Untitled Document
Bohemian Grove
Incomplete membership list
continually updated
Abel, Brent M. |
Isle of Aves |
President California Bar Association 1974-1975, director U.S. Trust
of Delaware Inc. in 1986. |
Adams, Robert M. Jr. |
Sundodgers |
Robert McCormick Adams Jr. (born 1926) is a U.S. anthropologist.
He served as the provost of the University of Chicago from 1982 and
1984. He served as the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution from
1984. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Adams, William H. |
Meyerling |
Director at XTO Energy, Inc. since 2001. Adams has been a director of XTO Energy since 2001. He is Executive Regional President of Texas Bank in Fort Worth, Texas. Prior to that, he was employed by Frost Bank from 1995 to 2001, where he most recently served as President of Frost Bank-South Arlington. He also served as Senior Vice President and Group Leader of Commercial/Energy Lending at Frost Bank. |
Adolf, Gustaf |
|
He was the Crown Prince of Sweden at that time (House of Bernadotte) and the eldest son of Gustav VI Adolf of Sweden and his first wife Princess Margaret of Connaught. His mother was a granddaughter of Queen Victoria since she was the daughter of HRH Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and his wife, Princess Margaret Luise of Prussia. On October 19, 1932 he married Princess Sibylla of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, daughter of Carl Eduard, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Princess Sibylla was a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria, a granddaughter of HRH Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany. In 1947, Prince Gustaf Adolf was killed in an airplane accident at the Copenhagen Airport in Copenhagen, Denmark. One of his sons is Carl XVI Gustaf , today's King of Sweden. In 1929, Time Magazine named him as a honorary member of the Bohemian Grove. |
Akers, John Fellows |
|
Yale Delta Kappa Epsilon, joined IBM in 1960 as a sales trainee
in San Francisco following active duty as a Navy carrier pilot, president
IBM Data Processing Division in 1974 (then IBM's largest domestic
marketing unit), vice president IBM in 1976, senior vice president
IBM in 1982, president IBM in 1983, chairman and CEO of IBM 1986-1993,
director New York Times Company since 1985, co-chairman Business Roundtable
1986-1990, director Pepsi since 1991, director Lehman Brothers, director
Hallmark, director WR Grace & Co., member Council on Foreign Relations. |
Albert, Eddie |
Owl's Nest |
American actor born in 1908. Had his career from the
1940s until the 1980s. |
Alexander, Lamar |
|
Became governor of Tennessee in 1978, founder Corporate Child Care
Services in 1987, became president University of Tennessee in 1988,
became Secretary of Education in 1991, country and classical pianist
who has played on the Grand Ole Opry and the Billy Graham Crusade,
director Empower America, director Lockheed Martin, founder Republican
Neighborhood Meeting. Lives in Nashville, Tennessee. Reading his official
bio he comes across as a decent, outgoing guy, but his involvement
in scandals tells us something else. |
Alioto, Joseph |
|
Mayor of San Francisco from 1968 to 1976 and president of the San Francisco National Bank. He was a friend of 1001 Club member Cyril Magnin., who was a well-known Jewish San Franciscan, president of Joseph Magnin Co., and president of the port of San Francisco. Some people have accused Cyril Magnin and Joseph Alioto of having been members of the mafia and the circle that killed JFK. |
Allen, Howard Pfeiffer |
Lost Angels |
Studied economics at Pomona College and law at Stanford University,
joined Southern California Edison Co. 1954, founding board member
of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee and instrumental in
bringing the 1984 Olympics to the city, president and chairman of
the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, trustee of the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art and an officer in the National Conference of
Christians and Jews, president of Southern California Edison and SCEcorp
(renamed Edison International in 1997) 1980-1984, chairman and chief
executive officer of Southern California Edison and Edison International
1984-1990, remained on the board until 1997. |
Anderson, Martin |
Sempervirens |
Dartmouth College, 1957; M.S. in engineering and business administration,
Thayer School of Engineering and Tuck School of Business Administration,
1958; Ph.D. in industrial management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
1962. Assistant to the dean, Thayer School of Engineering, 1959; research
fellow, Joint Center for Urban Studies, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and Harvard University, 1961–62; assistant professor
of finance, Graduate School of Business, Columbia University, 1962–65,
associate professor, 1965–68; special assistant to the president
of the United States, 1969–70; special consultant to the president
of the United States for systems analysis, 1970–71; assistant
to the president of the United States for policy development, 1981–82;
member, Commission on Critical Choices for Americans, 1973–75;
member, Defense Manpower Commission, 1975–76; public interest
director, Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco, 1972–79;
member, Committee on the Present Danger, 1977–91; member, President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, 1982–85; member, President's
Economic Policy Advisory Board, 1982–89; member, President's
General Advisory Committee on Arms Control, 1987–93; member,
National Commission on the Cost of Higher Education, 1997–98;
trustee, Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation, 1985–90; member,
California Governor's Council of Economic Advisers, 1993–98;
chairman, Congressional Policy Advisory Board, 1998–01; member,
Defense Policy Board, 2001; senior fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford
University, 1971–; named Keith and Jan Hurlbut Senior Fellow,
Hoover Institution, 1998. Director of research, Nixon presidential
campaign, 1968; senior policy adviser, Reagan presidential campaigns,
1976, 1980; policy adviser, Wilson presidential campaign, 1995, Dole
presidential campaign, 1996, Bush presidential campaign, 2000; delegate,
Republican National Conventions, 1992, 1996, 2000; served as 2d Lt.,
Army Security Agency, 1958–59. Columnist, Scripps Howard News
Service, 1993–94; TV commentator, Nightly Business Report, 1997–.
Author of many politics-oriented books. |
Anderson, Robert A. |
|
President, chairman, and CEO of Rockwell during the development of the Space Shuttle. Director of Aftermarket Technology Corporation. Member of the Board of Visitors of UCLA Anderson School of Management. Member of the Atlantic Institute for International Affairs, the Bohemian Grove, and the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Anderson, Ross F. |
|
Unknown. |
Andreas, Dwayne Orville |
|
Chairman and chief executive officer Archer-Daniels-Midland (HQ:
Decatur, Illinois), particularly close to vice-president Hubert Humphrey,
charged with illegally contributing $100,000 to Humphrey's 1968 campaign
for President (acquitted), donates generously to many Democratic and
Republican presidential candidates, has often been photographed with
world leaders (including Mikhail Gorbachev), staunch supporter of
federal tax subsidies for corn-based ethanol (gasoline additive),
Federal prosecutors are investigating allegations that the company
has conspired to fix commodity prices (2005), frequently attends Bilderberg,
member Council on Foreign Relations. |
Armacost, Samuel Haydan |
Mandalay |
B.A. in Economics from Denison University, M.B.A. from Stanford
University, advisor to the State Department's Office of Monetary Affairs
1971-1972, director of Exponent Inc., Del Monte Foods Company, Callaway
Golf Company, director and later chairman SRI International, president,
director and chief executive officer Bank of America 1981-1986, managing
director Merrill Lynch Capital Markets 1987-1990, managing director
Weiss, Peck & Greer L.L.C. 1990-1998, director ChevronTexaco since
2001. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Arscott, David Gilford |
Aviary |
College of Wooster with a B.A. in arts, Managing General Partner
of Arscott, Norton & Associates 1978-1988, director Lam Research
Corporation 1980-1982 and chairman 1982-1984, president Compass Technology
Partners since 1988. |
Ashley, Holt |
Sundodgers |
Stanford Professor Emeritus of Aeronautics and Astronautics, received
the Daniel Guggenheim Medal, received an award from the American Institute
of Aeronautics and Astronautics. |
Atkins, Victor K. |
Stowaway |
Member Executive Committee of Caltech University, associate of the
RAND Corporation and makes donations between 5.000 and 10.000 dollars
a year, Emeritus trustee and donator to Claremont Graduate University
with annual sums between 10.000 and 25.000 dollars, Atkins Company,
he or his son (Jr.?) contributes more than 25.000 dollars a year to
the Harvard Center (together with Mellon, Lehman en Loeb foundation). |
Atwater, H. Brewster, Jr. |
Mandalay |
Chairman and CEO General Mills, a leading global food manufacturer
1981-1995. Despite a worldwide recession, Atwater led General Mills
through 10 consecutive years of market value growth. He re-focused
General Mills on its core products and services, and in so doing,
enabled the company to profitably expand on a global level. Atwater
is a director at General Electric (at least in 1996). |
Augustine, Norman R. |
|
A central figure in the American aerospace industry who has played
an important role in shaping United States space policy. Augustine
served as Under Secretary of the Army, Assistant Secretary of the
Army for Research and Development, and Assistant Director of Defense
Research and Engineering in the Office of the Secretary of Defense,
before becoming chairman and chief executive officer of the Martin
Marietta Corporation in the 1980s. He became chairman of the Defense
Policy Advisory Committee on Trade in 1987, which provides confidential
guidance to the secretary of defense on arms export policies. In 1990
he was appointed head of an Advisory Committee for the Bush (senior)
administration which produced the Report of the Advisory Committee
On the Future of the U.S. Space Program - a pivotal study in charting
the course of the space program in the first half of the 1990s. In
March 1995, he and Daniel Tellep, the CEO of Lockheed, agreed to merge,
forming Lockheed Martin Corp. Augustine went on to become the chairman
and chief executive officer of Lockheed Martin Corporation. At least
in 1997 he gave a speech in the Bohemian Grove. Augustine is also
a president of the Boy Scouts of America and chairman of the board
of the American Red Cross. Has spoken at the Cosmos Club and is a
member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Avery, Ray Stanton |
Lost Angels |
Founder Dennison Company, became eventually Avery Dennison, considered
the founder of the pressure sensitive label industry. Member of the Bohemian Grove. |
Ayers, Thomas G. |
|
Chairman Commonwealth Edison Company of Chicago, chairman Chicago
Chamber of Commerce 1966-1967, life trustee Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
lefe member The Commercial Club of Chicago. Went in 1981. |
Bailey, Ralph E. |
Mandalay |
President of Consol (Conoco's coal subsidiary). Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of Conoco Inc (merged with Phillips). Vice-Chairman
of Du Pont. Director and non-executive Chairman of Clean Diesel Technologies,
Inc. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Fuel Tech. Director of
J.P. Morgan & Company and Morgan Guaranty Trust Company. |
Bajpai, Shankar |
|
Former Indian ambassador to the U.S. when he visited in 1989. Wrote
articles for Foreign Affairs. Member Pacific Council on International
Policy (based in LA, western partner of the CFR). |
Baker, James A. III |
Woof |
Graduated from Princeton University in 1952. Attended Cap & Gown events, according to Kay Griggs, just as Allen Dulles, William Colby, Frank Carlucci, James Baker, George Griggs, and George P. Shultz (August 3, 2005, Rense). Houston lawyer. Friend of the Bushes. Undersecretary of commerce 1975–1976. Deputy manager of the 1976 and 1980 Ford and Bush presidential campaigns. Joined the Reagan administration in 1981. White House chief of staff 1981–1985. Treasury secretary 1985–1988. Attended the Fourth World Wilderness Conference in 1987, together with David Rockefeller, Edmund de Rothschild, and Maurice Strong. Planned the 1988 campaign that won George H.W. Bush the presidency. Secretary of State 1989–1992. Member National Security Planning Group. Played a prominent role in the Gulf crisis and the subsequent search for a Middle East peace settlement. Again White House Chief of Staff 1992-1993. United Nations special envoy to try and broker a peace settlement for the disputed territory of Western Sahara 1997. As an adviser to George W. Bush in the November 2000 presidential elections, he was influential in helping Bush secure the presidency by maneuvering the disputed vote count in Florida to the Republican-leaning Supreme Court. Baker was the manager of the foreign debts of occupied Iraq since 2003. Senior counselor for the Carlyle Group and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Also a member of the Atlantic Council of the United States, the Bohemian Grove, and the Pilgrims Society. Honorary trustee of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies. |
Baker, Norman, Jr. |
Owl's Nest |
President We-Go Rotary Club 1975-1976;"Rotary is a worldwide
organization of business and professional leaders that provides humanitarian
service, encourages high ethical standards in all vocations, and helps
build goodwill and peace in the world. Approximately 1.2 million Rotarians
belong to more than 31,000 Rotary clubs located in 167 countries." |
Bancroft, James R. |
|
Chairman UNC (United Nuclear Corporation). |
Bancroft, Paul III |
Hill Billies |
Independent venture capitalist and a consultant, director of UNOVA
since 1998, president, chief executive officer and director of Bessemer
Securities Corporation 1976-1988. |
Bannan, Bernard J. |
Pink Onion |
President and CEO of Binley Inc., a private real estate investment company. Director of MacNeal Schwendler Corp., a publicly traded software company. Director of Cable Design Technologies Corporation. |
Barry, John M. |
|
Writer & scholar. |
Baxter, Alfred |
Silverado Squatters |
Gave up some time to support the work the Bohemian Club research
of Peter Martin Phillips. |
Boucher, Richard A. |
|
He entered the Foreign Service in 1977. After studying Chinese, he served from 1979 to 1980 at the U.S. Consulate General in Guangzhou. In Washington he then worked in the State Department's Economic Bureau and on the China Desk, and returned to China with his wife from 1984 to 1986 as Deputy Principal Officer at the U.S. Consulate General in Shanghai. Upon his return to Washington in July 1986, he served as a Senior Watch Officer in the State Department's Operations Center. From August 1987 to March 1989, he worked as Deputy Director of the Office of European Security and Political Affairs. He started as Deputy Press Spokesman for the State Department under Secretary Baker in March 1989 and became Spokesman under Secretary Eagleburger in August 1992. Secretary Christopher asked him to continue as Spokesman until June 1993. United States Ambassador to Cyprus from 1993 to 1996. United States Consul General in Hong Kong 1996-1999. Spoke to the Asia Society on March 24, 1998. US Senior Official for APEC, the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, since July 1999. Spoke to the London Pilgrims Society on November 28, 2002. Has repeatedly condemned Israel's practice of killing terrorists and instead called for negotiations to settle the Palestinian-Israeli dispute. Supported the 2003 war against Iraq because it wasn't cooperating with the sanctions. |
Bechtel, Stephen D., Sr. |
Mandalay |
His father died under strange circumstances in Moscow. The Bechtel Company is a privately owned (giant) construction firm
operating worldwide and headquartered in San Francisco and is a mainstay
of the nuclear industry.
Bechtel designed the military space shuttle facility at Vandenburg
Air Force Base. It is known for decades for its many boondoggles all over the world. Bechtel had been rescued in its time of need by J. Henry Schroder and Avery Rockefeller. On June 3, 1954, the New York Times announced that Stephen Bechtel, chmn of Bechtel Corp. had become partner of J.P. Morgan Co. In 1955, Fortune reported that as Under Secretary of State, C. Douglas Dillon had arranged important contracts for Bechtel with the Saudi Arabian government, culminating in the present $135 billion Jubail operation. In January, 1975, Fortune pointed out that Bechtel had never been in the red for a single year, because "Its engineering projects are invariably financed by its clients." These clients are usually governments, a lesson which may have been learned from the Rothschilds. Bechtel funds the Heritage Foundation, which made large contributions to the neocon agenda since the 1980's. Heritage is headed by Le Cercle member Edwin J. Feulner, who is another member of the Bohemian Grove. Bechtel is a leading player in water system privatization, ranking just behind the big three -- Suez Lyonnaise des Eaux, Vivendi Universal and RWE/ Thames Water. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Bechtel, Stephen D., Jr. |
Mandalay |
Chairman of the Bechtel Corporation. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Bechtel, Riley P. |
Mandalay |
Personal fortune of 3 billion. University of Calif Davis, Bachelor
of Arts / Science Stanford University, Masters of Business Administration. Great-granddad
Warren started construction colossus Bechtel Group building railroads
in 1890s Oklahoma Territory. Later: Hoover Dam, Oakland Bay Bridge.
Dad Stephen Jr. took reins in 1960, built nuclear plants, Alaska pipeline,
Chunnel. Riley is now learning the ropes. Member of the Trilateral Commission. Member of the International Council of J.P. Morgan Chase, together with Kissinger, Andre Desmarais, Lee Kuan Yew (Bohemian Grove), and others. Its headed by George Shultz, an employee of the Bechtels. |
Beckett, John R. |
Sempervirens |
In 1960, John R. Beckett joined Transamerica as president. Over
the next 20 years, he led Transamerica's transition from a holding
company into a major diversified operating company. At one time, Transamerica
owned a motion picture distributor, an airline, a car rental company
and a machinery manufacturer, in addition to its insurance and financial
services businesses. |
Bedford, Peter B. |
Meyerling |
Member Hoover Institution Board of Overseers, CEO and chairman of
the board of Bedford Property Investors, Inc. Member of the Bohemian
Grove Annals Committee in 1997. |
Bendetsen, Karl R. |
|
Member of an advisory group to Ronald Reagan that received security
clearances to learn about new weapons developments such as nuclear
x-ray lasers. Started in 1982. Went in 1980. |
Bennett, Robert B. |
Sunshiners |
Unknown. |
Bergen, Edgar |
Dragon |
He was at San Clemente for the climax of the Nixon-Brezhnev meetings
in 1973, where he mingled with, among others, such Republican and
Democratic fat cats as Leonard K. Firestone, David Packard, and Edwin
Pauley. |
Berry, John W. |
Totem In |
Unknown. |
Bethards, Jack M. |
|
Chairman of the Annals Committee of the Bohemian Grove in 1997. |
Biaggini, B.F. |
|
Southern Pacific Chairman. Tenneco Director. |
Bierce, Ambrose G. |
|
American satirist, and critic, short story writer, editor and journalist. Born in Ohio in 1842. Military career from 1860 to 1866 and moved to San Francisco. He remained there for many years, eventually becoming famous as a contributor and/or editor for a number of local newspapers and periodicals, including The San Francisco News Letter, The Argonaut, and The Wasp. Bierce lived and wrote in England from 1872 to 1875. Returning to the United States, he again took up residence in San Francisco. In 1887, he became one of the first regular columnists and editorialists to be employed on William Randolph Hearst's newspaper, the San Francisco Examiner, eventually becoming one of the most prominent and influential among the writers and journalists of the West Coast. In December 1899, he moved to Washington, DC, but continued his association with the Hearst newspapers until 1906. Because of his penchant for biting social criticism and satire, Bierce's long newspaper career was often steeped in controversy. On several occasions his columns stirred up a storm of hostile reaction which created difficulties for Hearst. One of the most notable of these incidents occurred following the assassination of President William McKinley when Hearst's political opponents turned a satirical poem Bierce had written in 1900 into a cause célèbre. Bierce meant his poem, written on the occasion of the assassination of Governor-elect William Goebel of Kentucky, to express a national mood of dismay and fear, but after McKinley was shot in 1901 it seemed to foreshadow the crime:
The bullet that pierced Goebel's breast
Can not be found in all the West;
Good reason, it is speeding here
To stretch McKinley on his bier.
Hearst was accused by rival newspapers — and by then Secretary of State Elihu Root (Pilgrims Society; co-founder Carnegie Endowment and its first president; main founder CFR) — of having called for McKinley's assassination. Despite a national uproar that ended his ambitions for the presidency (and even his membership in the Bohemian Club), Hearst neither revealed Bierce as the author of the poem, nor fired him.
His short stories are considered among the best of the 19th century. In October 1913, the septuagenarian Bierce departed Washington on a tour to revisit his old Civil War battlefields. By December, he had proceeded on through Louisiana and Texas, crossing by way of El Paso into Mexico, which was then in the throes of revolution. In Ciudad Juárez, he joined the army of Pancho Villa as an observer, in which role he participated in the battle of Tierra Blanca. He is known to have accompanied Villa's army as far as the city of Chihuahua, Chihuahua. After a last letter to a close friend, sent from that city on December 26, 1913, he vanished without a trace, becoming one of the most famous disappearances in American literary history. Subsequent investigations to ascertain his fate were fruitless and, despite many decades of speculation, his disappearance remains a mystery. |
Boccardi, Louis |
|
President and Chief Executive Officer of The Associated Press from 1985 until his retirement in 2003. He was a member of the Pulitzer Prize Board from 1994 to 2003 and Chairman of the Pulitzer Prize Board in 2002. Mr. Boccardi has been a member of the Board of Visitors, the Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University since 1989. He has been a director since July 2003. Director of Gannett Co. In 1989, he held a "Lakeside Talk" about kidnapped
reporter Terry Anderson. He referred to his audience
as men of "power and rank" and "gave them more details
than he said he was willing to give his readers." |
Boeschenstein, William W. |
Piedmont |
After his graduation from Yale University in 1950, William W. Boeschenstein joined Owens-Corning Fiberglas where he held a number of sales, management and marketing positions. In 1964, Mr. Boeschenstein became Vice President-Marketing and served in that position until his election to Executive Vice President in 1967. He was named President and Chief Operating Officer in 1971. In 1973, he was named Chief Executive Officer and in 1981 he became Chairman of the Board. Mr. Boeschenstein's commitment to research and development is exemplified by the company's doubling the size of its research center in Granville, Ohio. The facility -one of the industry's most sophisticated -now has approximately 1,000 scientists, engineers and technicians working to expand Owens-Corning's present capabilities, as well as to generate new product and technological opportunities for both near-and long-term. During his 12 years of leadership as CEO at Owens-Corning, the company has grown from a building materials and fiberglass manufacturer with sales of approximately $500 million to a strong multi-national corporation with sales in excess of $3.5 billion. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations in the 1970's. |
Bolick, Clint |
|
Vice-president of the Institute for Justice. Gave a speech at the
Bohemian Grove in 2003. |
Bonney, J. Dennis |
Tunerville |
Bonney joined Chevron in 1960. After a variety of assignments in the corporation's Eastern Hemisphere operations, he was named assistant manager of the foreign operations staff in San Francisco in 1967 and manager in 1971. He was elected a corporate vice president in 1972. In 1974, Bonney became Chevron's vice president for corporate planning, a function he directed until 1981 while also supervising Chevron's Indonesian exploration and production activities. He assumed responsibility for European refining and marketing in 1981. He was named vice president for worldwide logistics and trading early in 1986. Member of Chevron's board of directors since January 1986 and a vice chairman since January 1987 to December 1995.
Supervised the five years of negotiations leading to Chevron's 1993 signing of a joint venture with Kazakhstan to develop the Tengiz Field, which created the largest Western business venture in the former Soviet Union. Chairman of the U.S. National Committee for Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (US-PECC) and is a director of the American Petroleum Institute. He is a trustee and vice chairman of the World Affairs Council of Northern California, a trustee of the Asian Art Museum Foundation, a member of the National Council of the World Wildlife Fund, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He is a director of the San Francisco Opera Association and of the University of California's International House. He is also a past president of the Commonwealth Club of California. |
Bosque, Ed |
|
Wrote about the Bohemian Grove and was a member. |
Borman, Frank |
Hill Billies |
Fighter pilot, operational pilot and instructor, experimental test
pilot and an assistant professor of Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics
at West Point, NASA instructor at the Aerospace Research Pilot School
at Edwards AFB, member of the Apollo 204 Fire Investigation Board
1967, Commander Apollo 8 Mission 1968, later he became the Apollo
Program Resident Manager, heading the team that re-engineered the
Apollo spacecraft, field director of NASA's Space Station Task Force,
special advisor to and finally chairman of Eastern Airlines 1969-1986,
director of the Home Depot, National Geographic, Outboard Marine Corporation,
Auto Finance Group, Thermo Instrument Systems and American Superconductor,
chairman and CEO of Patlex Corporation. |
Boskin, Michael J. |
Hill Billies |
Senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, professor of economics
at Stanford University, associate of the National Bureau of Economic
Research, former chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers
(1989-1993). Boskin is a Research Associate, National Bureau of Economic Research and serves on the Commerce Department's Advisory Committee on the National Income and Product Accounts. He is Chief Executive Officer and President of Boskin & Co., an economic consulting company. Director Oracle Corporation, Shinsei Bank, and Vodaphone Group |
Boswell, James G. II |
|
General Electric Director. Chairman and CEO of J.G. Boswell Co. |
Bowes, William K . |
Hill Billies |
A founder of Amgen (with Bill Gates), Cetus, Raychem, Dymo Industries, and U.S. Venture Partners. Has been an active and prominent venture capital investor in the Bay Area for nearly 35 years. Bill sourced and led the Firm's investments in Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Applied Biosystems, Devices for Vascular Intervention, Glycomed, Sun Microsystems and Ventritex, among others. He currently serves on the Board of Directors of Xoma Corporation. Before founding USVP, Bill was a Senior Vice President and Director of Blyth Eastman Dillon & Co. (formerly Blyth & Co., Inc.), where he worked from 1953 until 1978, and was a consultant to Blyth Eastman Paine Webber from 1978 to 1980. Activity in the nonprofit arena include: Board of Directors of the UCSF Foundation and Chairman of Mission Bay Capital Campaign; Advisory Council of Stanford University's Bio-X Initiative; Executive Committee of San Francisco Conservatory of Music; Board Chairman of The Exploratorium (a leading interactive science museum); Board Member of the Asian Art Museum and Hoover Institution. Bill has a B.A. in Economics from Stanford, an MBA from Harvard and served in the U.S. Army in the South Pacific and Japan during and after World War II. |
Brady, Nicholas Frederick |
Mandalay |
Brady was born April 11, 1930 in New York City. He was educated
at Yale University (B.A., 1952) and Harvard University (M.B.A.,
1954). He joined Dillon, Read & Company, Inc. in New York in
1954, rising to Chairman of the Board. He has been a Director of
the NCR Corporation, the MITRE Corporation, and the H.J. Heinz Company,
among others. He has also served as a trustee of Rockefeller University
and a member of the Board of the Economic Club of New York. He is a former
trustee of the Boys' Club of Newark. Brady served in the United States Senate
in 1982. During that time he was a member of the Armed Services
Committee and the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee.
In 1984 President Reagan appointed Brady to be Chairman of the President's
Commission on Executive, Legislative and Judicial Salaries. He has
also served on the President's Commission on Strategic Forces (1983),
the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America (1983), the
Commission on Security and Economic Assistance (1983), and the Blue
Ribbon Commission on Defense Management (1985). Brady
chaired the Presidential Task Force on Market Mechanisms (1987).
He became the 68th Secretary of the Treasury in 1988 and was also in charge of the secret service in this way during the White House male prostitution scandal in 1989. He is said to have been the president of Bohemian Grove camp Mandalay. Member of the Knights of
Malta. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
|
Brand, Sir Hubert |
|
Rear-Admiral in the British navy, extra equerry to the King (1922), principal naval aide to the King (1931-1932), and a visitor of the Bohemian Grove in the early part of the 20th century (at least in 1929). He was a member of a very powerful family (undoubtedly some Pilgrims Society members), which was close to the British royal family. One of his brothers, the third Viscount Hampden, was a lord-in-waiting to the King (1924-1936). Another brother, Robert H. Brand (since 1946 Baron Brand), was regarded as the economist of the Round Table Group or Milner's Kindergarten and became a partner and managing director of Lazard Brothers, a director of Lloyd's Bank, a director of The Times, a member of the Imperial Munitions Board of Canada (1915-1918), deputy chairman of the British Mission in Washington (1917-1918), financial adviser to Lord Robert Cecil, chairman of the Supreme Economic Council at the Versailles Peace Talks (1919), vice-president of the Brussels Conference (1920), financial representative for South Africa at the Genoa Conference (1922), head of the British Food Mission to Washington (1941-1944), chairman of the British Supply Council in North America (1942-1945, 1946), and His Majesty's Treasury Representative in Washington (1944-1946). In this last capacity he had much to do with negotiating the enormous American loan to Britain for postwar reconstruction. Robert H. Brand also married Nancy Astor's sister and was an intimate friend to Pilgrims Society and Round Table member Philip Kerr. Their father was a Governor of New South Wales and one of the original instigators of the federation of the Australian Colonies in 1900. A nephew was a Governor-General of Canada. |
Brandi, Frederic H. |
Mandalay |
Father was a top coal executive in the German Steel Trust. Moved
from Germany to the United States in 1926. CEO of Dillon, Read &
Co. in the 1950s and 1960s, up until 1971. He was replaced by Nicholas
Brady of the Bohemian Grove Mandalay Camp at that time. Brandi was
a member of the Pilgrims Society. |
Brandi, James H. |
Mandalay |
Son of Frederic Brandi. Invited to the Bohemian Grove in 1970 by his father.
Trustee Berkshire School, managing director of UBS Warburg LLC of
New York, director ThyssenKrupp Budd (North-American subsidiary of
ThyssenKrupp Automotive AG of Germany. The country his father came
from.) |
Bren, Donald |
|
Chairman of The Irvine Company, has been deeply involved in California real estate as a master planner, master builder and a long-term investor. Promoted Schwarzenegger for president.
