div IV and Div V be good on policy divisions, fully organized  with  no
nonsense.

    I know whereof I speak. As a part time duty I work as a  consulting  C/S
with a good IV and a good V. Sometimes I have had to  take  over  the  whole
C/S line. When the organization bogs in any way I know the  whole  thing  is
heading toward single-handing the lot. So I get the lines back  in  and  get
people to Cramming and get  the  F/N  at  examiner  ratio  approaching  100%
again.

    Thus, the advice you get about C/Sing is live-live-live, not canned
    theory.

                           ORG WINS

    Being on administrative lines to all orgs, I can tell you point blank
    that

    THEIR STATS DEPEND ON THEIR VOLUME AND QUALITY OF SERVICE.

    That isn't propaganda. It's pure fact.

    The F/N-no F/N at Examiner ratio tells you at once if Divs IV and V  are
organized and operating or if they are just fooling about.

    At 50% to 75% F/N at Examiner the administrative functions  of  Divs  IV
and V are stinking bad. C/S Series 2S is out. Cramming is out.  Hidden  data
lines exist. HCOBs, books and tapes are not used.

    The public, at that % of F/N will stay away in droves.  Registrars  will
go batty and adopt "Hot Prospect Systems".

    The staff -will go low pay and the execs will be a perpetual dark  shade
of purple from yelling. The cash bills ratio will be the subject of  finance
missions and the neighbors will be phoning the police.

    Why?

587

    Because an org is itself a technical delivery organization and 50% to
75% F/N at Examiner is an overt product.

    The Academy has already failed to apply student study tech and word
clearing. Qual is a joke.

    There is no library of tech available and if available isn't read.

    The org as a tech service delivery unit is treating its public to a no-
auditing situation and will get in trouble.

                            REMEDY

    The way to remedy is to get on policy with tech organization.

    Put in a Qual with word clearing and a library and cramming.

    Put in the C/S Series 25 Tech lines.

    Tolerate NO out tech or out-Admin in folders.

    Dummy run the lines until they're in.

    Cram Cram Cram C/S and auditor and tech personnel flubs whenever they
    occur.

    Get the organization functioning.

    Your F/N at Examiner ratio will climb straight up to 90% 95% 98%.

    By actual test pcs will flood in, Reg lines will get easy, success stats
    soar.

    More auditors more C/Ses, more organization. A second, a third HGC.

    And the more thoroughly the admin lines are manned the better the tech
lines work.

    This conclusion came from actual inspections of orgs and studies of
    their stats.

    Orgs should be seJling more training than processing.

    But why train if you can't interne them in a good Qual and HGC? They'll
never amount to anything as auditors unless they work in an organization
that is on tech and on policy.

    So you need an HGC.

    Tech, done in a proper administrative framework works.

    Some orgs really don't believe they could ever attain the flubless
auditing quality of Flag.

    But they can.

    It is even easy.

    It is even easier to attain flubless quality of auditing than any other
    kind.

    You put in a real on policy admin pattern. in IV and V. You begin with a
Qual Interne Course.

    You send to Cramming for any C/S or auditing error no matter how minute.

    The results come up.

    The errors cease.

    You're a success! If you do it.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:nt.rd Copyright Q 1971 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

588

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 SEPTEMBER 1971

Remimeo ED Hat Product Officer Hat Org Officer Hat Reg Hat Tech See Hat

SELLING AND DELIVERING AUDITING

    Up into the 1960s there was never  any  trouble  selling  or  delivering
auditing  or,  with  similar  volume  of  training,  keeping  an  org   very
prosperous.

    Then some "know bests" in orgs  changed  the  pattern  of  more  than  a
decade. Processing and Class IV orgs have not been really prosperous since.

    I traced this out, looking for the  WHY  of  Class  IV  orgs  having  an
occasional rough time making it. It led back to this major change.

    Originally and from 1950 forward into the  early  '60s,  the  processing
that was offered and sold and delivered  (without  fail)  was  the  25  Hour
Intensive. The cost of it varied between the US and  other  continents.  But
it was always and only a 25 hour intensive.

    The Case Supervisor Hat was wom by the Director of Processing.

    The pc began his intensive on Monday and  finished  on  Friday.  He  was
tested and ready to go by 1:00 PM Monday and the time  was  made  up  during
the week.

    Then Johannesburg and London "knew best"  and  began  to  sell  "5  hour
Intensives" or "Introductory Intensives".

    It was exactly at this point that finance trouble set in  for  Class  IV
orgs. Until this writing they have not done all that well.

    The reason is dropping the 25 hour intensive.

    Any handling would of course be to slide back onto the 25 hour Intensive
as smoothly as possible.

    Another factor that  hurt  orgs  was  heavy  student  discounts.  Anyone
apparently could become a student. This cut the price 50% and made  it  hard
to be viable.

    Selling anything but hours asks the pc and Registrar to C/S. The  person
may not buy what has to be done.

    Therefore we will groove back  over  to  this  policy  without  creating
public shocks. But the deadline should not be later than I February '72  and
as soon as feasible.

                          THE SYSTEM

                            LENGTH

    The 25 Hour Intensive was in 1950 a 36  hour  intensive  and  the  first
write up of it is given as 36 hours. Within 2 or 3 years this  became  a  25
hour intensive as being easier on auditors and easier to schedule and  sell.
This is easily done in the five days Monday to Friday.

                            SIGN UP

    A pc was signed up (began in 1955) for 25 hours by the Registrar. He was
then sent to a Tech personnel for estimate.  From  simple  5  minute  tests,
done at once after the sign up, no wait.

                               589

    The Tech personnel returned the pc to the Registrar with a time estimate
in terms of number of intensives, usually up to 6.

    The original sign up was then extended to the Tech estimate.

    The reasons for this line were several. (a) A Registrar must not analyse
the case, usually not being a tech-trained person. (b) The PRIMARY CAUSE  OF
PROCESSING FAILURES WAS TRACED TO NOT ENOUGH AUDITING  BOUGHT.  (c)  The  pc
was thereby getting all his auditing in one block making fast case gain  not
interrupted  by  life  throwing  ruds  out.  (d)  It  was  a  never  failing
opportunity to sell more auditing, making for a  more  viable  org.  (e)  It
gives consecutive scheduling week after week, very easy to do.

                          SCHEDULING

    It is of the utmost importance for an org engaged in selling auditing in
one week 25 hour lots to have a regular HGC and staff, a C/S, a D of  P  and
a short test section and a full test section.

    The auditors work enough hours to allow for 5 hours in the  chair,  31/2
hours of Admin time and 21/2 hours of study on their own time. The  auditing
hours can extend by reason of waiting a half  hour  for  a  C/S  within  the
day's auditing.

    The auditor handled one pc that week. It was utterly forbidden for a Reg
to offer bit and piece scheduling to the pc. The Reg  took  it  for  granted
the person would take a week off or several, no Q and  A  with  "21/2  hours
auditing Saturdays" because it literally denied the pc all his gains. .

    It was strictly "Be here Monday at 9 for testing."

    The auditors on Monday morning helped test and mark tests.

    The pes went into session at 1:00 PM Monday and went on to about 6:00 to
get in the 5 hours.

    The C/S "did" the folders after auditing hours Gust like C/S Series 25
    says).

    The D of P was NOT permitted to audit.  HGC  collapses  always  followed
when he did. He got the auditors mustered, interviewed and soothed  pcs  and
kept things going Oust as in C/S Series 25).

   - There was little day C/Sing as the C/Ses were very long.  In  emergency
the D of P did it or the C/S, coming on duty later in the day, did them.

    Cramming was handled in evening  study  time,  the  auditor  just  being
corrected until the end of the day, usually by a "listen in" on the  session
D of P system.

    Tuesday, Weds, Thurs and Friday completed the  Intensive  at  a  regular
five hours a day plus any make up time for lost hours.

    Today this auditing would fully repair the pc's life, handle what is now
C/S 54 and take him on up the Grade Chart  the  long  way,  the  longer  the
better both from the org point of view and the pc's.

                      AVAILABLE AUDITORS

    An auditing staff of six full time auditors is small for this system.

    Six is a minimum. To these are added a Tech Service, a D of P, a C/S and
a page for folders.

    As the system can easily use 15 auditors full time if the  Registrar  is
good, it should be built up to this.

    The auditors may in part be Internes.

    When an auditor has no pc for the week, a  staff  member  can  have  the
Intensive by giving up his units and tending to the more  important  of  his
traffic in hours he is not

                               590

audited just to keep his post in PT. A staff member on public lines can  get
a substitute for the week.

    A Qual Division is used for  Word  Clearing,  library,  Interne  Course,
Cramming, Exams and Certs and Awards. (Just as modernly posted.)

                          OVERLOADS

    Backlogs were never permitted. Trained staff members and field  auditors
were yanked in to prevent any backlog.  The  D  of  P  was  supposed  to  be
skilled at this.

    Pes never were told "You will have to wait until next month .......

                            UPSETS

    There were almost never upsets with this line. Pcs almost never blew. Ds
of P had no trouble finding emergency auditors for overloads or  in  finding
or training auditors to audit.

    The scheduling is so plain and simple that it just rolled along.

    The staff got audited and were happy.

    The only upset caused was when the Reg would not get a short test done 5
minutes after sign up and get the pc handled. The Reg would  sometimes  wait
for the long Monday test. The D of P is the short  test  person,  usually  a
meter check and a glance at the folder.

                           SUCCESSES

    This system raised OCA tests off the bottom of the graph to high  range,
increased IQs up to 1 point per hour of processing.

    Pcs were happy. The success stories were great.

    They made their completions and kept on going to the next process or
    level.

    It was sometimes a strain to find  enough  to  audit  on  them,  but  as
today's C/S 54 (Dianetic Narrative), complete with drug or medical  rundown,
and a Dianetic completion  can  consume  up  to  150  hours  and  as  single
expanded grades (much less triple) take at least 25 hours, along with  other
repairs and rundowns, any pc can run up to about 250  hours  and  some  many
more before SH Power is even approached.

    All this makes success on cases.

                          CONCLUSION

    As there is nothing against resuming the most successful HGC pattern, as
no policy or HCO B is contrary to it and all fit within it,  the  conclusion
is that a successful org should procure personnel and train up auditors  and
get it in if it wants to be prosperous.

    The line has to be held hard. The first  staff  member  who  offers  "an
introductory package" or a  "S  hour  intensive"  or  "Let's  start  pes  on
Tuesday or any day" should be rapidly told "This is the way  the  orgs  went
into trouble."

                          FOUNDATIONS

    The same pattern applies to Foundations with 121/2 hour  intensives  and
21/2  hour  evening  sessions.  But  again,  the  person  must  buy   enough
intensives.

                          COMPLETIONS

    Completions of a grade or Rundown in the middle of the week are attested
to and the pc goes on to the next RD or grade same day. This could  be  said
to violate letting

591

pc have his win. But it doesn't as he is now on his next major  action.  The
pc needing more hours at week's end buys another week.

                            PRICING

    Pricing must take into account that field professionals and students and
members get heavy discounts.

    Inflation has raised costs over the years.

    Therefore it is necessary that 5 0% of the Intensive Cost be at least as
high as 100% of it in 1950. Example: In the US $500  intensives  in  1950-60
would have to be S 1000 in 1971 so that at 50% they  would  still  be  S500.
And even then this is figuring it close. Today's psychiatrist  gets  S40  an
hour, no discount, for lousing people up and a  "full  course  of  analysis"
costs L9,000.

    Franchises get much higher prices than orgs and the  public  pays  them.
Right in the same town an org was going broke thinking its prices high  When
Franchises charging more were rolling in pcs!

                             ADMIN

    You have to have a very good kept up Central Files and Letter Regs.

    You have to provide afriendly org with upstat appearance. (By survey.)

    Your divisions have to be manned and your org has to be ON POLICY.

    You have to sell BOOKS and have a cracking good Div VI getting new
    people.

                           SUMMARY

    This was the period when Class IV orgs were successful and prosperous.

    It traces back to the fact that they never sold even an assist.

    They trained (by cash income) about I for I with processing.

    Power at SH even made it a rule to have the pe buy only intensives. Then
the pc was fully set up and Power was really delivered. The hours left  over
were scrubbed (which could have led to Quickie Power). But that's how  Power
was sold. The break down of the schedule of  25  hour  intensives  must  not
occur because of this way of selling Power.

