FREEZONE BIBLE ASSOCIATION TECH POST

LEVEL 0 COURSEPACK: Part 6 of 10

********************************

I am the Tech Lion.

Studying the Academy Levels gave me the ability to handle life.

I would like others to have the same knowledge that I now have.

Here is the Academy Level 0 Coursepack from 1988, in 10 parts.

There was an earlier FZBA post of the Level 0 coursepack from
1974, but due to extensive CofS revision, little remains the
same in both packs.

The full table of contents is in Part 1 only.

To see the proper formatting, use a fixed-pitch font such as
Courier to view this file.

Enjoy,

-The Tech Lion 

********************

STATEMENT OF PURPOSE 

Our purpose is to promote religious freedom and the Scientology
Religion by spreading the Scientology Tech across the internet.

The Cof$ abusively suppresses the practice and use of
Scientology Tech by FreeZone Scientologists. It misuses the
copyright laws as part of its suppression of religious freedom.

They think that all freezoners are "squirrels" who should be
stamped out as heretics. By their standards, all Christians, 
Moslems, Mormons, and even non-Hassidic Jews would be considered
to be squirrels of the Jewish Religion.

The writings of LRH form our Old Testament just as the writings
of Judaism form the Old Testament of Christianity.

We might not be good and obedient Scientologists according
to the definitions of the Cof$ whom we are in protest against.

But even though the Christians are not good and obedient Jews,
the rules of religious freedom allow them to have their old 
testament regardless of any Jewish opinion. 

We ask for the same rights, namely to practice our religion
as we see fit and to have access to our holy scriptures
without fear of the Cof$ copyright terrorists.

We ask for others to help in our fight. Even if you do
not believe in Scientology or the Scientology Tech, we hope
that you do believe in religious freedom and will choose
to aid us for that reason.

Thank You,

The FZ Bible Association

************************

PART 6 (this file)

35. HCOB 6 Nov. 1987 The Worksheets
Auditor Admin Series 14RA

36. HCOB 5 Nov. 1987 The Auditor's Report Form
Auditor Admin Series 13RA

37. HCOB 17 Mar. 1969R Summary Report Form
Auditor Admin Series 12RA

38. HCOB 5 Mar. 1971 The Fantastic New HGC Line
C/S Series 25
Auditor Admin Series 10

39. HCOB 31 Oct. 1987 The Folder Summary
Auditor Admin Series 7RA

40. HCO PL 8 Mar. 1971 Examiner's Form
Auditor Admin Series 11

41. HCOB 13 Nov. 1987 The PC Folder and Its Contents
Auditor Admin Series 3RA

42. HCOB 21 June 1972 I Method 5
Word Clearing Series 38

43. HCOB 8 July 1974R I Clear to F/N
Word Clearing Series 53R

44. HCOB 9 Aug. 1978 II Clearing Commands


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35. HCOB 6 Nov. 1987 The Worksheets
Auditor Admin Series 14RA


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 6 NOVEMBER 1987

Remimeo
Tech/Qual
Academies


Auditor Admin Series 14RA

THE WORKSHEETS

Refs.
HCOB 7 May 69 VI SUMMARY OF HOW TO WRITE AN
AUDITOR'S REPORT, WORKSHEETS
AND SUMMARY REPORT, WITH SOME
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
HCOB 3 Nov. 71 Auditor Admin Series 15
C/S Series 66
AUDITOR'S WORKSHEETS

Cancels:
BTB 6 Nov. 72R VII Auditor Admin Series 14R
THE WORKSHEETS


An auditor's worksheet (abbreviation: W/S) is supposed to be a 
complete running record of the session from beginning to end. The 
auditor should not be skipping from one page to another but should 
just be writing page after page as the session goes along.

A worksheet is always on 8" x 13" or 8 1/2" x 14" paper. It is 
written on both sides of the page, 2 columns on each side and with 
every page numbered front and back. The pc's name is written on 
each separate sheet.

Numbering the worksheet pages is important, as it makes it 
possible to quickly refer to something that occurred in a session. 
"The rock slam occurred on page 26" in a report to the C/S tells 
him exactly where in the worksheets to find this and can save more 
time than you ever cared to look at. Numbering the pages also 
gives you the proper number of pages the session went.

WORKSHEET CONTENT

During auditing one keeps his worksheet in PT as the session 
progresses, with comments, time and TA.

The important points of a session worksheet are:

A. When the TA goes up (on what?).

B. When the TA goes down (on what?).

C. When an F/N occurs (on what?).

D. When GIs or VGIs occur (on what?).

E. Any cognitions that occur (on what?).

F. When BIs occur (on what?).

G. The process being run, including time it was started, process 
command numbers and time it was completed.

H. Reads on questions, commands, items, etc. (e.g., sF, F, LF, 
LFBD).

TA and time notations should be made at regular intervals 
throughout the session.

When a process EP is reached, mark the F/N and note whether it was 
indicated, the pc's indicators, cognition, time and TA position.

Good worksheet action results in a communication -- a communication 
of truth. The C/S should be able to look the worksheets over and 
see what the auditor did, what the meter said, the key things that 
the pc did or said and how the session went. It is a running 
record of the session.

