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ENGLISH DOCS FOR THIS DATE- Outline the Activities of the HCO Office of LRH (DIV1.HCO) - P580124(B) | Сравнить

CONTENTS Subject: Outline of the Activities of the HCO Office of L. Ron Hubbard Cохранить документ себе Скачать
HCO BULLETIN OF 24 JANUARY 1958

(The following is a memorandum issued on March 9, 1953. It is still appropriate and is reissued here as an HCO Bulletin.)

Subject: Outline of the Activities of the HCO Office of L. Ron Hubbard

I maintain a Communications Office which is devoted to specific interests and which should be used for those interests and which should not be used for any other purpose by the organization. Its use for other purposes inhibits the work for which this office was designed and has a tendency to clog my writing communication line. Thus, the indulgence of the operation in general is requested so as to keep this communication center well within its own functions.

The functions of this center are:

1. The receipt and answering of correspondence addressed to myself, some of which is personal, much of which is to the interest of the general operation.

2. The answering and delivering of telephone communications relating specifically to communications addressed to me or proceeding from me.

3. The typing of manuscripts and investigation material from my Dimaphon records or personal dictation.

4. Compilation of investigation and case information submitted to me by auditors.

5. Assistance to the Treasurer in receiving bills and expediting their payment.

6. The care of social and Governmental matters in which I happen to be concerned.

7. Maintaining my Comm lines in good order.

Casual communication with this office inhibits its efficiency and involves it in concerns which inhibit a swift expedition of my work.

The office is not concerned with the activities of the central staff beyond acting as a communications relay point from myself to these operations and from these operations to myself.

This memorandum is issued because various parts of the operation have involved my office in concerns beyond its scope, the first effect of which is to cause my correspondence to receive secondary attention. A secondary concern is involving the office petty cash and stationery materials with those of the remaining operation which should have their own, procured by proper vouchers through proper channels.

I have no feeling about this beyond the attitude I always exhibit: when my communication lines or any part of them are challenged, or when personnel who work very close to me have their time employed on duties which are beyond the immediate scope of my office.

L. RON HUBBARD LRH:mld.rs.cden