In 2004, BusinessWeek magazine ranked Donald Bren 15th on its annual list of "The 50 Most Generous Philanthropists" in the country. |
Broder, David S. |
|
David S. Broder, a national political correspondent reporting on the political scene for The Washington Post, writes a twice-weekly column that covers an even broader aspect of American political life. The column, syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group, is carried by more than 300 newspapers across the globe. Broder was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in May 1973 for distinguished commentary. He has been named "Best Newspaper Political Reporter" by Washington Journalism Review. A survey for Washingtonian magazine found that Broder was rated "Washington's most highly regarded columnist" by both editorial-page editors and members of Congress, leading 16 others in ratings for "overall integrity, factual accuracy and insight." Author and syndicated columnist. Before joining the Post in 1966, Broder covered national politics for The New York Times (1965-66), The Washington Star (1960-65) and Congressional Quarterly (1955-60). He has covered every national campaign and convention since 1960, traveling up to 100,000 miles a year to interview voters and report on the candidates. Broder is a regular commentator on CNN's Inside Politics, and makes regular appearances on NBC's Meet the Press and Washington Week. In 1999, he held a speech at the Bohemian Grove titled "Direct Democracy--Curse or Blessing". |
Brooks, David |
|
Has been a senior editor at The Weekly Standard, a contributing editor at Newsweek and the Atlantic Monthly, and he is currently a commentator on "The Newshour with Jim Lehrer." He is the author of "Bobos In Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There" and “On Paradise Drive : How We Live Now (And Always Have) in the Future Tense,” both published by Simon & Schuster. New York columnist. Lakeside talk; ‘The Landscape of American
Politics.’ |
Brown, Harold |
Lost Angels |
Ph.D. in physics from Columbia University, research scientist at
the Radiation Laboratory at the University of California, joined the
staff of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory at Livermore in 1952 and
became director in 1960, during the 1950s he served as a member of
or consultant to several federal scientific bodies and as senior science
adviser at the 1958-1959 Conference on the Discontinuance of Nuclear
Tests, worked under Robert McNamara as director of defense research
and engineering 1961-1965, secretary of the Air Force 1965-1969, president
California Institute of Technology 1969-1977, Secretary of Defense
under President Carter, pushed stealth technology, the advanced MX
nuclear ICBM missiles and strengtened ties with NATO, counselor at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies, professor at John
Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, chairman
John Hopkins Foreign Policy Institute, member of the Council on Foreign
Relations, the Trilateral Commission and a trustee of the RAND Corporation,
Caltech JPL Committee, longtime director of Cummins Engine Company
(helped establish the Health Effects Institute), Presidential Medal
of Freedom 1981, director of the Philip Morris Companies since 1983,
director of Warburg Pincus & Co. since 1990, board member of Evergreen
Holdings Inc., bord member of Mattel. |
Brown, Charles L. |
|
Following his graduation, Mr. Brown was a member of the Navy until 1946 and served aboard the USS Mississippi in the WWII Pacific theatre. After his discharge, he worked for AT&T for over 40 years and served as CEO and Chairman from 1979-1986. In 1982, he successfully divested AT&T's local phone business, the largest corporate reorganization in U.S. history, to settle Federal antitrust litigation. In the process, he created business entities that produced average annual returns to investors of 25%, reinvigorated AT&T's research and development efforts and initiated AT&T global partnerships in Europe and Asia. During the 1980s, he was on the steering committee of the University of Virginia's first comprehensive fund raising campaign and completed a term on the Board of Visitors, 1986-1990. In the 1993-2000 Capital Campaign, Mr. Brown served as vice chairman of the executive committee and as chair of the National Leadership Gifts Council, a coast-to-coast network of campaign volunteers, who helped to organize regional campaigns in some thirty cities around the country. Mr. Brown also served on the boards of Chemical Bank, Delta Airlines, DuPont, General Foods and Metropolitan Life. Other nonprofit leadership included Colonial Williamsburg, the Public Broadcasting System, the Institute for Advanced Studies, Boy Scouts of America, YMCA and the National Parks Foundation. Went to the Bohemian Grove in 1979. After his death his wife donated $5 Million to the University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied Science. |
Brown, Edmund G. |
|
Few figures have played a more important role in the political and governmental history of modern California than that of Edmund G. "Pat" Brown. Elected district attorney of San Francisco in 1943, Brown began a productive and distinguished career in local law enforcement. He instituted a systematic reform program, cracked down on commercial vice, and reshaped much of the city's legal system. Brown's reputation soared along with his reforms. He won election to the office of state attorney general in 1950, adopted a tough approach to his responsibilities, and worked to root out official corruption and organized crime. By 1958 he had become the most popular figure in the California Democratic organization. Elected the same year to the governor's office on a platform strongly committed to humane and responsive government, Brown set in a motion a chain of political and social reforms. |
Bryan, J. Stewart III |
Owlers |
Is the 4th of a family dynasty of newspaper publishers, taking over
the publishing of the Richmond Times-Dispatch and The News Leader
from his father, D. Tennant Bryan in 1978. President of the Florida
Press Association (1971-1972), chairman and CEO of Media General,
chairman and President of Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
Foundation, director of the Foundation for American Communications,
director of Mutual Insurance Co. Ltd, director of The Associated Press
(1984-1993), director of the Newspaper Advertising Bureau, (1977-1995),
trustee of the Hoover Institution. |
Bryan, D. Tennant |
Lost Angels |
University of Virginia Raven Society, publisher of Richmond Times-Dispatch
and The News Leader 1944-1978, director Southern Railway Company 1953-1986,
president American Newspaper Publishers Association 1958-1960, member
of an advisory committee for an American exhibit in Moscow in 1959,
director Southern Newspaper Publishers Association 1963-1966 (just
as his father, grandfather and his son would be), director of the
Associated Press 1967-1976, trustee Washington Journalism Center,
Overseer Hoover Institution. |
Buckley, Christopher |
Hill Billies |
Editor of Forbes FYI magazine, speechwriter for George H.W. Bush
when he was vice president, political satirist. |
Buckley, William F., Jr. |
Hill Billies |
Skull & Bones, chairman of the Yale Daily News, CIA agent (supposedly
for only 1 year), editor of The Road to Yenan, a book addressing the
Communist quest for global domination. Author of several books on
communicating, history, political thought, and sailing, founder of
the National Review and long time editor of it, delegate to the United
Nations. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 2003. Member of the Knights of Malta. |
Buffett, Warren |
|
Studied at Wharton School of Finance 1947-1949, University of Nebraska
1950, Columbia University M.S., 1951. After working as an investment
salesman and securities analyst, he was partner (1956-1969) in the
investment firm Buffett Partnership, Ltd. In 1965, he acquired the
textile manufacturer Berkshire Hathaway and became (1970) chairman
and CEO. Through judicious investments and acquisitions of insurance
companies and manufacturing and service firms, Buffett has transformed
Berkshire Hathaway into a large conglomerate; in 1999, its assets
were $124 billion. His investments have also made him one of the wealthiest
people in the world. He has co-authored Warren Buffett Speaks
(with J. C. Lowe, 1997) and Thoughts of Chairman Buffett (with
S. Reynolds, 1998). His father, Howard Homan Buffett,. 1903-1964,
an investment banker, was a U.S. congressman from Nebraska (1943-1949,
1951-1953). Warren Buffett is, just as Rupert Murdoch, acquinted with
the Rothschild family and has been invited to Waddesdon Manor mansion
in England. Member of the Alfalfa Club. |
Burgener, Clair W. |
Ladera |
Republican, who served as member of California state assembly from
1963-1967, delegate to Republican National Convention from California
in 1964, member of California state senate in 1967, U.S. Representative
from California from 1973-1983. |
Burns, Brian P. |
Pelicans |
A nationally regarded business executive, attorney and philanthropist, Brian P. Burns has been a moving force in many financial transactions involving mergers and turnarounds at many companies during his career. He is now chairman and president of BF Enterprises, Inc., based in San Francisco. He is founder and principal benefactor of the John J. Burns Library of Rare Books and Special Collections at Boston College, which was named in honor of his father. In 1990, the Burns Foundation, which Burns chairs, endowed the library with the visiting scholar in Irish Studies chair. Among his other activities, Burns is a director of the American Ireland Fund, and founding chairman of the board of the Palm Beach Pops Symphony Orchestra. |
Bush, George H.W. |
Hill Billies / Mandalay |
Has a father who played a leading role in arming the Nazis. Skull
& Bones. Salesman of Dresser Industries who sold important technology
to the USSR. U.S. ambassador of the United Nations. U.S. ambassador
to China. Chairman of the Republican National Committee during Watergate.
Has openly supported the USSR, Communist China, Andropov & Mugabe.
CIA director. US vice-president under Reagan. US president. Member
of the Council on Foreign Relations, Bohemian Grove camp Mandalay and Hill Billies, the Atlantic Council of the United States, National Security Planning Group, and the Trilateral Commission.
Knight Grand Cross of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath. Director of the Carlyle
Group. Close ties to the Bin Ladens and the Saudie Kingdom. George H.W. Bush and ex-MI6 and Le Cercle member Nicholas Elliott stood in contact with each other in 1980. Bush is not a confirmed member however. |
Bush, George W. |
Hill Billies |
Yale Skull & Bones. Involved in a couple of failed oil companies.
Texas governor. US president. Close to the Saudies. |
Bush, John Ellis "Jeb" |
|
Forty-third Governor of Florida. He is a prominent member of the Bush family, the younger brother of President George W. Bush. |
Butler, Nicholas Murray |
|
Butler earned an A.B (1882), M.A. (1883) and Ph.D. (1884), all in philosophy, at Columbia, specializing in the writings of the German philosopher Immanuel Kant. He studied for a year at the universities of Berlin and Paris. Became a staff member of the Department of Philosophy at Columbia College, later known as Columbia University. In 1882, Nicholas Murray Butler was appointed by Columbia president Henry Barnard to offer Saturday lectures for teachers. The turnout was enormous. Member New Jersey Board of Education from 1887 to 1895. Delegate to the Republican Convention 1888-1936. In 1891 Butler founded the Educational Review, a journal of educational philosophies and developments. He served as its editor until 1921. Organized the New York College for the Training of Teachers in 1892, affiliated with Columbia. Chairman the Paterson school 1892-1893. In these roles he led efforts to remove state political interference from local New Jersey school systems. In New York City, he did the same, spurring the creation of a citywide school board that emphasized professionalism and policy over political spoils (1895–1897). When New York City's consolidation was complete, New York State sought a similar reform with Butler's advice, completed in 1904. Participated in the formation of the College Entrance Examination Board in 1900. Had become a close friend of Pilgrims Society member Elihu Root by this time. President of Columbia University 1901-1945. Professor Carroll Quigley wrote in 'Tragedy and Hope': "J.P. Morgan and his associates were the most significant figures in policy making at Harvard, Columbia and Yale while the Whitneys and Prudential Insurance Company dominated Princeton. The chief officials of these universities were beholden to these financial powers and usually owed their jobs to them... Morgan himself helped make Nicholas Murray Butler president of Columbia." Robert A. McCaughey wrote in 'Stand Columbia: A History of Columbia University in the City of New York, 1754–2004': "A compulsive name-dropper given to self-puffery, Butler was nevertheless an effective administrator [of Columbia], and J.P. Morgan, Andrew Carnegie, and E. H. Harriman sought to hire him to run their enterprises." Butler held the presidency in some of their railroad companies. President of the Germanistic Society of Columbia University in 1905-1906 and a director from 1908-1917. It organized and sponsored lecture series for German scholars in the United States. Travelled to Europe on occasion where he met with Kaiser Wilhelm and Mussolini in his early fascist days. Quote from the 1973 book 'The Glory and the Dream, a Narrative History of America, 1932-1972', by William Manchester, pages 67-68: "Nicholas Murray Butler told his students that totalitarian regimes brought forth "men of far greater intelligence, far stronger character, and far more courage than the system of elections," and if anyone represented the American establishment then it was Dr. Butler, with his 34 honorary degrees, and his thirty year tenure as president of Columbia University." (quoted by Charles Savoie) Supposedly Butler agreed with some of the Nazi racial theories about the superiority of the Teuton race. Another quote attributed to him is: "The history of American education and of our American contributions to philosophical thought cannot be understood or estimated with[out] knowing of the life work of Dr. William Torrey Harris." Harris, a supporter of Emmanuel Kant and Georg Hegel, shaped modern American education to a large degree. He also was highly influential in popularizing Hegel's philosophies in the second half of the 19th century. Established a friendship with Governor Theodore Roosevelt in the early 20th century. President University Settlement Society 1905-1914. Became a trustee of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching in 1905. President American Academy in Rome 1905-1940s. President of the American branch of International Conciliation, an organization founded in 1905 by a Nobel peace laureate, Baron d'Estournelles de Constant (from an "old aristocratic family which traced its genealogy back to the Crusades", whatever that means). Chairman of the Lake Mohonk Conferences on International Arbitration, which met periodically from 1907 to 1912. President American Scandinavian Society 1908-1911. Influential in persuading Andrew Carnegie (a Pilgrims member, Hegelian, and Social Darwinist) to establish the Endowment in 1910 with a gift of $10,000,000 he served as head of the Endowment's section on international education and communication, founded the European branch of the Endowment, with headquarters in Paris, and held the presidency of the parent Endowment from 1925 to 1945. In 1912, Roosevelt ran for the presidency as the candidate of the Progressive Party, which drew most of its strength from Republicans, against the nominees of the constituted party: Taft for the presidency and Butler for the vice-presidency. By splitting the national vote, they permitted the Democrat, Woodrow Wilson, to win the election. President France-America Society 1914-1924. Nicholas Murray Butler, in an address delivered before the Union League of Philadelphia, Nov. 27, 1915: "The peace conference has assembled. It will make the most momentous decisions in history, and upon these decisions will rest the stability of the new world order and the future peace of the world." Both Nicholas Murray Butler and Elihu Root were staunch supporters of the League of Nations that would emerge after WWI. In 1916 Butler failed in his attempt to secure the Republican presidential nomination for Root. President American Hellenic Society 1917-1940s. William Bostock paper (University of Tasmania), 'To the limits of acceptability: political control of higher education' (2002): "On October 8, 1917, the famous historian Charles A. Beard resigned from Columbia University in protest over the dismissal of two colleagues, Professors Cattell and Dana, for having publicly opposed the entry of the United States into World War I. Cattell and Dana urged opposition to the draft, incurring the censure of Columbia President Nicholas Murray Butler and the Columbia Board of Trustees. There had also been a history of conflict over academic leadership and governance between Butler and Cattell, a distinguished psychologist." Michael Parenti, 'Against Empire' (1995), chapter 10: "A leading historian, Charles Beard, was grilled by the Columbia University trustees, who were concerned that his views might "inculcate disrespect for American institutions." In disgust Beard resigned from Columbia, declaring that the trustees and Nicholas Murray Butler sought "to drive out or humiliate or terrorize every man who held progressive, liberal, or unconventional views on political matters." Elihu Root, Nicholas Murray Butler, and Stephen P. Duggan Sr. (CFR director) founded the Institute for International Education in 1919. Failed to secure the Republican presidential nomination in 1920. During the 1920s Butler was a member of the General Committee of the American Society for the Control of Cancer, chaired by Thomas W. Lamont, a Rockefeller banker and Pilgrims Society member. John D. Rockefeller, Sr. once wrote a public letter to Butler explaining why he supported the prohibition movement. According to Richard Koudenhove-Kalergi in his 1958 book 'Eine Idee erobert Europa. Meine Lebenserinnerungen' (translated): "One of my most energetic American friends and patrons was the president of the Columbia University, Nicholas Murray Butler, the president of the Carnegie Endowment at the same time. He wrote the foreword to the American edition of Paneuropa." Kalergi's Paneuropa movement was set up and funded by Max Warburg and Louis Rothschild in 1923. Paul and Felix Warburg were promoting the movement in the United States and Rothschild-ally Leopold S. Amery was a major supporter from the United Kingdom. Stephen P. Duggan, the CFR director and co-founder of the Institute for International Education, became the president of the American Cooperative Committee of the Pan-European Union (he held this position from 1925 to 1940). In 1927 Butler assisted the U.S. State Department in developing the Kellogg-Briand Pact. Failed to secure the Republican presidential nomination in 1928. President of the Pilgrims Society 1928-1946. Visitor of the Bohemian Grove and an honorary member by 1929. Butler gave the core members of the Frankfurt School’s Institute for Social Research a home in exile at Columbia University in 1934. These people were supporters of Georg Hegel, Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, Sigmund Freud, and Max Weber. Among these people was Herbert Marcuse, a Jewish Marxist Hegelian, who became the 'father of the New Left' in the 1960s. President Italy-America Society 1929-1935. Director of the New York Life Insurance Corporation 1929-1939. Nobel Peace Prize 1931. Received a gold medal from the National Institute of Social Sciences at the Hotel Waldorf-Astoria in 1932, together with J.P. Morgan. On November 19, 1937, Butler attended a meeting where Pilgrims Society member Robert Cecil, 1st Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, received a Nobel Prize for his work in establishing the League of Nations. Both Butler and Lord Cecil held speeches about the role the League of Nations should have. Although it is only a rumor, Butler is supposed to have said at this meeting (in private) that communism was a tool of the British financial powers to knock down national governments and to bring about a world government in the future. Chairman Carnegie Corporation of New York 1937-1945. Vice-president International Benjamin Franklin Society in 1939. Governor Pan American Trade Committee in 1939. Governor of the Metropolitan Club, founded by J.P. Morgan in 1891, and which counted among its members two Vanderbilts, three Mellons, five Du Ponts, and six Roosevelts. He was a governor Honorary president American Society of French Legion of Honor from 1944 on. Decorated by China, France, Dominican, Republic, Cuba, Germany, Greece, Yugoslavia, Belgium, Poland, Italy, Romania, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Hungary, Holland, Chile and other countries. Quigley has quoted Butler as saying "The world is divided in to three classes of people: a very small group that makes things happen, a somewhat larger group that watches things happen, and the great multitude which never knows what happened." |
Butler, Richard |
|
Richard Butler, former head of the United Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM) to disarm Iraq is an expert in arms control, international security issues, the United Nations and the Middle East. He served as Australian Ambassador to the United Nations from 1992 to 1997, before serving as the head of UNSCOM from 1997-99. Currently Diplomat in Residence at the Council of Foreign Relations in New York, Richard Butler is an avid author who was granted the Order of Australia in 1988 for services to international peace and disarmament. His new book, "Fatal Choice: Nuclear Weapons and the Illusion of Missile Defense" was published in January 2002. Main Iraq negotiator for disarmament. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1999 titled "Saddam and Me". |
Buttler, Samuel |
|
Olin Chemical. |
Calhoun, Alexander D. |
Last Chance |
Lawyer at Squire, Sanders & Dempsey LLP. Member of the American Bar Association, the State Bar of California, the New York State Bar, the District of Columbia Bar and the American Society of International Law. He has been a lecturer on international business transactions at the University of California Berkeley, Boalt Hall School of Law, an adjunct professor of banking law at the University of San Francisco School of Law and a visiting lecturer at the Beijing Institute of Foreign Trade. Trustee of The Asia Foundation, a director emeritus of the Japan Society of Northern California and a commissioner of the Asian Art Commission, San Francisco. Recently, Mr. Calhoun has been involved in structuring constitutional convention and election-related arrangements in Afghanistan. He provides general corporate counsel to a nonprofit organization working to advance the mutual interests of the United States and the Asia Pacific region. This organization contracted with the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAM) and the Afghan constitutional secretariat to support the process for Afghanistan’s Constitutional Loya Jirga (grand council), which recently adopted Afghanistan’s first constitution, and is currently supporting the election process under that constitution. |
Califano, Joseph A. |
|
Founding chairman and president of the Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University. Secretary of Health, Education,
and Welfare. Director Ditchley Foundation. Legal council of the Democratic
National Convention. Gave a speech in 1991: 'America's Health Revolution
-- Who Lives, WhoDies, Who Pays'. |
Call, Richard W. |
Lost Angels |
The only Richard W. Call I see sits on the Board of Trustees of
Santa Rosa Junior College (expiration date is 2008). This is located
in California, not far from the Bohemian Grove. |
Callaway, Howard H. |
Pelicans |
President Richard Nixon appointed Howard H. "Bo" Callaway
as Secretary of the Army in 1973, Callaway continued in that position
into the Ford administration. Callaway resigned from his post in June
1975 to become chairman of President Ford's newly-formed campaign
organization, the President Ford Committee (PFC). Callaway headed
the PFC for nine months, overseeing the recruitment of personnel,
the development of its organizational structure, and, in conjunction
with the White House, the implementation of political strategies.
In March 1976, Democratic Senator Floyd Haskell advanced charges that
Callaway, while serving as Secretary of the Army, had furthered his
family's interests in a Colorado ski resort by persuading the Forest
Service and the Civil Aeronautics Board to make rulings favorable
to the resort. Callaway asked President Ford to relieve him of his
duties pending the resolution of these charges. With Ford in a tough
fight for the Republican nomination, Callaway soon resigned as PFC
chairman. Member of the Council for National Policy (1998). |
Carey, C. W. |
Tunerville |
Unknown. |
Carter, Jimmy |
|
Thirty-Ninth President of the United States
1977-1981. |
Casey, Albert V. |
Lost Angels |
Harvard University, president of Times Mirror Co., publisher of
The Los Angeles Times, CEO American Airlines 1974-1985, director of
American Airlines, president and CEO Resolution Trust Corporation,
Distinguished Executive at the Woodrow Wilson International Center
for Scholars, U.S. Postmaster General. |
Casey, William J. |
Mandalay |
Chairman of the Security and Exchange Commission under Nixon, head
of the Export-Import bank under Ford (1974-1975), Reagan campaign
manager and CIA Director under Reagan, Bechtel consultant,
outside legal counsel
to Wackenhut, Knight
of Malta, member Council on Foreign Relations, member Atlantic Council of the United States, died of a brain tumor
2 days before he could testify about his role in the Iran/Contra affair.
According to "Watergate" journalist Carl Bernstein, Casey
gave Pope John Paul II unprecedented access to CIA intelligence including
spy satellites and agents. |
Chadbourne, William |
Mandalay |
Stayed at Mandalay together with John Francis Neylan. They were
coordinating the visit of Alexander Kerensky to the Bohemian Club,
who was lecturing throughout the United States at that time. |
Chain, John |
|
A General and commander of the Strategic Air Command, who was lobbying
for the B2-Spirit stealth bomber in 1989. |
Chambers, Frank G. |
Sempervirens |
One of the most successful venture capital investor in the Silicon
Valley. Chambers raised $5.5 million in 1959; his Continental Capital
Corporation is believed to be the first Small Business Investment
Company (SBIC) in Northern California. |
Chambers, Robert L. |
Midway |
Director Allegiant Bancorp Inc. since 2000. Chambers has been President of Huntleigh Securities Corp., a securities brokerage company, since September 2000. Prior to that time, he was Chief Executive Officer of K.W. Chambers & Co., a regional, full-service broker/dealer, for more than five years. |
Charles, Allan E. |
Dog House |
Unknown. |
Cheney, Richard 'Dick' B. |
|
Dropped out of Yale and wasn't motivated in studying at all. Refocusing on academics, Cheney first matriculated to Casper Community College in 1963 and thereafter to the University of Wyoming where he began earning straight A's. He received his bachelor's degree in 1965 and master's degree in political science in 1966 both from the University of Wyoming. Some time later, Cheney was selected for a one-year fellowship in the office of Representative William Steiger, a Republican congressman from Wisconsin. Dick Cheney's public service career began under the Nixon administration in 1969. He served in a number of positions at the Cost of Living Council, at the United States Office of Economic Opportunity (as a special assistant to Donald Rumsfeld beginning in the spring of 1969), and within the White House. Under President Gerald Ford, Cheney became Assistant to the President and the youngest White House Chief of Staff in history (1975-1977). Chairman of the Republican Policy Committee from 1981 to 1987. In 1986, after President Reagan vetoed a bill to impose economic sanctions against South Africa for its official policy of apartheid, Cheney was one of 83 Representatives who voted against overriding the veto. Cheney served as the Secretary of Defense from 1989 to 1993 under President George H. W. Bush. He directed Operation Just Cause in Panama and Operation Desert Storm in the Middle East. Director Council on Foreign Relations 1987-1989 & 1993-1995.
Member of
the Trilateral Commission. Cheney joined the American Enterprise Institute after leaving office in 1993. From 1995 until 2000, he served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Halliburton, a Fortune 500 company and market leader in the energy sector. He also sat on the Board of Directors of Procter & Gamble, Union Pacific, and EDS. In 1997, he, along with Donald Rumsfeld and others, founded the "Project for the New American Century," a think tank whose self-stated goal is to "promote American global leadership". U.S. vice-president 2000-2008. Held a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1991 called "Major DefenseProblems
of the 21st Century". Regent of the Corporate Management Board of the Smithsonian Institution. |
Choper, Jesse H. |
|
Law clerk to Chief Justice Earl Warren. |
Clark, David A. |
Fore Peak |
Unknown. |
Clark, James W. |
Land of Happiness |
Unknown. |
Clark, Richard Ward |
Aviary |
Slowly worked himself up in General Mills and McKesson, vice- president
of Finances and CFO of the Provigo Corporation, has produced a few
low-circulation albums and has authored a book. |
Clark, William Patrick |
Isle of Aves |
Stanford University and Loyola Law School, United States Secretary
of Interior, National Security Advisor, deputy secretary of state,
justice of the California Supreme Court, justice of the California
Court of Appeal, and judge of the Superior, chairman of the Task Group
on Nuclear Weapons Program Management, presidential emissary to the
chairmen of the Navajo and Hopi Indian tribes, member of the Commission
on Defense Management (headed by David Packard), as a member of the
Defense Department's Commission on Integrated Long-Term Strategy,
trustee Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Library, chief executive
officer Clark Company, senior counsel to the law firm of Clark, Cali
and Negranti. |
Clausen, Alden W. |
Hill Billies |
Chairman and CEO BankAmerica Corporation, President World Bank 1981-1986,
trustee Asia Foundation, and the A.W. Clausen Center for World Business is
named after him. |
Clay, Lucius D. |
|
Held many army administrative posts and became (1944) deputy director of the office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. Clay was (1945–47) deputy chief of the U.S. military government in Germany and in 1947 became commander of U.S. troops in Europe. He directed operations in the Berlin blockade as U.S. military governor (1947–49). Clay retired from the army as a full general in May, 1949, to enter private business. After the closing of the borders between East and West Berlin by the Communists, he served (Sept., 1961–May, 1962) as President Kennedy's personal representative in Berlin with the rank of ambassador. He wrote Decision in Germany (1950). Went to the Bohemian Grove in the 1960s. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Cleave, Peter Van |
|
President of the Northwestern Alumni Association from 1980 to 1982, Mr. Van Cleave also sat on the board of the John Evans Club for six years. His firm, Peter Van Cleave & Associates, helped families set up charitable trusts to honor deceased relatives. He also volunteered extensively with people with learning disabilities at the Roseland Training Center on Chicago’s South Side. |
Clemm, Michael von |
|
President of Templeton College, Oxford, who gave a speech in the
Bohemian Grove in 1997. Von Clemm was an American, born on Long Island, educated
at Exeter and Harvard. He and his wife left the U.S. to pursue postgraduate
studies in anthropology at Oxford and, later, to spend two years with
a Tanganyikan tribe. He flirted with notions of journalism and the
World Bank, where he thought that his anthropological expertise might
be of use --"Giving aid to societies without knowing how the
societies work would be like pouring money down the drain," he
said -- but saved himself much frustration by making finance his principal
career instead. He joined the London office of Citibank where he invented
several financial instruments, helping to found the "Eurodollar"
market and to establish London as the world's leading financial center. Member of the White's Club. |
Clinton, William Jefferson |
|
Rhodes scholar; Bohemian Grove 1991 (no regular); Bilderberg 1991;
United States president 1992-2000; member of the Trilateral Commission;
member of the Council on Foreign Relations; went to Davos World Economic
Forum. |
Clinton, J. Hart |
Cliff Dwellers |
Publisher of San Mateo Times. Antitrust attorney with the San Francisco firm Morrison & Foerster. |
Coelho, Tony |
|
Chairman of the House Democratic Campaign Committee before he visited
the Bohemian Grove in 1989. |
Cole, Jerry C. |
|
Member of the Bohemian Grove Annals Committee in 1997. |
Coleman , Lewis W. |
Isle of Aves |
Stanford University, 13 years with Wells Fargo and Company and ending
as chairman, chairman of Banc of America Securities LLC, and Chief
Financial Officer, head of the World Banking Group and head of Capital
Markets at BankAmerica, director Northrop Grunman, director Chiron
Corporation, a biotechnology company, president of the Gordon E. and
Betty I. Moore Foundation (San Francisco) 2000-2004, now a trustee
of that foundation, overseer of the Hoover Institution, member of
the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Collier, Harry |
Stowaway |
He was a co-captain of the Stowaway camp. Graduated Oxford University 1963 (Modern History). Worked in technical and scientific publishing 1964-71 (McGraw-Hill, Butterworth Scientific, Pergamon Press, Institution of Electrical Engineers). Worked for ISI (Philadelphia) as Head of European Operations 1971-79, based for four years in France and four years in England. Joined Learned Information in Oxford in 1979 as a Director responsible for publishing, newsletters and projects. In December 1987 he formed his own company, Infonortics Ltd to specialise in newsletters, conferences, studies, seminars and projects in the area of electronic information. Harry Collier was Chairman of EUSIDIC, the European Association of Information Services, 1983–84, and again in 1985–86. From January 1988 until December 1991 he was Executive Director of EUSIDIC, and for eight years a Council member of INTUG, the International Telecommunication Users Group. In 1992 he was one of the founders of the Association of Global Strategic Information (AGSI) and played a major organisational part in that association. Harry Collier is a frequent speaker at meetings throughout Europe and North America. He was founder editor and chief writer for the industry monthly newsletter Monitor from its first issue in 1981 until December 1993; he is author of a book 'Strategies in the Electronic Information Industry', and his latest book (1998) is 'The Electronic Publishing Maze: Strategies in the Electronic Publishing Industry'. In May 1998 he received the OSS 'Golden Candle' Award for his services to the information community. Harry Collier speaks English and French, with some Italian and German. Hobbies include food, wine, playing the violin, and collecting recordings of violinists. |
Colmery, Harry W. |
Piedmont |
National commander of The American Legion.
