scientology education
 
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> Janesville Gazette
School to use Hubbard theories

> Quincy Herald Whig
Quincy to be Literacy Center's main office

> WBRZ News 2 Louisiana - The Advocate
Study skills class linked to Scientology

> Saint Petersburg Times
Scientology makes it in classroom door

> Saint Petersburg Times
Church tutors embrace methods

> Wichita Eagle
Quality of tutors goes unchecked

> Boston Globe
A new word in literacy -- Scientology

> The Observer (UK)
German police told to target Scientologists

> Riverfront Times
Applied Pressure: Should St. Louis County grant tax breaks to Scientology-linked tutoring programs?

> St. Pete Times
A Curious Alliance

> Chicago Daily Herald
Hubbard-inspired school opens

> Saint Petersburg Times
Spiritual symbiosis: A surprising one

> Riverfront Times
L Is for L. Ron

> WOAI.com San Antonio
SA School Used Scientology-Based Curriculum

> Saint Louis Post Dispatch
Hazelwood schools reject firm with ties to Scientology founder

> The Saint Louis Argus - STLArgus Blog
Censorship at the Argus

> Saint Louis Schools Watch
Union Leader Praises Williams

> Saint Louis Schools Watch
Hazelwood Public Schools Rejects Applied Scholastics

> Studytech.org
Hazelwood (Missouri) School Superintendent Rejects Applied Scholastics

> Saint Louis Schools Watch
Scientology and the Schools

> St. Louis Post Dispatch
St. Louis schools end training at center with Scientology ties

> The Boston Globe
Curiously, an outpost of Scientology

> Travolta promoting Study Technology on Tavis Smiley show
Studytech.org

> The Houston Press
Between the Lines: A Scientology-backed tutoring program looks to expand in the Houston area

> UW Fond Du Lac
Letter to parents

> Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Class yields a surprise subject
>
The Houston Press
Between the Lines: A Scientology-backed tutoring program looks to expand in the Houston area

> Larry King Show on CNN
Tom Cruise Denies He's Dyslexic

> The Star Online: Malaysia News
Mongolia adopts new method of learning

> The Lovelock Review-Miner
Board makes it official: Applied Scholastics study dropped

> Lovelock Review-Miner
Board orders staff to discontinue use of purported Scientology-connected books

> alt.religion.scientology
Scientology official admits ASI program a "generation plant"

> National Enquirer
Enquirer blasts Tom Cruise over dyslexia claim

> Associated Press
New headquarters for L. Ron Hubbard educational methods opens in St. Louis

> St. Louis Post Dispatch
L. Ron Hubbard-inspired teacher training center opens in county

> IMDB Presswire
Cruise slammed for dyslexia revelations

> Bedford McIntosh
Educational Wisdom from the People Who Brought You Battlefield Earth

> Fox News
People lets Tom Cruise promote Scienotology

> People Magazine
Tom Cruise claims Study Tech cured his illiteracy

> Magill
The company, the course, the church and the controversy

> St. Louis Post Dispatch
Villa Gesu Will House Teachers Of Group With Scientology Link

> CNN
Tom Cruise interview with Larry King

> Register.Co.UK
Cisco Exec backs Hubbardist Courses

> The Oregonian
Xenu and the evil yawns are nowhere in sight

> Boston Herald
Mayor, council star in urban comedy

> New York Post
Tom, Nicole split a question of faith

> Boston Herald
Scientology-linked project to get scrutiny

> Boston Herald
Scientology-linked project gets city grant

> NOW Magazine
Scientology wants city's kids

> St. Petersburg Times
New school to use ideas of Scientology's founder

May 31, 2001
The Oregonian
Xenu and the evil yawns are nowhere in sight


Xenu and the evil yawns are nowhere in sight
- Steve Duin

The door is always locked, a curious twist for a storefront literacy project, and the windows are surprisingly dark.

Once inside the room at 700 N. Killingsworth, there are a half-dozen empty tables, a large dog with a ball in his mouth, and shelves of books:

The infamous "Green Eggs and Ham." A "Star Wars" novelization. And -- oh, yes --myriad titles such as "Learning How to Learn," "How to Use a Dictionary" and "Small Common Words Defined," all "based on the works of L. Ron Hubbard," the pulp-writing messiah of the Church of Scientology.

Hillary Larson, executive director of the Portland branch of HELP -- the Hollywood Education and Literacy Project -- seems perplexed that Hubbard's influence on their learning curriculum might be cause for alarm.