CORRECTION

One NEVER writes up the worksheet after the session from notes. 
One never copies the worksheet into "more readable form" from 
"notes taken in session." A worksheet is the worksheet.

The auditor should always read over his worksheets before turning 
in the folder to the Case Supervisor and if any words or letters 
are missing or cannot be read, they should be written in with red 
ink in block print.

Example:
UNCONSCIOUS (red)
I must have been -unconsi- at the time.

People often do this too extensively. It is just the word which is 
not decipherable that is marked in block letters. At the most this 
would be about one or two corrections to a page,

If the auditor is having to do a lot of correction of his 
worksheets, he should learn how to write more clearly faster.

"STENOGRAPHIC" AUDITING

Admin must not be used to stop or slow a pc.

Sometimes one sees an auditor sit there trying to write everything 
down and interrupting the pc with "Just a minute, just a minute -- 
wait a minute, wait a minute ..." That is stenographic auditing, 
and it violates the Auditor's Code.

If you start writing down every word said, all you do is slow up 
the session and you really slow up the C/S, too. An honest 
auditing report is not necessarily a verbose auditing report.

SHORTHAND

Auditors sometimes develop a sort of shorthand. For example, any 
time anybody says "without" it is written "w/o" and every time 
somebody says "understanding" it is written "U." That is all right 
just as long as the auditor and the C/S know what is meant. 
Remember, a worksheet must result in a communication.

ROCK SLAMS, EVIL PURPOSES AND SERVICE FACSIMILES

If a rock slam occurs in a session, make sure it isn't a 
mechanical fault of the E-Meter and note that a check for a 
mechanically caused R/S was done. Then write the R/S down BIG on 
the worksheet, write down EXACTLY what the pc was saying and note 
EXACTLY what question was asked. After the session go back and 
circle your notes at that point in red. During the session you can 
simply put a bar on the worksheet alongside the portion to be 
circled; it could be very distractive to the pc if he noticed you 
picking up another pen and heard a circle being drawn.

If the pc voices an evil purpose or service facsimile during a 
session, note it down in full, put a bar beside it and circle it 
in red after the session.

FALSIFYING WORKSHEETS

Falsifying a worksheet makes it so the C/S can't C/S and nobody 
can trace what happened to the pc. It is quite an overt act. It is 
a violation of the Auditor's Code and in fact is probably the most 
covert and vicious crime in auditing. A falsified auditing report 
is inevitably detected and the penalty is severe. (Ref: HCOB 26 
Oct. 76 1, C/S Series 97, Auditor Admin Series 25, AUDITING 
REPORTS, FALSIFYING OF)

---------

Keeping accurate session worksheets will ensure the Case 
Supervisor has all the data he needs to keep you and your 
preclears winning with the correct application of standard tech.


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

Compilation assisted by
LRH Technical Research
and Compilations

LRH:RTRC:rw.gm

_

******************************************************************

36. HCOB 5 Nov. 1987 The Auditor's Report Form
Auditor Admin Series 13RA


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 5 NOVEMBER 1987

Remimeo
Tech/Qual
Academies


Auditor Admin Series 13RA

THE AUDITOR'S REPORT FORM

Ref:
HCOB 7 May 69 VI SUMMARY OF HOW TO WRITE AN
AUDITOR'S REPORT, WORKSHEETS AND
SUMMARY REPORT, WITH SOME
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Cancels:
BTB 6 Nov. 72R VI Auditor Admin Series 13R
THE AUDITOR REPORT FORM


The Auditor's Report Form (abbreviation: ARF) is a printed form 
filled out by the auditor after a session. It gives the details 
of the beginning and end of the session, condition of the pc, the 
wording of the process, etc.

The form is so written that one can see the whole session at a 
glance, just by looking at the one side of the Auditor's Report 
Form.

The form is filled in at the top with:

1. Name of pc.

2. Name of auditor.

3. Pc's grade.

4. Date.

5. Time length of session, excluding time for breaks (example:
"1 hour 58 minutes"). This is "hours in the chair."

6. Total number of hours paid for (12 1/2, 25, 50, etc.).

7. Running total of paid hours used to date.

8. Total tone arm motion for the session. (Often neglected but 
important as an indicator of case progress.)

The body of the form is filled in with:

9. Time session started.

10. TA and sensitivity setting at start of session.

11. Condition of pc at session start.

12. Rudiments.

13. What process was run - LISTING THE EXACT COMMANDS (often 
forgotten by most auditors).

14. Time and TA at start and end of each process.

15. End phenomena (including F/N, cognition, pc indicators).

16. Whether process is flat or not.

17. Time session ended.

18. TA at end of session.

19. Condition of pc at session end.

20. Pc gains or comments.

21. TA range.

22. Meter trim check result and notation of any known meter 
calibration error, per HCOB II May 69R, METER TRIM CHECK.


Example:

[FZBA editor: see the following files 
Graph0-2A.JPG - sample Auditor's Report Form
Graph0-2B.DOC - blank ARF in Microsoft Word format]


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

Compilation assisted by
LRH Technical Research and
Compilations

LRH:RTRC:rw.gm

_

******************************************************************

37. HCOB 17 Mar. 1969R Summary Report Form
Auditor Admin Series 12RA


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 17 MARCH 1969R
REVISED 12 NOVEMBER 1987

Remimeo

Auditor Admin Series 12RA

SUMMARY REPORT FORM


The Summary Report Form is a report used simply as an exact record 
of what happened and what was observed during the session.