Author of the initial draft of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, also known as the GI Bill of Rights. |
Conger, Harry M. |
Isle of Aves |
Chairman Western Business Roundtable 1985, chairman and CEO Homestake
Mining Company (gold mines in North America, South America and Australia.
Merged with Barrick Gold Corporation in 2001), chairman American Mining
Congress, chairman World Gold Council, director Pacific Gas and Electric
Company, trustee Caltech, fellow California Council on Science and
Technology. |
Coolbrith, Ina |
|
Became California's poet laureate in 1918 and was the first woman in any state to have been appointed to that position. Bohemian Grovers Jack London and Mark Twain were among here admirers. She was a Librarian at the Bohemian Club and edited Daniel O'Connell's poet "Songs
of Bohemia". She was born in the 1841. |
Cook, Sam B. |
Last Chance |
From a ground floor office at First National Bank of St. Louis headquarters in Clayton, Sam Bryan Cook has operational authority over a $4 billion banking empire that extends into almost every part of Missouri. Cook, 46, last year was named president and chief operating officer of Central Bancompany Inc., the 13-bank holding company headed by his father, Sam B. Cook. The move was viewed by many in the industry as an indication that Sam Cook, 75, would soon hand the reins of the family-controlled firm over to his only son, the only family member active in the company's operations. The younger Cook -- who goes by his middle name -- also is vice chairman of Central Bancompany and chairman and chief executive officer of First National Bank of St. Louis. |
Cooley, Richard P. |
Mandalay |
President and CEO of Wells Fargo 1966-1982, chairman and CEO Seafirst
Bank 1983-1994, trustee of the RAND Corporation 1971-1981 & 1982-1992,
trustee of Caltech, director of PACCAR 1991-1996 (which manufactures
Peterbilt trucks). Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Coolidge, Calvin |
|
President of the United States (1923-1929). |
Coors, Joseph |
|
Described as
"anti-labor, racist, and homophobic". His grandfather founded Golden-based Adolph Coors Co. in 1873 and
made a fortune. Joseph later used this brewing fortune to support
President Reagan and help create the conservative Heritage Foundation in 1973 (donated $250,000).
The prominent right-wing activist Paul Weyrich and wealthy right-wingers Richard Scaife (donated $900,000) and Edward Noble helped with the creation of this foundation. By 1995, the Foundation had an annual budget of $25 million and was headed by Le Cercle member Edwin Feulner. Coors was a member of an advisory group to Ronald Reagan that received
security clearances to learn about new weapons developments such as
nuclear x-ray lasers, which started in 1982. |
Coors, Bill |
|
Brother of Joseph Coors. He is vice-chairman for Adolph Coors Co.
The chairman is his son, Peter Coors. |
Coppola, Francis Ford |
|
Made Apocalypse Now in 1979. In 1986 Coppola, with George Lucas, directed the Michael Jackson film for Disney theme parks, Captain Eo, which at the time was the most expensive film per minute ever made. Made The Godfather series from 1972 to 1990. Directed Bram Stoker's Dracula in 1992. In 1998, he gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove titled 'Two Republics: Rome and America'. |
Costello, Joseph V., Jr |
|
Owner and founder of Hill & Company. Since 1956 Hill & Co. has been one of San Francisco's premier brokerage for residential real estate. His wife, Patricia Funsten Costello, a Past President of the Junior League (1964-1965) and a vivacious San Francisco community leader, died on January 22, 2004. During her time as president of the Junior League funds were approved to establish the Ravenswood Child Care Center in East Palo Alto. |
Creson, William T. |
Cuckoo's Nest |
CEO and chairman of Crown Zellerbach, until it was taken over by
Sir James Goldsmith (Le Cercle). |
Crocker, Charles |
Stowaway |
Chairman of the board of Children's Hospital in San Francisco, chairman
of the Hamlin School's Board of Trustees, president of the Foundation
of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, president of Crocker Capital
Corporation, founder, chairman and chief executive officer of BEI
Technologies Inc., board member of BEI Medical Systems Company, Inc.,
board member of Fiduciary Trust International, board member of Pope
& Talbot Inc., board member of Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
since 2001, director at Franklin Templeton Investments, where Anne
M. Tatlock is vice-chairman (left her WTC office on 9/11 to meet with
Warren Buffett at Offutt AFB, where Bush would land that day) and
Thomas Kean is a director (headed the 9/11 commission in 2004-2005). |
Cronkite, Walter |
Hill Billies |
Very well-know journalist and anchorman, who sat on the board of CBS. Supposedly
he did the Owl's voice in the Cremation of Care ceremony. Newswriter and editor, Scripps-Howard, also for United Press, Houston, Texas; Kansas City, Missouri; Dallas, Austin, and El Paso, Texas; and New York City; United Press war correspondent, 1942-45, foreign correspondent, reopening bureaus in Amsterdam, Brussels; chief correspondent, Nuremberg war crimes trials, bureau manager, Moscow, 1946-48, manager and contributor, 1948-49, CBS-News correspondent, 1950-81, special correspondent, since 1981; managing editor, CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite, 1962-81. |
Crosby, Bing |
|
One of the most popular and influential American singers and actors of the 20th century, rivaled only by Elvis Presley and The Beatles. Die in 1977. |
Crown, Lester |
|
Billionaire. General Dynamics Executive vice president and director. Went in
1979. Chairman of Henry Crown and Company (diversified investments) since 2002. President of Henry Crown and Company from 1973 to 2002. Director of Maytag Corporation. Lester controls family holdings, including large stakes in General Dynamics, Maytag, Bank One and pro basketball's Chicago Bulls. Major benefactor of Jewish charities, universities and the Aspen Institute. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Cunningham, Keith A. |
|
UNC Resources (United Nuclear Corporation). 1980 guest of James
Bancroft. |
Dachs, Alan |
Hill Billies |
President and CEO of the Fremont Group and director of Bechtel Group
Inc. |
Dart, Justin |
|
Justin Dart, Jr., was born on August 29, 1930, into a wealthy and prominent family. His grandfather was the founder of the Walgreen Drugstore chain, his father a successful business executive, his mother a matron of the American avant garde. In 1981, President Ronald Reagan appointed Dart to be the vice-chair of the National Council on Disability. The Darts embarked on a nationwide tour, at their own expense, meeting with activists in every state. Dart and others on the Council drafted a national policy that called for national civil rights legislation to end the centuries old discrimination of people with disabilities -- what would eventually become the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. In 1986, Dart was appointed to head the Rehabilitation Services Administration, a $3 billion federal agency that oversees a vast array of programs for disabled people. A leader of the international disability rights movement and a renowned human rights activist, died last night at his home in Washington D.C. Widely recognized as "the father of the Americans with Disabilities Act" and "the godfather of the disability rights movement," Dart had for the past several years struggled with the complications of post-polio syndrome and congestive heart failure. He was seventy-one years old. Dart was also a highly successful entrepreneur, using his personal wealth to further his human rights agenda by generously contributing to organizations, candidates, and individuals. |
Davidow, William |
|
Former CEO at Intel. Dr. William H. Davidow has served as a Director since April 1995 and as Chairman of the Board of Directors since June 1996 of FormFactor, Inc.. Since 1985, Dr. Davidow has been a general partner of Mohr, Davidow Ventures, a venture capital firm. Dr. Davidow serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors of one publicly traded company, Rambus Inc., in addition to FormFactor. Dr. Davidow also serves on the board of directors of one privately held company. Dr. Davidow holds an A.B. and a M.S. in electrical engineering from Dartmouth College, a M.S. in electrical engineering from the California Institute of Technology and a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Stanford University. |
Davidson, Ralph P. |
River Lair |
Since 1986 Mr. Davidson has been chairman of the executive committee of the Time, Inc., board of directors in New York, NY. Prior to this he served as chairman of the board of Time, Inc., 1980 - 1986. Mr. Davidson has been with Time, Inc., since 1954 in various capacities: retail representative for Life magazine, European regional manager of Time International, advertising sales executive, European advertising director in London, managing director of Time International and associate publisher, and vice president and publisher. In 1982 Mr. Davidson was appointed to the President's Commission on Executive Exchange. He is also a member of the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Centennial Commission, chairman of the executive committee of the Business Committee for the Arts, and a director of the New York City Ballet. Member of the CFR and the Trilateral Commission. |
Davis, Donald W. |
Iron Ring |
Unknown. |
Davis, Dwight F. |
|
Secretary of War 1925-1929. He succeeded Henry L. Stimson as governor-general (1929-1932) of the Philippines. In World War II, Davis served in the army as a major general. Died in 1945. |
Davis, Paul L., Jr. |
|
Unknown. |
Davis, Richard Mercer |
Poker Flat |
Unknown. |
Davis, William L. |
Sahara |
Spent more than 20 years at Emerson Electric Co. where he held several senior positions, including president of Appleton Electric Company and president of Skil Corporation. In 1988, he was promoted to executive vice president responsible for Emerson's Tool Group, and in 1993 he was named senior vice president responsible for Emerson Industrial Motors and Drives Group and the Process Control Group. Prior to joining Emerson, Davis spent 12 years in retail with Sears, Roebuck & Co. Davis currently serves on the boards of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Chicago Urban League, Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, and the YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago. In addition, he is a trustee of Northwestern University and serves on the advisory board of the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management; and is a member of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago. Davis is chairman, president and CEO of R.R. Donnelley, one of the leading commercial printers and content management suppliers in the world. Director of Marathon Oil Corporation since 2002. Trustee of the Aspen Institute. |
Day, Robert A. |
Whoo Cares |
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Trust Company of the West, an investment management company. Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of W. M. Keck Foundation, a national philanthropic organization. Director of Syntroleum Corporation, Sociiti Ginirale and McMoRan Exploration Co. (McMoRan). Director at
Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold, Inc since 1995. |
De Benedetti, John L. |
Skyhi |
John is President of MarketPulse, a consulting firm that works with
leading biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies on strategies for
product development and launch, doctor acceptance, product pricing
and market acceptance issues. Director of directMD, Inc. (another
one of these directors is in business with the Bechtels) |
DeMuth, Christopher |
|
J.D., University of Chicago Law School A.B., Harvard University.
DeMuth researches regulation. He served in the Nixon and Reagan administrations
and was a senior advisor to the Bush 2000 Election Campaign. He is
on the Board of the Smith Richardson Foundation, which funds several
right-wing think tanks, including AEI. DeMuth also heads one of the
most influential think tanks in Washington, the American Enterprise
Institute, which saw about two dozen of its affiliates receive appointments
in the administration of George W. Bush. DeMuth gave a speech at the
Bohemian Grove in 1997. |
Dennis, Reid W. |
Midway |
A venture capitalist and recipient of the “Lifetime Achievement
Award” from the National Venture Capital Association. He was
formerly president and chairman of the National Venture Capital Association
(NVCA) and a past President of the Western Association of Venture
Capitalists (WAVC).Mr. Reid is also the founder and a managing director
of Institutional Venture Partners (IVP). IVP has invested in over
200, including Atmel, Foundry Networks, Juniper Networks, LSI Logic,
Sequent Computer Systems, Stratus Computer, Synoptics, and Wellfleet. |
DePalma, Robert A. |
|
Rockwell Chief Financial Officer in the 1980's. |
Dickason, James F. |
Lost Angels |
Studied at Stanford University, 10 year trustee of Stanford University,
helped direct fund-raising drives for the University and served as
president of the business school advisory council, President The Newhall
Land and Farming Co., instrumental in the development of the city
of Valencia in northern Los Angeles County, member of the Hoover Institution
Board of Overseers 1986-1992. |
Dillingham, Lowell |
|
Scion of an old Hawaiian family and son of Walter F. Dillingham. Dillingham gradually assumes control of the company since 1960. He oversees the merger of Hawaiian Dredging and the Oahu Railway in that same year to form the Dillingham Corp. and transforming the family business into a public company. He later becomes chairman of the company and is mentioned as a visitor of the Bohemian Grove in the 1980s. In 2003 the company filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy. Founded in the 1880s to build a railroad across the swamps of Oahu, Dillingham became a leading engineering and construction firm, building dams, airfields, high-rise offices, hotels and embassies around the world -- including San Francisco's Embarcadero One, the Hyatt at Union Square and the Wells Fargo Building. in the past decade, Dillingham became embroiled in several nasty disputes with government customers -- notably Los Angeles and San Francisco -- in which the company said it was owed millions, while the cities or counties alleged overbilling, substandard construction and misrepresentation of minority involvement. |
Dingman, Michael D. |
Whoo Cares |
Dingman has been President of Shipston Group Ltd. (international investments) since 1994. He was Chairman of the Board of Fisher from 1991 to 1998. Still a director at Fisher Scientific International Inc. |
Djerejian, Edward P. |
|
founding Director of the The Honorable Edward P. DjerejianJames A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University, is one of the United States’ most distinguished diplomats with his career spanning the administrations of eight U.S. Presidents. A leading expert on the complex political, security, economic, religious, and ethnic issues of the Middle East, Ambassador Djerejian has played key roles in the Arab-Israeli peace process, the U.S.-led coalition against Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait, successful efforts to end the civil war in Lebanon, the release of U.S. hostages in Lebanon, and the establishment of collective and bilateral security arrangements in the Persian Gulf. Prior to his nomination by President Clinton as United States Ambassador to Israel, Ambassador Djerejian served both President Bush and President Clinton as Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs and President Reagan and President Bush as U.S. Ambassador to the Syrian Arab Republic. Ambassador Djerejian has also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, as Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Press Secretary for Foreign Affairs in the White House, and as Deputy Chief of the U.S. mission to the Kingdom of Jordan. A foreign service officer since 1962, other assignments include political officer in Beirut, Lebanon, and Casablanca, Morocco, Consul General in Bordeaux, France, and he headed the political section in the U.S. Embassy in Moscow during the critical period in U.S.-Soviet relations marked by the invasion of Afghanistan. Ambassador Djerejian served in the United States Army as a First Lieutenant in the Republic of Korea following his graduation from the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. He holds a Bachelor of Science, an Honorary Doctorate in Humanities from Georgetown University, and an Honorary Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, from Middlebury College, and is fluent in Arabic, Russian, French, and Armenian. Director of the James Baker III Institute for Public Policy--Rice University. In 1999, he gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove titled "The Middle East Peace Process: Changes and Prospects". Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Doan, Herbert D. |
Sundodgers |
President and CEO of The Dow Chemical Company from 1962 to 1971.
He served on the Dow and Dow Corning boards of directors and in 1973
founded Doan Associates, the second venture capital company in Michigan.
He chairs the board of Neogen Corporation and is on the boards of
the Michigan Molecular Institute (MMI) and Dendritech, Inc., a for-profit
subsidiary of MMI. In the public arena he has served on the National
Science Board (the governing body of the National Science Foundation)
and the board of the Office of Technology Assessment. He has worked
with the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences,
cochaired Michigan’s Venture Capital Task Force, and served
as president of the Michigan High Technology Task Force. Doan is a
member of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, the American
Chemical Society, and Sigma XI, and has received several honorary
degrees. Since 1996 he has been president and chairman of the Herbert
H. and Grace A. Dow Foundation. Recipients of the Petrochemical Heritage
Award. |
Dockson, Robert R. |
Cuckoo's Nest |
Robert R. Dockson graduated from the University of Southern California with a masters degree in international relations and a Ph.D in economics. He was later appointed dean of the University of Southern California School of Business Administration. In 1970 he became chairman and CEO of CalFed Inc. |
Dodd, Edwin D. |
Midway |
Chairman and chief executive officer of Owens-Illinois Inc., was
appointed by Ronald Reagan to the Commission on Industrial Competitiveness. |
Doolittle, Jimmy |
|
Old Aviator who went in the 1960s. |
Donovan, William |
|
William Donovan was born in Buffalo, United States, on 1st January, 1883. After graduating from Columbia University in 1907 he became a lawyer. Donovan was an active member of the Republican Party and after meeting Herbert Hoover he worked as his political adviser, speech writer and campaign manager. During the First World War Donovan joined the United States Army and as a colonel in the 69th Infantry Regiment won the Medal of Honor and three Purple Hearts. While in Europe he visited Russia and spent time with Alexander Kolchak and the White Army. Donovan ran unsuccessfully as lieutenant governor in 1922 but was appointed by President Calvin Coolidge as his assistant attorney general. In 1932 he was the Republican candidate for the post of governor of New York. By the time Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected president in 1932 Donovan was a millionaire Wall Street lawyer. He was a strong opponent of Roosevelt's New Deal but shared the president's concern about political developments in Nazi Germany and in 1940 Donovan agreed to take part in several secret fact-finding missions in Europe. In July 1941, Roosevelt appointed Donovan as his Coordinator of Information. The following year Donovan became head of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), an organization that was given the responsible for espionage and for helping the resistance movement in Europe. He was helped in this by William Stephenson and Britain's MI6 chief, Stewart Menzies. Donovan was given the rank of major general and during the Second World War he built up a team of 16,000 agents working behind enemy lines. As soon as the Second World War ended President Harry S. Truman ordered the OSS to be closed down. However, it provided a model for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) established in September 1947. Donovan returned to his law practice in 1946. In 1949, he became chairman of the newly-founded American Committee on United Europe (ACUE), which he helped to establish together with Churchill son-in-law and CIA agent Duncan Sandys, Vatican agent Joseph Retinger, and Knights of Malta member and CIA chief Allen Dulles. Donovan himself was another member of the Knights of Malta. Through the ACUE a lot of CIA, Rockefeller, and Ford money was funneled to Radio Free Europe, the Economist, the European Council of Princes, the Gehlen Organization, and the Stay-Behind networks. Donovan became ambassador to Thailand in 1953 and died in 1959. He was already attending the Bohemian Grove in the 1920's. |
Douglass, Kingman |
Isle of Aves |
Yale, investment banker, military service in World War II: senior
US Army Air Corps intelligence liaison officer in British Air Ministry;
Allied Intelligence Group in Pacific Theater, OSS, deputy director
CIA March 1946 to July 1946, assistant director CIA 1951-1952. |
Drake, J. Harrington |
|
Drake presided over a decade of top financial performance at Dun & Bradstreet Corporation - growing revenues from $480 million to over $2 billion. He was chairman from 1975 to 1984 and achieved ten consecutive years of top market value performance and expanded D&B's core services, most notably with the acquisition of A. C. Nielsen Company. Went to the Bohemian Grove in 1981 as a gueast of Henry T. Mudd, then former Chairman of Cyprus Mines. |
Draper, William H. III |
Hill Billies |
President and chairman of the Export-Import Bank of the United States
1981-1986, director of the United Nations Development Program 1986,
founder and managing director of Draper International venture capital
firm. His father, William H. Draper, Jr., (1894-1974) was made director,
vice president, and assistant treasurer of the German Credit and Investment
Corp (set up by Dillon, Read & Co. of Pilgrim Clarence Dillon).
His business was short-term loans and financial management tricks
for Thyssen and the German Steel Trust. Draper was an associate of
Prescott Bush and Pilgrim Averell Harriman. Member Atlantic Council of the United States. |
Dreier, David |
|
A Republican member of the United States House of Representatives (congress) since 1981, representing the 26th District of California. Dreier has served as chairman of the powerful House Rules Committee since 1999. He has also served as chairman of California's Republican Congressional Delegation since 2001. Dreier was a major player in helping elect Arnold Schwarzenegger in California's 2003 recall election, and is a frequent guest on the political talk show circuit. Throughout his early Congressional service, Dreier established a record as a strong supporter of tax cuts and of President Reagan's anti-Communist foreign policy. Locally Dreier is well known for supporting local institutions such as the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Metro Gold Line, and advocates for transportation improvements such as railroad grade separations and highway expansion.
Homosexual. |
Drury, Allen |
Totum Inn |
The veteran journalist was covering the U.S. Senate for The New York Times in 1959 when he finally completed and published the political novel he had begun seven years earlier. The tale of political and sexual scandal involving selection of a new secretary of state won immediate critical acclaim and became a best-seller. It earned the Pulitzer for literature the following year, launching a new career for Drury as author. He went on to write 17 other novels and five nonfiction books. |
DuBain, Myron |
Midway |
Businessman and friend of the Bush family. He received a BA from
the University California, Berkeley in 1946 and also graduated from
Stanford University in 1967. DuBain has been on the board of advisors
of the University California, Berkeley. DuBain served as President
and CEO of the Fireman's Fund Insurance from 1974 to 1975; Chairman,
President, and CEO until 1981. From 1981 to 1982 he served as Vice
Chairman of the board of American Express. He served as chairman of
SRI International from 1985 to 1989. DuBain has also served on the
board of Transamerica, Wells Fargo Bank, and SCIOS. He serves on the
board of directors of the San Francisco Opera. From 1989 to 1996 he
served as Chairman of the James Irvine Foundation. DuBain is a member
of the Bohemian Club, Pacific Union Club, California Tennis Club,
Lagunitas Country Club, and the Villa Taverna Club. |
Ducommun, Charles E. |
Mandalay |
Professor of Education and Professor of Psychology at Stanford University.
He sat on Stanford's board of trustees from 1961 to 1971. |
Duggan, Ervin S. |
|
Reporter for the Washington Post, 1964 - 1965. Staff assistant to the President at the White House 1965 - 1969. Director of Special Projects (History and Art) at the Smithsonian Institution 1969 - 1970. Author with Doubleday and Co. 1970 - 1971. Special assistant to Senator Adlai E. Stevenson 1971 - 1977. Special Assistant to the Secretary at the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1977 - 1979. Member of the policy planning staff at the Department of State, 1979 - 1981. National editor of Washingtonian Magazine, 1981 - 1986. Since 1981, Duggan has served as a communications consultant with Ervin S. Duggan Associates in Washington, DC. President and CEO of Public Broadcasting Service 1994 - 1999. Gave a speech at
the Bohemian Grove in 1997. |
Duncan, Charles W. Jr. |
|
Duncan joined Duncan Foods Company in 1947 and was elected president in 1958. When Duncan Foods merged into The Coca-Cola Company in 1964, Duncan was elected to the company's board. He served as deputy secretary of the U.S. Department of Defense from January 1977 to August 1979 and as secretary of the Department of Energy from August 1979 until January 1981. Director of United Technologies when he went to visit the Bohemian Grove in 1981. Duncan is treasurer and director of The Methodist Hospital. He is a trustee emeritus and past chairman of the board of governors of Rice University. He was also appointed commissioner on the Texas National Research Laboratory Commission and continues to be actively involved with other civic, charitable and corporate organizations. |
Du Pont, John Eleuthere |
Isle of Aves |
Fortune estimated at about 250 million, gay, B.S. Zoology at University
of Miami 1965, supposedly lived for about the first 50 years with
his mother, threatened his wife a couple of times with a gun, calling
her a Soviet spy, converted his 800 acre Foxcatcher into a wrestling
"training compound", complete with 14,400 square foot training
facility costing over half a million dollars, became the primary benefactor
to the sport of amateur wrestling in the entire United States, Du
Pont perfected an (illegal) wrestling move, the 'Foxcatcher Five',
in which the opponent's testicles are cupped not-so-gently, opened
a firing range at Foxcatcher, which he named the 'J. Edgar Hoover
Pistol Training Center', as his mother dies at age 91, Du Pont shows
up at her funeral late and in a track suit 1988, dismisses three black
wrestlers, telling them Foxcatcher was now a "KKK organization."
in 1995, John du Pont kills Olympic wrestler David Schultz in 1996
and is taken into custody after a 2-day standoff. |
Duryea, Leslie N. II |
Lost Angels |
Stanford University member, which means he has been giving donations
and did lots of voluntary work for them. |
Eastwood, Clint |
|
Famous movie star. Appeared in Schwarzenegger's Pumping Iron remake. Also went to
the Sun Valley meetings. |
Edwards, William C. |
|
Member of the Hoover Institution Board of Overseers. |
Ehrlichman, John D. |
Mandalay |
Ehrlichman, who along with H.R. Haldeman was one of Nixon's two
top advisers (Domestic affairs), resigned from his White House post
in April 1973 and was convicted two years later for obstruction of
justice, conspiracy and perjury in the attempted cover-up of the Watergate
burglary and related crimes. After his release from prison, Ehrlichman
later moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he began a new career as
an artist, writer and commentator. He wrote four books. He eventually
moved to Atlanta where he was senior vice president of Law Environmental.
He once said to a reporter: "Once you've spent three days
with someone in an informal situation, you have a relationship --
a relationship that opens doors and makes it easier to pick up the
phone." |
Eisenhower, Dwight D. |
Stowaway |
In his early Army career, he excelled in staff assignments, serving under Generals John J. Pershing, Douglas MacArthur, and Walter Krueger. After Pearl Harbor, General George C. Marshall (Pilgrims Society) called him to Washington for a war plans assignment. He commanded the Allied Forces landing in North Africa in November 1942; on D-Day, 1944, he was Supreme Commander of the troops invading France. After the war, he became President of Columbia University, then took leave to assume supreme command over the new NATO forces being assembled in 1951. Stayed in the Bohemian Grove camp Stowaway in 1951. Republican emissaries to his headquarters near Paris persuaded him to run for President in 1952. U.S. president from 1953 to 1961. |
Elachi, Charles |
|
He is currently the Director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Vice President of the California Institute of Technology, where he is also a Professor of Electrical Engineering and Planetary Science. He taught "The Physics of Remote Sensing" at Caltech from 1982 to 2000. Elachi was Principal Investigator on numerous research and development studies and flight projects sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. He was Principal Investigator for the Shuttle Imaging Radar series (SIR-A in 1981, SIR-B in 1984 and SIR-C in 1994), was a Co-Investigator on the Magellan imaging radar, and is presently the Team Leader of the Cassini Titan Radar experiment and a co-investigator on the Rosetta Comet Nucleus Sounder Experiment. 2004 lakeside
talk; ‘Exploring Mars and Searching for Life in the Universe.’ In his 30 year career at JPL, Dr. Elachi played the lead role in developing the field of spaceborne imaging radar from a small research area to a major field of scientific research and application. As a result, JPL and NASA became the world leaders in the field of spaceborne imaging radars, and over the last decade, developed Seasat, SIR-A, SIR-B, SIR-C, Magellan, SRTM and the Cassini Radar. |
Elliott, George |
|
In 1989 he wrote at the Bohemian Grove: "Around campfires large and small, warm hospitality awaits you. Of course you must be with us." As Kerry's former commanding officer in Vietnam, he became a key figure in a book and ad campaign questioning Democratic Presidential Candidate John F. Kerry's war record. Changed his mind a couple of times over it a couple of times. |
Emett, Robert L. |
Star & Garter |
Trustee of California's Claremont McKenna College. |
Evans, James H. |
|
University of Chicago Law School, high positions at Reuben H. Donnelley
Corp., Dun & Bradstreet Inc., and the Seamen's bank for Savings,
in the navy during WWII, chairman 1965 Red Cross Campaign for Greater
New York, chairman of the Union Pacific Corporation, director Citicorp,
AT&T, Bristol-Myers, General Motors Corp. and Metropolitan Life
Insurance Co., governor Foreign Policy Association, trustee Rockefeller
Brothers Fund, University of Chicago and the American Youth Foundation,
Bohemian Grove visitor. |
Fay, Paul B., Jr. |
Zaca |
President, The Fay Improvement Company - financial consulting and business ventures. Director at First American Corporation and Vestaur Securities Inc. |
Feick, William |
Whoo Cares |
Served as managing-director of William D. Witter, Inc., 1987-1993 and as a financial consultant tsince 1994. Director at Piedmont Mining Co. since 1984. Chairman Peggy Guggenheim Collection Advisory Board. |
Feulner, Edwin J. |
Cave Man |
Once hosted by Nixon. Member of the secretive intelligence group
Le Cercle. Dr. Feulner has studied at the University of Edinburgh,
the London School of Economics, the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania, Georgetown University, and Regis University. Feulner
is the President of enormously influential right-wing Heritage Foundation,
Washington’s leading public policy organization or think tank.