    The 25 hour Class IV one  week  Intensive  delivered  in  orgs  was  the
successful pattern. No other pattern has ever worked.

    It should be guarded against not again to depart from this successful
    pattern.

    It takes time to handle pcs well and to total success.

L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:mes.rd Copyright@ 1971 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

592

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 APRIL 1965
Gen Non-Rernimeo Issue III
All Orgs
Sthil Staff

Sthil Students   POWER PROCESSES

    Only the HGC at  Saint  Hill  and  the  Case  Cracking  Section  of  the
Department of Review may use the 3 new Power  Levels  I  recently  developed
until they have on staff Review Cl VI Personnel who have interned  at  Saint
Hill in the Saint Hill Dept of Review.

    The processes require the most skilled and exact  application  and  have
exact phenomena  to  be  observed  which  becomes  impossible  to  supervise
outside the above departments.
    Only Class VI auditors may audit these processes  first  only  at  Saint
Hill and only under the supervision of Mary  Sue  Hubbard  until  they  have
learned them perfectly.

    Training on such processes can be undertaken only by  Provisional  Class
VI auditors after leaving  the,  course,  and  only  enrolled  on  staff  as
Intemes in the Department of Review or the HGC.

    Orgs not having personnel so trained by Interneship may  not  use  these
processes in their Review Departments.

    The fact of having a Review personnel trained in Review  at  Saint  Hill
does not permit an org to train new Review personnel in the org. Anybody  in
an org's Review who will be using or supervising the use of Power  Processes
must have been interned at Saint Hill.  Such  training,  however,  gives  no
right to train others.

    Holding this policy firmly guarantees the full  success  technically  in
all cases in any org in the world. Avoiding it in any way  jeopardizes  that
success. These power processes are simple. But so is T.N.T.

    The reason for this is that there is no adequate repair for errors  made
in running these processes if their existing remedies are also goofed.

    The  strongest,  swiftest  Ethics  action  must  follow  any   slightest
violation of the above for these processes alone guarantee sweeping  success
for Scientology on the roughest cases everywhere.,

    Any auditor who discovers that the pe he is auditing has bee n illegally
audited previously on a power process or any higher level process for  which
the pc is not graded must report the matter  at  once  to  the  nearest  HCO
Ethics Section by collect wire or 'phone call.

                        R6 NEW STUDENTS

    Before enrolment in the R6 unit of the SHSBC all students who  have  not
been run on the Power Processes and who have any slightest  difficulty  with
R6 EW must be ordered at once to the Review Case Cracking Section for  Power
Processes.

    Any student not showing adequate case gain on the course must be ordered
to the Review Case Cracking Section.

    The Power Processes must not appear on any check sheet.

                       TRUSTED AUDITORS

    I reserve, my right to give a process to a trusted Class VI  auditor  to
run on one pc for testing.

                       REVIEW, ORDERS TO

    No D of T or Course Supervisor or  Academy  Instructor  may  threaten  a
student who is disruptive of  course  discipline  with  Review  auditing  or
training.

    Such students may only be ordered to Ethics.

    Auditing may no  longer  be  used  as  discipline  by  any  Comm  Ev  or
Scientology Executive.

                               593

    Students who obtain too few passes may be ordered to Review.

    Students who are ARC Broken may be ordered to Review.

                        REVIEW EXPENSES

    Any student ordered to the Review  Cramming  Section  or  Case  Cracking
Section is ordered at his or her own expense at prevailing Review rates.
    Students who cannot pay and whose credit is compromised may  be  ordered
by Review to the Hardship Section where student auditors who have failed  in
classification may be needful of pcs to catch up  on  check  sheets  or  get
experience with processes. If no such students are  available  the  hardship
case or backward student must simply wait for one to show up if one does.

                          PACE OF ORG

    The organization is geared to the average case and study rate and  there
is no reason why it should have to pay above its  narrow  costing  allowance
for the student who  is  too  bad  off  or  the  preclear  who  cannot  gain
normally.

                           PRECLEARS

    When any HGC preclear does not buy enough  auditing  to  attain  a  case
change, and if no result has been obtained, he or she may not  be  dismissed
from the org but must be passed to Review at the preclear's own expense.

    It is vital that an HGC pc buy enough auditing to obtain a proper result
for his case if it is worse than average. Otherwise the matter  passes  from
the preclear's hands and is taken over by Review.

    No 'Tailed cases" may be dismissed from the org.

                     ALL TO QUALIFICATIONS

    No student or pc may leave an org by any other  exit  than  through  the
Department of Examinations.

    If students or pcs fail for any reason to be up  to  required  standards
they are shunted by Examinations to Review.

    If the student or pc passes the Department of  Examinations'  appraisal,
he or she is sent to the Department of  Certifications  for  attestation  of
attainment and for logging out of the org.

    Until so logged the student or pc has not technically left the org.

    Departure without logging is "Departure unauthorized" and is treated  as
a "blow" and passes into the hands of Ethics at once.

                  ETHICS AND STUDENTS AND PCs
    Students and pcs shunted about from the Academy or HGC to  Examinations,
Review and Certification or back again are  not  considered  transferred  or
subjected to discipline in the  Ethics  meaning  of  these  words  and  have
therefore no recourse.

    The entire object of an org is to  produce  a  satisfactory  auditor  or
higher state of case in the pc and anything that impedes this  would  be  an
arbitrary and unreasonable restraint upon  an  org  and  its  Technical  and
Qualification Divisions and their personnel.
    A student or pc should signify an understanding of this on enrolling  in
an org for training or scheduling processing. They are  buying  progress  in
life and may not act to prevent its occurrence.

    If they enter  an  org  they  are  understood  to  consider  improvement
desirable and therefore tacitly agree  to  be  improved  by  the  technology
furnished.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright 1--" 1965 by L. Ron)Yubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

594

           I
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 MAY 1965

Remimec,
Qual Div HATS    TECH AND Q UAL DIVS
Cl V11 Check Sheet

                        POWER PROCESSES

    The Power Processes or any version of them may not be  used  by  persons
not trained at Class VII at Saint Hill.

    The data on this overwhelmingly demands this policy  be  FIRMLY  applied
with no exceptions.

    These wonderful processes are capable of making a Release from even  -34
in every case to which they are applied.

    Run by new Class V1 auditors who have been star-checked at Saint Hill on
them, goofs of huge magnitude have been made.

    In orgs, without full Class VII trained auditors,  the  Power  Processes
just wouldn't work at all.

    Pes would be folding up like accordions, Releases just wouldn't happen.

    Tremendous experience and  the  closest  supervision  preceded  by  full
training in the D of P-ing of the Processes  as  well  as  running  them  is
vital to success.

    They are easy.

    But until every faintest kink is taken out of an auditor's auditing  and
every possible eventuality has been shown to him and until he has seen  what
misuse can do, the auditor cannot handle them.

    Thus Ethics must be very alert to illegal use of  Power  Processes.  And
must be very severe about it. Otherwise there will be  some  very  sick  pcs
around and administrative chaos.

    There are then two grades of processes which demand the highest  quality
of training before they produce results.

    One is Class VI materials.

    The other is Class VII materials, the Power Process.

    This is no effort to make a monopoly. It is simply responsibility.

    After all, auditing on them is available right now.

    Training for Class VI and VII is available this very minute at Saint
    Hill.

    The technology will be passed on for training use in an Org when an Org
    is a Class
VII Org-to wit when it is fully qualified to teach and use them an , d when
its Executive
Secretaries of HCO and the Org and its Division Secretaries are Clears and
its Tech and
Qual personnel are Releases.

    The processes aren't denied anyone. We are simply protecting people from
the fallout of the most powerful auditing weapons ever developed.

    We are taking responsibility for our own creation and using it  for  the
greatest good of the greatest number of dynamics.

    One wishes the atomic scientist had been that socially responsible.

LRH:mh.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

595

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 JUNE 1965

Rernimeo
Sthil Students
Franchise

SIX POWER PROCESSES

    There are six Power Processes. Use of these processes is restricted to
CI VIIs and may only be used at Saint Hill in the Qualifications Div or
later in orgs as outlined in Sec EDs.

    Having been Released does not qualify one to use the Power Processes.
Policy regarding the use of Power Processes will be severely enforced.

    Processes at the various levels that are OK for use ARE IN HCO
    BULLETINS.

    Hearing about a process from a student, pc , etc" DOES N OT QUALIFY IT
FOR USE. THAT IS OFF-LINE AND QUITE OFTEN ALTER-ISED TECH.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.rd Copyright (D 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 20 AUGUST 1965

St Hill

CONTINUING PC TO THIRD STAGE RELEASE

    Any preclear who has paid in full for 50 hours of Power Processing,  and
who reaches the state of Second Stage  Release  in  25  hours  may,  at  the
discretion of the Director of Processing, be continued  on  to  Third  Stage
Release.

    The above action is not a right of the preclear. He paid for  preference
on Power Processing to Second Stage Release. The action  of  taking  him  to
Third Stage as above is entirely at the whim of the D of P.

    No pressure, duress, cajoling or, any other means of getting the D of  P
to exercise her whim may be used, either on the part of the preclear or  the
auditor.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.kd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

596

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 OCTOBER 1965
Gen Non-Rernimeo
Tech Div
Qhal Div    RELEASE DECLARATIONS

    Any untrained person may not be declared at a grade  of  Release  higher
than that to which Power Processing will take him, namely Grade VA,  and  no
one may be declared Grade VI Release or above  who  has  not  been  properly
trained in the skills of solo auditing at Saint Hill.  Also,  a  person  who
has trained to Level VI but not been audited up through the grades,  and  so
cannot do solo auditing on Class VI (Clearing Course)  materials,  may  only
be classed as Prov Class VI.

    Before being permitted to engage on the processes of solo auditing  (the
first being R6 EW), all students in Training will have  to  be  released  on
the Power Processes, in order to ensure a  successful  passage  through  the
higher. levels.

    There will be cases such as those which are handled by SEC ED 122 SH  on
which Power Processing may not be a prerequisite to  higher  level  Training
and materials, but each such case will be handled on its own merits.

LRH:ml.kd   L. RON HUB13ARD
Copyright @ 1965
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF 6 APRIL 1971
SH Tech Services
Cl VII Checksheet
C1 VII Auditors  POWER BADGES

    All pes being audited on Power Processes are to  wear  Power  Badges  as
described below.

    This badge consists of a 3" X 2" white card with  the  lettering  neatly
printed on it in black, preferably sheathed in plastic.

    It is to be issued to the pc and pinned noticeably on  a  lapel,  breast
pocket or similar place by Pc  Administrator  at  the  commencement  of  his
Power  Processing  cycle  and  collected  back   when   he   completes.   Pc
Administrator is to tell the pc to wear  this  badge  throughout  his  Power
Processing.

    His Power Auditor is responsible for seeing that his pc is  wearing  the
Power Badge.

Text of Badge:

                          I AM ON POWER PROCESSING.
                         DO NOT ASK ME ANY QUESTIONS
                        ABOUT MY CASE, THE PROCESSES
                               OR MY AUDITING.

                                   Reconstructed from 1965 LRH Sec ED by Tr
                                             & Serv Msn
LRH:JR:D&MM:nw.rd      for Tr & Serv Aide
Copyright @ 1971 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

597

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 FEBRUARY, 1964

CenOCon

RUNDOWN OF CASE SUPERVISOR HAT

    The function of Case Supervisor is to see that cases are  cracked.  This
applies to all cases, including Staff, HGC, Academy, PE and Co-Audit. The  D
of P, D of T, Staff Co-Audit Director and PE Director continue  to  function
as before, but are subject to the  advices  and  instructions  of  the  Case
Supervisor in deciding what should be run on any case.

    In order to understand the exact function of the Case  Supervisor,  read
the following directive issued to the course at Saint  Hill,  together  with
Ron's instruction to the person who took over the post.

    These have been modified slightly to make them more applicable to
    Central Orgs.

    Here is the Directive:

    "The post of Auditing Supervisor is abolished since all instructors  are
doing auditing supervision as a training measure.

    The missing action is that of Case Supervisor.

    The  Auditing  Supervision  done  by  all  instructors   quite   rightly
concentrates on student skill in auditing.

    A Case Supervisor is needed, therefore, whose sole interest and  concern
is the advance of cases by any and various means.

    The Case Supervisor will be instructed and supervised by  the  HCO  Area
See in the marking of folders and handling various cases and will take  over
the full handling of case folders as soon as feasible.