Copies of this HCOB are to be run off on 8 1/2" x 14" or 8" x 13" 
paper. Each blank below is filled in with the appropriate data.


DATE:________________________

PC or PRE-OT:______________________ AUDITOR:_____________________

PROCESS RUN:_______________________ TA:__________ TIME:__________

ASPECTS AND GAINS:

1. How did pc do in relation to what was run? ___________________

2. Effectiveness of process. ____________________________________

3. Any free needles? ____________________________________________

4. General needle behavior. _____________________________________

5. Did TA go below 2.0 (how low)?_______ Did it come up? ________

6. Did TA go high (how high)?________ Did it come down? _________

7. General TA range. ____________________________________________

8. Emotional tone of the pc and whether this improved.___________

9. Any misemotion? ______________________________________________

10. Preclear appearance. ________________________________________

11. Mannerisms. _________________________________________________

12. Mannerism changes. __________________________________________

13. Any change in skin tone? ____________________________________

14. Did color of eyes change?____ Get brighter?____ Get dull?____

15. Any comm lags? ______________________________________________

16. Any cognitions? _____________________________________________

17. Any pains turn on? ______ Blown? ______

18. Any sensations turn on? ______ Blown? ______

19. Any difficulties? ___________________________________________

20. Did you complete C/S instructions? __________________________

21. Was pc happy at session end? ________________________________

22. TA at session end. _________ Needle at session end. _________

ETHICS REPORT:


---------

USE OF SUMMARY REPORTS

The Summary Report is used extensively in training. It is a tool 
for increasing an auditor's obnosis of what goes on in a session, 
and also teaches auditors how to quickly and concisely analyze and 
report on a case.

EVERY STUDENT AUDITOR ON COURSES AND CO-AUDIT MUST WRITE A SUMMARY 
REPORT FORM AFTER EACH SESSION.

Requiring use of Summary Report Forms by interns and staff 
auditors is left entirely to the discretion of the C/S.

FILLING IN THE REPORT

The top of the form is filled in with the date, pc or pre-OT's 
name, etc., as called for. Each of the questions 1 to 22 of the 
form are then answered. Write down briefly what the preclear was 
doing in the session. Do not write opinions with regard to what 
was happening or how the preclear was running the process. The C/S 
is interested in the aspects of the case in relationship to the 
process or processes being run.

In the "Ethics Report" section a brief note is made on any report 
being made to Ethics. For example, a report that the pc is PTS; a 
report on a rock slam observed in session; a Knowledge Report on 
others' overts or crimes against Scientology revealed by the pc in 
session; or in an HCO Confessional, a Knowledge Report on the pc's 
overts and withholds. All that is noted in this space is that a 
report to Ethics has been made, and its subject. The actual ethics 
report is written and routed separately. (Ref: HCO PL 10 Mar. 82, 
Reiss. 20.6.86, CONFESSIONALS-ETHICS REPORTS REQUIRED; HCOB 10 
Aug. 76R, R/Ses, WHAT THEY MEAN; HCO PL 7 Mar. 65R III, OFFENSES 
AND PENALTIES; HCOB 7 Jan. 85, HCO CONFESSIONALS)

The Summary Report should be LEGIBLE. If the auditor's handwriting 
is poor, the answers should be neatly printed out.

Two or more sessions in one day call for only one Summary Report 
with the TA and data of each session.

The Summary Report is not stapled to the worksheets but is paper-
clipped on top of the Auditor's Report Form and beneath the Exam 
Report.

Writing a Summary Report should only take the auditor a matter of 
minutes. Having just audited the preclear, he should quite easily 
fill the report out.


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

Revision assisted by
LRH Technical Research
and Compilations

LRH:RTRC:ja.rw.gm

_

******************************************************************

38. HCOB 5 Mar. 1971 The Fantastic New HGC Line
C/S Series 25
Auditor Admin Series 10


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 5 MARCH 1971

Remimeo

C/S Series 25
Auditor Admin Series 10

THE FANTASTIC NEW HGC LINE

(A marvelous new C/S Auditor line
has just been piloted in for HGCs.)


In the new C/S 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 C/S form
for the Tech C/S 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 C/S, 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 pc where
auditing is sold by the hour.

Where Auditors are so engaged and the new folder routing line is in
use, this C/S form is used:

Full blank page.

Pc's Name (Red) Date

Auditor's Name (Red) Class of Auditor
required next session

(Session Grade) left blank

Auditor's comment (Red) or think about the case if he wishes.

The next C/S

1. ___________________________ 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 C/S.

The C/S looks it over (it is HIS final responsibility for the case
being run right).

The C/S 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 F/N and well done hours) as the
Auditor gets no hour credit for the session. If the C/S and other
Admin is ok he writes OK with his initial in the session grade
space. If none of it is okay he leaves it blank and does the C/S
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 C/S writes "Well Done by Exam" on his
own new C/S 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 F/N at Exams yet the Admin and
next C/S are ok, the Auditor loses the session time in the C/S but
gets the Admin time credited to his week's stat. The C/S 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
C/S, did a correct session, got an F/N at Exam and did the Admin
and next C/S is correct, then the C/S marks "Very well done" in the
blank space for session grade with his initial. After inspection,
this would be the sole action of the C/S regarding that folder.