Unlike most other think tanks, Heritage not only suggests ideas but
actively pushes them in Congress. If you have any doubt that the Heritage
Foundation is engaged in systematic lobbying, consider the words of
Heritage vice presidents Stuart Butler and Kim Holmes, published in
the 1995 Annual Report issued in spring 1996: Butler:
Heritage now works very closely with the congressional leadership....
Heritage has been involved in crafting almost every piece of major
legislation to move through Congress.
Holmes: Without exaggeration, I think we've
in effect become Congress's unofficial research arm.... We truly have
become an extension of the congressional staff, but on our own terms
and according to our own agenda.
Butler: That's right. As Kim knows, things
have been happening so fast on Capitol Hill we've had to sharpen our
management skills to take full advantage of the opportunities. There
has also been an unprecedented demand on us to "crunch the numbers"
for the new congressional leadership.
On January 18, 1989 President Reagan conferred the Presidential Citizens
Medal on Feulner as "a leader of the conservative movement."
Feulner also serves as Treasurer and Trustee of The Mont Pelerin Society;
Trustee and former Chairman of the Board of The Intercollegiate Studies
Institute; member of the Board of the National Chamber Foundation;
member of the Board of Visitors of George Mason University; a Trustee
of the Acton Institute, and the International Republican Institute.
He is past president of various organizations including The Philadelphia
Society and the Mont Pelerin Society, and past Director of Sequoia
Bank, Regis University and the Council for National Policy. Feulner
served on the Congressional Commission on International Financial
Institutions ("Meltzer Commission," 1999-2000). He was the
Vice Chairman of the National Commission on Economic Growth and Tax
Reform ("Kemp Commission," 1995-1996), Counselor to Vice
Presidential candidate Jack Kemp (1996), Chairman of the U.S. Advisory
Commission on Public Diplomacy (1982-91), a Consultant for Domestic
Policy to President Reagan, and an advisor to several government departments
and agencies. He was a member of the President’s Commission
on White House Fellows (1981-83), of the Secretary of State’s
UNESCO Review Observation Panel (1985-89), and of the Carlucci Commission
on Foreign Aid (1983). In the summer of 1982, he served as a United
States Representative to the United Nations Second Special Session
on Disarmament (with the rank of Ambassador) where he delivered the
final United States address to the General Assembly. During the transition
from the Carter Administration to the Reagan Administration, Feulner
served on the Executive Committee of the Presidential Transition.
He remains involved in various aspects of foreign policy, particularly
public diplomacy, international communications issues and international
economic policy. He has served on the United States delegations to
several meetings of the IMF/World Bank group. Feulner was the former chairman of the Institute for European Defense and Strategic Studies. By Georges Magazine he was ranked nr 45 in a list of the 50 most influential politicians. Greenspan was one, Cheney was two. |
Field, Charles K. |
|
Charles Kellogg Field (1873-1948), was a graduate of the Stanford class of 1895, and wrote Four-leaved Clover: being Stanford Rhymes, in 1896, under the pen name Carolus Ager. He also penned Stanford Stories, in 1900, with author Will Irwin. He wrote several Bohemian Grove plays performed during midsummer jinks between 1902 and 1918. Became editor of Sunset Magazine in 1911, after Charles Sedgwick Aiken had headed it since 1902. Sunset was founded in May 1898 by Southern Pacific Railroad. Chairman of this company was Edward Harriman. One of the largest stockholders in the company was Harknesses, also large shareholders of Standard Oil and intermarried with the Stillman family, which, in its turn, was also intermarried with the Rockefellers. The magazine dealt with the outdoors, artistic writings, and things about everyday life. It also wrote about the Asian-American relations along the Pacific Coast, a sensitive issue for the magazine because of its geographic proximity to large Asian communities in San Francisco. In 1914, Southern Pacific Railroad sold the Magazine to Woodhead, [charles] Field and Company, largely because many contributors to the magazine were against many of the policies of the extremely wealthy industrialists. After Southern Pacific bounced it, the magazine focused even more on the works of Bohemians like Ina Coolbrith, Jack London, Bret Harte, and John Muir (founder of the Sierra Club). Until his death in 1910, the magazine also published the works of Pilgrims Society member and Bohemian Club member Mark Twain. Charles Field was very much a member of Bohemian Club and literary circles during the early part of the century. He entered broadcasting in his 60s, and was “Cheerio” on KGO-AM in the mid 1930s. In 1936, he bought the Johnson-Field house and turned the barn into a theater. Supposedly, he hanged himself from the banister in 1948. According to a webpage written by the Newfane Elementary School: "Mr. Charles K. Field bought the house in 1936. He was famous and had a national radio show. He turned the barn into a theater. A ballet troupe even trained there. On September 3, 1948, Mr. Field hanged himself from the banister." Field was one of the friends of Herbert Hoover from their Stanford days. |
Finch, Robert H. |
|
Robert Finch was born in Tempe, Arizona. After serving in the Marines briefly during World War II, he entered Occidental College in Los Angles where he graduated in 1947 with a bachelor's degree. Following college, Mr. Finch went to Washington, D.C. where he worked as an administrative aide to Congressman Norris Poulson, representative from California. It was during this time that he met and became friendly with freshman Congressman Richard M. Nixon. Partly at Nixon's suggestion, Mr. Finch returned to California to study law at the University of Southern California where he took his LL.B. degree in 1951. After being admitted to the California bar, he practiced law until 1958 when he went back to Washington as administrative assistant to Vice-President Nixon. In 1960, Mr. Finch managed Vice-President Nixon's unsuccessful campaign for President of the United States. In 1966, he was elected as Lieutenant Governor of California, serving under Governor Ronald Reagan until 1969, when he accepted a post in the Nixon Cabinet as Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, a position he held until 1970. |
Firestone, Leonard K. |
Mandalay |
Educated at Princeton, sales manager and director Firestone Tire
& Rubber Co., a company founded by his father, president Firestone
Aviation Products Co. from 1941, inactive navy lieutenant, president
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. from 1943, U.S. ambassador to Belgium
under Nixon and Ford, president World Affairs Council of L.A., generous
contributor to charities. |
Fisher, Donald G. |
Hill Billies |
Founder and chairman of Gap Inc. (annual sales of approximately
$15 billion), trustee of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, ,director
of the United Way of the Bay Area, the Boys and Girls Club of San
Francisco, EdVoiceTeach for America and a governor of Boys & Girls
Clubs of America. Actively involved in the California Business Roundtable
and the San Francisco Committee on Jobs. Three presidential appointments
to the Advisory Council for U.S. Trade Representatives, was named
to the Presidio Trust board of directors by President Bill Clinton
in 1997. Member of the California State Board of Education, a member
and former chairman of University of California Haas School of Business
Advisory Council, trustee of Princeton University. |
Flanigan, John |
Mandalay |
Brother of Peter. |
Flanigan, Peter M. |
Mandalay |
Peter M. Flanigan was an assistant to the President on the White
House staff, 1969-1974 (Nixon). He was an executive director of the
Council on International Economic Policy during this time. Previously
he had been involved in investment banking with Dillon, Read, and
Co. (advisor and partner - then owned by Bechtel) He returned to business
when he left government service. His position in the White House involved
him in efforts to gain approval to build the Space Shuttle in the
1969-1972 period. Anno 2005 he is a trustee of the Manhattan Institute,
an advisor to UBS Warburg LLC of New York, a member of the Council
on Foreign Relations, and s member at-large of National Catholic Educational
Association. Knight of Malta. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Flax, Robert J. |
Aviary |
Executive Vice President and General Counsel at Bay View Bank. |
Florida, Richard |
|
Richard Florida is a professor of regional economic development at Carnegie Mellon University and a columnist for Information Week. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 2003, probably in reaction to his bestselling book 'The Rise of the Creative Class'. |
Foley, Thomas S. |
|
An American politician of the Democratic party, having served as speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives and ambassador to Japan. He served in the US Congress from 1964 to 1994. His thirty year career in Congress was notable for its length and for his steady climb up the ranks of the Congressional and Party leadership, and also for the manner of its conclusion: when the Republican Party gained control of Congress in 1994, Foley became the first sitting Speaker of the House since 1860 to fail to be re-elected. He was Tammany district leader of the Irish-Italian district east of city hall. Member of the Trilateral Commission. |
Forbes, Malcolm Stevenson, Sr. |
|
Son of the Forbes Magazine founder. A 1941 graduate of Princeton University. Publisher of Forbes magazine 1964-1990. Legendary for his lavish lifestyle, his private Capitalist Tool jet, his Highlander yachts, and huge art collection. Has a substantial collection of Harley Davidson motorbikes. Member of the Bohemian Grove and the Pilgrims Society. Member of the American Society of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem. |
Ford, Gerald |
Mandalay |
Ford was a member of the House of Representatives for 24 years from 1949 to 1973, and became Minority Leader of the Republican Party in the House. Ford was very popular with the voters in his district and was always re-elected with 60% margins. During his tenure, Ford was chosen to serve on the Warren Commission, a special task force set up to investigate the causes of, and quell rumors regarding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. After Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned during Richard Nixon's presidency, on October 10, 1973, Nixon nominated Ford to take Agnew's place, under the 25th Amendment - the first time it was applied. The United States Senate voted 92 to 3 to confirm Ford on November 27, 1973. Ford had long been one of President Nixon's most outspoken supporters (someone joked once that "He is one of the few people who not only admires Nixon, but actually likes him!"). Ford traveled widely as Vice President and made many speeches defending the embattled President. He cited the many achievements of President Nixon and dismissed Watergate as a media event and a tragic sideshow. When Nixon then resigned in the wake of the Watergate scandal on August 9, 1974, Ford assumed the presidency, proclaiming that "our long national nightmare is over". On August 20 Ford nominated former New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller to fill the Vice Presidency he had vacated, again under the 25th Amendment. United States president 1974-1977. |
Ford, Henry |
Mandalay |
Grandson of Henry Ford and was born in Detroit. He was president of Ford Motor Company from 1945 to 1960. Chairman and CEO of Ford from 1960 to 1980. The company became a publicly traded corporation in 1956. |
Ford, Ernest J. |
|
Ernest Jennings Ford (1919-1991), better known by the stage name Tennessee Ernie Ford, was a pioneering U.S. recording artist and television host who enjoyed success in the country & western, pop, and gospel musical genres. |
Foster, Paul S. III |
Sunshiners |
unknown. |
Francois-Poncet, Jean A. |
|
French politician who served as Minister of Foreign Affairs under Valéry Giscard d'Estaing (right wing, tied up with Le Cercle) between 1978 and 1981. In 1999 he held a speech at the Bohemian Grove titled "The New Europe". |
Frank, Anthony M. |
Bald Eagle |
Postmaster General of the United States 1988-1992, chairman Belvedere
Capital Partners 1993-1999, Director Temple-Inland, Inc., Cotelligent,
Inc., Bedford Property Investors & Crescent Real Estate Equities. |
Freeman, Gaylord A. |
|
Chairman of the First National Bank of Chicago. |
Frist, Bill |
|
In 1985, Dr. Frist joined the faculty at Vanderbilt University Medical Center where he founded and subsequently directed the multi-disciplinary Vanderbilt Transplant Center, which under his leadership became a nationally renowned center of multi-organ transplantation. A heart and lung surgeon, he performed over 150 heart and lung transplant procedures, including the first successful combined heart-lung transplant in the Southeast. First elected to the U.S. Senate in 1994. Frist is particularly passionate about confronting the global AIDS pandemic. He frequently takes medical mission trips to Africa to perform surgery and care for those in need.
Frist rose rapidly through Senate leadership. In 2000, he was unanimously elected chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) for the 107th Congress and in December 2002 was unanimously elected Majority Leader of the U.S. Senate (108th Congress). Under his leadership as Chairman of the NRSC, for the first time in history, the party of the President won back majority control of the U.S. Senate in a midterm election. He assumed his position as the 18th Senate Majority Leader and 14th Republican Floor Leader having served fewer total years in the U.S. Congress than any previous leader. He currently serves on the following committees: Finance; Rules; Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP). In the past, he has served on the following committees: Foreign Relations, Budget, Banking, Commerce, and Small Business. In 2001, he was named one of two Congressional representatives to the United Nations General Assembly. |
Furth, Alan C. |
Tie Binders |
Alan C. Furth has been with the Southern Pacific Co. since 1950, serving as general counsel (1963 - 1966), executive vice president (1976 - 1979), and president (1979 - to at least 1985). |
Gagosian, Bob |
|
Robert B. Gagosian came to Woods Hole in 1972 as an Assistant Scientist. After spending his undergraduate years at MIT, he earned a Ph.D. in organic chemistry from Columbia University in 1970 and held a National Institutes of Health postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California, Berkeley, from 1970 to 1972. At WHOI, he held successive appointments in the Chemistry Department, culminating in the chairmanship in 1982. He was appointed Associate Director for Research in 1987 and Senior Associate Director in 1992. He became Acting Director in mid-1993 and was named Director in January of 1994. He has served on a wide variety of visiting committees and research panels for the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, and universities and research organizations in the US and internationally. He served as Chairman of the Board of Governors for the 52-institution Consortium for Oceanographic Research and Education from 1998 to 2001, was a Faculty Fellow of the World Economic Forum in 2001 and 2002, and is a member of the Science Advisory Panel of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Science Advisory Board. An active member of the Geochemical Society of America, Gagosian is also a member of four other US professional organizations and the European Association of Organic Geochemists. In addition, he serves as a regional board member of BankBoston and on the corporations of the Bermuda Biological Station for Research and the Sea Education Association. He has supervised 14 graduate students or postdoctoral fellows, and has participated in four major field programs and 14 oceanographic cruises, including seven as chief scientist.
Gave a speech at
the Bohemian Grove in 2003. |
Gaither, James C. |
Friends of the Fores |
Partner of Cooley Godward LLP, managing director of Sutter Hill
Ventures, trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
trustee of the Hewlett Foundation, trustee of the RAND Corporation,
director Basic American Inc., director Levi Strauss Company. |
Galbraith, Evan G., Jr. |
Hill Billies |
U.S. defense representative in Europe and defense adviser to the
U.S. mission to NATO, former ambassador to France 1981-1985, advisory
director of Morgan Stanley, chairman of the National Review. |
Galvin, Robert W. |
|
Motorola, Inc., Chairman of the Executive Committee. Bob Galvin
started his career at Motorola in 1940. He held the senior officership
position in the company from 1959 until Jan. 11, 1990 when he became
Chairman of the Executive Committee. He continues to serve as a full
time officer of Motorola. He attended the University of Notre Dame
and the University of Chicago, and is currently a member and was the
recent chairman of the Board of Trustees of Illinois Institute of
Technology. Galvin has been awarded honorary degrees and other recognitions,
including election to the National Business Hall of Fame and the presentation
of the National Medal of Technology in 1991. Motorola is the first
large company-wide winner of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality
Award presented by President Reagan at a White House ceremony in November
1988. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 2003. |
Garrity, Edward |
|
Director at IT&T. |
Gates, Thomas S., Jr. |
|
Son of an investment banker. Graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1928 and joined the investment banking firm of Drexel and Company in Philadelphia. Became became a partner in 1940. Rose to the rank of lieutenant commander in the Navy 1940-1945. Under-secretary of the Navy 1953-1957. Secretary of the Navy 1957-1959. Secretary of defense 1959-1961, who authorized U-2 reconnaissance flights. Director and president Morgan Guaranty Trust Company 1961-1965. CEO and chairman of Morgan Guaranty Trust Company in 1965. Nixon appointed him chairman of the Advisory Commission on an All-Volunteer Force, which presented its influential report in November 1969. Ambassador to China 1976-1977. Member Council on Foreign Relations. Member Pilgrims Society. Member Bohemian Grove. |
Gergen, David |
|
Served in the White House as an adviser to four Presidents: Nixon,
Ford,
Reagan, and Clinton. Special international adviser to the president
and to Secretary of State Warren Christopher. Editor-at-large at U.S.
News & World Report. Analyst on various news shows. Moderator
at a PBS documentary; ‘The world at large’. Chairman of
the National Selection Committee for the Ford Foundation’s program
on Innovations in American Government. Of the U.S. News & World
Report. Member Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission. |
Gerstner, Louis V. Jr. |
|
Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. was chairman of the board of IBM Corporation from April 1993 until his retirement in December 2002. He served as chief executive officer of IBM from 1993 until March 2002. In January 2003 he assumed the position of chairman of The Carlyle Group, a global private equity firm located in Washington, DC. Prior to joining IBM, Mr. Gerstner served for four years as chairman and chief executive officer of RJR Nabisco, Inc. This was preceded by an 11-year career at American Express Company, where he was president of the parent company and chairman and CEO of its largest subsidiary, American Express Travel Related Services Company. Prior to that, Mr. Gerstner was a director of the management consulting firm of McKinsey & Co., Inc., which he joined in 1965. Mr. Gerstner is a director of Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and a member of the advisory boards of DaimlerChrysler and Sony Corporation. He is vice chairman of the board of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, a member of the board of the Council on Foreign Relations, a member of The Business Council, and a fellow of the America-China Forum. In past years he served on the Boards of The New York Times Company, American Express Company, AT&T, Caterpillar, Inc., Jewel Companies, Melville Corporation, and RJR Nabisco Holdings Co. Member of the Trilateral Commission. |
Giannini, Amadeo Peter |
|
Credited with a temper to match that of the elder J. P. Morgan.
In 1928, banker Giannini formed Transamerica Corp. as a holding company
for all his interests. Transamerica Corp., holding 99% of Bank of
America stock, controlling the Giannini branch banks (485) in California
besides other banks in Oregon, Nevada, Washington and Arizona, was
the largest bank holding company in the world. Giannini was a great
admirer of the New Deal. |
Gilligan, Patrick |
Valley of the Moon |
Unknown. |
Gingrich, Newt |
|
Gingrich attended school at various military installations and graduated from Baker High School, Columbus, Georgia, in 1961. He received a bachelor's degree from Emory University in Atlanta in 1965. He received a master's degree in 1968 and doctoral degree in 1971 in Modern European History from Tulane University in New Orleans. He taught history at West Georgia College in Carrollton, Georgia, from 1970 to 1978. Gingrich was elected as a Republican to the House of Representatives in November 1978. In 1981, Gingrich was a cofounder of both the Congressional Military Reform Caucus and the Congressional Space Caucus. In 1983 he founded the Conservative Opportunity Society, a group that included young conservative House Republicans. In 1983, Gingrich demanded the expulsion of fellow representatives Dan Crane and Gerry Studds for their roles in the Congressional Page sex scandal. In 1987, Gingrich brought ethics charges against Speaker of the House Jim Wright, a Democrat, who eventually resigned as a result of the Congressional ethics inquiry. Gingrich served as Minority Whip until the election of 1994, the first midterm election during the Presidency of Bill Clinton. Fined $300.000 for financial misdeeds by the House ethics committee in 1995, called the Lewinsky affair a coverup. In 1995 he was named Time Magazine's Man of the Year. Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1995 to 1999. |
Goff, Harry R. |
Wayside Log |
Co-chairman of the Citigroup Maryland Leadership Council. President and CEO of CitiFinancial (part of Citigroup). |
Goldwater, Barry |
Cave Man |
A five-term United States Senator from Arizona (1953-1965, 1969-87), he was the Republican Party candidate for the U.S. President in the 1964 election. Went at least once to the Bohemian Grove in 1964 when he was the guest of retired general
Albert Wedemeyer. In 1969, he also had the opportunity to complete a Mach 3+ check ride in the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird. Hard to pigeonhole, he began as a reform Democrat, served as a friend and colleague of Joseph McCarthy to the bitter end (one of only 22 Senators who voted against McCarthy's censure), developed a deep friendship with President John F. Kennedy and a lasting dislike for Lyndon B. Johnson, whom he said "used every dirty trick in the bag", and Richard Nixon, whom he later called "the most dishonest individual I have ever met in my life." Interested in the UFO topic but never gained access to the data. Freemason. |
Gore, Albert "Al" A. |
|
The Gore family has married into the Schiff family, Harvard, served
in Vietnam War as a journalist, Armand Hammer sells a zinc mine to
the father of Al Gore in 1973, ten minutes later his father sells
the mine to little Gore, democratic congressman 1976-1985, U.S. Senate
1985-1992, took the initiative for creating the internet in 1989,
U.S. vice president 1992-2000, very large supporter of environmental
issues and the United Nations. |
Glover, Danny |
|
Moviestar most famous for his role in the Lethal Weapon movies. |
Gray, Harry Jack |
Owl's Nest |
Chairman United Technologies Corporation. United Technologies Chemical
Systems Division builds rocket motors for Titan, Minuteman III, Trident,
and Tomahawk cruise missiles. U.T. makes Pratt and Whitney jet aircraft
engines and Sikorsky helicopters, member Council on Foreign Relations.
Currently, Gray is chairman and CEO of Harry Gray Associates and also
serves as chairman and CEO of SourceOne and as chairman of Mott Corporation. Became chairman of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies
(AICGS) in 1986 and is that still today. The chair before him was Donald Rumsfeld. |
Grey, John R. |
Stowaway |
Board member of Grossman's Inc. until 1997, president of Coldwell
Banker F.I. Grey & Son, Inc. |
Greenberg, Maurice R. |
Cave Man |
Rose to the rank of captain in WWII and Korea, recipient of the
Bronze Star, chairman and chief executive officer of American International
Group, Inc. (AIG), chairman and trustee of the Asia Society, founding
chairman of the U.S.-Philippine Business Committee, vice chairman
of the U.S.-ASEAN Business Council, chairman of the U.S.-Korea Business
Council, member of the U.S.-China Business Council and the Business
Roundtable, member Atlantic Council of the United States, has been a chairman, deputy chairman and director of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, chairman emeritus of New York Hospital,
chairman of the Starr Foundation, vice-chairman of the Council on
Foreign Relations 1994, member of the Trilateral Commission, Bilderberg
1991, his fortune amounts to about 3.5 billion. |
Greenspan, Alan |
|
Chairman and President of Townsend-Greenspan & Co.(1954-1974, 1977-1987); Chairman of the National Commission on Social Security Reform (1981-1983); nominated to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to fill an unexpired term (1987). Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Greenspan also serves as Chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Fed's principal monetary policymaking body. Knight Commander of the Order of the British
Empire 2002. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Member of the Trilateral Commission |
Griffin, Merv |
|
He began his career as a singer and even appeared on Broadway; he later became host of his own TV show, The Merv Griffin Show, and an entertainment business magnate. He created the wildly successful game shows Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune. Upon his retirement, he sold his production company, Merv Griffin Enterprises, to Coca-Cola's Columbia Pictures Television unit for $250 million, which was the largest acquisition of an entertainment company owned by a single individual at that time. He retained the title of executive producer of both shows. |
Haas, Walter A., Jr. |
|
Graduated from Berkeley in 1937. Haas was the great grand-nephew of Levi Strauss and came from a long line of family philanthropists. Joined the San Francisco-based Levi Strauss & Company in 1939. In 1953 he set up a the Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund with his wife, Evelyn. President and chief executive officer of Levi Strauss between 1958 and 1976 and chair of the board from 1970 to 1981. Visitor of the Trilateral Commission in the early 1980s. Honorary chair until his death in 1995. His son is a member of the CFR and the Trilateral Commission. |
Haig, Alexander Jr. |
|
Born in Philadelphia in 1924. University of Notre Dame 1942-1944. West Point 1944-1947. Commissioned a second lieutenant in the Army, serving in Japan and Korea on the staff of General Douglas MacArthur. In 1950, he married the daughter of MacArthur's deputy chief of staff, to whom Haig was aide-de-camp. Served in Korea 1950-1951 where he freed Sun Myung Moon (the person who thinks he's the new Messiah) from a concentration camp during the battle of Inchon in September 1950. Studied business administration at Columbia University 1954-1955. Operations officer of a tank battalion in Europe 1956-1958. Student at Naval War College 1959-1960. M.A. in International Relations from Georgetown University 1962. In 1962 he was selected over many other applicants to become a staff aide to a Kennedy Administration task force on Cuba directed by Cyrus Vance and Joseph A. Califano, Jr. Here he became involved with the CIA trying to overthrow Fidel Castro. He was the Pentagon's representative to a highly classified unit known as the "Subcommittee on Subversion", who's target was Cuba. Stayed at the Pentagon until 1965. Battalion and brigade commander in Vietnam 1966-1967. Deputy Commander of Cadets at West Point 1967-1968. Military aide on the National Security Council staff 1968-1969. Senior Military Advisor to the Assistant of the President for National Security Affairs, Henry Kissinger, 1969-1973. Worked all the time-every day, every night, and every weekend-to insure that the flow of documents in and out of Kissinger's office was uninterrupted. Haig was one of the persons that kept pushing the bombing of Cambodia and was working every moderate staff member out of office. Coordinated Nixon's historic visit to China in February 1972. Haig long was rumored to have been Deep Throat, the inside source for the Washington Post as the paper exposed the Nixon cover-up of the Watergate break-in of June 1972. Haig helped South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu to negotiate the final cease-fire talks in October 1972. Promoted to full 4 star general in 1972. Vice Chief of Staff of the Army January to May 1973. Nixon's White House Chief of Staff 1973-1974, at which point he retired after twenty-six years in the Army. Commander in Chief of United States European Command 1974-1979. Supreme Allied Commander of NATO 1974-1979. Retired from the Army in 1979. President and CEO of United Technologies Corporation 1979-1981 for which he still serves as a senior adviser (has negotiated international arms deals for the company). When the P2 scandal unfolded in 1981-1982, Haig and Kissinger were named among those who stood in contact with this neo-fascist lodge that fought the communist influence on the Italian government. U.S. Secretary of State 1981-1982. Reagan didn't like him, because Haig pushed his own policies too hard. During the confusion after Ronald Reagan was shot by John Hinckley, Haig asserts at the White House, "I'm in control here", forgetting about the Constitutional line of succession. One of the more famous Haigisms from those days is "That's not a lie. It is a terminological inexactitude". Visited the Trilateral Commission since at least 1982 (and until at least 1990) as a fellow of the Hudson Institute. In 1984 he was the founder of the global consulting firm Worldwide Associates, Inc. and has headed it ever since (seems to be a similar concept as Kissinger Associates). It has a strong focus on the former Soviet Union and China and today it is run by the United Technologies Corporation, to which Haig still is a senior advisor today. A 1991 Congressional report in the aftermath of the BNL affair said about Haig's role in United Technologies: "neither Paul nor Haig would comment on what Haig was doing for the company." A basic description (the only thing available) about Worldwide Associates reads: "... the company assists corporations in developing and implementing acquisition and marketing strategies. It also provides advice on the domestic and international political, economic and security environments and their effects on the global marketplace." Today's managing director of Worldwide Associates is retired Army Colonel Sherwood D. Goldberg, a civilian aide to the Secretary of the Army. He is about the only person besides Haig Sr. and Jr. that has been identified as an employee of Worldwide Associates. Wrote the book 'Caveat: Realism, Reagan and Foreign Policy' in 1984. Ran unsuccessfully for the Republican presidential nomination in 1988. Wrote the book 'Inner Circles: How America Changed the World - A Memoir ' in 1992. Host of the weekly television program, "World Business Review," and is a member of the board of directors of Compuserve Interactive Services, Inc., Metro-Goldwyn Mayer, Inc., MGM Mirage, Inc., Indevus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., SDC International, Inc., Abington Biomedical Funds, and China Overseas Shipping Co. (one of the largest dry bulk shipping companies in the world, among other things, and a front for the Chinese military), the National Foundation for Advanced Cardiac Surgery, and Preferred Employers Holdings, Inc. Today (2005) a director of the Jamestown Foundation, which was created in 1983 for the purpose of educating the United States and the West about the nature and purposes of the Soviet Union. It helped defectors from the communist world resettle in the United States. Other board members have included Dick Cheney, James Woolsey, Donald Rumsfeld, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Tom Clancy, Admiral John McCain, and Donald Rumsfeld. It is focused on the former USSR and China. Haig was a founding director of America Online, Inc. and is a strategic advisor to DOR BioPharma, Inc. since 2003. Serves on the board of Newsmax together with Arnaud de Borchgrave. Member of the neoconservative Benador Associates, together with James Woolsey, Lord Lamont (chairman of Le Cercle), Arnaud de Borchgrave, and Richard Perle. Advisor to the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Trustee of the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Advisor to the National Infantry Foundation. Senior advisor to United Technologies Corporation. Member of the Knights of Malta, the Bohemian Grove, the Atlantic Council of the United States, and the Council on Foreign Relations. Just as Arnaud de Borchgrave and Jerry Falwell, Haig is a close friend and colleague of Sun Myung Moon. Haig has claimed that Moon's educational battle fought on the pages of the international newspapers and on the college campuses has been a primary reason for the demise of communism. |
Hackbarth, Alfred E., Jr. |
Land of Happiness |
Director of UPBancorp Inc., an OTCBB listed multi-bank holding company. |
Hambrecht, William R. |
Midway |
An investment banker and co-founder of Hambrecht & Quist. Also founder
of WR Hambrecht & Co. Hambrecht & Quist helped take over Apple Computer
and Adobe Systems public and backed Netscape, MP3.com, and Amazon.com.