    All problems having to do with the individual cases of students or  pes,
any and all auditing assignments and all individual case problems are to  be
routed to the Case Supervisor.

    In all questions of what is to be run on a student or pc, regardless  of
his situation in training, the  word  of  the  Case  Supervisor,  under  the
supervision of the HCO Area Sec, is final."

    Here is Ron's instruction:

"Dear John: From Conference Data,

    You are going to be hopelessly tangled up on post if you put any time in
on auditors. You are Case Supervisor. It's up to the  other  instructors  to
get auditors to audit.

    You are not supposed to hang  up  on  getting  something  done  via  the
auditors. Only courtesy  to  inform  the  auditing  instructors  that  seine
auditor is weak on something. But it's no part of  your  hat.  You'll  never
get cases running if you try to do the jobs of the Auditing Instructors  and
your own job of Case Supervisor. That drops it right back in  the  rat  race
where it was-all supervision of auditors, no supervision of cases.

    In your boots-and I've worn a hat like yours since Elizabeth  days  from
time to time in Orgs-I don't  recall  one  single  interview  with  a  staff
auditor. As D of P I've handled auditors  and  cases  via.  But  as  a  Case
Supervisor when 1 was not D of P, I don't recall ever talking  to  a  single
Auditor about any case  before  1  handled  the  folder  or  the  case.  I'd
occasionally say 'Run so and so' and check up in a day  or  two  and  if  it
hadn't been run (which was seldom) I'd walk in on the session  and  run  it.
No truck with the auditor. Why?

    1.      Auditors that haven't cracked a case haven't seen the case so
        why talk to them?
    2.      Auditors that won't or can't run what they're told need more
    training not

598

        more persuasion or a 5 minute ACC from me or you.

    3.      1 was interested in the cases.

    You will make a fatal error  on  post  if  you  permit  yourself  to  be
interviewed by Auditors and take their views  of  the  case.  See  (1)  just
above.

    Always assume the Auditor can and will run exactly  what's  ordered.  If
that assumption is incorrect don't vary your  instruction.  Do  it  yourself
and say to Instructors 'That auditor needs training'.

    I could go through this class pc to pc with folders and zoom every  case
present, so I expect you to. To do that I wouldn't talk to a single auditor-
indeed, I'd shy off it like mad if I wanted to get my job done.

    You are not the D of T. You are wearing my Case Cracker hat. Don't  make
like a D of P who has auditors to supervise,and train. Just crack cases  and
smooth them out.

    Every case you handle is awry in some basic ability as a pc so the field
of action is unlimited.

    Definitions: Auditing Supervisor- Supervises the  auditing  of  auditors
    and helps them crack casest

    Instructor-Instructs in the science of auditing.

    D of P-Supervises cases through staff auditor.

    Case Supervisor-Keeps the cases looked over and winning, looks  only  at
    cases and advises what to run or runs it, interviews only cases, ignores
    auditors to the point of  paying  even  very  little  real  attention,to
    auditor report comments or opinions.

    Glad I had a look at this and a chance to set it right because you would
have drowned in all the faulty or non-observation going on. You've  kept  in
the error that made the case run wrong in the first place. Non-Obnosis.

    An auditor can be present if silent while you interview or run  a  case.
Otherwise that's it.

    I used to do a lot of starting a process right on a pe and then step out
and tell the auditor-'O.K. that's what's to be done. Flatten it.'

    You from your position viewpoint  have  half  a  hundred  pes  and  only
nominal auditor assistance. Your job is to see that cases get cracked.  Your
job is not to see that auditors get trained.

                                Best,

                                    L. Ron Hubbard."

    It will be seen from this that the function  of  the  D  of  P  is  only
changed to the degree that he has the specialized  assistance  of  the  Case
Supervisor in cracking cases.

    A final  word  to  the  Case  Supervisor:  Ron's  instruction  is:  Know
practically by heart the two Saint Hill lectures of  4th  February  and  6th
February 1964-"Auditor Self-Criticism" and "Comm Cycle in  Auditing".  These
two lectures are your bible.

    Good hunting.

                                Issued by:   Peter Hemery
                                  Org Supervisor WW
                                  for
                                  L. RON HUBBARD
                                Authorized by:     L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:gl.rd
Copyright@ 1964
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    [Note: The directive referred to above appears on
Page 435.1

599

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 FEBRUARY 1964

HCO Secs Assoc Sets for info

NOMINATION OF CASE SUPERVISOR

    In HCO Policy  Letter  of  February  24,  1964,  "Technical  Supervision
Changes", it was mentioned that the present Technical Director  should  take
over the post of Case Supervisor initially.
    This step is taken to avoid sudden change  and  randomity.  However,  it
should be borne in mind that the post is quite different and that  therefore
the present Tech Director may not be the most suitable  personnel  for  this
key post.
    Basically, the Case Supervisor is an excellent  auditor,  a  person  who
likes to  audit  and  who  can  crack  cases.  His  functions  may  be  well
understood from studying HCO Policy Letter of February  24,  1964,  "Rundown
of Case Supervisor Hat".
    Therefore, as soon as possible after receiving this Policy  Letter,  the
HCO Area See should consult with the  Assoc  See  and  the  members  of  the
Technical Council, and,  using  his  or  her  judgment,  nominate  the  most
suitable person for the post.
    This may also affect other  posts,  such  as  D  of  P,  D  of  T,  etc.
Therefore, it is essential to effect the action smoothly.
    Nominations should be sent for final approval, together with  any  other
changes, by cable to L. Ron Hubbard as soon as possible.
    Get your best Tech line up into action soon, since good Tech means happy
pcs and students and excellent survival for the Org.

      Issued by: Peter Hemery
            HCO See WW
LRH:gl.rd        for L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright Q 1964 Authorized by:   L. RON HUBBARD
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

      HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 14 JUNE 1965
      ALL HGCs
      ALL CASE CRACKING UNITS
Rernimeo
Staff Auditor Hats
Interne Hats
Class VII Internes     FOLDERS, MARKING OF

    No staff auditor or Interne may proceed with the  next  session  on  any
case unless the folder of the last  consecutive  auditing  period  has  been
marked by the Case Supervisor or Director of Processing  or  the  person  in
normal charge of all cases.

    Where two sessions occur in one day, these count as one session and need
only one summary report by the auditor for marking purposes.

                                             L. RON HUBBARD LRH:mh.kd
Copyright (R) 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                               600

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint HUI Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex -

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 JUNE 1965

Remimeo

                                ALL TECH DIV
                                ALL QUAL DIV
                               ETHICS SECTION
                             CLASS VII INTERNES

STAFF AUDITOR ADVICES

    No Staff Auditor or Interne or organization auditor or any auditor on  a
Staff Co-audit may seek advices on what to do from  any  person  except  the
officially appointed person doing the auditing folders.

    Seeking advice on cases verbally or in writing from the person not doing
the folders is OFF  LINE  except  in  Ethics  matters  when  Ethics  may  be
consulted or Saint Hill advised.

    When an auditor seeks advice off-line and accepts it, unbeknownst to the
official supervising the auditing  via  the  folders,  a  random  factor  is
introduced into the running of cases that can be quite fatal.

    At, Saint Hill, on Power Processes, such an action is  a  crime  as  the
consequences can be so catastrophic to cases run on Power Processes.

    The proper sources of instruction are tapes and HCOBs.  Adding  bits  to
these that aren't there is the commonest auditor error.

    Asking for unusual solutions from a case supervisor  who  is  doing  the
folders is a sure sign that the last  directives  have  not  been  followed;
giving instructions that are  unusual  is  useless  because  they  won't  be
complied with either.

    The Dev-T situation of asking for advice off-line burdens lines and
    fouls up cases.

                     COMM CYCLE AND ETHICS

    When an auditor has a fractured comm cycle very often  processing  still
works on the average pe.

    When an auditor has a fractured comm cycle and the pc is an Ethics  type
case (SP, PTS, W/hs) a mess ensues. One can  always  tell  if  an  auditor's
comm cycle is poor or if the Code is being broken because  when  put  on  an
Ethics type pe, things collapse.

    When a pc won't run, one can be sure that

    1. The Auditor's Comm Cycle is out and

    2. The pc is an Ethics type case.

    When both these are present, no results can possibly occur.

    When only one is present, usually the auditing works somewhat.

                     CASE SUPERVISOR PUZZLE

    When a Case Supervisor doing folders sees  a  process  going  wrong,  he
should not blame the process or his own advice if  these  are  even  faintly
educated.

                               601

    Instead the pc is an Ethics type or the Auditor's Comm Cycle is out.

    If neither of these seem to be the case, and things still go wrong  then
the auditor just isn't running what he says he is  or  running  what  he  is
supposed to run.

    If all the above seems not to be the case, then the auditor  is  seeking
off-line advices and some screwball interpretation has  been  added  to  the
process.

    A clever Case Supervisor -marking folders, goes by the text-case running
well, continue the standard approach. Case not running well, send to  Review
for analysis REGARDLESS OF ANY AUDITING TIME LOST.

    When a pc goes to Review, it is clever to send the auditor to the Review
Cramming Section to check over his Auditor's Code and Comm Cycle with TRs.

    If when auditor and pc still don't run well,  send  the  pc  to  Ethics.
(Review may already have done so.)

                             ETHICS

    If the Case Supervisor ever finds an auditor not following  instructions
or seeking or taking off-line directions he must at once  send  the  auditor
to Ethics. It is usually an Ethics Hearing and a minor suspension.

    If a Case Supervisor doing the folders finds a  false  report  has  been
made, he must send the offender to Ethics.

                           WITHHOLDS

    A pc is not sent to Ethics because of withholds gotten off in a session.
However, on the Invalidation button one commonly finds  suppressive  persons
around the pc and the auditor must send the pc to Ethics at session  end  to
get the matter disconnected or handled.

    Sometimes one finds another person's offences than the pc's  in  getting
off withholds. These are reported to Ethics for investigation.

                           TEXT BOOK

    D of P work is completely text book. PC doing okay-get on with it as per
the process, the next process to be run, or the next grade.

    PC not doing okay-to Review to find out why.

    If Review finds pc is an Ethics type, sends pc to Ethics.

    It's all text book. It is so easy.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:mh.bp.oden Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

602

                HUBBARD COMMUNICAT
                 Saint Hill Manor, East Gri

                HCO POLICY LETTER OF

Rernimeo
All Tech Hats
All Qual Hats    Tech Div
Class V11   Qual Div
Students

PC ROUTING
REVIEW CODE

      The Code has four symbols
      REV!
      REV FL?
      DECLARE?
      ETH?

    When the Case Supervisor sends (by marking the  summary  report  in  the
folder) a pc from the Tech Div to the Qual Div, the following code is used.

                              REV!

    Means "This pc is in trouble! Please do a Review hard." Review does  HCO
Pol Ltr 26 June 1965 Form with  extreme  care  and  handles  thoroughly  all
points uncovered. PC GOES STRAIGHT TO INVOICE AND REVIEW AUDITOR.

                            REV FL?

    Means "Could you please find out if this process is  flat  for  me?  And
anything else you care to do, of course." PC GOES STRAIGHT  TO  INVOICE  AND
REVIEW AUDITOR.

                           DECLARE?

    Means "Pc has reached a grade or Release. Please look at pc and if okay,
pass on to Certs and Awards." PC GOES STRAIGHT TO EXAMINER. IF PC LOOKS  ALL
RIGHT TO EXAMINER AND FOLDER IS OKAY EXAMINER SENDS PC TO CERTS  AND  AWARDS
WITH A CHIT. Review auditor does not get  on  line  at  all.  However  if  a
casual glance tells the Examiner this pc is  not  all  right  or  if  folder
shows a mess, the Examiner routes by a chit to invoice and Review.  The  pc,
however, is not returned to the HGC, but can, of course, in the  case  of  a
grade, sign up for more.

                              ETH?

    Means "This pc may be an Ethics case, roller coasters or no case  gain."
PC GOES STRAIGHT TO INVOICE AND REVIEW AUDITOR who does HCO Pol Ltr 26  June
65 and returns pc to  Examiner  who  may-or  may  not-direct  pc  to  Ethics
depending on results of the Review.