By the C/S 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 C/S. No matter 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 C/S, new D of P
and another Examiner and more Tech Services personnel.

Despite how hard the C/S 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 C/S using the old lines can C/S 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 pcs handled, Auditors will be added. The C/S will
not be able to handle his job. The line, being faulty, gets pegged
at about 250 hours no matter how hard the C/S and Admin people work.

With the same C/S 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

1. 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 pc 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.

8. 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 C/S using a Folder Page 
who comes on late and works the C/S's hours.

15. Fed the folders rapidly by the Folder Page who is standing in 
the C/S area, the C/S does his C/S work. If the Folder Page is fast, 
removing folders and putting the new one in, chasing up data and 
other bits for the C/S, 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 C/S, an output of 30 
Auditors. Needless to say the C/S 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 C/S posts the data he wants Auditors to know or do on the 
AUDITORS' 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 
handles 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 HGC1.

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 Secs and Registrars and procure new pcs on a by-pass 
for the org.

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 Sec 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, checkouts 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 Sec and 
Registrar set-up can cause a no pc 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 and wear their hats 
on pc flow.

PROCUREMENT

The D of P has always had new pc 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 pcs 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 pcs 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
Founder

LRH:nt.rd.gm

_

******************************************************************

39. HCOB 31 Oct. 1987 The Folder Summary
Auditor Admin Series 7RA


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 31 OCTOBER 1987

Remimeo
Tech/Qual
Academies

Auditor Admin Series 7RA

THE FOLDER SUMMARY

Cancels:
BTB 5 Nov. 72R III Auditor Admin Series 7R
THE FOLDER SUMMARY


The Folder Summary (abbreviation: FS) is a summary of the actions 
taken on a pc in consecutive order. It is kept up every session by 
the auditor and is stapled to the left inside front cover of the 
folder as a running summary for C/S use.

CONTENTS

All entries on the Folder Summary are done in blue or black ink, 
except where otherwise noted. The following data is entered:

1. ADMIN DETAILS

Session date, length of time of session and admin time. When a new 
folder is started. When an OCA is taken. When a Folder Error 
Summary is done.

2. PROCESSING DETAILS

What processes were run and the result of each. Mark an EP beside 
each action taken, or if it was not taken to EP, mark in red 
"UNFLAT," "O/R," "BOGGED," etc., as applicable.

The listing question of an L&N action is written out in full.

Dianetic items run are written out in full.

Any rock slam that occurred in the session is noted in red, giving 
the session worksheet page where it occurred and the question or 
subject which rock slammed, phrased exactly.

Any evil purpose or service facsimile stated by the pc is noted in 
red, giving the session worksheet page where it occurred.

3. EXAM REPORT

At the bottom of the process details mark "F/N," indicating an F/N 
occurred at the Examiner, or "BER" (red) if a Bad Exam Report. If 
TA was high or low at exam, that datum is also noted in red.

4. ATTESTS

Date and what was attested.

If pc sent to attest but did NOT attest, this is noted in red.

5. ADVANCED COURSE DATA

Date started Advanced Course, level, date attested to completion.

(The individual Solo sessions are NOT noted but should be entered 
on a separate Folder Summary in the Solo folder.)

6. MEDICAL DATA

When pc reports sick or injured. Give date and a brief statement 
of illness or injury. Written in red.

When pc is off Medical Liaison Officer lines, another entry is 
made to indicate this.

--------

The auditor is responsible for keeping up this summary after each 
session and immediately on receipt of a medical report or pc-
volunteered BER. It is a standard part of the auditor's session 
admin.

FORMAT

The Folder Summary sheets are on 8" x 13" or 8 1/2" x 14" paper 
divided into four columns, as in the following example:

[FZBA editor: see Graph0-3.JPG]


Folder Summary sheets are stapled to the inside front cover, 
earliest at the bottom to most recent on top. When a new pc folder 
is made, ALL Folder Summary sheets are removed from the old folder 
and advanced to the inside cover of the new folder so that the 
complete Folder Summary of the case is always in the current 
folder.

--------

A Folder Summary, standardly kept, is a communication. It makes 
what has been run on the pc visible. It communicates fully and 
rapidly amongst a technical elite who know how these things are 
done. Someone who is trained as an auditor or Case Supervisor can 
look through the Folder Summary and immediately see what has been 
run on the case, what has been omitted, the items that were run 
and any actions that were started but never completed. This 
summary is vitally important to both the auditor and the C/S for 
study of the pc's case and seeing that he is correctly programmed 
and handled.

Failure to keep up the Folder Summary can lead to C/S errors, so 
the auditor must always remember to fill it out after every 
session.


