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:This article is about a secret society. For the pirate flag see Jolly Roger; for the international poison symbol see skull and crossbones.
Skull and Bones (also known as "Chapter 322" and "Brotherhood of Death") is a secret society at Yale University. It is said to be the first such Yale society, established by William Huntington Russell and Alphonso Taft in December, 1832. By the late 19th century, the most prestigious of these societies were Skull and Bones, Scroll and Key, and Wolf's Head. Others included Book and Snake and Berzelius . Today, Scroll and Key and Skull and Bones are primary rivals.
Existing members choose fifteen new Skull and Bones members during their junior year. Criticism of Skull and Bones members has centered upon concentration of wealth, elitism, opium dealing, subversion of the educational process at Yale, war profiteering, and especially nuclear war profiteering. In the exposé "Fleshing out Skull and Bones" (BooksEnthsiast.com), author Kris Millegan and others offer evidence that Skull and Bones exerts massive and undue influence upon the foreign policy of the United States.
Many of the details of Skull and Bones membership, initiation and practices are subject to speculation, for the reason that they are kept closely secret by almost all members (often called Bonesmen). However, the Society published membership lists until 1971, and the following listing is based upon those lists at the Yale Library.
F. Trubee Davison (1918) was Director of Personnel at the CIA in the early years. Some of the other "Bonesmen" connected with the intelligence community are:
- Hugh Wilson (1909)
- Yale's "unofficial" Secretary of War, Robert D. French (1910)
- Archibald MacLeish (1915)
- Charles R. Walker (1916)
- Hugh Cunningham (1934)
- Richard A. Moore (1936)
- Reuben Holden (1940)
- James Buckley (1944)
- George Herbert Walker Bush (1948), 41st President of the United States (1989–1993)
- Sloane Coffin, Jr. (1949), "Tapped" by George H. W. Bush
- V. Van Dine (1949)
- William F. Buckley, Jr.William Frank Buckley Jr. born November 24, 1925), an American author and journalist, founded National Review a prominent conservative political magazine, in 1955, and the television show Firing Line in 1966. Childhood Buckley was born in New York City to (1950), "Tapped" by Sloane Coffin, Jr.
- Dino Pionzio (1950), CIA Deputy Chief of Station during Allende overthrowThe Chilean coup d'etat of 11 September 1973 was a watershed event in the history of Chile. Historians and partisans alike have wrangled over its implications ever since. In Chile's 1970 presidential election, in accordance with the constitution, Congress
- WilliamWilliam Putnam Bundy ( September 24, 1917- October 6, 2000) was a member of the CIA and advisor to President Lyndon B. After leaving government service he became a historian. Raised in Boston, Massachusetts he came from a family long involved in politics. and McGeorge BundyMcGeorge "Mac" Bundy ( March 30, 1919 September 16, 1996) was Special Assistant for National Security Affairs to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson from 1961- 1966, and then headed the Ford Foundation from 1966- 1979. He was one of Kennedy's wise men, a noted
- Senator David Boren (1963)
Some other prominent Bonesmen include:
- William Howard TaftWilliam Howard Taft Order 27th President Term of Office March 4, 1909 March 4, 1913 Predecessor Theodore Roosevelt Successor Woodrow Wilson Date of Birth September 15, 1857 Place of Birth Cincinnati, Ohio Date of Death March 8, 1930 Place of Death Washing (1878), 27th President of the United States
- Gifford Pinchot (1889), President Theodore Roosevelt's chief forester
- Pierre Jay (1892), first chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Harry Payne Whitney (1894), husband of Gertrude Vanderbilt, investment banker
- Frederick E. Weyerhaeuser (1896)
- Thomas Cochran (1904), Morgan partner
- Harold Stanley (1908), founder of Morgan Stanley, investment banker
- Alfred Cowles (1913), Cowles Communication
- John Thomas Daniels (1914), founder of Archer Daniels Midland
- Artemus Gates (1918), President of New York Trust Company, Union Pacific, TIME, Boeing Company
- Henry Luce (1920), Time-Life
- Henry P. Davison (1920), senior partner, Morgan Guaranty Trust
- Russell W. Davenport (1923), editor Fortune Magazine, created Fortune 500 list
- George Herbert Walker, Jr. (1927), financier and co-founder of the NY Mets
- John Heinz II (1931), father of Teresa Heinz Kerry's first husband John Heinz
- Amory Howe Bradford (1934), husband of Carol Warburg Rothschild and general manager for the New York Times
- Senator Jonathan Bingham (1936)
- Potter Stewart (1936), Supreme Court Justice
- Dean Witter, Jr.(1944), investment banker
- Senator John Chafee (1947)
- William Henry Draper III (1950), the Defense Department, UN and Import-Export Bank
- Evan G. Galbraith (1950), Ambassador to France and Managing Director of Morgan Stanley
- Richard Gow (1955), president of Zapata Oil
- C. E. Lord (1949), Comptroller of the Currency
- Winston Lord (1959), Chairman of Council on Foreign Relations, Ambassador to China and assistant Secretary of State in the Clinton administration.
- Senator John Kerry (1966)
- George Walker Bush (1968), 43rd President of the United States
According to Ralph Bunch, emeritus professor of the Department of Political Science at Portland State University, "The real threats to the American democracy...come from the misuse of political and economic power by an undemocratic wealthy elitist clique of materialist ideologues in secret cabals at the highest levels of American society."
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