                          AUDITOR'S PC

    Note that an auditor may take his pc to Qual if the session won't  start
or run. The route is not auditor to D of P to Review, but the  Auditor  with
the pc to Invoice to Review auditor. The  pc's  auditor  leaves  the  pc  at
invoice in Qual and reports then at once to the D of P who must assign  some
work or send the auditor to Dept of Schedules to pick up a low  priority  pc
or even, on peak loads, to the Director of Review to help out.  The  auditor
must not remain unassigned, even if he is put to Files.

                               603

                         DEPT OF SCHEDS

    HGC Admin (The Dept of Schedules, Tech Div) receives folders at the  end
of the session or the day's auditing and gets them to the  Case  Supervisor.
When the Case Supervisor sends them back  (before  the  next  session),  HGC
Admin then sees what  should  happen  in  the  folders  and  routes  the  pc
promptly and as promptly handles any  auditor  re-assignment.  Pes  who  are
going to come back are promptly reviewed and sent back and  the  auditor  is
not changed on them and the auditor is temporarily assigned by HGC Admin  to
bridge the gap. Pcs who are not going  to  come  back  are  struck  off  the
assignment board and the auditor is instantly reassigned. If the next pc  on
the list cannot instantly be found by HGC Admin then  the  next  pc  on  the
list is grabbed.

    The auditor, then, does not go to Qual  with  the  pc.  It  is  not  the
auditor who discovers the pe is destined for Review. This is  discovered  by
HGC Admin before sessions normally begin for the day.

    The whole interest here is economy of auditing time. Save all of it  you
can in any way you can.

                     THE ASSIGNMENT BOARD

    A large cellulose or soft board at least 3 ft by 5 high  exists  in  HGC
Admin. Each Auditor's name is printed on a card and each pc's  name  is  put
on a card.

    There is a column for each session period if there are more than one  in
the day. And one column for pes who have been sent to Review. The  auditors'
names are in the column on the left on green cards and the pes' are  in  the
other columns on white cards.

    HGC Admin assigns and routes by moving cards on the Assignment Board.

    There are three possible sessions, morning, afternoon and evening. There
is also  the  Review  column.  Thus  one  has  5  vertical  columns  on  the
Assignment Board.

                       WAITING LIST BOARD

    Any pc waiting list is posted, with the pc's name on a  white  card,  on
another board in HGC Admin. It reads from left to right in horizontal  lines
and the white card is removed to the Assignment Board.

    Students who are waiting for auditing are also put on the  waiting  list
board but their names are on a different (paler) shade of  green  from  that
of auditors. These quite commonly  are  scheduled  half  days  so  that  one
auditor is auditing two of them a day. The student studies  the  other  half
of the day.

    This can also be done (half day scheduling) with town pcs. Out  of  town
pcs are always full day scheduled.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright @ 196S by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

604

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 19 JULY 1965

Gen Non-Remitneo

SEPARATION ORDER

    There are instances met with by Ethics Officers, especially in  relation
to husbands and wives, where there may be suppressions on individual  people
but not suppressive of Scientology.

    In such cases a "Separation Order" for a specific period of time is  the
best action. For example, Joe S-- and Mary S-  are  hereby  placed  under  a
Separation Order while Joe is undergoing Processing. They  are  to  have  no
contact with each other during this
      period from (date)     to   (in this case to the end of the Power
Processing 2nd
      Stage Release).

                 L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.pm.kd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

                      HCO POLICY LETTER OF 28 JULY 1965
                                  Issue II

Remirneo
Tech Hats
Qual Hats

CASE SUPERVISOR,
SPECIAL ATTENTION

    The D of P is usually the Case Supervisor. Therefore the D of P has no
Case Supervisor on own case.

    The Case Supervisor andlor the D of P's case folders are done by the
Director of Review.

    The Case Folders of the Tech See and Qual Sec and all Secretaries
otherwise are done by the Case Supervisor except as above.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.rd Copyright Q 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

605

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 30 JULY 1965

Sthil
Tech Div
Qual Div

PRECLEAR ROUTING TO ETHICS

    There is no direct routing of preclears to the Ethics Officer except
through the channels of the Qualification Division and Review.

    This, therefore, cancels the direct routing to Ethics as covered in the
Class VII, Confidential, HOD Bulletin of 28 June 1965.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ml.cden Copyright (D 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 24 AUGUST 1965

Gen Non-Remimeo

PCs RELEASED ROUTING

    A pc who is recommended to Ethics and also to declare must be sent to
Ethics first to ensure no possibility of Roller Coastering.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:inl.kd Copyright @ 1965 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

606

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 29 OCTOBER 1968
                                  1

Remimeo

STAT FOR CLASS VIII C/S QUAL IS NUMBER NAMES IN CF.

LRH:ei.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright (c) 1968     Founder
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 17 JANUARY 1969

Remimeo

    PC ATTESTATIONS

(COVERS PCs AND PRE-OTs)

    Although the right of a preclear to attest completion may not be  denied
him, it is still ultimately the Case Supervisor who says whether or not  the
case is complete.

    This appertains QUAL DIV pes and pro-ots.

    It was found conclusively that no matter how good and radiant and  great
the pc feels, and how fantastic the indicators are even  at  the  examiner's
desk, the pc will come to grief when out tech has occurred.

    A large number of pcs and pre-ots  attested  complete  whilst  the  Case
Supervisor detected out tech in their sessioning. As they had  been  audited
by Class VIIIS with excellent TRs, good indicators and meter phenomena  were
in, and remained in, on some cases for several  days  even,  but  sooner  or
later the case was found  in  Ethics  or  medical  or  post  trouble,  or  a
combination of all of these.

    So let him attest complete all he wants, but the CIS decides.  And  this
is done solely on what he  sees  in  the  folder.  NOTHING  ELSE  unless  he
requires additional data for which lines exist.

    Tech is far too deadly in its accuracy to let any pc out of Qual  whilst
knowing there is out tech on the case.

    This is not invalidation  of  pcs  as  releasing  them  from  Qual  with
technical outness constitutes the validation of a lie.

    Auditing is too precise and accepts only the STANDARD in application and
result.

                                             Lt. O.J. Roos

LRH:OJR.Idm.ei.rd      Flag C/S
Copyright @ 1969 for
by L. Ron Hubbard      L. RON HUBBARD
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    Founder

607

                     THE FOUNDING CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY
                   1812 19th Street N.W., Washington, D.C.

FOUNDING CHURCH POLICY LETTER OF 20 MAY 1957

                       OUTSIDE AUDITING

    Staff of the Founding Church may do 8 hours of outside auditing on their
own, but no more.

    Students and current HGC preclears may not be audited by staff auditors
except as assigned by the Director of Processing or Director of Training.

    A staff auditor may not audit outside any preclear he has audited for
the HGC in the past year.

    A staff auditor on leaving the HGC shall not audit anyone who has been
an HGC preclear in the past 2 years.

LRH:md.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

                                      NOT HCO POLICY LETTER ORIGINAL COLOUR
                                      FLASH NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. I

ASSOCIATION SECRETARY DIRECTIVE OF 9 JULY 1957

                       PRIVATE PRECLEARS OF HASI STAFF
                               AUDITING LIMIT

    HASI Staff Members are limited to eight hours per week of auditing
private preclears in their own time.

    These eight hours weekly are not cumulative.

                                             Jack Parkhouse

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                          (Issued from Washington)

                                 HASI LONDON
                        POLICY LETTER OF 26 JULY 1957
To All Staff
Bulletin Board
      FUNDS OR FAVORS RECEIVED

    Any funds or favors received from persons outside the HASI London by any
staff member by reason of his connection with HASI London or Scientology
must be reported in writing to the HCO Secretary.

    This includes cash, loans, dinners, loans of vehicles, quarters,
    clothing or presents.

    There is no restriction in receiving such items but it shall be deemed
cause for instant dismissal if the report of such favors is not so made.

    This includes all outside auditing done by a staff member for which pay
is received.

    The intention of this policy is to tighten the security of the HASI as
it moves into the possible sphere of government contracts.

LRH:jd.cden.rd   L. RON HUBBARD
Copyright @ 1957 Agent for Great Britain
by L. Ron Hubbard
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

608

                               NOT HCO POLICY LETTER
                               ORIGINAL COLOUR FLASH
                                   NOT GREEN ON WHITE
                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                                   LONDON

                       HCO BULLETIN OF I I APRIL 1958
                         (with amendment of 3/6/58)

STAFF MEMBERS' OUTSIDE AUDITING REGULATION

    The regulation applying to staff members' outside auditing is as
follows: No staff member may audit for pay, gratuity, or without pay or
gratuity, any HGC preclear or outside student for a period of two years
after the person completed processing at the HGC or study at the Academy.

LRH

(Note: The amendment was change of staff auditors to read staff members. I

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                       37 Fitzroy Street, London W. 1

                      HASI POLICY LETTER OF 27 MAY 1958
                           (Issued at Washington)

                    (Modification of Assoc Sec Directive
                               of 9 July 1957)

All Staff
Field Offices
Bulletin Board

OUTSIDE AUDITING

    Staff of the HASI London may do 8 hours per week of outside auditing  on
their own, but no more.

    Current students and HGC preclears may not be audited by staff auditors,
or other staff members, except as assigned by the Director of Processing  or
the Director of Training.

    . staff auditor may not audit any preclear he has audited for the HGC in
the past year.

    . staff auditor, or any other staff member, on leaving the  HGC  or  the
HASI, shall not audit anyone who has beenan HGC preclear or Academy  student
in the past two years. If  he  does,  his  certificate  may  be  subject  to
cancellation.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:rs.rd Copyright (~) 1958 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

609

                 HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex
                 HCO POLICY LETTER OF I APRIL 1960
 CenOCon

      REGULATIONS FOR STAFF MEMBERS AND EX-STAFF MEMBERS
              (Supersedes all previous directives on same subject)

    Regulations Affecting all Staff Members:

 I    Any staff member of the organization may do eight hours of outside
 (private)
    auditing on their own per week, and no more than this per week.

2.    Any staff member of  the  Organization  may  not  audit  any  current
    preclear or student unless that preclear or student has been  signed  up
    for processing in the Hubbard Guidance Centre by the Registrar  and  has
    been assigned to the auditor by the Director of Processing.

3.    Any staff member may not audit for pay or reward any preclear who has
    been audited in the Hubbard Guidance Centre in the past two  years.  The
    ruling of only eight hours of outside auditing applies in all cases.

4.    Any staff member may not audit for pay or reward anyone who has  been
    an HGC preclear or an Academy student of any course of the  organization
    in the past two years (this includes A.C.C. students).

5.    A staff member is permitted to do group auditing and can receive  pay
    or reward for this. Staff may process other staff members, as in  a  co-
    audit team or an auditing arrangement amongst staff.

    This policy is intended to insure that prospects developed on  Org  comm
    lines by Org personnel get into the HGC and/or Academy, rather  than  on
    to a personal comm line which would deny the HGC  and/or  Academy  of  a
    prospective preclear or student which the Org has developed. It is  also
    intended to insure that prospects receive  the  service  we  intend  for
    them, i.e. supervised service at the HGC and/or Academy.

6.    A staff member may not be a member of the Communist Party.

7.    Staff members may initiate or form any  Scientology  group  activity,
    but in all such cases  the  matter  shall  first  be  submitted  to  the
    Advisory Committee (Advisory Council) for their approval,  and  only  on
    specific acceptance by the Executive Director shall  any  such  activity
    have Organizational sanction.

8.    If a staff member who has not been hired on a temporary or part  time
    basis leaves a technical post without good and sufficient reason in  the
    first year of his employment and  he  has  not  been  dismissed  by  the
    Director of the Department or the Organization Secretary, he is  charged
    2SO guineas sterling (1,000 dollars) for the  training  he  received  on
    that technical post. The reason for this is that  the  organization  has
    occasionally been victimized in the past by persons coming on staff  for
    the sole purpose of acquiring training. The services  of  such  a  staff
    member only become fully effective after several months of training, and
    since training is expensive it is only right that persons doing this  be
    charged for it.

    The following regulation applies to ex-Staff members:

    On leaving staff, and for a period of two years thereafter, an  ex-Staff
    member may not audit for pay or reward any person who has  been  an  HGC
    preclear in the past two years nor a person who has been an  Academy  or
    A.C.C. student in the past two years. However, he  is  permitted  to  do
    group auditing of such persons and may receive pay or reward for it.

