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  1. In a letter to his wife Mary Sue,: 58–59, 332–333 Hubbard said that, in order to assist his research, he was drinking alcohol and taking stimulants and depressants. In OT III, Hubbard reveals the secrets of an immense disaster that had occurred "on this planet, and on the other seventy-five planets which form this Confederacy, seventy-five million years ago". [193]

  2. En 1979, l’épouse de Hubbard, Mary Sue, et une douzaine d’autres responsables de la scientologie sont convaincus de conspiration contre le gouvernement fédéral des États-Unis. Hubbard est mentionné, par le procureur fédéral, comme « coconspirateur non poursuivi », et aucun lien ne lui est trouvé avec l'affaire [30].

  3. Mary Sue Hubbard Quote "...To my dear husband, auditor, teacher and our Founder, go my thanks and acknowledgement for having given the most precious gifts of Freedom and true Beingness to me and my fellow Man. Without him, none of this would have been possible; and so to Ron goes my everlasting gratitude for having provided for all of us the Road to Clear."

  4. Mary Sue Hubbard. third wife of L. Ron Hubbard (1931-2002) Mary Sue Whipp; Statements. instance of. human. 1 reference. imported from Wikimedia project. English Wikipedia. sex or gender. female. 0 references.

  5. Mary Sue Hubbard Quote "...To my dear husband, auditor, teacher and our Founder, go my thanks and acknowledgement for having given the most precious gifts of Freedom and true Beingness to me and my fellow Man. Without him, none of this would have been possible; and so to Ron goes my everlasting gratitude for having provided for all of us the Road to Clear."

  6. Hubbard continued to develop Dianetics (and ultimately Scientology), through which he met his third and last wife, Mary Sue Whipp, in late 1951 – only a few months after his divorce. The controversy surrounding the divorce had severely dented his reputation.

  7. www.bartleby.com › topics › mary-sue-hubbardMary Sue Hubbard | Bartleby

    They become Bud and Mary Sue Parker, the children of Betty and George Parker, the family in the television show. The film also proves that there is no perfect way of life. This is shown when Bud and Mary Sue’s perfect family life falls apart, when their mother, Betty leaves them and their father to do things for themselves that she usually did.