The company was bought by Chase Manhattan (now J.P. Morgan Chase &
Co. in 1999 for $1.35 billion. He is also known to have attendee Bohemian
Grove and is a graduate of Princeton University. Hambrecht has also
supports turning public schools over to for-profit companies. According
to Business Week, Hambrecht has invested at least $6 million in Beacon
Education Management, which operates 24 charter and district schools
in five states. |
Hancock, Harvey |
Owl's Nest |
Unknown. |
Hansel, Henry |
|
Director California Motor Car Dealers Association (CMCDA), Hansel
Auto Group. |
Hanson, Victor Davis |
|
Victor Davis Hanson is the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow
at the Hoover Institution. Hanson was a National Endowment for the
Humanities fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral
Sciences, Stanford, California (1992–93), a visiting professor
of classics at Stanford University (1991–92), a recipient of
the Eric Breindel Award for opinion journalism (2002), and an Alexander
Onassis Fellow (2001) and was named alumnus of the year of the University
of California, Santa Cruz (2002). He was also the visiting Shifrin
Chair of Military History at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland
(2002–3). Hanson is the author of some 170 articles, book reviews,
and newspaper editorials on Greek, agrarian, and military history
and essays on contemporary culture. He currently lives and works with
his family on their forty-acre tree and vine farm near Selma, California,
where he was born in 1953. Hanson gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 2003. |
Hardie, John L. |
Son's of Toil |
Unknown. |
Harrar, J. George |
Hideaway |
Guest of Frederick Seitz. George Harrar was responsible for opening
the Rockefeller Foundation's Mexico field office. After his tenure
in Mexico from 1943-52, he returned to headquarters to serve as Deputy
Director for Agriculture from 1952-55, Director for Agriculture from
1955-59, Vice President from 1959-61 and President of the foundation
from 1961-72. Under his guidance, the foundation joined in cooperation
with other U.S. foundations and inter-governmental organizations to
form the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research
(CGIAR). The Rockefeller Foundation stood at the base of the so called
'Green Revolution', which started around 1944. |
Harris, Milton M. |
Sunshiners |
Unknown. |
Harrison, William Greer |
|
From a large family from Ireland, membership goes back to the 19th
century, president Harrison & Co Agents for Thames and Mersey
Marine Insurance Co, Liverpool, founding member of the Bohemian Club,
close friend of fellow Bohemian Daniel O'Connell, had literary pretentions,
7 time president of the Olympic club, got a bit disillusioned with
the club. |
Hart, George D., Jr. |
Pig'n Whistle |
Trustee of the California State University 1963-1974 (Chairman 1972-1974). |
Harte, Bret |
|
An American author and poet, best remembered for his accounts of pioneering life in California. Born in Albany, New York, he moved to California in 1854, later working there in a number of positions, including miner, teacher, messenger, and journalist. Died in 1902. |
Hartley, Fred L. |
|
Chairman of the Board and President, Union Oil Company of California. Director of Rockwell and Unocal. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Harvey, James R. |
Midway |
Occidental Petroleum, Hooker Chemical...finance company executive
born in Los Angeles, California. Harvey graduated with a BS in Engineering
from Princeton University in 1956. From 1956 to 1961 he was an engineer
for Chevron (now ChevronTexaco.) He then attended the University California,
Berkeley, where he receive an MBA in 1963. For two years he was an
accountant for the high power Touche, Ross chartered accountants.
In 1965 he was appointed as Chairman of the Board of Transamerica,
a position he serve until 1995. During Harvey’s time as Chairman
the corporation underwent major restructuring and acquired several
financial service companies. Harvey also served of the board of directors
of Airtouch Communications, McKesson, and the Charles Schwab Corporation
. member of the Pacific-Union Club. |
Hauser, William Kurt |
|
Director and Economist Stanford University: BA 1960, MBA 1962. Mr.
Hauser joined the investment management firm of Brundage, Story and
Rose in New York City in 1962, where he served until 1966, when he
began his association with Wentworth, Hauser and Violich. He was awarded
the Chartered Investment Council designation by the Investment Counsel
Association in 1976. Hauser gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in
1997. |
Hawley, Wallace R. |
Parsonage |
Mr. Hawley is a co-founder of InterWest Partners (1979), one of the largest venture capital partnerships in the United States with over $600 million in committed capital, formed to make equity investments in diversified U. S. growth companies which range in size from seed-stage to later-stage investments. Mr. Hawley's prior experience includes seven years as president of SHV North America Holding Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of a Netherlands corporation with $4 billion in sales and a partner in SHV's venture capital subsidiary. He was a consultant with McKinsey & Company, Inc., an international management consulting firm. Vice Chairman of the Center for Economic Policy Research, Stanford University Guest lecturer at Stanford Business School Trustee of the Foundation for Teaching Economics Board member of the National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship Member of the Board of Trustees of Young Life. He also serves as an advisor to a number of financial firms including: Wingate Partners of Dallas, Texas; Brynwood Partners of Greenwich, Connecticut; Noro-Moseley Partners of Atlanta, Georgia; Rosewood Capital L. P. of San Francisco. Mr. Hawley is a past board member of the Sanford Institute at Duke University, past president of the San Francisco chapter of the Association for Corporate Growth, and past board member and officer for the Western Association of Venture Capitalists. |
Hawley, Phillip M. |
Mandalay |
Former chairman and CEO of Carter Hawley Hale Stores, which at the
time of his retirement was the biggest department store chain in the
West. He has also served as director at AT&T, Atlantic Richfield
Company, BankAmerica, Johnson & Johnson, Walt Disney Company and
Weyerhaeuser. Member of Phi Beta Kappa, the Business Roundtable, and
the Trilateral Commission. |
Haynes, Harold J. |
|
The Boeing Company board of Directors. Retired Chairman of Chevron
Corporation. |
Hayward, Thomas B. |
Hillside |
Member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 1978-1981; US navy admiral;
chairman of the Hawaii Space Development Authority; member of the
Council on Foreign Relations. |
Hearst, William Randolph, Jr. |
|
U.S. journalist and newspaper proprietor. Hearst shared a 1956 Pulitzer prize for international reporting shortly after being named editor in chief of the Hearst Corporation. The privately held company had been built into a media empire by his father, William Randolph Hearst, Sr., the flamboyant press baron. |
Helms, Richard |
|
Interviewed Adolf Hitler in Nuremberg as a reporter for UPI, covering
the 1936 Olympics, joined the OSS under Allen Dulles in 1943, chief
of operations CIA clandestine operations since 1952, instigated MK-ULTRA
in 1953, director CIA in 1966, ordered by Kissinger to prevent Allende
from coming to power in 1970, ambassador to the Shah's Iran 1973-1977,
consultant to Bechtel on business in Iran, pleads guilty for perjury
failing to testify to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that
the CIA overthrew Chile's Allende after which he is fined 2000 dollar. |
Henderson, Fred |
|
Unknown. |
Heston, Charlton |
|
An American film actor (50's and 60's) noted for heroic roles, and his personal conservative Republican politics. |
Hewlett, William R. |
Highlanders |
Hewlett Packard Corporation co-founder. Hewlett Packard is a contractor
on the B-52 bomber and the Pershing missile. In Sonoma County, the
location of the Bohemian Grove, Hewlett Packard is the largest employer
and the number one recipient of Department of Defense funds. (1987
description) Trustee Carnegie Institution of Washington. |
Hickel, Walter J. |
|
Secretary of the Interior, invited by Fred L. Hartley, president
of Union Oil. Union Oil caused the Santa Barbara oil spill and Walter
Hickel was involved in solving that problem. |
Higgins, William L. |
Tunerville |
William (Bill) Higgins was a co-founder of Caspian Sea Ventures Co., Limited, a recent acquisition of RealAmerica Co. He has held executive management positions in McDermott International, Inc., serving as Executive Vice President from 1988 to 1995. His total career with McDermott spanned 27 years. Mr. Higgins was also President and chief executive officer of Dillingham Construction Holdings, Inc. from 1996 to 1998. He was named a Director in February,2000. Currently Mr. Higgins is Chief Operating Officer of the Dick Corporation, a Pottsburg, Pennsylvania based civil construction company. |
Hiller, Stanley, Jr. |
|
Hiller has been a senior partner in Hiller Investment Company (private investments) since 1968. Chairman of the Board of Key Tronic Corporation (manufacturer of computer keyboards and other input devices). Previously, he was Chairman of the Board of Baker International, Reed Tool, York International, and other corporations. Director of the Boeing Corporation 1976-1998. |
Hixon, Alexander P. |
Zaca |
Unknown. |
Hoffman, Wayne M. |
Spot |
Hoffman is the former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Flying Tiger Line, Inc. and Tiger International, Inc., the international air cargo and transport company. During Mr. Hoffman's 19 years at Flying Tiger, the company grew to $2.5 billion in revenues and was sold to Federal Express in the late 1980s. Prior to Flying Tiger, Mr. Hoffman served as Chairman of the Board of the New York Central Transportation Company, and in other executive roles with the New York Central Railroad Co. and the Illinois Central Railroad. He formerly served on the boards of Hoffman Pacific Corporation (owner), Pacific Executive Aviation, Adventure Airlines, U.S. Sunamerica, Inc., Kaufmann & Broad, Rohr, Inc. and Aerospace Corp. Mr. Hoffman also co-founded the Hungry Tiger chain of restaurants located throughout the western United States. |
Hollister, Charles Davis |
|
Joined the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) in 1967 as
an oceanographer/sedimentologist in the Department of Geology and
Geophysics. His early research documented the global effects of deep
ocean circulation on sediment texture and on the distribution of current
controlled sediment rifts. Hollister started the development of the
giant piston coring system and documented the longest continuous record
of ocean basin history in a single 100 foot long core. He also made
significant discoveries concerning ocean sediment transport and directed
the High Energy Benthic Boundary Layer Experiment (HEBBLE). In addition,
Hollister initiated the sub-seabed concept and led the international
team that studied the scientific feasibility of isolating high-level
radioactive material into sediments below the sea floor. Hollister
gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1997 about the disposal of
nuclear waste. |
Hood, Edward E. |
|
Hood joined General Electric in 1957 as a design engineer after service in the U.S. Air Force. In 1962, he was selected to head GE's Supersonic Transport Project, and was named general manager of GE's Commercial Engine Division and elected a vice president of the company in 1968. In 1972, Hood was promoted to Vice President and Group Executive of GE's International Group. The following year, he was named Vice President and Group Executive of the Power Generation Group, a position he held until late 1977 when he was promoted to Senior Vice President and Sector Executive of Technical Systems and Materials Sector. He was elected Vice Chairman of GE's board of directors in 1979, a position he held until his retirement in 1993. America's toughest boss by Fortune
magazine in 1984. |
Hoover, Herbert |
Cave Man |
Head of the Food Administration under Wilson, head of the American
Relief Administration, member of the Supreme Economic Council, organized
shipments of food for starving millions in central Europe and Soviet
Russia after WWI, Secretary of Commerce under Presidents Harding and
Coolidge, United States president 1929-1933, became the scapegoat
for the great depression, powerful critic of the New Deal, elected
by Truman and Eisenhower to reorganise the Executive Departments. |
Hopper, James |
|
Guest from long ago. |
Hotchkis, Preston |
Owl's Nest |
An insurance executive and member of the Business Advisory Council
of the Department of Commerce. Met with Eisenhower and Richard Nixon
in the 1950s. |
Houghton, Amory, Jr. |
Mandalay |
Chairman of New York-based Corning Glass Works until 1983 (The fifth
generation of his family to head this company). Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Howard, Benjamin |
|
British physician, membership goes back to the 19th century. |
Howard, Jack R. |
Cave Man |
Yale, president of Scripps Howard Broadcasting Company in 1937,
assistant executive editor of Scripps Howard Newspapers in 1939, president
of The E.W. Scripps Company in 1953, president Scripps Howard Foundation
1963-1968, Jack R. Howard Fellowships in International Journalism. |
Huber, Gordon |
Wild Oats |
Unknown. |
Hussman, Walter |
|
Publisher of the Arkansas Democrat Gazette. Member of the Bohemian Grove. |
Imbler, Stephen V. |
Romany |
Senior vice president and chief financial officer Hyperion. President of Liquid Audio. |
Inman, Bobby Ray |
|
He served as Director of Naval Intelligence from 1974 to1976, then moved to the Defense Intelligence Agency where he served as Vice Director until 1977. He next became the Director of the National Security Agency from 1977 to 1981. In 1982, Inman joined the board of Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC - the largest employee-owned research and engineering firm in the United States). He retired from SAIC in 2003. After retiring from the Navy, Inman was chairman and chief executive officer of the Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation in Austin, Texas, for four years and chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Westmark Systems Inc., a privately owned electronics industry holding company, for three years. Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas from 1987 through 1990. His primary activity since 1990 has been investing in start-up technology companies, where he is a managing partner with Gefinor Ventures. He is also a member of the board of directors of Fluor (which has contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan), Massey Energy Company, SBC Communications and Temple Inland. He is known publicly as President Bill Clinton's first choice to succeed Les Aspin as Secretary of Defense in 1993. He withdrew from consideration in a televised conference in which he complained about a "conspiracy" to attack his character. Among those he named were Senator (and future presidential candidate) Bob Dole, and neoconservative pundit William Safire. He has also been influential in various advisory roles. Notably, he chaired a commission on improving security at U.S. foreign installations after the Marine barracks bombing and the April 1983 US Embassy bombing in Beirut, Lebanon. The commission's report has been influential in setting security design standards for U.S. Embassies. Since 1987, Inman has also served as a professor at the University of Texas at Austin. Went in 2005 to the Bohemian Grove, where he told the Bohos that the U.S. will have to stay in Iraq another 10 years before it can accomplish anything there. Bobby Ray is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission. |
Ireland, R. L. III |
|
Unknown. |
Jackson, Maynard |
|
Jackson was a prominent member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc.,
the first intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established for
African Americans. In 1965 Jackson became a lawyer with the first
and largest black law firm in Atlanta, Georgia. In 1974 he was elected
mayor of Atlanta, the first black mayor of a major southern city,
and served until 1982. He was reelected in 1989. |
Jaedicke, Robert K. |
Sempervirens |
Former Dean of the Stanford University Graduate School of Business
and member of the boards of directors of Wells Fargo Bank, Boise Cascade,
GenCorp, State Farm Insurance, Enron, and Homestake Mining. |
Jameson, Andrew G. |
|
Member of the Bohemian Grove Annals Committee in 1997. |
Jenkins, William M. |
Woof |
Dr. Jenkins holds a B.S. in Psychology, an M.A. in Psychobiology and a Ph.D. in Psychobiology from Florida State University, with additional post-doctoral training from UCSF. Founder/Divisional Senior VP of Scientific Learning Corporation. |
Jewell, James Earl |
|
Member of the Bohemian Grove Annals Committee in 1997. |
Johnson, Belton Kleberg |
River Lair |
Unknown. |
Johnson, Charles B. |
Mandalay |
Fortune of 1.5 billion, runs mutual fund giant Franklin Resources
with half-brother Rupert Johnson (see). Yale grad and ex-Army lieutenant,
Charles is chairman and CEO. After last year's purchase of Fiduciary
Trust, firm now manages $271 billion in assets. |
Johnson, W. Thomas |
Lost Angels |
Chairman and CEO of CNN, president Los Angeles Times, executive
assistant of Lyndon B. Johnson, trustee Southern Center for International
Studies, member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Member of the Trilateral Commission. |
Jones, David C. |
Dog House |
Jones graduated from Roswell flying school in New Mexico in 1943 and the National War College in 1960. He also attended the University of Nebraska, Louisiana Tech University, Minot State University, Boston University, and Troy University. In 1943 he was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant in the United States Air Force. He advanced through the ranks and was created a general in 1971. Jones was deputy Commander of operations in Vietnam, vice commander of the 7th Air Force, commander-in-chief of the U.S. Air Force in Europe, and commander 4th Allied Tactical Air Force. From 1974 to 1978 he served as Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 1978 until he retired from military service in 1982. Jones is a member of the Air Force Association, the Falcon Foundation, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Alfalfa Club, and the Bohemian Club. |
Jones, John Lowell |
Derelicts |
John Lowell Jones was a director of Norfolk Southern Corporation. |
Jones, Richard W. |
Sleepy Hollow |
Unknown. |
Jones, Thomas V. |
Lost Angels |
President, chairman and CEO of Northrop Corporation 1952-1990, Northrop
Corporation. This company has been involved with constructing planes
like the F/A 18 hornet, the B2-Spirit, and the F22 Raptor. It provides
technologically advanced products and services in defense electronics,
systems integration, information technology, nuclear and non-nuclear
shipbuilding, and space technology. The company's headquarters are
located in Los Angeles. Member of the Circle of Presidents at the
RAND Corporation, which means he has donated at least tens of thousands
of dollars if not millions. |
Jowitt, Ken |
|
Ken Jowitt is the Pres and Maurine Hotchkis Senior Fellow at the
Hoover Institution and the Robson Professor of Political Science at
the University of California, Berkeley. Jowitt specializes in the
study of comparative politics, American foreign policy, and postcommunist
countries. He is particularly interested in studying types of anti-Western
ideologies that might appear in the near future and, in that context,
is working on Frontiers, Barricades and Boundaries, a book dealing
with the changes in international political geography and the challenges
to American and Western institutions. Jowitt has been teaching at
the University of California, Berkeley, since 1968. In 1983 he won
the University Distinguished Teaching Award and was dean of undergraduate
studies from 1983 to 1986. In 1995, the year he was named Robson Professor
of Political Science, he also received the Distinguished Teaching
Award for the Division of Social Sciences. Jowitt received his bachelor's
degree from Columbia College in 1962 and his master's degree and doctorate
from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1963 and 1970, respectively.
The University of California Press published his doctoral thesis,
Revolutionary Breakthroughs and National Development: The Case of
Romania, in 1971. Jowitt gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1997. |
Kaiser, Henry J. |
Mandalay |
Industrialist. Founder Kaiser Engineers. Now it’s part of
ICF Kaiser Consulting Group. Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Goes
into health and medical policies. |
Kaiser, Edgar F. |
Mandalay |
Family of Henry J. Kaiser, Kaiser Foundation. |
Kaiser, Edgar F., Jr. |
Mandalay |
Son of Edgar F. Kaiser. Invited by his father in 1970. |
Karlstrom, Paul J. |
|
Member of the Bohemian Grove Annals Committee in 1997. |
Kearns, Henry |
Mandalay |
A good friend of Stephen Bechtel Sr. Chairman of the Export-Import
Bank 1969-1973 (resigned after an inquiry had been started). Under
Kearns’ chairmanship of the Import-Export bank, Bechtel received
numerous lucrative contracts. Kearns also convinced the board to drop
the requirement that approval of loans should be relaxed. Thereafter,
Kearns could personally approve loans of US $30 million or less directly
to Bechtel. During Stephen's Bechtel Sr.’s tenure on the board,
the Export-Import Bank lent hundreds of millions of dollars to several
countries, including Indonesia, the Phillipines, Brazil, Egypt, and
Algeria for the financing of Bechtel-related projects. |
Keegan, John |
|
An English military historian specializing in 20th-century wars. In 1960 he was appointed to a lectureship at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, a post he held for 26 years. In 1986 he moved to the Daily Telegraph to take up the post of Defence Correspondent. In 1998 he wrote and presented the BBC's Reith Lectures, entitled War and Our World. He was knighted in 2000. |
Kelly, John Michael |
Camels |
Unknown. |
Kelley, Thomas B. |
Seven Trees |
A partner in the Faegre & Benson LLP's ’s Denver office. Tom has more than 33 years experience in media and communications law and is the pre-eminent media and First Amendment attorney in the Rocky Mountain Region. He is listed in the First Amendment Law category in The Best Lawyers in America. Tom has worked on high profile cases such as: the Oklahoma City bombing; Kobe Bryant case; JonBenet Ramsey; and the Columbine High School shootings. |
Kemp, Jack F. |
|
Jack F. Kemp is the founder and a co-director of Empower America. He served four years as the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (his then Assistant Secretary of Housing was Catherine Austin Fitts.) and as the U.S. Representative from New York state (18 years). Jack Kemp was a honorary co-chairman of the Alexis de Tocqueville Institute (publishes propaganda from major corporations) in the mid-1990s at a time when AdTI was involved in pro-tobacco activities sponsored by Philip Morris. In 1996, he was nominated by then Senator Bob Dole as the Republican Party's vice presidential candidate. Kemp is on the board of Habitat for Humanity and "several technology companies including Oracle." Fitts described how Kemp could sometimes slip into psychotic rages. Rev Moon partner (who believes he's an incarnation of the Messiah), member Council for National Policy,
Empower America, Heritage Foundation, and the Washington Family Council. Said to be a high-level Freemason. |
Kennedy , David M. |
Mandalay |
History professor from Stanford University, chairman of the Continental
Illinois Bank and Trust Company, Secretary of the Treasury, guest
of Rudolph A. Peterson. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Kennedy, Robert D. |
Owl's Nest |
Cornell University Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering.
