UNITS
A · B · C · D · E · F · G · H · I · J · K · L · M · N · O · P · Q · R · S · T · U · V · W · X · Y · Z
Definitions
1. in 1965 the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course was organized as follows. It was divided into four units, Unit A covering Level
2. Unit B covering levels I and II. Unit C covering levels III and IV. Unit D covering Level VI. (HCO PL 27 Feb 65)
3. there are certain classes of auditors, there's Class Ia, Ib, Ic and 2a. These classes each connote certain types of auditing. Class la has no auditing; Class Ib has some type of auditing. The administration of the Academy depends upon the auditing requirements more than the classes. You get auditing something on this basis, you have a class of auditor and that requires certain checksheets, and you also have a unit and the auditor belongs to that unit. So an individual auditor is actually designated by his class, which would be Class Ia, Class Ib. Ic or 2a. That's his classification. What unit he appears in is determined by the current auditing he is doing and these units are Unit W, X, Y and Z. The unit in which he finds himself is doing certain auditing actions and you will sometimes GAE somebody down from one auditing activity to another auditing activity, and although he still retains the classes he has he's doing another type of auditing. (HCO PL 17 Sept 62)
4. in 1965 the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course was organized as follows. It was divided into four units. Unit A covering Level