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

Compilation assisted by
LRH Technical Research
and Compilations

LRH:RTRC:rw.gm

_

******************************************************************

40. HCO PL 8 Mar. 1971 Examiner's Form
Auditor Admin Series 11


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO POLICY LETTER OF 8 MARCH 1971

Remimeo
Examiner's Hat
Tech Services Hat
(Mimeo on 16 Substance paper)


Auditor Admin Series 11

EXAMINER'S FORM


(Important Note: This form is handled exactly as per HCO PL of 13 
Oct. 68RA, AND NO EXAMINER MAY EXAMINE UNLESS STAR-RATED ON THAT PL, 
and HCOB 5 Mar. 71, C/S Series 25, AND AN E-METER COURSE. Students 
and pcs can be very upset if this post's duties are not done 
correctly and org pc and course results ruined.)


After Session _____________________ Qual Div _______________(place)
Volunteered _______________________ Date __________________________
Medical ___________________________ Time __________________________
Pc or Pre-OT Name _________________________________________________
Last Grade Attained _______________________________________________
Grade, Course or Action Being Attested ____________________________
Pc's Statement (Write down exactly what pc says)
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
TA Position and any BD _____________ Pc Indicators ________________
State of Needle ___________________________________________________
F/N Indicated to Pc _______________________________________________
Signature of Examiner ____________________________


ROUTE THIS FORM TO TECH SERVICES WHICH ROUTES IT INTO THE FOLDER.

WHEN ILLNESS REPORTED, MAKE THIS OUT WITH A CARBON UNDER IT AND 
ROUTE ORIGINAL TO TECH SERVICES AND FOLDER, AND CARBON TO MEDICAL 
LIAISON OFFICER OR QUAL SEC.

RUSH ROUTE ANY ROLLER COASTER LATER REPORT OR SICK REPORT TO FOLDER 
TO PREVENT C/S ERRORS.


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

Adopted as official
Church policy by
CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY
INTERNATIONAL

LRH:CSI:mes.rd.gm

_

******************************************************************

41. HCOB 13 Nov. 1987 The PC Folder and Its Contents
Auditor Admin Series 3RA


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 13 NOVEMBER 1987

Remimeo
Tech/Qual
Academies

Auditor Admin Series 3RA

THE PC FOLDER AND ITS CONTENTS

Refs:
The HCOBs and HCO PLs of the Auditor Admin Series

Cancels:
BTB 3 Nov. 72R Auditor Admin Series 3R
THE PC FOLDER AND ITS CONTENTS
BTB 5 Nov. 72R I Auditor Admin Series 5R
CASE PROGRESS SHEET
BPL 14 Sept. 71RA I CASE PROGRESS SHEET

The pc folder represents a record of all the auditing actions and 
other handlings taken on a preclear as he moves up the Bridge. 
With the administration of the folder in good shape, following the 
exact forms and in correct sequence, it is a communication. An 
auditor or C/S can pick it up and see what has been done with the 
pc.

THE FOLDER

The folder itself is a folded sheet of cardboard which encloses 
all the session reports and other items. The folder is legal size 
-- large enough to hold 8" x 13" or 8 1/2" x 14" paper. (Ref.
HCOB 29 Oct. 87, Auditor Admin Series 4R, THE FOLDER) The
folder's contents are arranged as shown here: 

[FZBA editor: see Graph0-4A.JPG]


FRONT COVER ITEMS

Attached to the inside front cover of the folder are several 
forms:

The Yellow Sheet is a yellow sheet of paper on which is noted the 
different correction lists or sets of commands which have been 
word cleared on the pc, his Havingness Process and the size cans 
he uses. (Ref: HCOB 30 Oct. 87, Auditor Admin Series 6RA, THE 
YELLOW SHEET)

The Folder Summary is a very brief summary of the actions taken on 
a pc listed out consecutively session by session. The Folder 
Summary is placed on top of the Yellow Sheet and both are stapled 
to the front cover. (Ref. HCOB 31 Oct. 87, Auditor Admin Series 
7RA, THE FOLDER SUMMARY)

An FES (Folder Error Summary) Checklist provides data a C/S needs 
to ensure that full setups have been done before a pc starts a 
major level. FES checklists for starting or continuing Expanded 
Grades, New Era Dianetics and other rundowns are included as 
attachments to HCOB 29 Jan. 81R 1, Auditor Admin Series 24RA, FES 
CHECKLISTS AND SUMMARY. FES checklists are placed inside the front 
cover of the folder, on top of the Folder Summary. (Ref. HCOB 29 
Jan. 8 1 R 1, Auditor Admin Series 24RA, FES CHECKLISTS AND 
SUMMARY)

The OCA (Oxford Capacity Analysis) Graph is a graph which plots 10 
traits of the pc's personality based on his answers to the OCA 
test questions. The OCA graph goes on top of the FES checklists. 
(Ref. HCOB I Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 8R, OCA GRAPHS)

The Program Sheet is a sheet which outlines the sequence of 
actions, session by session, to be run on the pc to bring about a 
definite result. It is placed on top of the OCA graph and secured 
to the front cover of the folder with a large clip as shown in the 
diagram below. The pc's current program is the topmost item inside 
the front cover of the folder. The master program for every case 
is given on the Classification and Gradation Chart, and a copy of 
the chart is put in every pc's folder along with any other program 
sheets written. (Ref: HCOB 2 Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 9RA, 
THE PROGRAM SHEET, and HCOB 12 June 70, C/S Series 2, PROGRAMING 
OF CASES)

[FZBA editor: see Graph0-4B.JPG]


SESSION REPORTS

Each auditing session the pc receives is written up by the auditor 
and placed in the pc's folder.