Mr. Kennedy, age 72, held a number of executive and senior management
positions with Union Carbide Corporation, including Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and President. He retired as Chairman from Union
Carbide in 1995 after a career that spanned 40 years. He is a member
of the Boards of Directors of Sunoco Inc., Blount International Inc.,
and Hercules Incorporated. He is on the advisory board of RFE Associates. |
Kennedy, Robert F. |
|
Younger brother of President John F. Kennedy, and was appointed by his brother as Attorney General for his administration. He worked closely with his brother during the Bay of Pigs Invasion and the Cuban Missile Crisis. After his brother's death, Kennedy ran in 1964 for the New York senate seat, winning that office in the November of that year. In 1968, he was assassinated during his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. He spoke at the Bohemian Grove in 1964. |
Keller, Stephen F. |
Skyhi |
Unknown. |
Kerr , John C. |
Land of Happiness |
B.A. University of British Columbia, M.B.A. University of California,
Berkeley, chairman and chief executive officer of Lignum Ltd., chairman
of Lignum Investments Ltd., director Scotiabank 1999 and on, member
of the Corporate Governance and Pension Committee and the Human Resources
Committee, sits on the boards of the Vancouver Foundation and the
Council of Forest Industries and is involved in the negotiation of
softwood lumber agreements with the United States on behalf of the
Canadian lumber industry. In addition, at different times during the
period from 2000 to 2004, Mr. Kerr served as a director of the following
publicly-traded companies: Riverside Forest Products Ltd. and Bombardier
Inc., received the Order of Canada from the Governor-General of Canada
(representative of the British Empire). |
Ketelsen, James L. |
Uplifters |
He began his business career in 1955 as a CPA in Chicago with the firm of Price Waterhouse. In 1959 he joined J I Case Company and became president of Case in 1967. He served as president of Case until moving to Tenneco Inc. at its Houston headquarters in 1972 as a member of the Board of Directors and as executive vice president. He served as chairman and chief executive officer of Tenneco Inc. from July 1, 1978, to January 1, 1992. He is a former regent of the University of Houston System and a trustee of Northwestern University. Morgan Guaranty & Trust. Investor in nuclear industries. |
Killefer, Tom |
|
Chairman and president of U.S. Trust Corp. and a former member of the Stanford Board of Trustees. Director Northrop Corporation. Went to the Bohemian Grove in
1981. In 1971, he became a member of Stanford's Board of Trustees, serving in that capacity until 1981. In 1976, he became chairman of the board of directors of the Detroit branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and of Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. At various times, he also served as a director or trustee of the Naval Aviation Museum Foundation, the Detroit Symphony, the New York Philharmonic Society, Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in New York, the Lucile Salter Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford, the Atlantic Council of the United States, the Community Foundation of Santa Clara County, the National Council of Crime and Delinquency, and as a member of the Rockefeller University Council. Member of the Atlantic Council of the United States. |
Kimball, William R. |
Faraway |
He founded a fiberglass products company in the 1950s and served on the boards of several top companies during his business career. Kimball has been called a pioneer in the use of fiberglass plastics through Kimball Manufacturing Corp., where he also was president. He went on to found Kimball & Co., which manages various operations and investments. He also had been a director on the boards of Levi Strauss & Co., Cox Communications, Clorox Co. and RSI Corp. In addition, Kimball co-founded Alpine Meadows Ski Resort in Lake Tahoe, the Acorn Foundation and the Kimball Foundation. The Acorn Foundation gives grants to grassroots organizations for environmentally sustainable building projects, and the Kimball Foundation supports nonprofit groups that assist poor and disadvantaged families in the Bay Area. Kimball's extensive civic service in and around San Francisco included being chairman emeritus of the California Academy of Sciences' board of trustees and board member for the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the San Francisco Symphony and the American Conservatory Theater. He was also the founding chairman of the Kimball Art Center and School in Park City, Utah. |
King, Larry |
|
Not the guy from "Larry King Live". John deCamp - Named
by Paul Bonacci as the organiser of an off-season pedophile homosexual
snuff film made at the Bohemian Grove. Bonacci would eventually be granted
1 million dollars by the court. King served 5 years in jail. |
Kirby, Robert E. |
|
After receiving a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from Penn State in 1939, Mr. Kirby took a job with the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company in Tyrone, Pa., and within a year became assistant superintendent of the mill. In 1943, he joined the Navy's highly secret radar corps. He was sent to study electrical engineering at Princeton University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Bell Labs and was discharged in 1946 with the rank of lieutenant after serving as an electronics officer. In 1952, Westinghouse sendtKirby to Harvard Business School for 16 months. He became chairman of the board of Westinghouse in 1975 and retired in 1983. Westinghouse contracts include radar for the B-1B bomber and launch
tubes for the Trident missile. They are heavily involved with nuclear
propulsion systems. Kirby went to the Bohemian Grove in 1979 and 1980. |
Kirkham, Francis R. |
Dragon |
General counsel of Standard Oil of California 1960-1970. |
Kissinger, Heinz "Henry " Alfred |
Mandalay |
Henry Kissinger was born in the Bavarian city of Fuerth. He was a son of Louis and Paula Stern Kissinger. The elder Kissinger was a school teacher and after Hitler's rise to power, the family immigrated to London in 1938. After a short stay, they moved to Washington Heights in New York City. Recruited by Fritz Kraemer during WWII. Served in the U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps 1943-1946. According to Hersh, Kissinger stayed on active duty in West Germany after the war and was eventually assigned to the 970th CIC Detachment, whose functions included support for the recruitment of ex-Nazi intelligence officers for anti-Soviet operations inside the Soviet bloc. Captain in the Military Intelligence Reserve 1946-1949. Went to Harvard in 1947, where he was picked by the Rockefellers, three of whom were overseers there at the time. Executive director Harvard International Seminar 1951-1969. Became an consultant to the Operations Research Office in 1951. According to Hersh, that unit, under the direct control of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, conducted highly classified studies on such topics as the utilization of former German operatives and Nazi partisan supporters in CIA clandestine activities. Became a consultant to the Director of the Psychological Strategy Board in 1952, a covert arm of the National Security Council. The first director (and primary founder) was Gordon Gray, who served in this position from June 1951 to May 1952. Under Eisenhower, on September 2, 1953, the role of this department was expanded and the name became Operations Coordinating Board (OCB). Became an consultant to the Operations Coordinating Board in 1955, which was then the highest policy-making board for implementing clandestine operations against foreign governments. JFK would abolish the OCB in 1961 although a similar unacknowledged structure would remain operational. Became known as the most trusted aide to Nelson Rockefeller in the mid 1950s, who by then had served as Eisenhower's Special Assistant for Cold War Planning and overseer of all the CIA's clandestine operations. Member of the Department of Government, Center for International Affairs, Harvard University, 1954-1969. Study director of nuclear weapons and foreign policy at the Council on Foreign Relations 1955-1956. Director Special Studies Project for the Rockefeller Brothers Fund 1956-1958, which worked out basic cold war policy manifestoes (hardline). They were in large part adopted by successive administrations in Washington. Author of 'Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy', released in 1957. Consultant Weapons Systems Evaluation Group of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 1959-1960. Consultant National Security Council 1961-1962. Consultant RAND Corporation 1961-1968. Consultant United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency 1961-1968. Consultant to the Department of State 1965-1968. Right-hand man to Nelson Rockefeller during the 1968 Republican nomination campaign. Nixon's National Security Advisor 1969-1973. Chairman of the secretive Forty Committee, the covert apparatus of the National Security Council, from at least 1969 to 1976, which oversaw the CIA's clandestine operations. Nelson Rockefeller, even in his Senate bio, has been named as an (earlier) chairman of the Forty Committee. As head of this committee Kissinger had access to more information than the other members and he is said to have distorted it at times. During this same time period Kissinger also set up and headed the Washington Special Action Group (WSAG), another very important foreign policy group. Committee Secretary of State 1973-1977. Made two secret trips to China in 1971 to confer with Premier Zhou Enlai. Together with David Rockefeller involved in setting up the National Council for US-China Trade in 1973. Negotiated the SALT I and ABM treaty with the Soviet Union. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1973. Made other secret trips to China in later years to make extremely sensitive intelligence exchanges. Robert C. McFarlane was among those who went to China with Kissinger, in his case between 1973 and 1976. Negotiated the end of the Yom Kippur War in 1973. Said to have played a role in the 1973 Augusto Pinochet coup. Approved President Suharto's invasion of East-Timor in 1973, which resulted in a bout 250,000 dead communists and socialists. Suspected of having been involved in Operation Condor which started around 1975 and was an assassination and intelligence gathering operation on 3 continents. Director Council on Foreign Relations 1977-1981. Together with Cyrus Vance and David Rockefeller he set up the US-China Business Council in 1979, the sucessor to the Council for US-China Trade. Annual visitor of Bilderberg since at least the 1970s. Annual visitor of the Trilateral Commission since the late 1970s. Visited Le Cercle. Member of the 1001 Club and the Pilgrims Society. Visitor of Bohemian Grove camp Mandalay. Founder of Kissinger Associates in 1982, a secretive consulting firm to international corporations. Some of the first members to join Kissinger Associates were Brent Scowcroft (vice-chairman), Lawrence Eagleburger (president), Lord Carrington, Lord Roll of Ipsden, and Pehr Gyllenhammar. Some served until 1989, others were still active for Kissinger Associates in the late 1990s. Chairman National Bipartisan Commission on Central America 1983-1984. Set up the America-China Society in 1987, together with Robert McFarlane and Cyrus Vance. Appointed chairman of AIG's advisory council in 1987. Director of the Atlanta branch of the Italian Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL) from 1985 to 1991. This was during the 1989 BNL Affair (Iraq Gate) in which it became known that the Atlanta branch had made $4 billion in unreported loans to Iraq. After the revelation, the money was said to be used by the Iraqis to buy food and agriculture equipment, but in reality they were buying loads of military equipment. His consultancy firm, Kissinger Associates, set up the China Ventures fund with CITIC in 1989, which would be in the same year that he defended the Tiananmen Square massacre, arguing against sanctions being placed on China. In 1990, he sat on boards of American Express, Union Pacific, R.M. Macy, Continental Grain, CBS, and the Revlon Group. Also a consultant to ABC news at this time. Member Atlantic Council of the United States. Member of the Council of Advisors of the United States-Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce. Trustee of the Center Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), the Arthur F Burns Fellowship, the Institute of International Education, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Honorary Governor of the Foreign Policy Association. Patron of the Atlantic Partnership and the New Atlantic Initiative. Chairman of the Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships, the Nixon Center, and the American Academy in Berlin. Co-chairman of the Editorial Board of 'The National Interest' magazine. Chancellor of the College William and Mary. Honorary chairman World Cup USA 1994 (Kissinger has attended football matches with his friend and colleague Etienne Davignon). Named Honorary Knight Commander of St. Michael and St. George, 1995. Director Freeport-McMoRan 1995-2001. Director of Conrad Black's Hollinger International Inc. Member of J.P. Morgan's International Advisory Council. Former member of the Advisory Council of Forstmann Little & Co. and American Express. Advisor to China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC). Member of the Europe Strategy Board of Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst. Director of Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation. Chairman of the International Advisory Board of the American International Group (AIG), a partner of Kissinger Associates. Also chairman of the Advisory Boards of AIG Asian Infrastructure Funds I & II and a director of AIG Global. In 1997, Kissinger became the central advisor to the Business Coalition for US-China Trade, a group of about a 1000 leading companies willing to invest in China. In 2000, Henry Kissinger was quoted by Business Wire: "Hank Greenberg, Pete Peterson and I have been close friends and business associates for decades." Maurice Greenburg is head of AIG and Peter G. Peterson is head of The Blackstone Group, which is the other major partner of Kissinger Associates. Peterson is also a former chairman of Lehman Brothers. Kissinger is a friend of Lynn Forester and introduced her to Sir Evelyn de Rothschild at the 1998 Bilderberg conference. They would soon become married. After Pulitzer Price winning journalist Peter Arnett produced a CNN report on Operation Tailwind (a Vietnam operation in which US Special Forces allegedly killed US defectors with Sarin) in 1998, Kissinger and his friends called up CNN to demand that the news network should distance itself from the story (a story which CNN initially approved) and made sure that the producers of the show were publicly humiliated and fired. Arnett was fired again by NBC and National Geographic in March 2003 immediately after he said the Bush Administration was looking for a plan B now that Iraqi resistance turned out to be much more intense than expected. Within 24 hours the Daily Mail hired him. When Henry Kissinger is invited to speak at the United Nations Association on April 11, 2001 Lord Jacob Rothschild is flanking his side. Picked as the initial head of the 9/11 investigating committee in 2003, although he turned out to be too controversial to remain in that position. Henry Kissinger is a patron of the Open Russia Foundation since 2001, together with Lord Jacob Rothschild. The Foundation was set up by Mikhail Khodorkovsky, a controversial oligarch, later locked up by Putin. Honorary trustee of the Aspen Institute. Because of previous international attempts by European and South American judges to question him, he is known to take legal advice before traveling to certain countries in either continent. |
Kluge, John W. |
Wohwohno |
German émigré having tougher time re-creating earlier success. Amassed $8 billion fortune buying, selling cellular and broadcasting properties to Rupert Murdoch and WorldCom. Latest venture, Metromedia Fiber, less lucrative: company filed for bankruptcy earlier this year. Stepped down as chairman of Metromedia International (telecom, cable) after flak from shareholders. He has a personal fortune of $10 billion. |
Knight, Andrew S. B. |
Mandalay |
Resident of the United Kingdom. Educated at Ampleforth College and Balliol College, Oxford (MA, Modern History). Knight worked at the City of London merchant bankers, J. Henry Schroder Wagg, from 1961 to 1963 and the Investors Chronicle from 1964 until 1966. He joined The Economist in 1966 on the international business and investment sections. From March 1968 to April 1970 he served in the Washington offices of the paper before returning to Europe to establish its European section and, in 1973, its offices in Brussels. Editor of the Economist 1974-1986. Governor of the Ditchley Foundation since at least 1981 (still a member in 2005). CEO and editor in chief of the Daily Telegraph plc. 1986-1989. Identified as a governor of the Atlantic Institute for International Affairs in 1987. Chairman of News International (News Corp) 1990-1994. Executive and later non-executive director of News Corp. Director of BskyB since 1994 (later chaired by Jacob de Rothschild and the son of Rupert Murdoch). Non-executive director of Rothschild Investment Trust Capital Partners plc. since 1997 (chairman is Jacob Rothschild, co-director is Nathaniel Rothschild). Chairman of the Compensation Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of News Corporation. Member of the advisory board for Centre for Economic Development and Policy Research at Stanford University. Director of the Anglo-Russian Opera. Director Templeton Emerging Markets Investment Trust plc. since 2003. Chairman of the Jerwood Charity and Shipston Home Nursing; a member of the Advisory Board of the Centre of Economic Policy Research at Stanford University, California; a member of the Advisory Council of the Institute of International Studies, Stanford University; Governor (and member of the Council of Management) of the Ditchley Foundation; Chairman of the Harlech Scholars’ Trust; a Director of the Kirov Opera and Ballet (London). He was also formerly Chairman of the Ballet Rambert; Trustee of the Victoria & Albert Museum; Governor of Imperial College of Science & Technology; Council member of the Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House); member of the Board of Overseers at the Hoover Institution, Stanford; member of the Steering Committee of Bilderberg (seemed to have began visiting since 1996); Visitor of Bohemian Grove camp Mandalay; Council member of Templeton College, Oxford; non-executive Director of Reuters Holdings plc and of Tandem Computers Inc. |
Kravis, Henry R. |
|
First cousins partnered with fellow Bear Stearns mentor Jerome Kohlberg to form leveraged buyout firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts 1976. Bought underperforming companies using junk bonds, reworked balance sheet, sold for profit. Kohlberg exited in 1987. "Barbarians at the gate" best known for $25 billion RJR Nabisco buyout 1989. Recent spending spree: PanAmSat (satellites), Sealy Mattress, Auto-Teile-Unger (German auto parts). Also sprucing up Primedia: sold off moneylosing New York and Seventeen magazines; developing TV shows to boost Hot Rod, Motor Trend brands. High-profile New York socialite big donor to Metropolitan Museum; wife, Marie-Josée, former director of poverty-fighting Robin Hood Foundation. |
Krebs, Robert D. |
Sempervirens |
Krebs retired as Chairman of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation
(transportation) in April 2002. He held that position since December
2000. He was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer from June 1999 until
December 2000, and Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
from April 1997 to May 1999. He is a director at Phelps Dodge Company
and has been listed in Forbes' America's Most Powerful People. |
Kroc, Ray |
|
Founder of the McDonald's Corporation in 1955, although not of the restaurant chain itself, which was started by Dick and Mac McDonald in 1940. Dubbed the Hamburger King, Kroc was included in the TIME 100 list of the world's most influential builders and titans of industry and amassed a $500 million fortune during his lifetime. Died in 1984. |
Krulak, Victor H. |
Owl's Nest |
Marine Lieutenant General Victor Krulak arrived at the Naval Academy
at the young age of 16. “Brute” as he was known, would
later play a major role in three wars: World War II, the Korean War
and Vietnam. During World War II, Lieutenant Colonel Krulak led a
raid against the Japanese at Choiseul Island in the Northern Solomon
Islands. He succeeded in his mission of creating a diversion to cover
a larger invasion, but was wounded in the battle. PT boats had been
dispatched to help Krulak’s battalion evacuate, and he was rescued
by a Skipper of one of the boats—John F. Kennedy. When the Korean
War broke out, Krulak was assigned to serve as Chief of Staff for
the First Marine Division. From 1957-1959, he served as director of
the Marine Corps Education Center in Quantico. In March 1964, Krulak
was designated commanding general, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, and
promoted to lieutenant general. In this position, Krulak was responsible
for all Fleet Marine Force units in the Pacific and made more than
50 trips to the Vietnam Theater. His book, First to Fight: An
Inside View of the U.S. Marine Corps, is still widely read around
the world. |
Kurutz, Gary F. |
|
Member of the Bohemian Grove Annals Committee in 1997. Not a businessman. |
Laird, Melvin R. |
|
After serving (1942–46) in the navy during World War II, he entered politics as a Republican and was (1946–52) a state senator in Wisconsin. As a member (1953–69) of the U.S. House of Representatives, he served on the appropriations committee where he actively supported a large military budget and a strong nuclear defense posture as well as increased funds for health and education. Laird became secretary of defense in President Nixon's cabinet and presided over the shift from a conscripted to an all-volunteer army. He supported (1970) the invasion of Cambodia and approved the strategy of bombing North Vietnam to force a peace settlement. After his resignation as secretary, he served (1973) briefly as counselor to the president for domestic affairs. Laird is the author of A House Divided (1962) and editor of Republican Papers (1968). U.S. secretary of defense (1969–73). |
Landis, Richard G. |
Uplifters |
Retired Chairman and CEO Del Monte Corporation. Honorary chairman of the University of La Verne (CA). Member of the Newcomen Society. |
Lane, Laurence W., Jr. |
Sempervirens |
Chairman of the Board Lane Publishing Co. Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Australia 1985-1989. |
Lane, Melvin B. |
Sempervirens |
Trustee of the Sierra Club 1977-1984. Founding Chairman of the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Member of the Advisory Council of Save the Bay. |
Larson, Charles |
|
Retired four star Admiral of the United States Navy. He twice served as Superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. He also served as CINCPAC (Commander in Chief, Pacific). In 2002, after switching parties to become a Democrat, he ran unsuccessfully for Lieutenant Governor of Maryland with Democrat Kathleen Kennedy Townsend. He and his wife Sally reside in Annapolis. As of 2004, he serves on the Northrop Grumman Corporation's Board of Directors. |
Larson, John W. |
Derelicts |
Unknown. |
Lawrence, Ernest O. |
|
Nuclear physicist who occupied the Bohemian Grove Redwood Clubhouse at the time of the Manhattan Project. |
Leavitt, Dana G. |
Pelicans |
Unknown. |
Lehman, John F. |
|
Born in 1942, and a scion of one of Philadelphia's oldest and wealthiest (banking) families. Lehman can trace his family line back to an aide to William Penn, founder of the Quaker colony. Received a B.S. in international relations from St. Joseph's University in 1964. Bachelor of Arts and Masters of Arts degrees from Cambridge University. While at Cambridge, Lehman frequently spent weekends at the palace of Prince Rainier and Princess Grace in Monaco, because he is a second cousin of the late Grace Kelly (Princess Grace of Monaco). Received a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania (1974). As a student, he joined the Intercollegiate Student Institute, founded by William Buckley, Jr. (Skull & Bones; CIA; Knights of Malta; Bohemian Grove), and as a graduate student roomed with Edwin Feulner (later Heritage Foundation president; Mont Pelerin Society president; member Le Cercle; Bohemian Grove; etc). Flew combat missions during the Vietnam War. Served under Henry Kissinger at the National Security Council 1969-1974.
He was a delegate to the Vienna Mutual Balanced Force Reductions negotiations 1975-1978. Deputy Director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. Worked for UBS AG. President of the aerospace consulting firm Abington Corporation 1977-1981.
Managing Director Corporate Finance at PaineWebber, Inc. 1981-1987.
Secretary of the Navy under Reagan 1981-1987. Member of the Committee on the Present Danger under Reagan, together with William Casey, Frank Gaffney, George Shultz, and Richard Perle. Was forced to leave the Reagan administration for his extreme anti-communist convictions.
Became a trustee of the Philadelphia-based Foreign Policy Research Institute, a conservative think tank.
At the Bohemian Grove in 1991, he delivered a speech in which he claimed that 200,000 Iraqis had been killed in the Gulf War. The speech was called 'Smart Weapons'. Founder and chairman of J.F. Lehman
& Company in 1992. This company invests mainly in small- to mid-sized defense companies and employs a small group of former Joint Chiefs, Admirals, and Marine commanders, together with people from NASA, Boeing, General Dynamics, United Technologies, Bechtel, the Department of Energy, etc. Lehman has served on the boards of TI Group plc, Westland Helicopter plc Sedgwick plc and all of J.F. Lehman's realized investments. He currently is a director of Ball Corporation, ISO Inc., EnerSys and Hawaii Superferry, Inc. and Chairman of Special Devices, Incorporated and chairman of OAO Technology Solutions, Inc. He is also Chairman of the Princess Grace Foundation and an Overseer of the School of Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania. Has been a member of the Heritage Foundation and the Council on Foreign Relations. He has been a member
of the 9/11 Commission in 2003 & 2004. Supporter of the Project for the New American Century and pressed for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Lehman himself persists in supporting the administration's claim that Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda were working together. A 'new revelation' he made on NBC in June 2003 that an Iraqi colonel was an Al-Qaeda operative was violently opposed by the CIA, which claimed that this link had turned out to be bogus a long time ago. Lehman has always been one of the harshest critics of the CIA for its pre- and post-9/1l intelligence. He led the American delegation to the funeral of Prince Rainier in 2005. Has been quoted as saying: "Power corrupts. Absolute power is kind of neat." Member of the Advisory Board of Paribas Affaires Industrielles. |
Leighton, Judd C. |
Parsonage |
Director Gulf & Western Inc. Chairperson Leighton-Oare Foundation, Inc. |
Leighton, Philip |
|
One of the persons who were thinking about establishing what would
become the Stanford Research Institute. |
Leland, Ted |
|
Stanford University´s athletic director. Lakeside talk; ‘College
Athletics: Serious Business or Toy Department?’. |
Levine, Lord Peter |
|
Jewish. Former advisor to Margaret Thatcher. Became Lord Mayor of London in 1998. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1999 called 'We Reinvented Government Before You Did'. Chairman of Lloyd’s of London in 2004. Patron of the Lloyd's Yacht Club. Chairman of the Board of Governors for the London Seminar of the Asia Insurance Review in 2004. |
Lewis, David S. |
Owl's Nest |
Mr. Lewis was a major force in the aerospace and defense industry
for three decades. His management skills were notable for their breadth,
ranging over military and commercial aviation, space exploration,
land combat systems, submarines and surface ships. Mr. Lewis was chairman
and chief executive officer of General Dynamics from early 1971 until
his retirement at the end of 1985. During his tenure, General Dynamics'
revenues and earnings quadrupled. While he was chairman, the company
designed and/or built Los Angeles-class fast attack submarines, Trident
submarines, M1 Abrams tanks and the first ships ever built to transport
liquefied natural gas throughout the world. Under his leadership,
the company won the highly competitive U.S. Air Force Lightweight
Fighter Competition, with the F-16 Falcon. He was brought along by
General Dynamics chairman Roger Lewis in the early 1980s. |
Lewis, Drew L. |
Mandalay |
Former secretary of transportation 1981-1983. chairman and CEO Union
Pacific Corp. Director Gannett Corp. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Lewis, Gerald J. |
Crossroad |
Gerald J. Lewis has been a director of the Company since 1996. Judge Lewis has been Chairman of Lawsuit Resolution Services since 1997, and was of counsel to the law firm of Latham & Watkins from prior to 1996 to 1997. Judge Lewis is also a director of Invesco Mutual Funds. Director at General Chemical Group |
Lewis, Roger |
Owl's Nest |
Assistant Air Force secretary, president of the National Railroad
Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK) in 1971, and CEO and chairman of General
Dynamics up to the 1980s. |
Lilley, James R. |
|
During a government career spanning four decades, James Lilley served in the CIA, White House, State Department, and Defense Department. He is the only American to have served as the head of the American missions in Beijing, where he was ambassador from 1989-1991, and Taiwan, where he was Director of the American Institute in Taiwan from 1982-1984. He also served as the U.S. ambassador to South Korea from 1986-1989. He is currently a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, DC. Member Council on Foreign Relations. |
Linkletter, Art |
|
The host of two of the longest running shows in broadcast history: House Party which ran on CBS TV and Radio for 25 years, and People Are Funny which ran on NBC TV and Radio for 19 years. Art's daughter, Diane Linkletter, committed suicide on October 4, 1969 by jumping out of her sixth floor kitchen window. She was 21 years old. Several contradictory stories were brought forward, and Art concluded that she committed suicide because she was on or having a flashback from an LSD trip. Several reports claimed that there was no involvement from LSD, but Art still continues to speak out against drugs. Art also lost his son to an automobile accident. |
Littlefield, Edmund W. |
Mandalay / Rattlers |
A leading San Francisco business executive, and a major benefactor of Stanford University and the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Head of Utah International Inc. until 1976
when it merged with General Electric. He joined Utah Construction Co. in 1951 and began his 21-year career as the firm's principal officer in 1958. Under his leadership, the company was transformed into a worldwide natural resources and shipping company, which was renamed Utah International Inc. In 1976 the company merged with General Electric in what was then the largest merger in history. Littlefield continued as a member of the GE board of directors. Listed
as a member of G.E.'s largest stockholding family. Stayed in Rattlers
in 2004.
Littlefield served on numerous corporate boards throughout his career including Bechtel Investment Co., Chrysler Corp., Del Monte Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co., and Wells Fargo & Co. He was also generous with his time, serving on the Stanford University Board of Trustees from 1956 until 1969 and on the Graduate School of Business Advisory Council from 1959 until 1984. He served on the Hoover Institution Board from 1990 to 1994. He also served at different times as a director of both the San Francisco and the California chambers of commerce, as chairman of SRI International, and as a trustee of the Bay Area Council and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. |
Livermore, Charles |
|
President of the Bay View Business Association. |
Lockhart, James B. |
Sunshiners |
Lockhart is the co-founder and former managing director of NetRisk, a risk management software and consulting firm serving major financial institutions, including banks, insurance companies and investment management firms worldwide. He has an extensive background in insurance. Prior to founding NetRisk, he was Senior Vice President of Finance for National Re and a Managing Director for Smith Barney. Earlier in his career he was Vice President and Treasurer for Alexander & Alexander, and worked for Gulf Oil in Europe and the U.S., serving as Assistant Treasurer. He served with distinction in the previous Bush Administration as Executive Director of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation from 1989 until 1993. He was a director of the Association of Private Pensions and Welfare Plans (now the American Benefits Council) from 1993 until 1995. Lockhart was nominated by President Bush in July 2001 and confirmed by the United States Senate on January 25, 2002 as the new Deputy Commissioner of Social Security. |
London, Jack |
|
Famous writer at the beginning of the 20th century. |
Lozano, Ignacio E., Jr. |
Cuckoo's Nest |
Ignacio E. Lozano, Jr. served as the US Ambassador to El Salvador from 1976-1977. He was a Director of Bank of America, The Walt Disney Company, Pacific Life and Sempra Energy. He also has extensive experience in journalism having been Publisher and Editor of La Opinion. He is a graduate and a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Notre Dame. |
Ludwig, Daniel K. |
|
Set up National Bulk Carriers, which became the largest shippin
company in the US. His shipyards pioneered the use of welding rather
than riveting the hulls of ships, thereby saving valuable time during
World War II when demand for ships soared. He transported oil and
molasses around the world. He set up the Jari project, which was an
attempt to create a tropical tree farm in Brazil for producing pulp
for paper. Later helped Meyer Lansky, chief of the Jewish maffia in
New York, to set his drug money laundering empire in Bahamas. Ludwig
is one of the richest private citizens in the world and has been a
member of the 1001 Club, together with Meyer Lansky. |
Lundborg, Louis |
|
Former chairman of the Bank of America. |
Lurie, Bob |
|
Bought the San Francisco Giants in 1976. |
Lutz, Robert A. |
|
Vice-Chairman, Product Development and Chairman, GM North America,
General Motors Corporation, USA. 1961, BSc in Production Science (Hons)
and 1962, MBA (Hons), Univ. of California-Berkley. 1963-70, held a
variety of senior positions, Europe, General Motors; 1970-73, Exec.
VP, Sales and Member, Board of Management, BMW Munich. 12 years' experience
with Ford Motor Co.: Exec. VP, Truck Operations; Chairman, Ford Europe;
Exec. VP, Int'l Operations; 1982-86, Member of the Board. 1986, joined
Chrysler Corp.: Exec. VP; President and COO, Car and Truck Operations
Worldwide; Vice-Chairman. 2001-02, Chairman and CEO, Exide Technologies.
Currently, Chairman, General Motors, North America and Vice-Chairman,
Product Development, General Motors Corp. Chairman, The New Common
School Foundation. Trustee, Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Inst. Goes
to DAVOS - World Economic Forum. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 2003. |
MacDonnell, Robert I. |
Uplifters |
Retired from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. where he was a partner from 1982 to 2002. He is also a director of Xstrata (Schweiz) AG. Director at Safeway Inc. |
Mackinlay, Ian |
|
Chairman of Ian Mackinlay Architecture Inc. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove
in 2003. |
Madden, Richard B. |
Midway |
Director of the URS Corporation since 1992 and is known to have
attended Bohemian Grove. He has also served as CEO of Potlatch Corporation
from 1971 to 1994, director of PG&E Corporation from 1996 to 2000,
director of Pacific Gas and Electric Company from 1977 to 2000, and
director of CNF Inc. from 1992 to 2002. |
Madrid, Miguel de la |
|
De la Madrid received a degree in law from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) in Mexico City in 1957 and a master's degree in public administration from Harvard University in 1965. He worked for the National Bank of Foreign Commerce and the Bank of Mexico, and, until 1968, he taught law at the UNAM. Between 1970 and 1972 he was employed by Pemex, Mexico's state-owned petroleum company, after which he held several other bureaucratic posts in the government of Luis Echeverría Álvarez. In 1976 he was chosen to serve in José López Portillo's cabinet as secretary of budget and planning. Was president of Mexico from 1982 to 1988. |
Mahoney, Richard J. |
|
Monsanto Corporation Chairman and CEO. Went in 1986. Monsanto manages
the Mound Facility in Miamisburg Ohio for the Department of Energy.
The main activity of the Mound Facility is the production and maintenance
of the non-nuclear components for U.S. nuclear weapons: detonators,
timers, firing sets, and test equipment. Some work with nuclear materials
also occurs there. |
Major, John |
|
He worked as an executive at Standard Chartered Bank in May 1965
where he rose quickly through the ranks, before leaving on his election
to Parliament in 1979. He is an Associate of the Institute of Bankers.
Became a Knight of the Companions of Honour 1998. Former Prime Minister
of the U.K. 1990-1997. Member Carlyle Group's European Advisory Board
since 1998 and chairman of Carlyle Europe since 2001. Chairman of
the Ditchley Foundation since 2005 and a member of the Queen's Privy
Council. Major is one of the few Brits that visited the Bohemian Grove.
In 2002, it became known that Major has had a four year extramarital
affair in the past. Le Cercle members Robert Cecil and Norman Lamont
were running his election campaigns. In February 2005, John Major
and Norman Lamont were accused of holding up the release of papers
on Black Wednesday under the Freedom of Information Act. Black Wednesday
refers to September 16, 1992 when the British government was forced
to withdraw the Pound from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM)
by currency speculators - most notably Le Cercle member George Soros
who made $1 billion that day. Member of the Pilgrims Society. |
Malott, Robert H. |
Silverado Squatters |
Graduate of Kansas University and Harvard Graduate School of Business
and attended NYU Law School, board member of the Amoco Corporation,
Bell & Howell, United Technologies Corporation, Sovereign Specialty
Chemical Company, the Hoover Institution, Public Broadcasting Service
and the National Park Foundation, chairman and chief executive officer
of FMC Corporation, chairman of Argonne National Laboratory, Smithsonian's
National Museum of Natural History, the Lyric Opera of Chicago and
the Chicago Botanic Garden, trustee of the Aspen Institute, American
Enterprise Institute and the University of Chicago. |
Marshall, J. Howard |
Midway |
Was a wealthy oil man and was briefly married to the actress, Anna
Nicole Smith. Shortly after the marriage Mr. Marshall died and Anna
Nicole Smith was involved in a court battle with her former stepson.
She was eventually awarded $88 million. In 1931 J. Howard Marshall
graduated from the law school of Yale University with a Magna Cum
Laude. After graduating he became assistant dean at Yale Law School.
