1.
Jack Parsons John Whiteside Parsons was born on 2 October
1914 in Los Angeles, California. His mother and father separated
whilst he was quite young and Parsons said later that this left him with
"...a hatred of authority and a spirit of revolution", as well as an
Oedipal attachment to his mother. He felt withdrawn and isolated as a
child, and was bullied by other children. This gave him, he thought,
"...the requisite contempt for the crowd and for the group mores
Parsons went on to develop a career as a brilliant scientist in the
fields of explosives and rocket-fuel technology. His achievements as a
scientist were such that the Americans named a lunar crater after him
when they came to claim that territory for their own. Appropriately
enough, Crater Parsons is on the dark side of the moon.
Parsons made contact with the O.T.O and the A.'.A.'. in December
1938, whilst visiting Agape Lodge of the O.T.O. in California.
(Staley).
Parsons belief and commitment to Crowley and his teachings is not in
doubt.
2. L. (Lafayette) Ron Hubbard - During the 1920s, L. Ron Hubbard
traveled twice to the Far East to visit his parents during his father's
posting to the United States Navy base on Guam.
Although he claimed to have graduated in civil engineering from
George Washington University as a nuclear physicist, university
records show that he attended for only two years, was on academic
probation, failed in physics, and dropped out in 1931. It is also claimed
that he obtained his Ph.D from Sequoia University in California, which
was later exposed as a mail-order diploma mill. [2] [3]
Hubbard next pursued writing, publishing many stories and novellas in
pulp magazines during the 1930s.[4] He became a well-known author
in the science fiction and fantasy genres, and also published westerns
and adventure stories. Critics often cite "Final Blackout", set in a warravaged
future Europe, and "Fear", a psychological horror story, as the
best examples of Hubbard's pulp fiction. His 1938 manuscript