INSIDE THE CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY;
Milton School Shades Ties to Scientology
Copyright 1998 Boston Herald Inc.
March 2, 1998
By Joseph Mallia
A Church of Scientology school in Milton is enrolling
large numbers of children from middle-class and professional black
families in what critics say is part of the church's nationwide
plan to recruit minorities.
Officials at Delphi Academy do not tell parents that
the school is part of the Church of Scientology, and that they are
trying to recruit blacks for Scientology's costly programs.
Yet they do admit that all staff members are Scientologists
and they use Scientology materials.
A Herald review of the school has found that Delphi
Academy:
Used precisely the same "Study Tech" as
the Boston Church of Scientology on Beacon Street, where the methods
are considered religious scriptures.
Sent up to 10 percent of each child's tuition money
to the Association for Better Living and Education, a Scientology
organization in Los Angeles, according to its federal tax returns.
Got "referral" income of 10 percent to
15 percent of any Scientology course or book bought by a Delphi
Academy parent, according to the school's federal tax returns and
ex-members of the church.
Has used an "E-Meter" - a device like a
lie detector that measures emotional reactions - on Delphi children,
according to a former student, Sabriya Dublin of Jamaica Plain.
The E-Meter - the same device used by the church in counseling -
sends a mild electric current through the child's body, with fluctuations
in a gauge showing emotional reactions, as a child answers questions
while holding a shiny metal tube in each hand. A former Delphi student
from Oregon, however, said the E-Meter was not used at his school.
Created a Delphi Parents Association so parents could
pay for playground repairs and two new computers through fund-raising
events - while Delphi made royalty payments to Scientology's ABLE
organization.
Promoted Scientology outside the school. Delphi's
headmistress, Ellen Garrison, helped establish a Scientology tutoring
program for ninth-grade teachers at the Randolph Public Schools,
said former Scientology church spokeswoman Kit Finn.
And a "Homework Club" sent older Delphi
students to teach Scientology methods at the Tucker Elementary School,
a Milton public school, a Delphi official said.
Attracted so many students in recent years that the
school, in a converted gatehouse off a quiet stretch of Blue Hill
Avenue, had to build two new classrooms. School spokeswoman Joanne
List said most of the new students were black.
Critics of Scientology say the real motive of Delphi
is to increase church membership, and make money by selling high-priced
Scientology courses to parents, according to Priscilla Coates, an
anti-cult activist in Los Angeles.
One parent, Harvard Dental School instructor Dr.
E. Leo Whitworth, had just such an experience with Delphi Academy.
Whitworth said his son, L.V., was taught basic Church
of Scientology methods like Study Technology during the four years
he was enrolled at Delphi Academy.
The dentist said he did not learn that Delphi was
linked to Scientology until after his son was enrolled, and then
they recruited him for a variety of programs at the Church of Scientology
on Beacon Street in Boston.
"I took two courses at the church," Whitworth
said. "It cost in the hundreds. They wanted me as a member.
And they did try to get my wife. She started a course but she didn't
finish," the dentist said.
During a vacation in California, Whitworth visited
the offices of Sterling Management, a for-profit business linked
to the Church of Scientology. There, Scientologists tried to sell
him a dental office management program, Whitworth said.
"They were trying to get me to use their business
techniques," he said, but he didn't like the program and it
was too expensive. "It was too much like car salesman techniques.
It cost a lot - around $ 10,000."
Whitworth, who is also a Northeastern University
trustee, said he knew of "several" non-Scientologist parents
who enrolled their children in Delphi Academy and later became members
of the church.
In retrospect, he said, Delphi Academy appears to
be deceptive.
"I would rather they did say, up front, that
they are part of Scientology. There are certain ways they could
be more open," he said.
He also warned parents who enroll their children
at Delphi to "be aware there are other aspects to it - the
Scientology. " Whitworth's son, now 15, asked to be taken out
of Delphi, the father said. "He didn't want to stay there anymore.
He was just uncomfortable."
Several other black parents, however, said they were
pleased with how well their children were learning at the school.
And Delphi officials say students got high marks on the annual California
Acheivement Tests.
New students to the $ 6,200-a-year school are recruited
for Delphi and its summer camp by word of mouth, and through bulk
mailings that do not mention Scientology. The school first opened
in Belmont in 1980 under the name Apple School.
The 1,000-student network of Delphi academies in
Oregon, Florida, California - and Milton - has recruited unsuspecting
families for many years, Coates said.
But the interest in black citizens is new, because
Scientology has few non-white members, she said. "They are
looking for new niches for people and money," Coates said.
A Herald reporter visited the 104-student Milton
school twice, and found that the majority of its younger students
are black. It enrolls children ages 3-13.
Parents who have enrolled their children at the school
include professionals like Brockton obstetrician Dr. Dawna Jones
and government workers like Barbara Hamilton, youth activities aide
to Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino.
Dr. Jones did not return calls seeking comment, but
Hamilton said her son is doing well at Delphi.
"I would say he's just generally improved,"
including better reading skills, Hamilton said.
Other black, non-Scientologist parents include a
top manager at Lexington-based Stride Rite Corp., an investment
analyst, a nurse, a Massachusetts state trooper, Boston police officers,
computer executives at Digital Equipment Corp. and Lotus Development,
and an MBTA welder, according to Delphi officials.
Several other black parents are medical doctors,
one owns a Roxbury air-conditioning company, one is a Christian
minister, while another is a Catholic religious education director,
Delphi officials said.
"The Scientology thing, that was one thing I
had to clear up. At first I didn't know it was a religious school,
and I wasn't looking for a religious school," said Lee Jensen,
a Massachusetts Water Resources Authority official, who enrolled
her daughter, Nicole, at Delphi. "I told them, 'I need to know
exactly what you're teaching my child, because you have her for
nine hours a day.' "
Not every parent is middle-class, and Delphi gives
no financial aid or scholarships, so some parents just scrape by,
said List. "We have a lot of single mothers who eat peanut
butter sandwiches, and don't drive fancy cars," she said.
The school does not require its students to convert
to Scientology, said former student Sabriya Dublin, who said she
attended the school for eight years.
The founder of the Delphi Academy schools, Alan Larson,
said in an interview from Oregon that they succeed because they
require every child to learn everything - without exception - before
moving on to the next task.
And the Rev. Heber C. Jentzsch, president of the
Church of Scientology International, said Delphi students' Scholastic
Aptitude Tests are "400 points above the national average."
But Dennis Erlich, a former Scientology trainer in
California, said his two daughters had to spend two years in remedial
math and English courses after he transferred them to public school
from a Scientology -run school, where he said instruction was poor.
Another church defector, Robert Vaughn Young, said
Scientology's leaders do not care about traditional education. They
only care about getting people to buy Scientology courses, he said.
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