    Violation of these regulations can result in the  HCO  Board  of  Review
    cancelling all of the individual's certificates. A person may  apply  to
    the HCO for a relaxation  of  these  regulations  if  he  thinks  it  is
    justified in a particular case, but the decision of the HCO is final.

LRH:js.cden Peter Hemery
Copyright @ 1960 HCO Secretary WW
by L. Ron Hubbard      for
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED    L. RON HUBBARD

                               610

                        HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
                  Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 27 FEBRUARY 1961

Staff B. Board
Do not re-mimeo

OUTSIDE PCS OF STAFF MEMBERS

    It would be wise to have all staff members who do 8 hours of private
auditing per week to report to HCO, the names and addresses of such PCs.

    In security check the matter of private processing should also be
    checked.

L. RON HUBBARD

LRH:ln.jl.rd Copyright @ 1961 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
      Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 21 JUNE 1962

CenOCon

STAFF MEMBERS AUDITING PRIVATE PCS

       (Summarizes current policy)

    The following regulations apply without exception to all  staff  members
who audit private preclears for fees.

    Staff members must not do more than eight hours private auditing in  any
one week.

    Staff members must not charge less than the HGC fees of the Central  Org
of the area.

    Staff members must report to the HCO Secretary on any  private  auditing
they do, and inform the HCO See of the  name  and  address  of  any  private
preclear.

    Staff members should give the D of P a technical report on their private
    preelears.

    Staff members are not allowed to audit privately anyone who is,  or  has
been during the preceding two years, an Academy student or HGC preclear.

LRH:dr.rd   L. RON HUBBARD

Copyright @ 1962 by L. Ron Hubbard ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

611

CHRONOLOGICAL INDEX OF CONTENTS

              1950     1959

20 Nov. Instruction Protocol-Official        2 Jan.      Instructors or HCO
Staff
      (missued 2 Sept. 1970) 108        Processing Past ACC Students
349
      1954       6 Jan.      (Change of HCO Policy Letter of
                       IS December 1958) (HCOB)    277
20 May      Atmosphere of the Clinic         19 Jan.     Extra Weeks on HPA
Course      277
      (extract from Clinical Procedure) 495  10 Mar.     BScnjHCS Course
Tapes Vol. 2-213
20 May      The Auditors of the Clinic       8 Apr.      New HPA/HCA Tapes
Vol. 2-214
      (extract from Clinical Procedure) 495  30 Apr.     Additional Staff
Auditors    116
                       4 May How to Write a Curriculum (HCOB) 151
            1956       11 May     HPA/BScn "Retreads"    278
12 Sept.    The Summary of a Bulletin from the Academy        2 June
Correction of HCO PL of 23 December 1958
      in Washington D.C.-Concerning Training 264         Qualification of
HGC Staff Auditors     501
26 Sept.    Flow Line for Personnel (HCOB)   20    9 June     Student Files
116
26 Sept.    Registrar (Org Bulletin)    495  13 Aug.     Students Attending
Courses     278
26 Sept. Procedure for Putting Auditors on Staff   19 Aug. Writing of
Letters by Staff Auditors Vol. 2-36S
      (Ori; Bulletin)  496   26 Aug.    Promotional Functions of the
Academy
15 Nov.     HGC Preclear Complaints (HCOB)   496         (excerpt)  131
                                  26 Aug. Promotional Functions of the HGC
                                  (excerpt) 503
      1957  31 Aug. Certifications      279
      circa'57 The Supervisor's Code (revised 15 Sept. 1967) 141    3 Sept.
Director of Processing-Hat (Sec'I ED)   504
5 Mar.      Student Reports HICOB)      145  9 Oct.      Staff Auditors
512
1 Apr.      Technical and Administrative Divisions 21    16 Oct.
Handling Students'and Auditors' Reports
10 Apr.     Student Intensives               (HCOB)      131,512
            219  16 Oct.     How to Prepare HOC Weekly Reports
3 May Traming-What it is Today               for Review  513
      How We Tell People About It (HCOB)     268   23 Oct.    Academy
Training    132
7 May Assignment of Auditors, Rooms, Students      22    27 Oct.
Processing of Children on the HGC Vol. 3-226
9 May Student Intensives     see-219    29 Oct.    Processing of Academy
Students    219
13 May      Financial Enrollment Procedure   129   27 Nov.    Key to the
Organizational Chart of the
17 May      Definitions (HCO TIH  145        Founding Church of Scientology
of
17 May      The Hubbard Guidance Center 496  Washington DC (excerpt:
Technical Division)    4
20 May      Outside Auditing 608
24 May      Stable Data for InstroGtors (HCOB)     146
1 June      Rights of the Directors of Training &             1960
      Processing, Staff Auditors & Instructors
     regarding Preclears & Students     I Jan.Administrative Procedure for
     Reducing Overts 514
      (HCO Information Bulletin)  23    22 Jan.    Requirements for HGC
Auditors    515
10 June     What to Tell New HGC Auditors to Process          22 Feb.
HPA Qualifications     279
      on Preclears HICO Processing Bulletin) 497   23 Feb.    ACC Files
350
9 July      Private Preclems of HASI Staff         24 Feb.    ACC Hats
351
      Auditing Limit (Assoc See Directive)   608   23 Mar.    ACC
Supervisor Hat   354
10 July     Hiring of Staff Auditors    497  29 Mar.     HOC and Academy
Prices for Minors
I I July    Tech Staff Certificate Validation                 (cancels &
replaces 27 Oct. 1959) Vol. 2-260
      (Assoc See Directive)  24   1 Apr.     Training Requirements-Hubbard
Apprentice
15 July     Our First Lesson in Training UICO T8)  147        Scientologist-
HPA/HCA-BScn/HCS HiCOB) 280
26 July     Funds or Favors Received    608  1 Apr.      Regulations for
Staff Members and
2 Sept.     Verbal Directions from LRH (HCOB)      497        ex-Staff
Members     610
4 Sept. Stable Data for Instructors (HCOB)   47    4 May Acceptance for ACC
and
5 Sept. Testing  ~15         Academy Cannes  281,354
      5 Sept. All preclears am expected to   498,  24 May     Extension
Course Prices    Vol. 3-227
16 Sept. HGC Policy               498   2 June     Requirements for Staff
Posts Vol. 1-123
16 Sept. Hubbard Guidance Centre-Use of Title                 7 July
Training Applicants    132
      (HASI Staff Notice)    498  19 Aug,    Registrar Lost Line    516
            1958       30 Aug.    Training Restrictions  133
            17 Sept. Giving the Pc Full Hours      517
21 Jan. ACCs-HPA/HCA (HCOB)  349  11 Oct. Case Assessments for Students
282
25 San. Inept Students 148   2 Nov. HPA/HCA Course 282
8 Feb. Since people will begin to expect           14 Nov. Sign Up of
Students & Pea
      being cleared    499  Acceptance by D/P & DIT (excerpt) 24
4 Mar. Addition to HASI PL of Feb. 8, 1958 (HCOB) 499    15 Nov. Staff
Certificate Requirements     220
2 Apr.      ARC in Comm Course (HCOB)   149  16 Nov.     New Org Programmes
283
11 Apr.     Staff Members' Outside Auditing        17 Nov.    Anatomy of
the Human Mind Course as a
      Regulation (HCOB)      609        Pre-requisite for HPA Training
284
23 Apr.     Vital Training Data for Training Hats        19 Nov.    Pc
Scheduling  117
     and Registrar (HCOB)   149   22 Nov. There will be no professional
     rates
6 May Modified Procedure for Signing up Prospective                 (SA
only) Vol. 3-249
      Students & Pas (Admin Directive)  130  20 Dec.     Restriction on
Ssmt Hill Area   see-409
9 May Who Should Take Which Class HICOB)     130   21 Dec. Curriculum for
ACCs-January 1961      355
27 May Outside Auditing      609
19 June     Freeloaders      Vol. 1-140
9 July      Staff Clearing (HCOB) Soo   1961
29 Sept.    Vital Training Data (HCOB)  ISO
I Oct.      HCO Board of Review   269   10 Jan.    A Brief Outline of an
HGC as Currently Done 518
2 Oct.      Sale and Conduct of Academy Courses    27~   30 Jan. Case Files
117
6 Oct.      Who can be Processed        31 Jan. Academy Meters      134
      Who can be Trained     Vol. 1-510 14 Feb. The Pattern of a Central
Organization
9 Oct.      Correction of HCO Policy Letter of           (excerpt:
Technical Division)    5
      October 1, 1958 (HCOB) see-271    14 Feb. The Academy of Scientology
(excerpt)   284
23 Nov.     Scientometric Testing (See ED)   115   27 Feb. Outside Pes of
Staff Members    611
25 Nov.     Techniques to be Used on HGC Preclears,      500  27 Feb. Free
Courses     Vol. 3-228
27 Nov.     ACC Records      349  6 Mar. Restriction on SOP Goals Procedure
518
15 Dec. Academy Training Curriculum & Examination 274    13 Mar.    Free
Courses (revises 27 Feb. 196 1)   Vol. 3-228
16 Dec. Extension Course Curriculum (HCOB)   275   20 Mar.    Basic Staff
Auditor's Hat    519
23 Dec. Qualifications of HGC Staff Auditors 501   24 Mar.    HGC Admin
Partial Hat
31 Dec. Routing of Profiles (HCO Sec'I Letter)     502        Staff Auditor
Assignment  118

612

              1961 (cont.)   196Z(oam.)