The Worksheets are the sheets on which the auditor notes what is 
happening in the session from beginning to end. After the session 
the auditor puts his worksheets in sequence (page 1, 2, 3, 4, 
etc.) for inclusion in his session report. (Ref: HCOB 6 Nov. 87, 
Auditor Admin Series 14RA, THE WORKSHEETS, and HCOB 3 Nov. 71, 
Auditor Admin Series 15, C/S Series 66, AUDITOR'S WORKSHEETS)

The Auditor's Report Form is a form made out after each session, 
giving an outline of what actions were taken during it. The form 
is placed on top of the session worksheets and the resulting 
packet is stapled together at the top left-hand corner. (Ref: HCOB 
5 Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 13RA, THE AUDITOR'S REPORT FORM)

The Summary Report Form is a fill-in-type standard form. It 
provides data on what happened and what was observed during the 
session. When used, it is placed on top of the Auditor's Report 
Form. (Ref. HCOB 17 Mar. 69R, Auditor Admin Series 12RA, SUMMARY 
REPORT FORM)

The Exam Report Form is a report made out by the Qual Examiner 
when the pc goes to the Examiner after session. It includes the 
pc's name and grade, date, time, meter details, pc's indicators 
and any pc statement. It is placed on top of the Summary Report 
Form. (Ref: HCO PL 8 Mar. 71, Auditor Admin Series 1l, EXAMINER'S 
FORM)

The Auditor's CIS is a sheet on which the auditor writes the C/S 
instructions for the next session. It is placed on top of the Exam 
Report Form and the whole packet is clipped together with a paper 
clip. (Ref: HCOB 5 Mar. 71, C/S Series 25, Auditor Admin Series 
10, THE FANTASTIC NEW HGC LINE)

There are several other forms that are part of some session 
reports, depending on what was done in the session.

Correction Lists are lists of prepared questions in HCOB or HCO PL 
form, designed to find bypassed charge and repair a faulty 
auditing action or life situation. If a correction list is used in 
a session, it is placed just beneath the worksheets and stapled 
along with the worksheets and Auditor's Report Form. (Ref: HCOB 7 
Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 16RA, CORRECTION LISTS)

An L&N List (Listing and Nulling List) is a list of items said by 
the pc in response to a specific listing and nulling question from 
the auditor. Each list is done on a separate sheet. If an L&N list 
is made in a session, it is placed underneath the worksheets and 
paper-clipped in place as part of the whole session report. It is 
not stapled to the worksheets. (Ref. HCOB 8 Nov. 87, Auditor Admin 
Series 18RA, L&N LISTS)

A Dianetic Assessment List is a list of somatic items given by the 
pc to the auditor. The auditor writes each one down along with any 
meter read. Such lists are made as part of New Era Dianetics 
auditing. They go underneath the worksheets and are paper-clipped 
in place as part of the whole session report. They are not stapled 
to the worksheets. (Ref. HCOB 9 Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 
19RA, DIANETIC ASSESSMENT LISTS)

[FZBA editor: see Graph0-4C.JPG]


MISCELLANEOUS REPORTS

A "miscellaneous report" is a report such as a medical report, a D 
of P interview, a report from the Ethics Officer, a Success Story, 
etc. These are filed in the pc's folder at the correct 
chronological point. Such reports give a C/S important information 
about the case. They must be filed at the proper place in the 
folder and must not be omitted. (Ref. HCOB 10 Nov. 87, Auditor 
Admin Series 20RA, MISCELLANEOUS REPORTS, and HCOB 22 Oct. 76, C/S 
Series 98, Auditor Admin Series 26, AUDITING FOLDERS, OMISSIONS IN 
COMPLETENESS)

THE BACK COVER ITEMS

Attached to the inside of the back cover of the folder is another 
set of forms.

The Invoice Form is a sheet which shows how much auditing a pc has 
signed up and paid for, and how much of that has been delivered. 
It is stapled just inside the back cover of the folder. (Ref: HCOB 
12 Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 23RB, INVOICE FORM AND ROUTING 
FORMS)

A Routing Form is a form that gives the step-by-step sequence of 
actions that are taken in routing a person or particle into, 
within and out of an organization. It gives the post titles of 
those responsible for each step and the actions they take in 
handling the person or particle. A routing form gives the full 
road map by which someone or something is routed. The routing 
forms filed in a pc folder are those used to route the pc into the 
HGC and through his service. Routing forms are placed on top of 
the invoice form. (Ref: HCOB 12 Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 
23RB, INVOICE FORM AND ROUTING FORMS)

The FES (Folder Error Summary) is a summary of any errors made in 
handling the pc's case. The FES also should show the actions which 
have been taken to correct specific errors. All FES sheets and the 
FES summary are kept clipped together and are placed on top of the 
routing forms. (Ref. HCOB I I Nov. 87, Auditor Admin Series 22RB, 
FOLDER ERROR SUMMARY FORMAT, and HCOB 29 Jan. 81 R 1, Auditor 
Admin Series 24RA, FES CHECKLISTS AND SUMMARY)

Dianetic Assessment Lists not being used in the pc's current 
auditing are clipped together and kept at the back of the folder. 
They are placed on top of the FES. (Ref: HCOB 9 Nov. 87, Auditor 
Admin Series 19RA, DIANETIC ASSESSMENT LISTS)

The Dianetic Full Flow Table lists in chronological order all 
Dianetic items the pc has run. Beside each item it shows whether 
or not each flow was run to EP. The table is placed on top of the 
Dianetic Assessment Lists. (HCOB 8 Nov. 72RA, Auditor Admin Series 
21RA, THE DIANETIC FULL FLOW TABLE)

[FZBA editor: see Graph0-4D.JPG]


A pc folder that contains the necessary forms, reports and 
information, all in good order, makes it much easier to get 
auditing delivered. And that benefits everyone.


