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Korean news St. Paul Ramsey Jan., Apr., Jul., Oct. 9500 [33] Kurier Polski: Polish: Roseville Ramsey Monthly [33] Labor Review: Labor issues Minneapolis Hennepin Monthly 60000 [33] La Prensa de Minnesota: Hispanic Minneapolis Hennepin Weekly (Mon.) 14,200 [33] The Land: Rural Life Mankato Blue Earth Weekly (Fri.) 20789 [33] Latino Midwest News ...
[62] His review was subsequently disputed by the Church of Scientology International's vice president, Brian Anderson, who denounced the book in a letter to the newspaper, claiming that it had been "obviously calculated to make a quick buck capitalizing on L. Ron Hubbard's name" and was a "fast and shoddy" work. In response, Platt pointed out ...
Mission Earth is a ten-volume science fiction novel series by L. Ron Hubbard. Hubbard died three months after the publication of volume 1, and other volumes were published posthumously. The series's initial publisher, Bridge Publications, coined the word dekalogy, meaning "a series of ten books", to describe and promote the novel. Made up of ...
After Hubbard's wedding to Sara, the couple settled at Laguna Beach, California.where Hubbard took a short-term job looking after a friend's yacht [114] Working from a trailer in a run-down area of North Hollywood, [112] Hubbard resumed his fiction writing to supplement the small disability allowance that he was receiving as a war veteran. [115]
The newspaper diversified during the mid-20th century, becoming part owner of Sharon radio station WPIC from 1938 to 1959; purchasing four eastern Mercer County weeklies in 1965, eventually merging them into the now-twice-weekly Allied News in Grove City; and founding a weekly newspaper, Hubbard Press, in Hubbard, Ohio in 1997. Hubbard Press ...
Julia Reel accused a Hubbard Inn employee of physically assaulting her. The Chicago establishment responded on social media and took legal action. A woman claimed a bouncer threw her down the stairs.
September 4, 1931 - Michigan newspaper reports Hubbard staying with local aviator Phillip W. Browning and attempting to revive two local glider clubs. [12] September 8, 1931 - Michigan newspaper reports Hubbard injured in hit-and-run. [13]
An early review in The New Republic summed up the book as "a bold and immodest mixture of complete nonsense and perfectly reasonable common sense, taken from long-acknowledged findings and disguised and distorted by a crazy, newly invented terminology" and warned of medical risks: "it may prove fatal to have put too much trust in the promises ...