31 Mar.     The Director of Processing's Case            24 May
Training-Session Cancellation
      Checking Hat     525        Auditing Section 318
5 Apr.      HCA/HPA Rundown or Practical Course          24 May
Questionnaire    322
      Rundown for Academies  285  26 May     Training Drills Must Be
Correct     159
5 Apr.      SOP Goals Goofs  531  29 May     Professional Rates
10 Apr.     HCO Ltd HPA/HCA Certificate Conditions 294        (adds to 27
Oct. 1961)  Vol. 3-251
17 Apr.     Training, Professiorial-New Policy     295   1 June
Auditing-Rudiments Check Sheet    548
25 Apr.     D of P Form-Check Type One       5 June      Class 11 Training
only by Academies
      (modifies 31 Mar. 1961)     532        and Saint Hill   324
8 May Extension Course 296   7 June     Professional Training to be done in
Academy
W May Staff Auditors   534   and Saint Hill Only   324
11 May      Student Training-Auditing has Priority 405   21 June    Staff
Members Auditing Private Pos 611
24 May      SOP Goals Assessments 535   26 June    Certification
Requirements     325
26 May      A Message to the Executive Secretaries       2 July
Rudiments Policy 549
      and All Org Staff-Quality Counts       5 July      Course Rotation
411
      (reissued 21 June 1967)     25    9 July     Special Briefing Course
404
26 May Modification of HPA/HCA,   9 July Mimeo & Magazine Distribution,
Sthil Course 411
     BScn1HCS Schedule 296  12 July The British Mark IV E-Meter     Vol. 2-
     231
26 May      Basic Staff Auditor's Hat        14 July     Auditing Allowed
550
      (refors to 20 Mar. 1961)    536   19 July    Clearing-Free Needles
552
7 June      Academy Schedule, Clarification of (HCOB)    297  24 July
Academy Extra Weeks    325
23 Aug.     HPA/HCA Policy   299  30 July    Certification and Validation
Requirements     326
24 Aug.     HGC Allowed Processes 536   2 Aug.     Training Aids    160
12 Sept. Curriculum for Clearing Courses     356   9 Aug. Names and
Addresses of
20 Sept. Training Policy     299        Academy Enrollees     Vol. 1-267
29 Sept. HGC Allowed Processes    537   13 Aug.    Clearing   553
6 Oct. Standardized E-Meter Book Exam   300  21 Aug.     Body Router Hat
120
9 Oct. Academy Training      302  28 Aug.    How to Write an Auditor's
Report      554
9 Oct. HPA/HCA Rundown Change           I Sept. Healing Promotion
556
     (amends HCOB 7 June 1961)    sce-298    12sept. Saint Hill Graduates
     412
18 Oct. Examinations   406  12 Sept. Authorized Processes     557
23 Oct. E-Meters to be Approved   Vol. 2-228 17 Sept. An Arrangement of the
Academy    327
23 Oct. New Rundown for BScn/HCS Course      304   20 Sept. Co-Audit Unit
413
25 Oct. New Students See Check    406  27 Sept. Clean Must Be Trained
334
27 Oct. Professional Rates Restored    Vol. 3-250  27 Sept. Pay for Goals
Finding    414
2 Nov. Training Quality (reissued 3 Mar. 1967)     134  27 Sept. Valid
Processes  558
2 Nov. Allowed Processes from Courses  305   28 Sept. Saint Hill Briefing
Course Terminations    414
21 Nov. Training Course Requirements   306   2 Oct. Termination &
Classification   415
21 Nov. HGC Processing Liability  539  3 Oct. Rooms, Emptying for Cleaning
417
22 Nov. Training Course Rules and Regulations      152  8 Oct. HGC Clearing
559
24 Nov. Saint Hill Tapes for HPA/HCA Courses 306   12 Oct. HPA/HCA Written
Examination      334
29 Nov. Class of Auditors (adds to 29 Sept. 1961)  541  16 Oct. Auditing
Hours Limited    562
6 Dec.     Saint Hill Training         19 Oct. Preparation of HRA/HCA
Certificates     137
      Candidates from Organizations    407   21 Oct.Auditing Supervisor and
Auditing
8 Dec.     Director of Training-Weekly Report Form 135        Instructors,
Duties of  335
8 Dec.     Instructom'Weekly Report Form     154   28 Oct.    Z Unit-Case
Review     417
8 Dec.     Students' Weekly Reports to Ron         28 Oct.    Co-Audit
Suspended  418
      (amended & reissued 23 Oct. 1967)      155   8 Nov.     Departure
Form  418
12 Dec.    Training Activities    408  12 Nov.     Purpose of the Saint
Hill Special
13 Dec.    Extension Course Completion 136         Briefing Course  405
19 Dec.    Saint Hill Retreads    see-410    14 Nov.    Terminations from
the Saint Hill Special
20 Dec.    Student E-Metering     307        Briefing Course  420
28 Dec.    Clearing Courses 359   2 1 Nov.   Re-issue of Materials  Vol. 1-
44, Vol. 2- 92
28 Dec.    HGC Allowed Processes  543  23 Nov.     Saint Hill Retread Fee
420
                                  24 Nov. Objective One  338
                                  I Dec. V Unit-New Students
                                       Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
                                       421
       1962       2 Dec.     Supervisor's Stable Data
 3 Jan.     Upgrading of Auditors  308        (reissued as amended 7 Sept.
 1907) 143
            2 Dec. Instructors' Stable Data   161
 5 Jan. Reports from HGCS    544   6 Dec. Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
 422
 10 Jan.    HCO Standing Order No. 5-Students       8 Dec.     Training-
 Saint Hill Special Briefing Course
       (reissued as amended 21 June 1967)     156        Summary of Subjects
 by Units   423
 17 Jan.    Auditor Assignment     220
 17 Jan.    Responsibility Again (reissued 7 June 1967)  546
 22 Jan.    Crash Programme  26               1963
 22 Jan.    Security Checks  547
 30 Jan.    Technical Director and Administrator    27   15 Jan.    Routine
 2-12       563
 7 Feb.     Restriction on Saint Hill Area          8 Feb.     Curriculum
 Change     424
       (amends 20 Dec. 1960) 409   9 Feb.     Saint Hill Course Goals
 425
 13 Feb.    3D Criss Cross Items   409  11 Feb.     Auditing Regulations
 426
 14 Feb.    Saint Hill Retreads (amends J9 Dec. 1961)    410   13 Feb.
 Academy Taught Processes    339
 18 Feb.    Technical Director Basic Hat      see- 28    13 Feb.    V Unit
       427
 12 Mar.    Staff Training   410   14 Feb.    How to Examine-Theory
 Examinations     163
 26 Mar.    Staff Regulation       14 Feb.    Saint Hill Special Briefing
 Course
       Relations with Pes and Students  27          Reimbursement
 Arrangements     Vol. 3-291
 4 Apr.     Training Course Regulations (Added)     157  21 Feb.    Urgent-
 Goals Check      564
 6 Apr.     Technical Director Basic Hat           6 Mar. Selling Techniques
 Forbidden  Vol. 2-325
      (cancels 18 Feb. 1962) 28    15 Mar. Check Sheet Rating System
 164
 16 Apr. Regulations, Academies and Courses   157  23 Mar. Classification of
 Auditors-Class 11 & Goals   340
 25 Apr. Hat of Course Administrator    see-121    29 Mar. Clear Requirement
 429
 3 May      Practical Auditing Skills   309   2 Apr. Food and Cleaning
 Regulations for Students 430
 9 May      Addition to Students'Weekly Report           4 Apr. District
 Offices Technical Reports to HCO WW 29
      (adds to 8 Dec. 19611  158   4 Apr.Important Changes in Technical
 Reports
 14 May     Training Sections     311         to HCO WW  29
 14 May     Training-Classes of Auditors      313  4 Apr.      HCO WW Post
 Disbanded
 16 May     HPA/HCA Training 136        HCO Technical Secretary WW  35
 17 May     Rudiments Checks 547  4 Apr.      Director of Training Weekly
 Student
 21 May     Tape Examinations     158         Interviews 137
 21 May     Training-Classes: of Auditors          5 Apr.      Organization
 Students on Saint Hill Course    431
      (revised from 14 May 1962)  315   11 Apr.    Tectunical Director's
 Weekly Reports   35

613

              1963(cont.)    1964(cont.)

I I Apr. Goals Finding and Goal Finders 564  5 Nov. Corrections to HCO
Policy Letters   Vol. 1-516
13 Apr. Policy of HGCs S65   13 Nov. Provisional Class VI Classification
19 Apr.     Handling Org Technical Queries   36          (cancels 18 Sept.
1964) 448
22 Apr.     Hat of Course Administrator 121  11 Dec.     Full Table of
Courses and Classification   380
5 May Staff Member Enrolments     Vol. 3-292 18 Dec.     Re: OIC Data
139
10 May      Student Rates for HGC Auditing
      in SA Orgs Vol. 3-231
15 May      Instructor Hats  164             1965
31 May      Training of Clears, (cancels 27 Sept. 1962)  341
10 June     Scientology Training-Technical Studies 342        Technical
Division 4 Org Board Outline 1
18 June     Students Blowing 432  21 Jan.    Vital Data on Promotion
3 July      Change of Routing: Org Technical Reports     36
(revised 5 Apr. 196S)  Vol. 2- 4
9 July      HPA/HCA Certificate Check Sheet  342   7 Feb.     Keeping
Scientology Working
23 July     Retreads on Saint Hill Special Briefing Course 432
(reissued 15 June 1970 & 28 Jan. 1973)  44
30 July     Current Planning 344  14 Feb.    Safeguarding Technology
2 Aug.      Saint Hill Course Changes   433        (reissued 7 June 1967)
49
8 Aug.      "Plants" in Academics       27 Feb.    Course Pattern   449
      Introduction of "Form" 5B   138   28 Feb.    Deliver    Sl
21 Aug.     Change of Organization Targets         28 Feb.    Course Check
Outs-Twin-Checking     183
      Project 80-A Preview   Vol. 2- 95 16 Mar.    Further Material on
Study -Examinations
18 Sept. Scientology Five-Scientology Instructors        165
(reissued 13 Sept. 1967)     184
24 Sept. Course Rules and Regulations        166   17 Mar.    Clearing and
Training    383
25 Sept. Right to Refuse HPA/HCA             17 Mar.     Faculty Meeting
Report      452
      Student Application    139  21 Mar.    Staff Members Auditing Outside
Pes   Vol. 1-586
25 Sept. Hats of Student Instructors for SHSBC           168  29 Mar.
Excerpts from HCO Pl, of
27 Sept. Training Technology-Pink Sheets           171        Nov. 9, 1964
& Nov. 26,1964
4 Oct.      Technical Council     37         (revised) for Staff Hats
Vol. 1-587
8 Oct. New Saint Hill Certificates & Course Changes 434 2 Apr.      Star-
Rate Checkouts for Process
23 Oct. Students'Weekly Reports to Ron  (modification of 27 Feli. 1965)
453
      (amendment & reissue of 8 Dec. 1961)   see- 155 5 Apr. Handling the
Suppressive Person
28 Oct.     Student ARC Breaks    173   The Basis of Insanity 53
26 Nov.     Certificate and Classification Changes       5 Apr. The No-Gain-
Case Student     61
      Everyone Classified    360  7 Apr. Healing Policy in Field    Vol. 1-
521
6 Dec.      Org Programming  363  13 Apr. Course R6 Auditing  454
11 Dec.     Classification for Everyone      14 Apr. Classification on GPMs
454
      (amends 26 Nov. 1963)  364  14 Apr. Organization GPM Unit     455
                                  16 Apr. The "Hidden Data Line"    186
                 16 Apr.     Drills, Allowed 188
      1964       19 Apr.     Training and Processing Regulations
                       Technical Discipline-Students'Questions      65
24 Jan. Case Supervisor           435   22 Apr.    Level 0 Comm Course
346
10 Feb.     Enrolment on Self Determinism          23 Apr.    Correction to
HCO PL of April 14, AD IS
      (reissued 23 June 1967)     37         Organization GPM Unit  see-455
13 Feb. Classification 365   28 Apr.    Technical Personnel   67
20 Feb. Regulations-Course (excerpt)    436  28 Apr.     Power Processes
593
23 Feb. Classification 366   29 Apr.    Ethica-Review (excerpt)     68
24 Feb. Technical Supervision Changes   38   29 Apr.     Bonuses    Vol. 3-
313
24 Feb. Org Programming      367  5 May Supervisors      190
24 Feb. Rundown of Case Supervisor Hat  598  5 May Classification,
Gradation and Awareness Chart
24 Feb. Nomination of Case Supervisor   600        (reissued 4 July 1970)
384
18 Mar. HGC Allowed Processes     566   8 May      Results of HCO Technical
20 Mar. Technical Reports    39         Investigation    Vol. 1-405
2 Apr. To the Saint Hill Student: Instruction Targets 437     9 May
Auditing Fees-Preferential Treatment of
2 Apr.      Use of Recreation Facilities, 1964     438        Preclears-
Sule of Preference     122
2 Apr.      Saint Hill Enrolment-Materials, Courses,          10 May
Releases-Vital Data
      and Use of Class VI Processes     439        (revised & reissued 19
Sept. 1967) 387
10 Apr.     Scientology Courses         13 May     SHSBC Unit-Graduation
457
     (reissued as amended 23 June 1967) 174  16 May Important Explanation-
     Auditing Restrictions 221
17 Apr. Food and Cleaning Regulations for Students 442   16 MayAcademy
Courses-General Remarks-Zero
22 Apr.     Summary of Policies on Classification and               Courses-
Hubbard Recognized Scientologist  347
      Gradation, Certification, Franchise and            17 May     Urgent-
CCHs (cancels 15 May 1962)   191
      Memberships, and the Auditors Division 369   17 May     Free
Scientology Centre     222
5 May Summary of Classification and Gradation            17 May     Academy
Processing  224
      and Certification      373  20 May     Power Processes  595
8 May Transport  443   21 May     Memorandum of Agreement     Vol. 2-270
12 May      Theory Testing-Expiration Dates  175   23 May     Rebates
569
13 May      Transport (adds to 8 May 1964)   443   24 May     Student Guide
to Acceptable Behaviour      458
25 May      Instructor's Conference Report Form    444   27 May
Processing  S70
I I June    New Students Data     445   3 June     R6 EW 461
18 June     Professional Route Classification            14 June    Six
Power Processes  596
      Requirements (addenda to 5 May 1964)   378   14 June    Folders,
Marking of  571,600
30 July     Gradation Programme, Revised     379   17 June    Staff Auditor
AdvIces     (501
12 Aug.     Policy on Technical Information  39    28 June    Releases,
Different Kinds (HCOB) 389
21 Aug.     Staff Auditors (reissued 7 June 1967)  567   1 July     Comm
Cycle Additives  Vol. 1-426
16 Sept.    Understanding and Tape Lectures        I July     Ethics Chits
69
      (reissued 21 July 1967)     176   4 July     Pc Routing-Review Code
603
16 Sept.    Terminations     447  5 July     Assignment of Tech Personnel
70
18 Sept.    Final Classification on Termination          5 July
Memorandum of Agreement
      from Saint Hill  447        (correction to 21 May 1965) see Vol. 2-
270
23 Sept.    Policies: Dissemination and Programmes       6 July
Releases    571
      (excerpt: Auditing and Training Policies)    40    7 July
Releases, Policy on    71
24 Sept.    Instruction & Examination:       I I July    Assignment of Tech
Personnel
      Raising the Standard of     177        (amends& cancels 5 July 1965)
70
28 Sept.    Clay Table Use   568  12 July    Release Policies-Starting the
Pc    572
4 Oct.      Theory Check-Out Data (reissued        13 July    Testing
73
      21 May 1967) (modifies 24 Sept. 1964)  181   19 July    Release
Checks, Procedure for  574
27 Oct.     Policies on Physical Healing, Insanity       19 July
Separation Order 605
      and "Troublesome Sources"   Vol. 1-513 23 July     Priority of Power
Processing  Vol. 2-272
27 Oct.     Policies on Physical Healing, Insanity       26 July    Release
Declaration Restrictions
      and Potential Trouble Sources                Healing Amendments
74
      (reissued 23 June 1967)     Vol. 1-517 28 July     Course R6 Auditing
462

614

              1965(co.t.)    1966(ca.t.)