It was here he studied oil, which took him on a lifelong journey that
eventually made him a multi-millionaire. Just two years later he was
recruited by Secretary of the Interior, Harold Ickes and later was
a member of the Petroleum Administration for War. A year before the
end of World War II began his career in the oil industry when he joined
Ashland Oil and Refining Co. He went on to hold top positions at various
oil companies until 1984, when he founded Marshall Petroleum. |
Martin, Robert C. |
Sons of Rest |
Robert C. Martin has been a software professional since 1970. He is CEO, president, and founder of Object Mentor Inc., a firm of highly experienced software professionals that offers process improvement consulting, object-oriented software design consulting , training, and development services to major corporations around the world. |
Marting, Walter A. |
Mandalay |
Yale and Harvard. President of Hanna Mining Company of Cleveland, Ohio. President and Chief Executive Officer of Hcell Technology. Early in his career he served as Vice President Administration and Finance for Amax Europe, a subsidiary of Amax,Inc., at the time a Fortune 500 diversified mining concern. He worked more recently as an investment banker with the Los Angeles M&A boutique, L.J.Kaufman and Co. whose clients included Carnation and Hughes Aircraft. With Hughes he arranged a number of innovative lease financings for their in-flight entertainment equipment group. Most recently Mr. Marting has served as CFO of a rapidly growing digital systems firm based in Orange County for whom he arranged seed and early stage capital fundings. He will be involved at hCell in strategic partnering initiatives and in helping the Company achieve its longer term financial and market objectives. |
Matthews, Chris |
|
MSNBC host. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 2003. Matthews, a Roman Catholic, graduated from The College of the Holy Cross, and did graduate work in economics at the University of North Carolina. Then he served in the Peace Corps in Swaziland as a trade development advisor. As a Democrat, Matthews has worked for several Democratic politicians. He was a presidential speechwriter for four years during the administration of Jimmy Carter. He served as a top aide to long-time Speaker of the House of Representatives Tip O'Neill for six years. He worked in the U.S. Senate for five years on the staffs of Senators Frank Moss and Edmund Muskie before running for U. S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. Matthews worked as a print journalist for 15 years, spending 13 years as Washington Bureau Chief for The San Francisco Examiner (1987 – 2000), and two years as a nationally syndicated columnist for The San Francisco Chronicle. |
Maybeck, Bernard |
|
Well-known US architect who built the Bohemian Grove club house in 1904. |
McCarthy, Roger |
|
Chairman of Exponent, Inc.of Exponent Inc., a company he joined in 1978. 2004 lakeside talk: 'The
Coming Virtual Soldier'. |
McCaw, Craig O. |
|
Net Worth: $2.5 billion. He gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1997.
One of four sons of John Elroy McCaw, early investor in cable TV.
Second-oldest Craig took over cash-strapped company after father's
death in 1969; sold cable, reinvested in cellular phone networks.
Sold McCaw Cellular to AT&T for $11.5 billion in 1993. Brothers
dabble in business independently: Craig stayed in telecom, rescued
wireless carrier Nextel and founded broadband provider XO Communications.
Also funds satellite communications venture Teledesic, but telecom
crash making it hard to get business off ground. Finds solace on the
high seas: with Paul Allen (see), financed OneWorld Challenge, yacht
syndicate competing in the America's Cup. |
McCollum, Leonard F., Jr. |
Green Mask |
University of Texas B.S. in geology, staff geologist with Humble
Oil and Refining Company, president of Carter Oil Company (a division
of Standard Oil) at 39, making him the youngest head of an oil company
in America, director and later CEO of the Continental Oil Company
(Conoco). |
McCone, John Alex |
Mandalay |
Executive vice-president Llewelyn Ironworks. Established the McCone
Engineering Company, which built oil refineries and industrial plants.
On the brink of WWII he established the California Shipbuilding Company
Bechtel-McCone Corp. Chairman of the Atomic Energy commission. CIA
director under Kennedy to replace Allen Dulles. Director of ITT, Pacific
Mutual Life Insurance, United California Bank, Standard Oil of California,
and Western Bancorporation. Member of the Knights of Malta. |
McCourt, Frank J. |
|
Member of Senate (1967-70). Member, House of Delegates (1963-67). President of City Center Democrats. Vice-President of Second District Young Democrats. Director of 11th Ward Democratic Club. Director of Downtown Democratic Club. Director of Mount Royal Democratic Club. Member of Bohemian Club. Member of Maryland and Baltimore City Bar Associations. Member of Forty-Niners Club. Member of YMCA. Member of Friendly Sons of St. Patrick. Member of The University Club. |
McFaul, Michael |
|
McFaul was born and raised in Montana. He received his B.A. in
international relations and Slavic languages and his M.A. in Slavic
and East European studies from Stanford University in 1986. He was
awarded a Rhodes scholarship to Oxford where he completed his Ph.D.
in international relations in 1991. Michael McFaul is the Peter
and Helen Bing Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is also
an associate professor of political science at Stanford University
and a non-resident associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace. Before joining the Stanford faculty in 1995, he worked for
two years as a senior associate for the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace in residence at the Moscow Carnegie Center. McFaul is also
a research associate at the Center for International Security and
Arms Control and a senior adviser to the National Democratic Institute.
He serves on the Board of directors of the Eurasia Foundation, Firebird
Fund, International Forum for Democratic Studies of the National
Endowment for Democracy, Institute of Social and Political Studies,
Center for Civil Society International, and Institute for Corporate
Governance and Law, the steering committee for the Europe and Eurasia
division of Human Rights Watch, and the editorial boards of Current
History, Journal of Democracy, Demokratizatsiya, and Perspectives
on European Politics and Society. He has served as a consultant
for numerous companies and government agencies. McFaul's current
research interests include democratization in the post-communist
world and Iran, U.S.-Russian relations, and American efforts at
promoting democracy abroad. With Abbas Milani and Larry Diamond,
he co-directs the Hoover project on Iran. In 2003, he gave a speech
at the Bohemian Grove about the dwindling US-Russian relations. |
McDonald, Angus Daniel |
|
President of the Southern Pacific Company, the parent company of the Southern Pacific Railroad. Trustee
of Notre Dame. Knight of Malta. Died in 1941. |
McDonald, Robert A. |
|
Divisional President/Divisional Vice Chairman at Procter & Gamble Company. |
McElroy, Neil |
|
A business executive who took his Harvard diploma to Cincinnati to work for Procter & Gamble. He worked through the ranks in advertising and gained the post of president (1948–57) then took some time off to serve in the as Secretary of Defense under President Eisenhower (1957–59). He returned from Washington and became chairman of P&G (1959–72). Went to the Bohemian Grove in the 1960's. |
McHenry, Dean E. |
Isle of Aves |
Studied at UCLA, Stanford, Berkeley and received a Ph.D., taught
government at Williams College in Massachusetts and political science
at Pennsylvania State College, UCLA political science faculty 1939
and on, Carnegie Fellow in New Zealand and Australia 1946-1947, Fulbright
Lecturer at the University of Western Australia in 1954, authored
books like The American Federal Government and The American
System of Government, dean of social sciences and chairman of
the Department of Political Science, assistent-president University
of California from 1958, drafted California's Master Plan for Higher
Education in 1960, founding chancellor of the University of California
- Santa Cruz, driving force behind the growth of California's multitiered
system of public higher education, his son is another geopolitical
expert with great interest in Africa. |
McLaren, Loyal |
Mandalay / Stowaway / Cave Man |
His primary camp was Stowaway where he was a co-captain. McLaren
assisted Firestone with his guest, Henry Ford, to meet prominent republicans
in different camps. One of them was Gerald Ford. In 1954, on request
of the White House, McLaren arranged for the Prime Minister of Pakistan
to be received at the Bohemian Grove that summer. He put him in the Stowaway
camp and made sure he could give a lake side talk. |
McLean, John G. |
Mandalay |
Harvard professor who had written a visionary report predicting the inevitability of an oil supply crunch. Became president of Continental Oil Company. Died in 1974. |
McNear, Denman K. |
|
President of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company in the 1970's. |
McPherson, Rene C. |
|
Elected President of Dana Corporation in 1968 and continued in that office until becoming Chairman and CEO in 1972 (until 1980). Served as President of Hayes-Dana Division in Canada, leading a turnaround to profitability. Director of The Boeing Company and Westinghouse Electric Corporation. Died in 1996. |
McWilliams, James K. |
Skiddoo |
Former coal operator and current executive for utility giant American Electric Power Service Corporation. |
Meese, Edwin III |
|
Edwin Meese III served on the Council for National Policy (CNP) Executive Committee in 1994 and as CNP President in 1996. Meese was distinguished fellow and holder of the Ronald Reagan Chair in Public Policy, the Heritage Foundation; former Attorney General of the U.S. 1985-1988; Counselor to the President, 1981-1985; former Chief of Staff and Senior Issues Advisor for the Reagan-Bush Committee; former president, Council for National Policy; former professor of law, University of San Diego; former vice president for administration, Rohr Industries. As Chairman of the Domestic Policy Council and the National Drug Policy Board, and as a member of the National Security Council, he played a key role in the development and execution of domestic and foreign policy. During the 1970s, Mr. Meese was Director of the Center for Criminal Justice Policy and Management and Professor of Law at the University of San Diego. He earlier served as Chief of Staff for then-Governor Reagan and was a local prosecutor in California. Mr. Meese is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Institute of United States Studies, University of London. He earned his B.A. from Yale University and his J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. During the Reagan Kitchen Cabinet, Joseph Coors and others from the Heritage Foundation received a letter of endorsement from White House Chief of Staff Ed Meese in which Meese promised Edward J. Feulner, Jr., the president of Heritage, that 'this Administration will cooperate fully with your efforts.' After leaving the Reagan administration, Meese joined the staff of the Heritage Foundation. Walsh's Iran/Contra Investigation Report, August 1993: "Attorney General Edwin Meese III became directly involved in the Reagan Administration's secret plan to sell weapons to Iran in January 1986, when he was asked for a legal opinion to support the plan. When the secret arms sales became exposed in November 1986, raising questions of legality and prompting congressional and public scrutiny, Meese became the point man for the Reagan Administration's effort, in Meese's words, 'to limit the damage.'" |
Megeath, Samuel A. III |
|
A former director and chairman of PLM International Inc. (PLM). |
Merrill, Harvie M. |
The Webb |
Director TIS Mortgage Investment Company. Director Hexcel Corporation. Shareholder Fibreboard Corporation. |
Merrill, Steven L. |
Woof |
Steve Merrill has been active in venture capital investing since 1968, and most recently was a Partner with Benchmark Capital. He was president of BankAmerica Capital Corporation in 1976 and managed this very successful venture activity until 1980 when he formed Merrill, Pickard, Anderson & Eyre (MPAE), a privately held venture capital partnership. MPAE managed funds of approximately $285 million provided by a group of 50 limited partners, including major corporations, pension funds, insurance companies, university endowments, and prominent families. Some of the companies funded by MPAE include America Online, Aspect Telecommunications, Cypress Semiconductor, Documentum, and Palm Computing. MPAE stopped making new investments in 1996 and the partners founded Benchmark Capital and Foundation Capital. Steven is a limited partner in both of these firms but is no longer involved in the day-to-day management. Currently, Steven is devoting more time to civic and non-profit activities as well as his private investments. He was chairman of the Board of Trustees of Town School for Boys, a member of the Committee to Restore the San Francisco Opera House, and he is a past director of the Children’s Health Council. Steven is also a past president of the Western Association of Venture Capitalists and a past director of the National Venture Capital Association, and has been a director of numerous privately held companies. He holds an MBA from the Wharton School of Finance and a BA in Sociology from Stanford University. |
Mettler, Ruben F. |
Mandalay |
B.A. of science degree at California Institute of Technology, sent
to Bikini atol after WWII and witnessed some atomic bomb explosions,
later studied electrical and aeronautical engineering at Caltech,
where he earned a Master of Science degree in 1947 and a Ph.D. in
1949, graduating at the top of his class. Recruited into Hughes Aircraft
Corporation and remained there until 1954, after working in different
military systems he went to Washington and became a consultant to
the Department of Defense, joined Ramo-Wooldridge Corporation in 1955
as assistant director and worked for many years on missile guidance
systems and ICBM missiles, Ramo-Wooldridge Corporation changed into
TRW Inc. 1958, with TRW Inc. he served as executive vice-president
for Space Technology Laboratories (STL) 1959-1962, TRW/STL built the
first satellites without government funding and STL went on to become
the first contractor selected by NASA to design and build a large
scientific spacecraft, Mettler becomes president of TRW Systems Group,
which grew out of STL and expanded its leadership in development of
large, complex spacecraft for both the Air Force and NASA. All in
all, Mettler has been president, chief operating officer, chief executive
officer and chairman of TRW Inc. He completely resigned in 1994. Mettler
has been a member of the Japan Society, of the Bretton Woods Committee
2004 and of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Miller, Arjay |
Sempervirens |
He graduated from UCLA in 1937 and spent three years in graduate
school working part-time as a teaching assistant at UC Berkeley, before
becoming an economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
After three years in the Air Force Miller joined Ford Motor Co. in
1946. He became president of Ford in 1963 and vice chairman in 1968,
a year before moving to Stanford. Arjay Miller became the fourth Dean
of the Graduate School of Business on July 1, 1969. Under Miller’s
ten-year deanship the Stanford Business School became the top-ranked
graduate school in the U.S., taking over the position from Harvard. |
Miller, Henry S., Jr. |
Meyerling |
Chairman emeritus of the Henry S. Miller Companies and Henry S.
Miller Interests, Inc.; and is Managing Partner of Highland Park Village
and Preston Royal shopping centres. His career in real estate began
in 1938, when he joined his father, the founder of the companies.
By 1984 Henry S. Miller was the 5th largest real estate brokerage
firm in America. |
Miller, Paul Albert |
Stowaway |
Cryptanalyst, intercepting and deciphering secret German radio transmissions
and codes 1943-1945, Harvard University, joined the family company
Southern California Gas Co. around 1949, in 1968 he became chief executive
officer of the gas company's parent corporation, Pacific Lighting,
which was the largest private gas utility in the nation at the time,
providing energy to all of Southern California. he company, which
in 1988 changed its name to Pacific Enterprise, acquired the Thrifty
Drug Store chain, which later bought out Pay'n Save drug stores and
Bi-Mart stores. It also acquired Big Five Sports and other retail
businesses. Served as president and chairman of the Pacific Lightning
until 1989, was a trustee of Wells Fargo Bank, Newhall Land and Farming
and the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, served on the Arthritis
Foundation Board, chairman of the local and national United Way, the
American Enterprise Institute, the California Chamber of Commerce,
the World Affairs Council of Los Angeles, the Civic Light Opera and
the University of Southern California, also a member of the Pacific
Union Club. He married 5 times, was a gambler and always intensely
competitive. |
Miller, Richard S. |
Green Mask |
Unknown. |
Miller, Richard Russell |
Pink Onion |
Unknown. Probably the person involved in the Iran Contra scandal with Oliver North, etc. |
Miller, Robert F. |
Moro |
Unknown. |
Miller, Robert Gordon |
Medicine Lodge |
Unknown. |
Miller, William Frederic |
Sunshiners |
Unknown. |
Milligan, R. Sheldon, Jr. |
Cool-Nazdar |
In the Eagle Scouts when he was young, he and his wife were involved
with the University of California's Botanical Garden. |
Milliken, Roger |
|
Westinghouse Electric Corporation director. Chairman and CEO of
the textile firm Milliken and Company. |
Montgomery, George G. Jr. |
Santa Barbara |
Senior advisor to Seven Hills merchant bankers. From 1981 until 2002, George served as a General Partner, Managing Director and then Advisory Director at Hambrecht & Quist and its successor, JP Morgan H&Q. Previously, George held senior management positions at Blyth Eastman Paine Webber, Merrill Lynch, and White Weld & Co. Throughout his career, George has specialized in mergers and acquisitions, with a particular expertise in the life sciences industry. George received an MBA from Harvard Business School and a BA from Yale. George is a Trustee and former Board Chairman of the Environmental Defense Fund and serves on the board of the California Academy of Sciences. |
Moore, Gordon E. |
Jinks Band |
Gordon E. Moore is currently Chairman Emeritus of Intel Corporation. Moore co-founded Intel in 1968, serving initially as Executive Vice President. He became President and Chief Executive Officer in 1975 and held that post until elected Chairman and Chief Executive Officer in 1979. He remained CEO until 1987 and was named Chairman Emeritus in 1997. Moore is widely known for "Moore's Law," in which in 1965 he predicted that the number of transistors the industry would be able to place on a computer chip would double every year. In 1975, he updated his prediction to once every two years. While originally intended as a rule of thumb in 1965, it has become the guiding principle for the industry to deliver ever-more-powerful semiconductor chips at proportionate decreases in cost. He is a director of Gilead Sciences Inc., a member of the National Academy of Engineering, and a Fellow of the IEEE. Moore also serves on the Board of Trustees of the California Institute of Technology. He received the National Medal of Technology from President George Bush in 1990. |
Moore, Thomas W. |
Cuckoo's Nest |
Unknown. |
Moorer, Thomas H. |
Silverado Squatters |
Thomas Hinman Moorer (1912 -2004) was a U.S.
admiral. He served as the chief of naval operations between 1967 and
1970. He also served as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
from 1970 until 1974. While Chair, Moorer received unauthorized material
taken from the White House offices of the National Security Council.
He was fiercely critical of Zionist influence on the US government
and protested to the end the official version of the USS Liberty incident.
In 1984 he said: "I’ve never seen a president—I don’t care who he is—stand up to them [the Israelis]. It just boggles your mind. They always get what they want. The Israelis know what is going on all the time. I got to the point where I wasn’t writing anything down. If the American people understood what a grip those people have on our government, they would rise up in arms. Our citizens don’t have any idea what goes on." Moorer was a guest of one
of his bosses, Deputy Secretary of Defense David Packard. |
Morgan, Neil |
Silverado Squatters |
The locally well-known Neil Morgan, 50 year San Diego Union-Tribune
editor and columnist who was suddenly fired in 2004 for unknown reasons.
In the past he was a friend to Union-Tribune Publishing Co. chairman
James Copley. |
Morgan, Henry S. |
Stowaway |
A son of J.P. Morgan, Jr. He worked at his family's business, Morgan
Stanley & Co. During World War I, one of the most important elements
of agent authentication was the fabrication of passports, identification
cards and other documents. The censorship and documents branch was
headed by commander Henry S. Morgan of the United States Naval Reserve. Morgan's agency collected and
compiled intelligence from mail, cables, and telephone conversations
intercepted by the War Department under the government's wartime censorship
powers. Co-founder of Morgan Stanley in 1935, together with Harold Stanley of J. P. Morgan & Co., and others from Drexel & Co. |
Morgan, Charles F. |
Stowaway |
Son of Henry Morgan. Invited in 1970. |
Morris, Walter K. |
Tie Binders |
Served in the U.S. Air Force as a flight engineer on B-29s during World War II, and after three years with United Airlines he joined Chevron's engineering department in 1949. He held positions in engineering and the company's foreign operations staff before being elected president of a London-based Chevron oil subsidiary in 1963. Morris was appointed manager of the foreign staff in 1967 and became general manager of what was then the public relations department in 1969. He was named assistant vice president, public affairs, in 1977 and was elected vice president in January 1978. During his many years of community service, he was chairman of the board of KQED, Inc., and chairman of the board of Mills-Peninsula Hospital Foundation in San Mateo. He served on the boards of the American Red Cross, Golden Gate Chapter; California Council for Environmental and Economic Balance; Meyer Friedman Institute; Independent Colleges of Northern California, Inc.; and the San Francisco Planning & Urban Research Association (SPUR). He was a trustee of the Citizens' Research Foundation. He also served as chairman of the executive advisory committee, Program in Business and Social Policy at the University of California, Berkeley; vice chairman of the Public Affairs Council; regional vice chairman of the U.S. Council for International Business; and vice president of the British-American Chamber of Commerce. He was active with the World Affairs Council of Northern California and United Way of the Bay Area. Morris was a member of the Bohemian Club, the Stock Exchange Club and the Burlingame Country Club. He was an avid skier, hiker and enjoyed traveling to remote corners of the world. |
Morrow, Richard M. |
Mandalay |
Morrow began his career with SoCalGas in 1974 as an engineer and has held various positions in engineering, gas supply planning and acquisition, transmission and storage, distribution and customer operations, and marketing. Retired president, CEO, and chairman of Amoco Corporation. Chairman National
Acadamy of Engineering. Vice president of customer service for Major Markets San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern California Gas Company. President of the Commercial Club in 1988-1989. Member of the Executive Committee of The Chicago Community Trust 1991-1996. Brought Stephen Bechtel, Jr as a guest to the Bohemian Grove. |
Mosbacher, Emil, Jr. |
Cave Man |
Served on a navy minesweeper in the Pacific in WWII, oversaw his
family's oil, natural gas, and real estate business, Chief of protocol
at the Department of State 1969-1972, overseer of the Hoover Institution
1975-1994. |
Moulin, Gabriel |
|
Made the 1915 photo, which appeared in the National Geographic. |
Mountbatten, Prince Philip |
|
Loyal McLaren (1972) writes about how Prince Philip sought
to visit the Grove: Before leaving London for a visit to California
in November, 1962, Prince Philip wrote to Jack Merrill, an old friend
and expressed a desire to visit the Bohemian Grove... Since the
weather was unpredictable at this time of the year; we decided it
would be safer to hold the party inside the grill and bar building...
we restricted the invitation to former presidents of the club, committee
chairmen, and groups of our highly talented entertainers... At luncheon...
Charlie Kendrick delivered the speech of welcome. However, the show
was stolen by Prince Philip, who made a most amusing but salty speech
in keeping with the traditions of Bohemia. (p. 451) - 'Taken
from A Relative Advantage: Sociology of the San Francisco Bohemian
Club', by Peter Martin Phillips.
Born in 1921 on the Isle of Corfu, Greece. Parents were evacuated from Greece after a revolution and both became depressed (father) or mentally instable (mother). Studied in Germany under Kurt Hahn and both came to Scotland in 1933. Played polo in his youth, often against Sir Evelyn de Rothschild. Philip is the Duke of Edinburgh, a Knight of the Order of the Garter, a Knight of the Order of the Thistle, Grand Master and First or Principal Knight of the Order of the British Empire, and was a prince of Greece and Denmark until he married. Patron or President of 814 organizations. His wife, Queen Elizabeth II is patron of the Pilgrims Society. Long career in the navy from the start of WWII as a midshipsman to commanding his own frigate, the HMS Magpie. William R. Denslow's 10,000 Famous Freemasons: "Philip was initiated in Navy Lodge No. 2612 of London on Dec 5, 1952. Present at the initiation were the Earl of Scarbrough, grand master, q.v., and Geoffrey Fisher, archbishop of Canterbury." Philip is a Master Mason, never having shown great interest in the organization, while his cousin, Prince Edward (b. 1935) is the grand master of the United Grand Lodge. He and his wife set off for a tour of the Commonwealth, with visits to Africa, Australia, and New Zealand in 1952. They went on to visit the remote parts of the Commonwealth in 1956. Gordon Creighton, a Foreign Service official and Intelligence officer, concluded his story about a reported 1960s UFO landing on the estate of Prince Philip with: "So there had been a landing on the estate of Mountbatten and there was Mountbatten's great interest." The entire testimony was made during an interview with the Disclosure Project in September 2000. Prince Philip supposedly had a drawer full of sketches and information on different types of UFOs. Philip co-founded the WWF International in 1961 with Julian Huxley and Prince Bernhard. He has been the long time president of WWF UK. Co-founded the 1001 Nature Trust and 1001 Club from 1971 to 1974, together with Anton Rupert and Prince Bernhard. Co-founded the Interfaith consultations between Jews, Christians, and Muslims in 1984, together with Crown Prince Hassan of Jordan and Sir Evelyn de Rothschild at Windsor castle. In August 1988, Prince Philip said to the West German Deutsche Press Agentur: "In the event that I am reincarnated, I would like to return as a deadly virus, in order to contribute something to solve overpopulation". He wrote something along similar lines in the foreword of the 1987 book 'If I Were An Animal', written by Fleur Cowles. Philip was supposedly hostile to Diana after she divorced Charles in 1996. Mohamed Al-Fayed claimed Prince Philip had ordered Diana's murder who was killed in a car crash on August 31, 1997. Queen Elizabeth II said to Diana's butler Paul Burrell in December 1997: "Nobody, Paul has been as close to a member of my family as you have... There are powers at work in this country about which we have no knowledge." She advised him to be cautious and to lay low. Unlike his son, Charles, Philip supports genetically modified foods. On June 7, 2000, The Guardian quoted the Duke of Edinburgh as saying: "Do not let us forget we have been genetically modifying animals and plants ever since people started selective breeding." Philip is known to be the head of the family; what he says, generally goes. He is still president emeritus of the WWF International. |
Mudd, Henry T. |
|
Formerr chairman of Cyprus Mines. |
Muir, John |
|
A Scot (1838-1914) who was one of the first persons to call for
practical action to safeguard and cherish the worlds wild places.
A founding father of the world conservation movement and founder of
the Sierra Club. |
Mullikin, Harry |
Owl's Nest |
Unknown. |
Murdock, David |
|
Personal fortune of about $1.1 billion. Head of Dole Food Company and privately held Pacific Holdings has spent hundreds of millions buying up developer Castle & Cooke and its jewel: The Hawaiian island of Lanai. Promoted Schwarzenegger for president. |
Murphy, John M. |
Abbey |
Founder (1971), chairman, president and CEO of Home Loan & Investment
Bank, seemingly a relatively small, more consumer-friendly bank. His
father died when he was young and he was raised by the The Boys &
Girls Club at Fox Point. |
Murray, Charles |
|
An American writer and researcher. He is best known as the co-author of The Bell Curve. Murray has been affiliated with the American Enterprise Institute since 1990. During 1981-1990, he was a fellow with the Manhattan Institute, where he wrote Losing Ground and In Pursuit. During 1974-1981, Murray worked for the American Institutes for Research (AIR), one of the largest of the private social science research organizations, eventually becoming Chief Scientist. While at AIR, Murray supervised evaluations in the fields of urban education, welfare services, daycare, adolescent pregnancy, services for the elderly, and criminal justice. Before joining AIR, Murray spent six years in Thailand, first as a Peace Corps Volunteer attached-to the Village Health Program, then as a researcher in rural Thailand. |
Myers, Michael E. |
Roaring |
Former president of the The Texas Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors (TAIFA). |
Myhrvold, Nathan |
|
Dr. Myhrvold is co-president of Intellectual Ventures, a private entrepreneurial investment firm he co-founded with his former Microsoft colleague, Dr. Edward Jung. Before Intellectual Ventures, Dr. Myhrvold spent 14 years at Microsoft Corporation. In addition to working directly for Bill Gates, he was a top technical and business strategist for the company and was involved with founding the company’s scalable operating systems efforts which lead to the Windows NT and Windows CE product lines. During his tenure, Dr. Myhrvold held several executive positions, eventually retiring as Chief Technology Officer in May 2000. In addition to advising Gates and the company on future business and technical strategies, Dr. Myhrvold was responsible for founding Microsoft Research and numerous technology groups that resulted in many of Microsoft's core, leading products. Before joining Microsoft in 1986, Myhrvold was founder and president of Dynamical Systems. Prior to that he was a postdoctoral fellow in the department of applied mathematics and theoretical physics at Cambridge University and worked with Professor Stephen Hawking on research in cosmology, quantum field theory in curved space time and quantum theories of gravitation. He has published scientific papers in journals including Science, Nature, Paleobiology and the Physical Review. His paper "Cyberpaleontology - Supersonic Sauropods," co-authored with Dr. Philip Currie, was added to the Smithsonian Institution's 1998 Innovation collection and was one of the 1998 finalists for the Computerworld Smithsonian Innovation Awards. |
Naegele, Robert E. |
Sundodgers |
Former vice president and director of The Dow Chemical Company and a long-time Midland resident. Died in 2000. |
Nelder, Alfred |
|
Chief of Police in San Francisco. |
Neuharth, Al |
|
An American businessman, author, and columnist. Al helped to build Gannett into the largest newspaper company in the U.S. He also founded USA Today, the most widely read newspaper in the U.S. Neuharth retired from Gannett in 1989, at the age of 65. On December 22, 2004, Neuharth sparked controversy when he called in his column for American troops to be brought home from the "ill-advised adventures" in Iraq, which he compared to the immorality of the Vietnam war. Neuharth also stated that if he were eligible for service in Iraq, he would do everything possible to avoid it. Chairman of the Freedom Forum. |
Neylan, John Francis |
Mandalay |
Republican party leader and U.C. trustee. In 1950 he wrote to Richard
Nixon: "I'm sorry I missed you during your visit to Mandalay
Camp at the Grove. Some of my fellow members told me they had a very
delightful visit with you. I shall be very glad to be helpful and
shall look forward to seeing you on your return trip to San Francisco
(Neylan 7-24-50)." |
Nixon, Richard M. |
Cave Man / Owl's Nest / Mandalay |
Raised as an evangelical Quaker, Duke University law school, served
voluntary in WWII, congressman, senator, very anti-communist, vice
president under Eisenhower, lost the presidency from JFK, who supposedly
was his friend, United States president 1969-1974, resigned after
the Watergate scandal, mentioned that the Bohemian Grove was visited
by a bunch of fags. |
Novak, Robert |
|
Newspaper columnist and CNN co-host. In 2003 he exposed Valerie
Plane as a CIA employee, which led to the capture and death of many
overseas agents. Earlier in 2003, her husband, former U.S.Ambassador
Joseph C. Wilson, had criticized George W. Bush for relying on false
data that Saddam Hussein supposedly was purchasing uraniumin in Niger.
