Convention sur les soucoupes volantes à Hollywood
During those last days I was at Lockheed I thought often of Neptune's cryptic
words: "The road will open, Orfeo; walk it as you will," And later when he said:
"I smile upon you, Orfeo, for your greatly enhanced numbers."
Then his last prophetic words, "Strength and courage will be given to the millions
who will rise and meet the great battles ahead with only a faint hope on their
side for victory."
It was true, I thought; the road was beginning to open. New understandings and
an ever increasing awareness were coming to me as time passed. Also, as more
and more people learned of my experiences many began to phone, write, or visit
at our home, wishing to know more about the space visitors. We continued the
regular meetings at the Los Felix Club House, but as the crowds increased, the
Club House was know longer large enough to accommodate everyone. It was then
that Max Miller, President of the Flying Saucers International, an organizational
devoted to the study of flying saucer phenomena, and Jerome Criswell, the well-known
columnist and television Man of Prophecy, suggested that we rent the music room
in the famous old Hollywood Hotel for our weekly meetings. Thus we had been
meeting their for several months every Sunday or afternoon. Opinions were exchanged
and lectures on saucer phenomena were presented to enthusiastic audiences.
Paradoxically enough, as the general public's interest in the saucers increased,
the press, radio, television and other news media suddenly and inexplicably
dropped flying saucers from the news. Even the second-rate science fiction writers
banished the word from their lexicon of horrors. Thus the public was left to
grope for itself. And surprisingly enough the way was thus cleared for those
individuals who had experienced actual contacts with the extraterrestrials to
work freely without obstruction of erroneous "slanting" by official reporting.
Gerald Heard, Frank Scully and Donald Keyhoe were familiar names among persons
interested in the saucers. These men, along with fate magazine and Ray Palmer,
had been making every effort to awaken the public to the awesome fact that our
world might well be under observation by beings from another planet. But now
several unknown men were speaking up and declaring that they had actually had
contact with the saucers and space visitors. Among those were George Van Tassel,
Truman Betherum, George Adamski, George Williamson and Alfred Bailey. Those
few newspapers which ran stories on these men did so with the tongue-in-cheek
slant.
Sunday afternoons I was speaking to groups at the Hollywood Hotel. I knew that
my audience waited patiently for clear, concise, accounts of my experiences
with extraterrestrials. But they were often disappointed. Frequently when I
stepped upon the platform to speak a strange transition came over me. It was
as though another personality overshadowed me; someone who knew all the answers.
But the answers were not in my familiar English or Italian, but in an unfamiliar,
half-remembered tongue. I would struggle to translate the ideas into English
and end up by failing to be clear and direct. Thus with the understanding of
the universe almost within my grasp, I was often helpless to reveal any part
of it.
Nevertheless less, even with my many failures to be concise and direct, the
meetings gained momentum with increasing numbers in the audience.
It was then that Max Miller conceived the idea of a Flying Saucer Convention.
It sounded like a tremendous idea to me. With the help of several other persons
we enthusiastically began to formulate plans. It was decide that we should hold
the convention at the Hollywood Hotel where there was plenty of room in the
lobby to accommodate a large audience.
Various exhibits of saucer photographs, space ship models, books, magazines
and pamphlets on the saucers were set up around the lobby and many circulars
were mailed out announcing the event. Also invitations to speak at the convention
were mailed to all persons who had been most helpful in revealing and disseminating
information about the saucers and extraterrestrials.
But response to the invitations was very poor. Less than a week before the convention
was to open it appeared that none of the speakers that we had counted upon would
be present. Max was greatly worried. "It looks like we're sunk, Orfeo," he exclaimed
dejectedly. "This thing is going to be the prize flop of any and all conventions."
But as I looked at him, the conviction was suddenly strongly in my mind that
everything would come off well. I replied: "Don't worry, Max. It's going to
come off much better than we ever dreamed it would."
My prediction proved entirely correct. Everyone of the speakers whom we had
invited showed up for the convention, and some others besides. Among the invited
speakers were Frank scully, Arthur Luis Joquel II, George Van Tassel, George
Adamski, Truman Betherum, John Otto from Chicago, Harding Walsh and a mysterious
Dr. "X" who spoke long and eloquently on the saucers. He left immediately after
speaking and no one ever knew who he really was or where he came from, although
many inquired; for he had some startling things to say.
Almost to a man the speakers said they had received an irresistible urge to
attend on Friday (two days before the opening of the convention). Could it be
that the space visitors had been at work in their subtle way?
At any rate the convention was a tremendous success. For three days and nights
the crowds overflowed the Hollywood Hotel out onto the lawns and adjacent Hollywood
Boulevard. In fact the response was so tremendous that on the second morning
I requested Max to stop all publicity on the convention. Some of the larger
Los Angeles newspapers covered the convention. But all news stories were of
the tongue-in-cheek type. A few of the smaller, more rabid papers tried to "expose"
it as nothing but a promotional "money-making" scheme.
