primarysources date April 2009 Orphan date February 2009 Scientology Finance are the policies employed in Church of Scientology organizations related to financial management, the purpose of which is defined by L. Ron Hubbard in HCOPL 1 May 1958 Issue II, titled Financial Management Purpose Makes certain the org makes money and continues in good credit. Policy on bill payment and creditors From HCOPL 28 January 1965 How to Maintain Credit Standing and Solvency on page 5, Hubbard states Only pay by this system PAY EVERYTHING UP TO A DATE ALWAYS and no further. Hubbard states in this policy that collection actions by creditors accompanied by threat are only paid when threats are made in the future Government tax bills, water bills, occasionally rent or phone are sometimes accompanied by threats of vast action unless the whole bill is paid instantly. Still try to use the above system. But if you can t, pay it and retard other bills accordingly. And thereafter, don t pay that outfit s bill on any other terms than threatened trouble. In situations of dealing with a contractor, Hubbard gives special advice If a tradesman, despite the use of the above system, demands further payment or threatens suit, caution him that if he carries on this way you ll deal elsewhere. And carry out the threat. Never continue to use a private business firm after they become obnoxious about bills. Trade elsewhere. And say why. Hubbard asserts that if a creditor gets upset with non payment by a Scientology organization, then the creditor is gypping the organization or is unwilling to do financing If you re using the above dateline system and a tradesman gets upset, then he is gypping you or he has too little finance to handle your account, so stop trading with him. Always make that an ironbound policy. Be very proud and haughty about bills. Never propitiate. Use of this policy has resulted in lawsuits brought against Scientology organizations for non payment of bills. ref http www.skeptictank.or ... more details
Image MundyArms.gif right thumb The Mundy coat of Arms. ref Arms Per pale, Gules and Sable, on a cross, engrailed, Argent, five lozenges, Purpure on a chief, Or, three eagles legs, erased, a la quise, Azure ref Sir John Mundy , Lord Mayor of London, a native of High Wycombe, in Buckinghamshire, settled in Derbyshire in the reign of Henry VIII. ref http www.british history.ac.uk report.aspx?compid 50706 Magna Britannia , Daniel and Samuel Lysons, Volume 5, 1817 ref Sir John Mundy was a London goldsmith and Lord Mayor of London . He was born in Wycomb, son of William Munday ref The Universal Magazine Sept 1749, p 140 ref He purchased the manor of Markeaton in 1516 as well as Mackworth and Allestree , which are all now parts of Derby from Lord Audley . ref http derbyshire peakdistrict.co.uk derbymarkeaton.htm derbyshire peakdistrict.co.uk ref In 1515 he served as a Sheriff of the City of London . Seven years later he became the Lord Mayor of London and was knighted in 1529 some say 1523 . ref Notes and Queries by William John Thomas, Doran John , Henry Frederick Turle, Joseph Knight, Vernon Horace Rendall, Florence Hayllar. Pub 1850 ref He died in 1538. Mundy married twice, having children with his second wife Juliana Browne, daughter of his mayoral predecessor, William Browne, and granddaughter of two mayors, John Browne and Edmund Shaa . Vincent Mundy , his heir George Christopher Thomas was Prior of Bodmin in the time of Henry VIII of England Henry VIII John of Ryalton in Cornwall Margaret married Nicholas Jennings alderman of London and secondly Edmund Howard lord deputy of Clay his second wife and thirdly Henry Mannox Eleanor m to John Harleston esq of South Ockendon in Essex ?Elizabeth m to Sir John Tyrrell knt of Gypping in the county of Suffolk Jane married Sir Thomas Darcy of Tolleshant Darcy, Essex Mildred ref name gene http books.google.co.uk books?id QisAAAAAQAAJ&dq 22Nicholas Heath 22 mundy&client firefox a&pg PA25&ci 37,971,402,544&source bookclip A Genea ... more details