28 July Case Supervisor, Special Attention   605   12 Oct.    Duration of
SHSBC and Solo Course
30 July Prcclear Routing to Ethics      606        Requirements     470
5 Aug. Release Stages (HCOB) 390  14 Oct. Clearing Course Folders (cancels
3 Feb. 1966) 481
6 Aug. Technical Queries from R6 Graduates   462   17 Oct. Bonuses  Vol. 3-
209
20 Aug.     Continuing Pe to Third Stage Release   596   18 Oct. SH Staff
Auditor's Purpose      579
23Aug.      DeletionofTR5    191  7 Nov. Clear Check-outs in Continental
Orgs  482
23 Aug.     Classification at Upper Levels         10 Nov. Clearing Course
& OT Course Materials  we-492
      Temporary Measure      392  14 Nov. OT Course (replaces 12 Aug. 1966)
483
24 Aug.     Pea: Released Routing 606   21 Nov.Addendum to HCO Pal Ltr of
26 Aug. Scientology Training-Twin Checkouts  192   17 October 1966,
"Bonuses"   Vol. 3-211
30 An& Release Stages (HCOB) 393  16 Dec. Clearing Course Regulation
483
1 Sept. Saint Hill Services and Prim    Vol. 3-235 29 Dec.Routing and
Handling of SHSBC, Dianetic,
I Sept. Some Tech Div Policies    75    Solo VI and Academy Students
198
12 Sept. E-Meters and Books for Academy Students   140   30 Dec.    What
the SHSBC Student Needs to Know
14 Sept. Classification Required Before Moving                about
Foundation  471
      to Next Level    463
20 Sept.    Power Processing for the Public  see Vol. 2-272   1967
21 Sept. E-Meter Drills      195
21 Sept.    Memorandum of Agreement          17 Jan.     An Open Letter to
All Clears  484
      (amends 21 May 1965)   Vol. 2-274 1 Feb.     Student Auditing of
Preclears
22 Sept.    Release Gradation                (replaces 29 Oct. 1965)
226
      New Levels of Release (HCOB)      395  3 Mar.      Training Quality
(reissue of 2 Nov. 196 1)    134
24 Sept.    Student and Pe Reports      77   11 Apr.     Section III OT
Prerequisite     485
27 Sept. Release Gradation-Additional Data (HCOB)  26 Apr. Staff on Saint
Hill Advanced Courses  485
     (supplements HCOB 22 Sept. 1965)   398  27 Apr. Tech Division
     Statistic (amends 30 Sept. 1965) 10
ao Sept. Statistics for Divisions I May Advanced Coursm Administration
4P6
      (excerpt: Tech Division 4)  8     21 MayTheory Check~Out Data
(reissue of
14 Oct. Course Pattern (amends 27 Feb. 1965) 464         4 Oct. 1964)
(modifies, 24 Sept. 1964)    181
19 Oct. Release Declarations 597  7 June     Safeguarding Technology
22 Oct. Requirements for Student Classification    225        (reissue of
14 Feb. 1965)    49
25 Oct. Saint Hill Solo Audit Course    473  7 June      Responsibility
Again (reissue of 17 Jan. 1962)   546
29 Oct. Student Auditing of Preclears;  226  7 June      Staff Auditors
(reissue of 21 Aug. 1964)    567
3 Nov. Po Scheduling   124   21 June A Menage to the Executive Secretaries
12 Nov. Transfers from SHSBC to Solo Audit Course 474   and All Org Staff-
Quality Counts
19 Nov.     Auditing Reports 577        (reissue of 26 May 1961)    25
20 Nov.     The Promotional Actions of an Organization        21 June
HCO Standing Order No. 5-Students
      (excerpt: Technical Division 4)   7          (reissue & amendment of
10 Jan. 1962)    156
23 Nov.     Mark V and Listing E-Meters Vol. 2-234 23 June    Enrolment on
Self Daterminim
30 Nov.     Power Processing for the Public              (reissue of 10
Feb. 1964)  37
      (replaces 20 Sept. 1965)    Vol. 2-272 23 June     Scientology Couren
13 Dec.     Staff on Saint Hill Clearing Course    476        (reissue&
amendment of 10 Apr. 1964)   174
15 Dec.    Additions to "The Promotional Actions        23 June
Policies on Physical Healing, Insanity
      of an Organization"   see- 7           and Potential Trouble Sources
15 Dec. Students Guide to Acceptable Behaviour     196        (reissue of
27 Oct. 1964)    Vol. 1-517
28 Dec. Enrollment in Suppressive 6 July Advanced Conran Supervisors'
Statistic   486
      Groups     see Vol. 1-484, Vol. 2-284  21 JulyUnderstanding and Tape
Lectures
28 Dec. E-Meters Allowed    77         (reissue of 16 Sept. 1964)   176
30 Dec. PTS Auditing and Routing  578  11 Aug.     Second Dynamic Rules  89
                                  7 Sept. Supervisor's Stable Data
              1966     (reissue & amendment of 2 Dec. 1962)   143
       12 Sept. Clearing and OT Course Regulations
 13 Jan. Regulations for Auditing of Staff & Students 476      Clearing and
 OT Course Supervision
I     Feb. HGC Cure-Interne Training & Staff Auditors   78
(replaces 30 Sept. 1966 & combines
I     Feb. Staff Auditor and Supervisor Procurement     80          it with
28 Sept. 1966)   487
3     Feb. Clearing Course-Submission of Folders   477  13 Sept.    Further
Material on Study-Examinations
3     Feb. Clearing Coune-Weekly Auditing Hours    477        (reissue of
16 Mar. 1965)    184
4     Feb. Amendment to "The Promotional Actions        IS Sept.    The
Supervisor's Code      141
      of an Organization"    see- 7     18 Sept. Study-Complexity and
 Confronting      199
 10 Feb.    Tech Recovery    81    19 Sept. Releaws-Vitel Data
10 Feb. Check Sheets, Course      466        (revised reissue of 10 May
1965) 387
10 Feb. Bonuses for Service Delivery   Vol. 3-204  20 Sept. Confidential
Data       90
7 Mar. HGC Cure (Continued) 84    22 Sept. Dianetic Auditor's Course
Auditing Policy        230
7 Mar. Star Rates on Tech and Qmd Staff      85    22 Sept. Solo Auditing
Folders          475
8 Mar. High Crime      86   4 Oct.     Auditor and Org Individual Stars  10
)3 Mar. Amnesty  478   18 Oct.    Academy Check Sheets-Supervisor
Conditions 201
3 Apr. Dianetic Auditor's Course  228  23 Oct.     Students'Weekly Reports
to Ron
29 Apr. Ethics: Clearing Course   478        (reissue of 8 Dec. 1961)
see-155
9 May Requirements for a SHSBC Supervisor Vol. 1- 117   2 Nov.      Tech
Division, Departments of Tech Services,
9 May Bonuses Adjusted            Training and Processing           2
(correction to 10 Feb. 1966)      Vol. 3-206 12 Nov.    Clearing and OT
Course Regulations
29June Keep Academy Check Sheets Up-to-Date  124   (continues 30 Sept.
1966) 488
21 July Tech vs Qual   88   20 Nov. Out Tech 90
2 Aug. Dianstic Auditing    229   21 Nov.    Additional Policies on
Advanced
4 Aug. Ethics-Clean, Invalidation of   479         Courses Security 489
 8 Aug. OT Colour Flash-Colour Flash Addition 479   22 Nov.    Out Tech
 Vol. 1-472
 12 Aug. The Operating Thetan Course    480         (see also revised
 reissue 18 July 1970, page 215)
 12 Aug. OT Course     see-483     27 Nov. R 6 Materials 475
 16 Aug. Clearing Course Security  480  27 Nov.Bonn= Adjusted (addition to
17 Aug.    Routing and Handling of SHSBC Students  468  17 Oct. 1966,
cancels 22 Aug. 1966) Vol. 3-211
22 Aug.    Bonuses Adjusted (amendment &
      addition to 9 May 1966)     Vol. 3-207       1968
 13 Sept. Requirement for Termination on the SHSBC
      and Enrolment on Solo Course     468 9 Jan. Cancellation of HCO PL of
12 Sept. 1967
28 Sept.   Clearing & OT Course Regulations        and HCO PL of 13 Sept.
1967  491
      Clearing & OT Course Caw Supervision see-487 28 Jan.     Cancellation
      see-490
 30 Sept. Clearing and OT Course Regulations  we-487     23 Feb. Dianetic
 Auditor's Course Auditing Policy  231
 5 Oct. Students Terminating-Leave of Absence       24 Feb.Fast Flow for
 SHSBC Students'Preclears
      Blown Students   469         (amends 30 Dec. 1966) 472
 12 Oct.    OIC Graphs-Clearing and OT Course      2 Mar.      Advanced
 Course-Security Check Vol. 1-476
      Div IV Statistics, LRH Comm Statistic   9    8 Mar.      Checksheen
 202
 12 Oct.    Examinations     198   23 Apr.    Parent or Guardian Assent
 Forms      Vol. 2-283

                                615

              1968(cort.)    1969(.o.t.)

31 May Scientology Technology     91    22 Sept.   HGC Statistic (amends 30
Sept. 1965
31 May Auditors  Vol. 0- 42       & 31 Mar. 1969)  12
*29 June    Enrollment in Suppressive Groups       5 Oct.Dianetic Courses,
Wildcat
     (amends 28 Dec. 1965) Vol. 1-484, Vol. 2-284  (revised & reissued 10
     Dec. 1969)  263
24 Aug. Dissemination  91    20 Oct.Technical Divisions
26 Aug. Security Checks Abolished Vol, 1-486 Promotion and Responsibility
96
14 Oct. The Auditor's Code AD IS  111   26 Oct.    Clan Vill & HDG  494
19 Oct. Course Completion-Student Indicators 202   27 Oct.    Training Aids
(reissue of 2 Aug. 1962)     see- 160
24 Oct. Supervisor Know-How-Running the Class      203   8 Nov.     Tech
Services (FO 2 175 missued as
24 Oct. Supervisor Know-How-Handfing the Student   204        HCO PL 16
Apr. 1970)  113
24 Oct. Supervisor Know-How-R Factor to Students   205   15 Nov.    Rights
and Duties  .98
24 Oct. Supervisor Know-How  IS Nov. Clan VIII Retread   Vol. 3-239
      Tips in Handling Students   206   17 Nov.    Dianetics, and
Scientology Services
28 Oct.     Technical Reports (cancels 20 Mar. 1964)     92
(cancels 5 May 1969, 17 May 1969
28 Oct.     Classified Materials  493        & 26 Oct. 1969)  401
29 Oct.     Clan Vill CIS Qual Star     607  28 Nov.     Class Vill Retread
2 Nov.      Auditor's Code              ( 15 Nov. 1969 corrected)   Vol. 3-
239
      Add to Pol Ltr 14 October AD 18   see- 112   3 Dec.     Solo Auditing
and Pregnancy    491
21 Nov~     Senior Policy    92   6 Dec.     Tech Retreads and Retraining
see-216
16 Dec.     Security Div I   Vol. 1-490 10 Dec.    Diametic Courses,
Wildcat
                       (revised reissue of 5 Oct. 1969)  263
                 11 Dec.     Training of Clean     Vol. 2-299