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

Compilation assisted by
LRH Technical Research
And Compilations

LRH:RTRC:rw.gm

_

******************************************************************

42. HCOB 21 June 1972 I Method 5
Word Clearing Series 38


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 21 JUNE 1972
Issue I

Remimeo

Word Clearing Series 38

METHOD 5


Method 5 Word Clearing is a system wherein the Word Clearer feeds 
words to the person and has him define each. It is called 
material clearing. Those the person cannot define must be looked 
up.

This method may be done without a meter. It can also be done with 
a meter.

The reason the method is needed is because the person often does 
not know that he does not know. Therefore, Method 4 has its 
limitations as the meter does not always read.

The actions are very precise.

The Word Clearer asks, "What is the definition of __________?" 
The person gives it. If there is any doubt whatever of it or if 
the person is the least bit hesitant, the word is looked up in a 
proper dictionary.

This method is the method used to clear words or auditing 
commands or auditing lists.


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:nt.rd.gm

_

******************************************************************

43. HCOB 8 July 1974R I Clear to F/N
Word Clearing Series 53R


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 8 JULY 1974R
Issue I
REVISED 24 JULY 1974

Remimeo

Word Clearing Series 53R

CLEAR TO F/N

(Word Clearing Series 32R has been
corrected as 32RA to require the
F/Ning of all words and forbids
W/Cing on a high TA.)


Do NOT try to word clear a person Method 1, 2 or 4 whose TA 
is high at session start. Use standard auditing procedures by 
an auditor of the required class to get the TA down to normal 
range. (Usually a C/S Series 53RG and handling.)

If the TA is high at start of session, one of course cannot 
F/N a TA on Word Clearing when it is high for some other 
reason.

ALWAYS F/N a word being cleared on the meter. It may happen 
there is a chain and the word has to be earlier-similared. 
But even then, when the chain is F/Ned, the words on the 
chain that didn't F/N must F/N.

Example: A chemical-type word reading. Doesn't F/N. E/S it on 
E/S words, comes down to a lecture in school. The Mis-U word 
there F/Ns. Now check the words touched while going E/S. 
Usually they just F/N.

Do NOT do a lot of words to "clean" and say the person has 
been "word cleared." Cases are messed up because the Word 
Clearing may be over out-rudiments or even out-lists or out-
Int.

A Word Clearing worksheet must show truthfully all words 
F/Ned.

RED TAB

Where a pc has been word cleared on the meter without F/Ning 
or with or to a high or low TA, THE WHOLE FOLDER MUST BE RED 
TABBED.

Word Clearing worksheets must go into the pc's folder, just 
as Why Finding and Touch Assists and other auditing actions 
must be put in the folder.

A pc red tabbed because of Word Clearing must be repaired 
within 24 hours, as in the case of any other red tab.

--------

Stalled cases have been traced to Word Clearing errors. 
Repair of these will get them going again.


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:nt.rd.gm

_

******************************************************************

44. HCOB 9 Aug. 1978 II Clearing Commands


HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE
Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex

HCO BULLETIN OF 9 AUGUST 1978
Issue II

Remimeo

CLEARING COMMANDS

Refs:
HCOB 14 Nov. 65 CLEARING COMMANDS
HCOB 9 Nov. 68 CLEARING COMMANDS, ALL LEVELS
HCO PL 4 Apr. 72R ETHICS AND STUDY TECH
Rev. 21.6.75


Always when running a process newly or whenever the preclear is 
confused about the meaning of commands, clear each word of each 
command with the preclear, using the dictionary if necessary. 
This has long been standard procedure.

You want a pc set up to run smoothly, knowing what is expected of 
him and understanding exactly the question being asked or the 
command being given. A misunderstood word or auditing command can 
waste hours of auditing time and keep a whole case from moving.

Thus, this preliminary step to running a process or procedure for 
the first time is VITAL.

The rules of clearing commands are:

1. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES IS THE AUDITOR TO EVALUATE FOR THE PC 
AND TELL HIM WHAT THE WORD OR COMMAND MEANS.

2. ALWAYS HAVE THE NECESSARY (AND GOOD) DICTIONARIES IN THE 
AUDITING ROOM WITH YOU.

This would include the Tech Dictionary, the Admin Dictionary, a 
good English dictionary and a good nondinky dictionary in the 
pc's native language. For a foreign language case (where the pc's 
native language is not English) you will also need a dual 
dictionary for that language and English.

