Sequoia University

Sequoia University

Sequoia University was an unaccredited higher education institution in Los Angeles, California which acquired a reputation as a prolific "degree mill" selling degree certificates. Although it was eventually shut down by a court order, it is most notable today as the institution from which L. Ron Hubbard obtained a "Doctorate of Philosophy" in the 1950s.

Ownership and operations

The "university" was said to have originally been known as the College of Drugless Healing, which was traced by the United States government to a residential dwelling on Melrose Avenue. It operated strictly through a post office box and delivered mail-order doctorates without classes or exams. [Paulette Cooper, " [http://www.clambake.org/archive/books/tsos/sos-20.html The Scandal of Scientology] ", chapter 20. Tower Publications, Inc, 1971]

The dwelling in question was that of "Dr" Joseph Hough, a chiropodist who had established a profitable business selling bogus medical degrees to applicants. Hough's own doctorate was said to have been bogus, reportedly having been purchased from the unaccredited Free University of Mexico (Universidad de Mexicana) in 1938. He was investigated in 1957 by a California State Assembly investigation into degree mills operating in the state, but took the Fifth Amendment 22 times in the course of his testimony and refused to divulge information about Sequoia's activities. [" [http://www.lermanet.com/scientologynews/la-mirror-diploma-102357.htm Diploma Witness Won’t Talk] ", "Los Angeles Mirror News", October 23, 1957]

Sequoia was eventually shut down by the courts in 1984 during a legal crackdown on unaccredited institutions operating in California. At the time it was still offering degrees in osteopathic medicine, religious studies, hydrotherapy and physical sciences, and had outlets in both California and Oklahoma. A Los Angeles judge issued a permanent injunction ordering it to cease operating "until it complies with the state education laws." [John B. Bear and Mariah P. Bear, "Bears' Guide to Earning College Degrees Nontraditionally", p.331 Ten Speed Press, 2003.] However, its many years of operations had enabled a large number of people to fraudulently use their Sequoia "degrees" to obtain work for which they were otherwise unqualified. Even the Federal government was affected — a problem cited by the United States House of Representatives in hearings held in 1986, in which Sequoia was mentioned as one of a number of degree mills from which Federal employees had bought bogus credentials. ["Fraudulent Credentials: Federal Employees", House Select Committee on Aging. Subcommittee on Health and Long-Term Care, 1986]

equoia and L. Ron Hubbard

In the early 1950s, L. Ron Hubbard established himself in London at the head of the newly-founded Hubbard Association of Scientologists International. Hubbard appears to have already had a relationship with Hough, as Scientologists found themselves being given Ph.Ds from the "university."

On February 27, 1953, Hubbard cabled his associate Richard de Mille (a relative of the famous filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille) to instruct him to purchase a Ph.D. in Hubbard's name: "PLEASE INFORM DR HOUGH PHD VERY ACCEPTABLE. PRIVATELY TO YOU. FOR GOSH SAKES EXPEDITE. WORK HERE UTTERLY DEPENDENT ON IT. CABLE REPLY. RON" Shortly afterwards, Hubbard received a "Doctorate of Philosophy" from Sequoia, along with a "D. Scn" (Doctorate of Scientology) which he appears to have bestowed upon himself. [Russell Miller, "Bare-Faced Messiah", chapter 12. Michael Joseph Ltd, 1987]

The degree subsequently became a key part of his self-promotional efforts. Hubbard began referring to himself as "L. Ron Hubbard, Ph.D., C.E." [Hubbard, "Professional Auditor's Bulletin No. 87", June 5, 1956] (the C.E. referring to an equally unearned civil engineering qualification supposedly obtained from George Washington University, from which he had dropped out in his second year of studies). He presented it as evidence of his scientific qualifications, calling himself "Doctor Hubbard":

cquote|For hundreds of years physical scientists have been seeking to apply the exact knowledge they had gained of the physical universe to Man and his problems.

Newton, Sir James Jeans, Einstein, have all sought to find the exact laws of human behavior in order to help Mankind.

Developed by L. Ron Hubbard, C.E., Ph.D., a nuclear physicist, Scientology has demonstrably achieved this long-sought goal. Doctor Hubbard, educated in advanced physics and higher mathematics and also a student of Sigmund Freud and others, began his present researches thirty years ago at George Washington University. [Hubbard, [http://www.carolineletkeman.org/refund/docs/hco-info-ltr-1961-04-14-pe-handout.html "PE Handout"] , HCO Information Letter of 14 April 1961. Reprinted in the "Organization Executive Course" volume 6.]

Hubbard also envisaged using Sequoia to bestow a variety of "degrees" on students of his proposed "Freudian Foundation of America", a scheme which he put forward in April 1953 but which apparently never got off the ground. The students would have received certificates from Sequoia accrediting them as "Bachelor of Scientology," "Doctor of Scientology," "Freudian Psycho-analyst," and "Doctor of Divinity," among other qualifications. [Jon Atack, " [http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/atack/bs3-5.htm A Piece of Blue Sky] ", part 3 chapter 5. Lyle Stuart, 1990] He may have abandoned the idea for legal reasons; in May 1953, he told Scientologists in an "Associate Newsletter":

Public attention was drawn to Hubbard's "degree" by the Anderson Report of 1965, published in Victoria, Australia. The board of enquiry that produced the report was suspicious of the degree's validity and, in its words,

The question of the degree also attracted comment in the British press, forcing Hubbard onto the defensive. He issued a policy letter in February 1966 defending his degree: "I was a Ph.D., Sequoia's ["sic"] University and therefore a perfectly valid doctor under the laws of the State of California". (The latter claim was not true, as Sequoia had never been accredited by the State, nor had it any chance of being — as Christopher Evans notes, it "used to be well known to quacks on the West Coast as a degree mill where 'qualifications' could be bought for suitable sums." [Christopher Evans, "Cults of Unreason", p. 21. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1973] ) Hubbard announced that henceforth the title of "Doctor" would no longer be used within Scientology, as "the name has been disgraced" due to "the abuses and murders carried out under the title of 'doctor'" (a reference to his hatred of psychiatry). [Hubbard, "Doctor Title Abolished", HCO Policy Letter of 14 February 1966. Reprinted in "Organization Executive Course" volume 2]

A few weeks later, Hubbard publicly disclaimed his Sequoia degree in an advertisement in the personal column of "The Times":

However, even after this disavowal Hubbard continued to cite the Sequoia-issued Ph.D. In an interview with Rhodesian television in April 1966, he told the interviewer: "Actually I have a degree in philosophy, a Doctor of Philosophy". [Hubbard, in "Introduction to Scientology" (interview of April 1966); quoted in "Expand!" magazine, issue 21, 1973, p. 11.] Similarly, biographies published by the Church of Scientology also continued to mention the "doctorate"; the 1973 book "Mission into Time", for instance, claims that

equoia and Kelly Segraves

Sequoia University is also part of a controversy surrounding the credentials of Dr. Kelly Segraves, director of the Creation Science Research Center, a creationist organization that believes giant-sized humans once roamed the earth and coexisted with dinosaurs. Segraves claims to have received his Masters degree from Sequoia University in 1972, although researcher Bette Chambers made some inquiries and could find no accredited university by that name. [" [http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/credentials.html Some Questionable Creationist Credentials] ", talkorigins.org, May 31, 2002. Retrieved January 7, 2007.]

References

See also


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