              1969

17 Jan.     Pc Attestations       607              1970
20 Jan.     A Vital Target-Trained Auditor Programme
      (LRH ED 81 INT)        93   16 Jan.    Clan VIII Requirement  494
25 Jan.     Dianetic Auditor's Course Auditing Policy    231  19 Jan.
R4strara'Advice Form (HCOB)  Vol. 2-339
29 Jan.     Maintaining Standard Tech        9S    20 Jan.    Class Vill
Retread (corrects
5 Feb.      Press Policy-Code of a Scientologist Vol, 0- 25
28 Nov. 1969 & 15 Nov. 1969) Vol. 3-242
21 Feb.     Cancellation of Pol Ltr of             4 Feb.     Pc
Application Form for any Major
      November 5, 1964 Vol. 1-523       Auditing Action       Vol. 2-341
13 Mar.     Addition to HCO Pol Ltr of             4 Feb.     Pe
Application for Major Actions
      2~ June 1967     Vol. 1-5,23           (HCOB)           Vol. 2-343
31 Mar.     Completions Statistic, Triple Grades,             23 Feb.
Ethics-Quality of Service    100
      Tech & Qual Divisions  11   16 Apr. Tech Services (formerly FO 2175,
8 Nov. 1969) 113
6 Apr.      Diametics  232   17 Apr. An Auditor and "The Mind's Protection"
      580
6 Apr. Dianetic Registration see-257    10 May Single Declare (cancels 6
Aug. 1966)  403
8 Apr. Cancellation of HCO PL 31 March 1969  11    16 MayInstitutional and
Shock Cases,
5 May Dianctic Course Examinations      233  Petitions from   Vol. 1-529
5 May Auditor's Code and Dianctics      234  30 May Cutatives 102
7 May Students Guide to Acceptable Behaviour 235   3 JuneOrders to
Divisions for Immediate Compliance
7 May Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course Policy     237   (LRH ED 107 INT)
(excerpt: Division IV) 104
7 May Policies on "Sources of Trouble"  Vol. 1-525 8 June Student Auditing
(cancels 29 Oct. 1965,
8 May How to Teach a Course  207        23 May 1969 11, 17 May 1965
8 May Enturbulative Students 208        & 17 May 1965 11)     227
8 May Fast Flow by Attestation    237   15 June    Keeping Scientology
Working
8 May Teaching the Dianctics, Course (HCOB)  238         (reissue of 7 Feb.
1965) (reissued 28 Jan. 1973) 44
8 May Out Tech (revision of 22 Nov. 1967)    239   17 June    Technical
Degrades    106
11 May      Standard Admin for Training & Tech Services  125  17 June
OIC Change-Cable Change      Vol. 1-359
14 May      How to do a Starrate Checkout    240   4 July
Classification, Gradation and Awareness Chart
14 May      Star Rate Checkouts on Standard              (reissue of 5 May
1965) 384
      Dianctics Course see-262    18 July    Out Tech (revised missue of 22
Nov. 1967)  215
16 May      Course Administration       209  22 July     Tech Retreads and
Retraining
19 May      Hubbard Standard Diametics Course Policy                (amends
6 Dec. 1969)     216
      (cancels 7 May 1969)        241   2 Sept. Instruction Protocol-
Official
20 May      Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course
(reissue of 20 Nov. 1950)    108
      Course Materials Papers and Files      242   14 Oct.    Division IV
Org Board, Ideal Scenes and Slats 13
20 May      Keeping Dianetics Working in an Area (HCOB) M
23 May      Dianetic Contract           247
23 May      Dianctics Course Student Auditing            251
1971
23 May      Parent or Guardian Anent Forms   Vol. 2-289
24 May      Progress Board        249   5 Feb.     Org Gross Divisional
Statistics Revised
24 May      Dianetics Course Supervision and                  (excerpt:
Tech Div 4) (amends 30 Sept. 1965)      20
      Administration-Supervisor Checkouts          252   5 Mar.     The
Fantastic New HGC Line (HCOB)     581
29 May      Dianetic Certificates       126  6 May.      Line Design-HGC
Lines, An Example      585
1 June      Dianetics Training          253  16 Mar.     What is a Course?
217
3 June      Legal Statement concerning Dianetics         6 Apr.     Power
Badges      597
      & Medical Practice Laws     254   11 Aug.    Advanced Courses
Materials-Security of Data
3 June      Dianetic Course Pricing     Vol. 3-236       (replaces 10 Nov.
1966) 492
7 June      Dianetica-Points Which Go Out          25 Aug.    How to Get
Results in an HGC (HCOB)     586
      and Wreck Pea (HCOB)   255  28 Sept. Selling and Delivering Auditing
      589
I I June    Materials, Scarcity of (HCOB)    126
12 June Diametic Registration (revises 6 Apr. 1969)      257
24 June Diametics-Pre-Auditing Examination   259
11 July     Supervision (HCOB)    260
22 July     Fast Flow Training (canctIs 28 Jan. 1969)    210
23 July     Auditor Assignment Policies 127
27 July     What is a Checksheet  211
27 July     Antibiotics (HCOB)    Vol. 2-332
29 July     Course Administration Roll Book  IZ8
30 July     Student Progress Board (cancels 24 May 69)   212
3 Aug.      Starrate Checkouts on Standard Dianetica
      Course (corrects & replaces 14 May 1969)     262
2 Sept. Old ACC Students     359
2 Sept. Correction to HCO PL 12 June 1969
     Dianetic Registration  see-258
2 Sept. Triple Grades  Vol. 2-294
3 Sept. Successful Clan VIIIS     493
3 Sept. Former HDAs, HPAs    Vol. 2-295, Vol. 3-238

                               616

           HUBBARD SCIENTOLOGY ORGANIZATIONS

                  THE CHURCHES OF SCIENTOLOGY

                    ADVANCED ORGANIZATIONS

Church of Scientology of California     Church of Sclentology Church of
Scientology
Advanced Organization  Advanced Organization United Kingdom   Advanced
Organization Denmark
      of Los Angeles   Saint Hill Manor Jernbanegade 6
916 South Westlake Street    East GrInStead, Sussex, England  1608
Copenhagen V
Los Angeles, California 90006           Denmark

                HUBBARD COLLEGES OF SCIENTOLOGY

Church of ScientOlogy of Calionnia      Church of Scientology Church of
SCientology
American Saint Hill Organization  Hubbard College of Sclentology    Saint
Hill Denmark
2723 West Temple Street      Saint Hill Manor      Jernbanegade 6
Los Angeles, California 90026     East Grinstead, Sussex, England   1608
Copenhagen V
            Denmark

              CONTINENTAL AND AREA ORGANIZATIONS

UNITED STATES    ST. LOUIS   MONTREAL
PUBLICATIONS ORGANIZATION    Church of Scientology Church of Scientology
      3730 Lindell Boulevard 1168 St. Catheri no Street. W. 101
Church of Sclontologry of California    St. Louis, Missouri 63108
Montreal, Ouebec 1-12Y I B5
Pubi ications Organization
C/O ASHO    TWIN CITIES      UNITED KINGDOM
2723 West Temple Street      Church of Scientology LOCALCHURCHES
Los Angeles, California 90026     730 Hennepin Avenue
CELEBRITY CENTRES      Minneapolis, Minnesota 55403      Saint Hill
Foundation
            Saint Hill Manor
Church of6clentology of California      BOSTON     East Grinstead, Sussex
CelebrityCentre  Church of Scientology  PLYMOUTH
1551 North La Brea Avenue    448 Beacon Street
Hollywood, California 90028  Boston, Massachusetts 02115 Hubbard
Scientology Organization
Church of Scientology        39, Portland Square
Celebrity Centre New York    BUFFALO    Shemall
65 East 82nd Street    Church of Sciontology Plymouth, Devon
New York, Now York 10028     1116 Elmwood Avenue   MANCHESTER
LOCAL CHURCHES   Bmilao, Now York 14222 Hubbard Scientology Organization
      DETROIT    48 Faulkner Street
WASHINGTON, D.C. Church of Scientology  Manchester
.Founding Church of Scientology   19 Clifford Street     LONDON
2125 S Street, N.W.    Detroit, Michigan 48226
Washington, D.C. 20008       Hubbard Scientology Organization
      MIAMI 68, Tottenham Court Road
AUSTIN      Church of Scientology London W.I.
Church of Scientology  1235 BriCkeil Avenue  SCOTLAND
2804 Rio Grande  Miami, Florida 33131
Austa, Texas 7S705           "Apt
      NEWYORK    Fleet House
HAWAII      Church of Scientology of Now York      20 South Bridge
Church of Scientology  28 30 West 74th Street      Edinburgh, Scotland
143 Nenue Street New York, New York 10023    AUSTRALIAINEW ZEALAND
Honolulu, Hawaii 96821
SAN DIEGO   PHILADELPHIA     ADELAIDE
      Church of Scientology  Church of the New Faith
Church of Sclentology  8 West Lancaster Avenue     57 Pulteney Street
926 "C" Street   Ardmore, Pennsylvania 19003 Fullerton, Adelaide 5000
San Diego. California 92102  SACRAMENTO South Australia
SAN FRANCISCO    Church of Scientoiogy of California     MELBOURNE
Church of Scientology of California     819 19th Street  Church of the New
Faith
414 Mason Street Sacramento, California 95814      724 Inkerman Road
San Francisco, California 94102   CHICAGO    North Caulfield 3161
LASVEGAS    Church of Soientology Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Church of Scientology  1555 maple street     PERTH
2108 Industrial Road   Evanston, Illinois 60201    Church of the New Faith
Las Vegas, Nevada $9102      CANADA     Pastoral House
LOS ANGELES      St. Gsorge~z Tenace
Church of Scientology of California     TORONTO    Perth 5000
2005 West 9th Street   Church of SCientology Western Australia
Los Angeles, California 90006     124 Avenue Road  SYDNEY
PORTLAND    Toronto 180, Ontario  Church of the New Faith
Church of ScIentology  VANCOUVER  1 Lee Street
1607 N.E. 41st Street  Church of Scientology Sydney 2000
Portland, Oregon 97232 4857 Main Street New South Wales, Australia
      Vancouver 10,    AUCKLAND
SEATTLE     British Columbia
Church of Scientology        Church of Scientology
1531 4th Avenue  OTTAWA      New Imperial Buildings
Seattle, Washington 98101    Church of Scientology 44 Oueen Street
      292 Somerset Street, West   Auckland, New Zealand
      Ottawa

EUROPE      AMSTERDAM  AFRICA

PUBLICATIONS ORGANIZATION    Church of Scientology JOHANNESBURG
      Singel 261
Church of Scientology  Amsterdam, Netherlands      Church of Scientoiogy
Publications Organization         99PollyStreet
C/O SH Denmark   BERLIN      Johannesburg, South Africa
Jernbanegade 6   Church of Scientology  CAPETOWN
1608 Copenhagen V      1000 Berlin 12

Denmark     Giasebrechstfasse 10  Church of Scientology
LOCAL CHURCHES   Berlin,Germany   3rd Floor, Gannour House
            127 Plain Street
COPENHAGEN  MUNICH     Cape Town, South Africa

Church of SCientology  Church of Seismology  PORT ELIZABETH
Hovedvagtsgade 6 M Munich 2
1103 Copenhagen K      Lindwurmstfasse 29    Church of Scientology
Denmark     West Germany     2 St. Christopher's
            2iWestbourne Road
Church of Sciertology  G6TEBORG   Port Elizabeth, South Africa 6001
Ffederikstcorgw~j 5    Church of Scientology DURBAN
2400 Copenhagen V      Magasinsgatan 12
Denmark     S 411 18 GOteborg, Sweden   Church of Scientology
PARIS       57 College Lane
      STOCKHOLM  Durban, South Africa
Church of Scientology  Scientology Kyrom     PRETORIA
12, rue do Is Montagne Ste Geruwuwe     Kammakaregatan 46
75005 Paris, France    S-1 11 60 Stockholm, Sweden Church of Sclentology
            224 Central House
VIENNA      MALM6      Cnr Central & Pretorious Street$
Sciontology-6sterreich Church of Scientology       Pretoria, South Africa
A-107OWien  Skomakaregatan 12     BULAWAYO
Mariahilferstrasse 8BAlStg. 31W   S-211 34 Maimb, Sweden
Vienna, Austria        Church of Scientology
BRUSSELS         508 Kirrie Bldgs.
            Abercom Street
Church of Scientology        Bulawayo, Rhodesia
45A, Rue de I'Ecuyer
1000 Brussels, Belgium

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