(Example: English word "apple" is looked up in English/French 
dictionary and "pomme" is found. Now look in the French 
dictionary to define "pomme.")

So for the foreign language case two dictionaries are needed: (1) 
English to foreign language, (2) foreign language itself.

3. HAVE THE PC ON THE CANS THROUGHOUT THE CLEARING OF THE WORDS 
AND COMMANDS.

4. CLEAR THE COMMAND (OR QUESTION OR LIST ITEM) BACKWARDS BY 
FIRST CLEARING IN TURN EACH WORD IN THE COMMAND, IN BACKWARDS 
SEQUENCE.

(Example: To clear the command "Do fish swim?" clear "swim" 
first, then "fish," then "do.")

This prevents the pc starting to run the process by himself while 
you are still clearing the words.

4A. NOTE: F/Ns OBTAINED ON CLEARING THE WORDS DOES NOT MEAN THE 
PROCESS HAS BEEN RUN.

5. NEXT, CLEAR THE COMMAND ITSELF.

Auditor asks the pc, "What does this command mean to you?" If it 
is evident from the pc's answer that he has misunderstood a word 
as it is used in the context of the command:

a. Reclear the obvious word (or words) using the dictionary.

b. Have him use each word in a sentence until he has it. (The 
worst fault is the pc using a new set of words in place of the 
actual word and answering the alter-ised word, not the word 
itself. See HCOB 10 Mar. 65, WORDS, MISUNDERSTOOD GOOFS.)

c. Reclear the command.

d. If necessary, repeat steps a, b and c above to make sure he 
understands the command.

5A. NOTE: THAT A WORD READS WHEN CLEARING A COMMAND, AN 
ASSESSMENT QUESTION OR LISTING QUESTION DOES NOT MEAN THE COMMAND 
OR QUESTION ITSELF HAS READ NECESSARILY. MISUNDERSTOOD WORDS READ 
ON THE METER.

6. WHEN CLEARING THE COMMAND, WATCH THE METER AND NOTE ANY READ 
ON THE COMMAND. (Ref: HCOB 28 Feb. 71, C/S Series 24, METERING 
READING ITEMS)

7. DON'T CLEAR THE COMMANDS OF ALL RUDS AND RUN THEM, OR OF ALL 
PROCESSES AND RUN THEM. YOU'LL MISS F/Ns. THE COMMANDS OF ONE 
PROCESS ARE CLEARED JUST BEFORE THAT PROCESS IS RUN.

8. ARC BREAKS AND LISTS SHOULD BE WORD CLEARED BEFORE A PC GETS 
INTO THEM AND SHOULD BE TAGGED IN THE PC'S FOLDER ON A YELLOW 
SHEET AS CLEARED. (Ref. BTB 5 Nov. 72R II, Rev. 24.7.74, Auditor 
Admin Series 6R, THE YELLOW SHEET)

As it is difficult to clear all the words of a correction list on 
a pc over heavy bypassed charge, it is standard to clear the 
words of an L1C and ruds very early in auditing and to clear an 
L4BRA before commencing listing processes or an L3RE before 
running R3RA. Then, when the need for these correction lists 
arises, one does not need to clear all the words as it has 
already been done. Thus, such correction lists can be used 
without delay.

It is also standard to clear the words of the Word Clearing 
Correction List early in auditing and before other correction 
lists are cleared. This way, if the pc bogs on subsequent Word 
Clearing, you have your Word Clearing Correction List ready to 
use.

9. IF, HOWEVER, YOUR PC IS SITTING IN THE MIDDLE OF AN ARC BREAK 
(OR OTHER HEAVY CHARGE) AND THE WORDS OF THE L1C (OR OTHER 
CORRECTION LIST) HAVE NOT BEEN CLEARED YET, DON'T CLEAR FIRST. GO 
AHEAD AND ASSESS THE LIST TO HANDLE THE CHARGE. OTHERWISE, IT'S 
AUDITING OVER AN ARC BREAK.

In this case you just verify by asking afterwards if he had any 
misunderstoods on the list.

All the words of the L1C (or other correction list) would then be 
cleared thoroughly at the first opportunity -- per your C/S's 
instructions.

10. DO NOT RECLEAR ALL THE WORDS OF ASSESSMENT LISTS EACH TIME 
THE LIST IS USED ON THE SAME PC. Do it once, fully and properly 
the first time and note clearly in the folder, on the yellow 
sheet for future reference, which of the standard assessment 
lists have been cleared.

11. THESE RULES APPLY TO ALL PROCESSES, LISTING QUESTIONS AND 
ASSESSMENTS.

12. THE WORDS OF THE PLATENS OF ADVANCED COURSE MATERIALS ARE NOT 
SO CLEARED.

---------

Any violation of full and correct clearing of commands or 
assessment questions, whether done in a formal session or not, is 
an ethics offense per HCO PL 4 Apr. 72R, Rev. 21.6.75, ETHICS AND 
STUDY TECH, section 4, which states:

"AN AUDITOR FAILING TO CLEAR EACH AND EVERY WORD OF EVERY COMMAND 
OR LIST USED MAY BE SUMMONED BEFORE A COURT OF ETHICS.

"The charge is OUT-TECH."


L. RON HUBBARD
Founder

LRH:dr.gm