The convention was a hectic one. I was busy night and day and carried on practically
without sleep. When I wasn't speaking, people were surrounding me and bombarding
me with endless questions. Many were speaking at the weekly meetings and the
three nerve-wracking days of the convention, I never once lost my temper. A
power beyond my own consciousness or control carried me through. In trying moments
of heckling or confusion an upsurgence of peace and calm would pick me up and
give me strength equal to the occasion.
However, on the last night of the convention, the power that was sustaining
me suddenly failed and I lost my temper for the first time. A lone women who
had been especially persistent in seeking me out and cornering me to revile
me and hurl quotes of scripture at me was responsible for the outburst. She
knew I was wrong and she was right. And she had books, diagrams and bible verses
to prove it. When at last I literally blew my top she joyfully picked up her
data and departed shouting that my temper proved I was an agent of the devil.
Within an hour I lost my temper several times again.
The most trying experience of the convention occurred when a large group of
materialists were literally "giving me the works" in a stubborn, derisive effort
to "get to the bottom of my story" and ferret out obvious flaws from a "from
a common-sense viewpoint.
Sincere, open-minded, honest persons who are willing to investigate the event
of space visitors never resort to such sneering interrogations. They ask honest,
sincere questions on points they fully do not understand. But they have an honest
desire to know, not to discredit, to sneer and to disparage.
This particular group had their minds set upon "exposing" me. Their methods,
although entirely on a mental plane, would make the medieval inquisitions seem
innocuous. Like little demons they parroted elementary physics and could see
practical, intelligent action only behind the Iron Curtain. They knew that I
was a cheap publicity seeker who did not hesitate to lie about space visitors
or anything else to further my own ends. No words of explanation could possibly
prove anything to them they did not wish to believe.
I had undergone just as bitter and insinuating criticism before, but I was exceptionally
tired that last night. I felt almost though I were melting away before venomous
onslaught, collapsing at the seams, as it were, and suddenly I felt very, very
human and down to earth. I was on the verge of exploding in anger again when
a kind of veil was drawn over my conscious mind. The gesticulating figures before
me faded to babbling, inconsequential shadows.
As they continued their violent attacks, my thoughts drifted calmly back to
a scene of a few weeks before. I was attending a convention of science fiction
writers at the Hotel Commodore on Los Angeles. Since my experiences with the
extraterrestrials, I have become interested in the field of science-fiction,
for I have found that many scientific truths are adumbrated, or delineated,
in science-fiction before ever they become realties of our own world.
Many well known writers in the science-fiction field were present. When I came
in they were holding open discussions of trends in the science-fiction, the
various new markets, etc.
One of the audience asked: "Why have all science fiction writers suddenly stopped
writing or even mentioning flying saucers?"
A speaker replied authoritatively that the subject had become taboo with them.
Another member of the audience demanded to know why this was so since the saucers
had actually given such an impetus to the science-fiction field.
The speaker had no adequate answer for that one, but lamely explained that the
saucers were "old stuff" now.
I was becoming impatient with the proceedings and was on the point of leaving
when the guest speaker of the evening was announced. He was Mr. Gerald Heard,
the well-known science-fiction writer and author of IS ANOTHER WORLD WATCHING?
Mr. heard spoke with great eloquence and a deep, penetrating philosophy. He
berated the writers for turning out material of an inferior grade and warned
that the public would not continue to "stomach it", much less to buy it. Many
of them squirmed uncomfortably in their seats.
As he neared the end of his stimulating and thought-provoking talk, his eyes
met mine where I was seated near the back with two companions. I noticed that
he seemed tired and shaken.
As our eyes met and held a kind of mutual understanding passed between us in
ever widening circles. Dimly, I could hear him terminating his speech with these
words: There is one in this room tonight--I do not know he is, but he's going
to upset the whole apple cart." He paused, then his voice reverberated as he
added: "He is the Awakener--he has not yet appeared, but he well may be here
in this room tonight. Thank you."
And the mystic wheels between us set in motion by the controlled magnetic vortices
slowly receded and vanished.
I looked about the room at the audience, but they were no longer listening to
him. Some were whispering and laughing among themselves.
As I looked about that busy room I thought that it was small wonder that the
concoctors of science-fiction horror diets had declared the saucers "taboo".
Far too much beautiful reality was on the side of the saucers. Harmony and beauty
are much too tame for the horror boys. They have joined forces with the materialists,
subversives and egotists to fight the "flying saucer sensationalists" down at
every turn.
But the joke is on them, for reality slipped quietly past them and established
new frontiers of its own. The science-fictioneers were induced by subtle forces
to ignore flying saucers as were many other materialistic sources of information.
During the welcome lull the actual flying saucer phenomena and the extra-terrestrials
were left to the inexperienced but honest handling of rank amateurs. At first
these men were inept and inarticulate, but they are finding their voices and
their numbers rapidly increasing. The space visitors had actually only cleared
the atmosphere for them. Had the professional spinners of horror-fiction stuck
to the theme of flying saucers, the true contacts could never have been able
to perform their missions.