"My attention is so focused on literacy and education that bringing religion into it is a waste of time," said Larson, granddaughter of the late Oregon transportation czar Glenn Jackson.

"Scientology is an important part of my life, but my interest in life is education. That's not the purpose of the literacy project. Never will be."

In the last four years, Larson's program -- which provides free tutoring for all ages -- has drawn support from local civic leaders and politicians. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and city Commissioner Jim Francesconi toured the operation when it was parked on North Mississippi. Cmdr. Derrick Foxworth of the Northeast Precinct and Johnnie A. Gage, formerly of House of Umoja, spoke at the Killingsworth address in December.

"Did I know she was involved in Scientology? It did give me pause," Francesconi said. "But she was teaching kids to read. What impressed me is she's hung in there for a long time. There aren't many people who will sit in a storefront for a month, much less four years."

In recent weeks, however, HELP-Portland -- which sits directly across the street from PCC's Cascade campus and a block from Jefferson High School -- has been criticized as a gateway into the controversial "church."

Porter Raper, an English faculty member at PCC, argues that HELP is a "recruiting front" for Scientology: "This is nothing more than a veiled attempt to become legitimate in our community."

Scientology is a wide-eyed mixture of theology and science fiction uncorked by Hubbard in the early 1950s. Among his teachings are notions of reincarnation, landing stations on Venus, a 75 million-year-old tyrant named Xenu, and the evils of psychiatry and yawning.

Raper is particularly concerned that Larson is recruiting on the PCC campus for volunteers to fill three Vista positions that will allow HELP to dramatically expand its operating hours.

"They have this federal money," Raper said, "and it troubles me. They should not have this seal of approval."

HELP's Vista slots are administered through the Corporation for National Service. Javier La Fianza, the agency's area manager, said the literacy project's L.A. branch has five Vista volunteers and he's had no complaints about any proselytizing for Scientology.

"If it were to come to our attention they were promoting the church in a religious way," La Fianza said, "we'd pull the grant. Faith-based organizations are not allowed to use Vista and federal resources to promote their faith."

David Touretzky, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University who's been dueling the Scientologists on free-speech issues for years, argues, however, "The cult is taking a more subtle approach with this literacy stuff."

The principles of "study technology" offered at the North Killingsworth office, Touretzky argues, "are loaded with significance in the Scientology religion. . . . Study Tech actually helps lay the groundwork for introducing Scientology into the schools."

For now, Larson admits she has no time to address "judgments based on rumors." While waiting for her Vista reinforcements, she's too busy unlocking the door for prospective tutors and kids who are reeling from a collision with a "misunderstood word."

© 2001 OregonLive.com. All Rights Reserved.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Regarding Steve Duin's column, "Xenu and the evil yawns are nowhere in sight" (May 31), I always think it's a shame when people think it's cute to ridicule the religion or deeply held beliefs of others.

The mocked beliefs or practices seem usually to be those of a minority religious group about which the general public knows little, and so is more susceptible to a bizarre depiction of its beliefs and practices. (We are unlikely to see an article in The Oregonian describing Christianity as a "wide-eyed mixture of . . ..") Use of the word "cult" is usually a signal as to the writer's level of tolerance.

Duin, and his source at Portland Community College, Porter Local News, Raper, are examples that we have some way to go on the tolerance front.

Effective efforts to feed people, teach them to read and the like, should generally be applauded, not attacked, regardless of the person or group performing the efforts.

CLARKE BALCOM Southeast Portland

Regarding the May 31 column by Steve Duin, I am shocked that your paper would print such a thing in this day and age of religious tolerance and anti-bigotry/anti-hate speech.

Duin makes it clear that he has seen that the Hollywood Education and Literacy Project (HELP) run by Hillary Larson is a service provided by her to the community. And indeed there is no "recruitment" into the Church of Scientology.

What I find to be downright insulting and showing a total lack of education is Duin's description of my religion. (His column was) a purposeful and intentional slam on something he has no real information on except rumors and biased judgments, plus name calling.

I have been a Scientologist in this town for 26 years. I have worked at my church for 15 years, ensuring that our church is an asset to this community by doing everything from canned food drives to working on the Steering Committee for the Coalition Against Hate Crimes. Volunteers from my church donate hundreds of hours of work each year. These fine contributions you do not take the time to print.

GWEN BARNARD Director of special affairs
Church of Scientology
Celebrity Centre Portland
Southwest Portland