Novak never disclosed who leaked this information to him and has never
been persecuted. |
O'Brien, James |
Dragon |
Vice-president and director of Standard Oil of California since
the mid-1960s (at least up to 1975). |
O'Connell, Daniel |
|
Poet. His membership goes back to the 19th century. Wrote the poet "songs
of Bohemia", which was later edited by Ina Coolbirth, who was
librarian at the Bohemian Club. |
O'Conner, John |
Pelicans |
Sandra Day O'Connor, his wife, first woman Supreme Court Justice in 1981. Member of the Pilgrims Society and the Bohemian Grove. |
O'Keefe, Sean |
|
Secretary of the Navy and Defense Comptroller, participated in a
1994 round table of the Frank Gaffney's Center for Security Policy
and argued vociferously for increasing funding for the B-2 bomber,
paid consultant and advisory board member for the manufacturer of
the B-2, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon, Office of Management and Budget,
head of NASA. |
Olson, James E. |
|
Jim Olson took the reins of AT&T following the divestiture of the telecommunications field in the mid 80s. AT&T was no longer the "giant," but just one more competitor in a growing field. He spearheaded a reorganization and cost reduction program that saved AT&T over $1 billion in 1987. In 20 short months, his strategies returned the company to the forefront of the industry, restoring its competitive edge and the morale of its 300,000 employees. |
O'Malley, Peter |
|
Former owner of Los Angeles Dodgers. |
O'Neill, George D., Jr. |
Romany |
Founder of the Lost Classics Book Company. |
Ong, John Doyle |
Hill Billies |
Ohio State University and a law degree from Harvard University,
chairman The BF Goodrich Company 1979-1997, chairman of the Business
Roundtable, National Alliance of Business and the Ohio Business Round
Table, chairman New American Schools, chairman of the Board of the
Musical Arts Association of Cleveland, life trustee of the University
of Chicago, ambassador to Norway since 2002. Member of the Bohemian Grove. |
O´Reilly, David |
Mandalay |
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of ChevronTexaco since the completion of the merger between Chevron and Texaco in October 2001 and, prior to the merger, held the same positions with Chevron since January 2000. Prior Positions Held: Mr. O'Reilly was Vice-Chairman of the Board of Chevron from 1998 until 1999. He was a Vice-President of Chevron from 1991 until 1998. He was President of Chevron Products Company, from 1994 until 1998. He was a Senior Vice-President and Chief Operating Officer of Chevron Chemical Company from 1989 until 1991. Other Directorships and Memberships: American Petroleum Institute; Eisenhower Fellowships Board of Trustees; the Institute for International Economics; The Business Council; The Business Roundtable; JPMorgan International Council; World Economic Forum's International Business Council; the Trilateral Commission; the National Petroleum Council; the American Society of Corporate Executives. |
Owens, William A. |
|
Retired Admiral Owens was born and raised in Bismarck, North Dakota,
graduating from Bismarck High School in 1958. On the encouragement
of his father, he decided to apply to the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis,
Maryland. He was accepted, graduating in 1962. Owen’s naval
career includes more than 10 years or 4,000 days of service on a submarine,
including duty in the Vietnam War. He served in four strategic nuclear
powered submarines and three nuclear attack submarines, including
tours as Commanding Officer of USS Sam Houston and USS City of Corpus
Christi. From November 1990 to July 1992, Owens commanded the U.S.
Sixth Fleet, from which the first attacks of Desert Storm were launched,
and NATO’s Naval Striking and Support Forces Southern Europe.
He then directed the post-Cold War restructuring of the U.S. Navy
as the first Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Resources, Warfare
Requirements and Assessments. On March 1, 1994, Owens was appointed
by President Clinton to serve as Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff. In this capacity, he was the nation’s second highest-ranking
military officer, overseeing more than 1.5 million people in uniform.
Owens currently serves as Co-Chief Executive Officer and Vice Chairman
of Teledesic, a private company based in Kirkland, WA. Owens gave
a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1997. |
Packard, David |
Silverado Squatters |
Stanford, director of the Boeing Company, Caterpillar Tractor,
Chevron, Genentech Inc. and the Wolf Trap Foundation, founder and
vice-chairman of the California Roundtable, co-founder of Hewlett
Packard with William R. Hewlett, president of Hewlett-Packard 1947-1964,
chief executive officer of Hewlett-Packard 1964-1968, chairman of
the board of Hewlett-Packard 1964-1968 & 1972-1993, U.S. Deputy
Secretary of Defense under Nixon, trustee of the Herbert Hoover Foundation,
the American Enterprise Institute and the Hoover Institution, chairman
of the U.S.-Japan Advisory Commission 1983-1985, member of the Trilateral
Commission 1973-1981, chairman of the Blue Ribbon Commission on Defense
Management, member of the US-USSR Trade & Economic Council's committee
on science and technology 1975-1982, member of the Business Roundtable
, member of the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
1990-1992, member of the Atlantic Council of the United States. |
Parker, Jack S. |
Pelicans |
Vice Chairman of General Electric. TRW Corporation director. TRW
Corporation is a leader in Strategic Defense Initiative Star Wars
contracts and was recently (1987) selected to manage the Pentagon's
free electron laser experiment program. They have been researching
a new method of producing weapons grade plutonium using lasers (also
1987). TRW was an MX missile contractor. |
Patten, Lord Christopher F. |
|
British; Baron Patten of Barnes. Patten worked in the Conservative Party from 1966, first as desk officer and then director (from 1974 to 1979) of the Conservative Research Department. Patten was a Member of Parliament from 1979 to 1992, serving as Minister for Overseas Development at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office from 1986 to 1989. Member of the Privy Council since 1989. He was later Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (a sinecure) from 1990 to 1992, whilst also serving as Chairman of the Conservative Party. In July 1992, he was appointed the 28th and last Governor of Hong Kong until its handover to the People's Republic of China on 30 June 1997. After Hong Kong's handover, he left Hong Kong on 1 July 1997, together with The Prince of Wales, on board HM Yacht Britannia. Held a speech in 1998 in the Bohemian Grove titled 'Asia: What Comes After the Miracle?'. In 1998-1999, he chaired the 'Independent Commission on Policing for Northern Ireland', better known as the Patten Commission. In 1999, he was appointed one of the United Kingdom's two members of the Commission of the European Communities, with responsibility for Foreign Relations. He held this position within the Prodi Commission from 23 January 2000 to 22 November 2004. Although nominated for the post of President in the next Commission in 2004, he was unable to gain support from France and Germany. Lord Patten of Barnes is the Chancellor for the Universities of Newcastle and Oxford and a patron of the Tory Reform Group. |
Patterson, William A. |
|
President of United Airlines from 1934 until 1966. Chairman and CEO of United Airlines 1963-1968. |
Patterson, William A., Jr. |
|
Son of William A. Patterson of United Airlines. Invited in 1970. |
Paulson, Allen E. |
Dog House |
He turned Grummann Corp.'s struggling general aviation division into top-of-the-line Gulfstream Aerospace Corp, Chatham's largest industrial employer. He also was one of Georgia Southern University's main benefactors. |
Pauley, Edwin W. |
Owl's Nest |
Pauley made his fortune running oil companies from the mid-1920s
onward. He became involved with the Democratic Party as a fundraiser
in 1930s, eventually becoming treasurer of the Democratic National
Committee. In the summer of 1944, while treasurer of the DNC, Pauley
was part of a group that persuaded Roosevelt to choose Truman over
Henry Wallace as the vice-presidential nominee. He later served as
United States representative to the Allied Reparations Committee from
1945-1947. In May 1946, Pauley met with Herbert Hoover to discuss
the impact of food relief on Japan's ability to pay reparations. Pauley
was en route to East Asia to discuss with General MacArthur the Japanese
situation in light of rising tensions with the Soviet Union. When
Truman nominated Pauley to be Undersecretary of the Navy in 1946,
he was opposed by Secretary of the Interior, Harold Ickes. Ickes held
that Pauley's ties to oil interests was a clear conflict of interest.
Truman pressed ahead with the nomination, so Ickes resigned. This
effectively scuttled Pauley's nomination, and led him to return to
working behind the scenes in the Democratic Party. Pauley served in
Truman's 'kitchen cabinet' and advised Presidents Kennedy and Johnson.
He also was an ardent supporter of UCLA, both as a regent and as a
financial donor. Pauley Pavilion is named for him. |
Percy, Charles H. |
|
Father-in-law of John D. [Jay] Rockefeller IV. Joined the company of Bell & Howell; during the Second World War enlisted in the United States Navy in 1943 as an apprentice seaman and was honorably discharged in 1945 with the rank of lieutenant; after the war, rejoined the company of Bell & Howell, eventually becoming president, chief executive officer, and chairman of the board; appointed as President Dwight Eisenhower’s personal representative to presidential inaugurations in Peru and Bolivia with rank of special ambassador 1956; unsuccessful candidate for governor of Illinois in 1964; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in 1966; reelected in 1972 and 1978 and served from January 3, 1967, until January 3, 1985; unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1984; chairman, Committee on Foreign Relations (Ninety-seventh and Ninety-eighth Congresses); president, Charles Percy and Associates, Inc.; serves on the boards of several foundations and committees; is a resident of Washington, D.C. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Perkins, John S. |
Thalia |
Hughes Launch Service Acquisition director. |
Peterson, Rudolph A. |
Mandalay |
Swedish-born, California raised, president and CEO of Bank of America,
member of the Council on Foreign Relations, member of the Commission
on Postal Organization, Administrator of the United Nations Development
Programme 1972-1976, director of the James Irvine Foundation 1971-1982,
trustee of the Asia Foundation, visited Bilderberg. |
Pfeiffer, Robert J. |
Pig'n Whistle |
Pfeiffer joined Matson Navigation Co. in 1956 and became its president in 1973, then kept rising to A&B, Matson's parent company. He led A&B for more than a dozen years. Pfeiffer retired in 1999 but was named chairman emeritus and continued to keep regular office hours at Matson headquarters in San Francisco until shortly before his death. |
Phelan, James D. |
|
Phelan was born in San Francisco, California in 1861, the son of an Irish immigrant who became wealthy during the California Gold Rush as a trader , merchant and banker. Phelan graduated from St. Ignatius College in that city in 1881. He studied law at the University of California, Berkeley and then became a banker. He was elected Mayor of San Francisco and served from 1897 until 1902. Phelan was president of Relief and Red Cross Funds after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. He was then elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate and served from March 4 1915 to March 3 1921. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1920. During his time in the Senate he was chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Railroads during the 64th Congress and of the U.S. Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands during the 65th Congress. After his time in the Senate, Phelan returned to banking, and collected art. He died at his country estate Villa Montalvo in Saratoga, California in 1930. |
Piggott, Charles M. |
Uplifters |
Retired chairman and CEO of Paccar Inc. Haynes was a director of Boeing from 1974 to 1982 and from 1984 until 1998. Former director of Chevron. |
Pigott, James C. |
Thalia |
President of Pigott Enterprises, Inc., a private investment company, and has held that position since 1983. He was chairman and chief executive officer of Management Reports and Services, Inc., a provider of business services, from 1986 until December 1999. He is the uncle of Mark C. Pigott, a director of the Company. He has served as a director of the Company since 1972. |
Pings, Cornelius J. |
|
Professor of chemical engineering, served as provost of the University of Southern California from 1981 to 1993, and as vice provost and dean of graduate studies at Caltech from 1970 to 1981. He was also president of the Association of American Universities from 1993 to 1998. Based in Washington, D.C., the AAU represents the nation’s major research universities. |
Pitchess, Peter J. |
|
Sheriff of Los Angeles County 1958-1982. A 1978 report: "...The
suspect was arrested a few days later and pleaded guilty to the crime.
Our actions were commended by FBI special Agent in Charge, Ted L.
Gunderson and Sheriff Peter J. Pitches." (Ted Gunderson? It's
a small world after all) |
Poett, Henry William III |
Derelicts |
Unknown. |
Policy, Carmen |
|
While practicing law in his native Youngstown, Ohio, he served the San Francisco 49ers' front office in 1983 as vice president and general counsel. By 1991 he had been promoted to president and chief executive officer. He played a key role in all five of the 49ers' Super Bowl winning teams in 1982, '85, '89, '90 and '95. He earned a reputation as one of the preeminent executives in professional sports during his years as president and chief executive officer of the 49ers. Policy was a member of the NFL Finance Committee and the Committee on Opportunities and Challenges. Both The Sporting News and Pro Football Weekly named him NFL Executive of the Year in 1994, the latter award having been determined by a vote of NFL owners and executives. He serves on the board of directors of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation and expects to maintain a high level of civic and charitable involvement in the Cleveland area. He holds the prestigious Silver Cable Car Award from the San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau and The Mayor's Fiscal Advisory Committee Award in recognition of his managerial skills. Some have asked why Carmen Policy used to spent months at a time defending some of the most notorious mobsters between New York and Chicago. Other questions are tougher. Like why his name was mentioned repeatedly, and often cryptically, in secretly recorded 1980 conversations after mobsters laundered money through Policy's law partner. Or what Policy might have known about alleged links between the gangsters he represented and one of his biggest business clients. Or why so many of his business partners wind up in trouble with the law. Policy will not answer these or any other questions about his past. A Browns spokesman turned down a request for an interview, saying Policy does not have the time. |
Pollock, Charles E. |
Totem In |
Unknown. |
Popoff, Frank P. |
|
Joined Dow in 1959, starting in technical service and development and then moving through sales, marketing, business management and other positions in the United States and Europe. He was named Dow's president, chief operating officer and then CEO in 1987, and chairman of the board in 1992. He retired as CEO on his 65th birthday in 1995 and continued to serve the company as chairman of the board until November 2000. In 1989, the Queen of The Netherlands bestowed on him the title of Knight Commander in the Order Oranje-Nassau. Popoff has been recognized internationally as a leading proponent of sustainable development, which seeks to reconcile economic growth with environmental protection. In 1991, he was appointed by President George H.W. Bush to the President's Commission on Environmental Quality and as chairman of the Committee on International Cooperation. Popoff also is a director of American Express Co., Qwest Communications International Inc., United Technologies Corp. and Chemical Financial Corp. He serves on the boards of the Michigan Molecular Institute, the Kelley School of Business Dean's Advisory Council, the National Volunteer Center, and the Herbert H. and Grace A. Dow Foundation. He is director emeritus of the IU Foundation. Popoff is a past chairman of the Chemical Manufacturers Association and a member of the Business Council for Sustainable Development, The Council on Foreign Relations, The Business Council, the Council for Competitiveness and the American Chemical Society. |
Pouge, Richard W. |
Pelicans |
Unknown. |
Powell, Colin Luther |
Mandalay |
In 1989, Powell was promoted to four-star general, becoming the first African American to hold that rank, and was named chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He had an important role in planning the American invasion of Panama in late 1989, and prior to the Persian Gulf War (1991) he played a crucial role in planning and coordinating the victory of U.S. and allied forces. He declined to run for the U.S. presidency in 1995, despite widespread encouragement to do so, and in 1997 became chairman of America's Promise–the Alliance for Youth, a charitable organization formed to help needy and at-risk U.S. children. Powell was appointed secretary of state by President George W. Bush in 2001. He advocated the so-called Powell doctrine—that U.S. military power only be used in overwhelming strength to achieve well-defined strategic national interests—while promoting “a uniquely American internationalism,” and he also showed a particular interest in African affairs. As secretary of state, however, his influence on foreign policy issues was not as great as that of National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice (who succeeded him in 2005), Vice President Dick Cheney, and others. Knight Commander of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (Honorary)
1993. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations,
Bilderberg, the Trilateral Commission, and the Pilgrims Society. Former member of the Advisory Council of Forstmann Little & Co. Director of AOL and Revolution. Has been hired by the Carlyle Group as a speaker. Joined the venture capital firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers in 2005. |
Prussia, Leland S. |
Sempervirens |
In April 1981, Leland Prussia assumed the offices of Chairman of
the Board of BankAmerica Corporation and Bank of America NT&SA.
Mr. Prussia joined Bank of America as a Research Economist in 1956
after receiving Bachelor's & Master's Degrees in Economics from
Stanford University. From this position, he rose through the ranks
and, in 1971, became Senior Vice President in charge of the Bank Investment
Securities Division. By 1974, he was promoted to Executive Vice President
and Cashier (Chief Financial Officer) and was named to the bank's
Managing Committee two years later. In 1979, Mr. Prussia was named
Executive Officer of the bank's World Bank Division and retained that
position until becoming Chairman. Since his retirement from Bank of
America in 1987, Mr. Prussia has been primarily involved in economic
and financial consulting and advisory work. He is currently a member
of the Board of Directors of Crowley Maritime Corporation headquartered
in Oakland, CA. In addition to his duties with Bank of America, Mr.
Prussia has also been a former California Region Chairman of the Securities
Industry Association and past president of the Bank Capital Markets
Association. He has served on the California State Senate Commission
on Corporate Governance, Shareholders Rights and Securities Transactions
and has been a director of the California Economic Development Corporation.
Mr. Prussia is a former member of the Board of Trustees of the University
of San Francisco, the University of San Diego, and a former member
of the Advisory Council of the School of Business at San Francisco
State University. In addition, he was the first chairman of the Committee
for a Responsible Federal Budget of Washington, D.C. and a trustee
of the Neighborhood Housing Services of America Foundation. |
Reagan , Ronald |
Owl's Nest |
United States president 1981-1989, Knight Grand Cross of the Most
Honourable Order of the Bath. He got rousing applause when he called
for greater regulation of the media. "You know, the press
conferences were adversarial bouts -- they were there to trap me in
something or other." |
Redding, Joseph D. |
|
His father, B.B. Redding, was a general land agent for Southern Pacific Railroad Company (Harriman & Harkness owned). Born in Sacramento, September 13, 1858. He studied earnestly under the best masters of the music business, and reached an eminence in musical skill that but few can attain. He was also considered a brilliant chess player. Admitted into the scientific department of Harvard University in 1876. Attended Harvard Law School in 1878 and 1879. In August, 1879, he entered the law offices of McAllister & Bergen, in San Francisco, and was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of California, in December of that year. He has also practiced before the Supreme Court of the United States and before the departments at Washington. He has been one of the attorneys for the Southern Pacific Railroad Company (Harriman & Harkness owned) since 1881, with special reference to the land departments. He had a wide experience in many important legal cases, having been directly connected with them. His practice was large and lucrative and was estimated at between $15,000 and $20,000 per year. In 1884, he delivered a lecture before the Academy of Science, on the fish supply of the Pacific coast, which was warmly applauded. Elected president of the Bohemian Club in 1885 (age 27). Elected president of the San Francisco Art Association in 1886. Elected president of the Haydn Society in 1887. Member of the Pacific Club. In 1893, he devised the Cremation of Care ceremony and played the High Priest. Somewhere between 1893 and 1899 he went to New York where he resided in Pilgrims Society circles. He was still there at the time of the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906. The New York Times on June 25, 1899: "The most noteworthy performance of the kind occurred in 1893 when Joseph D. Redding, now a lawyer in New York, devised a beautiful spectacle, "The Cremation of Care." Time Magazine in 1933: "Origin of the Grove plays goes back to one Joseph D. Redding, San Francisco attorney who died last year. He proposed and wrote the first play, The Man of the Forest. In 1911 his Natoma was set to music by Victor Herbert, produced in Philadelphia with Mary Garden and John McCormack.' The best western composers have contributed scores for the Grove plays and Bohemians aver that much beautiful music is thereby lost to the world, as the plays are seldom given public performance." Redding was respected as an attorney, musician, composer, chess player, and scientist. Was very interested in marine life. |
Reed, John S. |
|
Director Council on Foreign Relations 19891992. Reed is currently Chairman of the New York Stock Exchange, a position he has held since September 2003, but he will be stepping down from that position in April 2005. He also served as Interim Chief Executive Officer of the New York Stock Exchange from September 2003 to January 2004. Reed had also been the Chairman of Citicorp and Citibank, 1984-1998. Reed had held numerous positions with Citigroup Inc., and its predecessors and affiliates since 1965. He is also a member of the Corporation of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a director of the Spencer Foundation, Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., and National Writing Project, and a trustee of The RAND Corporation. Mr. Reed served as a director of the Company from 1975 to September 2003, when he resigned to serve as Interim Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the New York Stock Exchange. He is Chair of the Compensation Committee and a member of the Audit, Executive, Finance, and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committees. He's a director of United Technologies and Altria Group, Inc. |
Reed, Philip Dunham |
|
Electrical Engineering and law degrees, admitted to the New York
State Bar Association 1925, patent counselor Van Heusen Company, deputy
director Materials Division of the War Production Board 1942, working
with other Pilgrims from General Electric. Reed was re-assigned to
assist (Pilgrim) Averell Harriman as the Deputy Chief of the U.S.
Mission for Economic Affairs in London in 1943, becoming chief of
that mission with the rank of minister in October 1943, serving until
January 1945. After leaving the U. S. Mission for Economic Affairs,
Reed served as legal consultant to the U.S. delegation to the 1945
United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco;
this led to Reed's long affiliation with the International Chamber
of Commerce (ICC). He was a member of the ICC from 1945-1975; he served
as president from 1949 to 1951. Reed headed the U.S. Mission on Anglo-American
Council of Productivity, a Marshall Plan agency, established in 1948.
Reed was vice chairman of the Business Advisory Council of the Department
of Commerce (became the Business Council in 1961) from 1951 to 1952.
He was also active in the Committee for Economic Development where
he served as a trustee and a member of the Research & Policy Committee
from 1946 to 1975. Reed acted as an Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships
trustee from 1953 to 1975, serving as Vice Chairman from 1955 to 1975,
and Chairman of the Finance Committee from 1956 to 1958. Reed also
served as a Trustee of the Samuel H. Kress Foundation from 1960 to
1965, and as a Trustee of the Winston Churchill Foundation of the
United States from 1970 to 1975. President and chief executive officer
General Electric Company 1940-1942 & 1945-1959, chairman International
General Electric 1945-1952, chairman Finance Committee and General
Electric Pension Trust 1952-1959, member Committee on the University
and World Affairs 1960, director Federal Reserve Bank of New York
1959-1960, chairman Federal Reserve Bank of New York 1960-1965, chairman
Executive Committee of the International Executive Service Corps 1966-1974,
director Council on Foreign Relations 1946-1969. Director of American
Express, Bankers Trust Company, Bigelow-Sanford Inc., Cowles Communication,
Kraftco Corporation, Otis Elevator, Metropolitan Life Insurance, Scott
Paper, Tiffany & Co., U. S. Financial Inc., Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace and the Ford Foundation, visitor Bohemian
Grove 1966-1988, member Pilgrims Society, stood in contact with the
American Ditchley foundation 1957-1986. |
Rees, William M. |
Owlers |
Unknown. |
Reichardt, Carl E. |
Mandalay |
Joined Wells Fargo in 1970, president 1978-1981, chief operating
officer 1981-1983, chairman and CEO of Wells Fargo & Company 1983-1994,
director of Ford Motor Company since 1981, vice-chairman Ford Motor
Company since 2001, director PG&E. Corp., McKesson Corp., ConAgra
Inc. and HCA (formerly Columbia/HCA) Healthcare Corp. |
Richardson, Elliot L. |
|
As a Lieutenant in the U.S. Army (1942-45), he landed at Normandy, and earned a purple heart and bronze star. He clerked for Circuit Judge Learned Hand (1947-48) and Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter (1948-49). In five cabinet departments, he served as Assistant Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (1957-59); Under Secretary of State (1969-70); Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (1970-73); Secretary of Defense (1973); Attorney General (1973); and Secretary of Commerce (1976-77). In diplomatic assignments, he was Ambassador to Great Britain (1975-76); Special Representative of the President to the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (1977-80); and Special Representative of the President for Multilateral Assistance to the Phillipines (1989-94). He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1998. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1991 called "Defining
the New World Order' (Russia collapsed, which ment there was a NWO). Member of the Pilgrims Society and the Council on Foreign Relations. Freemason. |
Richardson, H. Leonard |
|
President Educators' Collaborative Inc., Sonoma, CA. Member of the Bohemian Grove Annals Committee in 1997. |
Richardson, William C. |
Monastery |
Richardson is president and chief executive officer of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and a trustee of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation Trust. He is a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, and is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Public Health Association. He serves on the boards of the Council of Michigan Foundations and the Council on Foundations (trustee and chairman). He also serves on the boards of directors of CSX Corporation and The Bank of New York. He chairs of the Committee on Quality of Health Care in America for the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences. As a member of Kellogg Company's Board of Directors, Dr. Richardson chairs the Finance Committee. He also serves on the Executive Committee, the Compensation Committee, the Consumer Marketing Committee and the Social Responsibility Committee. |
Rickenbacker, Eddie |
Cave Man |
Became America's top flying ace (22 kills) in World War I; owned Indianapolis Speedway (1927-45) and ran Eastern Air Lines (1938-59). Died in 1973. |
Ridder, Daniel H. |
Hermits |
Chairman and trustee of California State University 1969-1970. Trustee of the California State University 1962-1975. Editor and
publisher of the Long Beach paper. |
Robert, Donald R. |
Uplifters |
Unknown. |
Roberts, George R. |
Uplifters |
Left Bear Stearns with first cousin Henry Kravis (Bohemian Grove) and Jerome Kohlberg to form investment boutique KKR. Bought underperforming companies using high-yield bonds. Immortalized as "barbarians at the gates" during Nabisco buyout of 1989. Kohlberg left 1987; partners still run firm using less debt in longer-term deals. |
Rocard, Michel |
Mandalay |
French socialist prime minister. Rocard spoke at the Bohemian Grove,
remarking on topics such as French agricultural policy and removing
barriers to trade in Europe. |
Rockefeller, Nelson Aldrich |
|
Dartmouth College Psi Upsilon Fraternity. Director Rockefeller Center 1931-1958. Coordinator Office of Inter-American Affairs 1940-1944. Chairman International Development Advisory Board 1950-1951. Chairman President's Advisory Committee on Government Organization 1952-1958. Present at the United Nations founding in San Francisco from April 25 to June 26, 1945, and is said to have played a prominent role. His father donated the land the United Nations headquarters was built on. Governor of New York 1959–1973. Vice-president of the United States under Gerald Ford 1974–1977. Chairman National Commission on Critical Choices for America. Member Council on Foreign Relations. Died in 1979 when he was with his mistress, Megan Marshak. He was cremated within 18 hours after his death. There is no known "tell all" of the events by Marshak, and she appears to have dropped out of public view since Rockefeller's death. |
Rockefeller, David |
Stowaway |
Born in 1915 and youngest son of John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Descendant of the German-Jewish Roggenfelder family which came to the United States in 1722. Attended school in New York City and graduated with a bachelor's degree in English history and literature from Harvard University in 1936. This was followed with a Ph.D. (1940) in economics from the University of Chicago and a study at both Harvard and the London School of Economics. Married Margaret "Peggy" McGrath in September 1940 and they raised six children, including son David Rockefeller Jr. Along with his brothers - John D. III, Nelson, Laurance, and Winthrop, David Rockefeller established the Rockefeller Brothers Fund (RBF) in 1940. Became a trustee of The Rockefeller Institute (later transformed into a university) for Medical Research in 1940. Trustee Rockefeller University 1940-1995. Secretary to New York City Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia 1940-1941. Assistant regional director of the United States Office of Defense, Health and Welfare Service 1941-1942. Enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1942. Military Intelligence officer in North Africa and Southern France 1942-1945. Assistant Military Attaché in Paris in the last 7 months of the war. Joined Chase National/Manhattan Bank in 1946 as an assistant manager under Winthrop W. Aldrich (Rockefeller intermarried) in the Foreign Department. Assistant manager in the Foreign Department, Chase National Bank 1947-1948. Played a major role in the development of the Morningside Heights neighborhood on the Upper West Side of Manhattan as president (1947-1957) and then chairman (1957-1965) of Morningside Heights, Inc. Second vice president Chase National Bank 1948-1949. Director of the Museum of Modern Art 1948-1958. Vice president Chase National Bank 1949-1952. Vice-president Council on Foreign Relations 1950-1970. Chairman of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research 1950-1975. In 1953, at this position, he recruited Detlev W. Bronk as president of the Rockefeller Institute and head of its medical research program. Bronk, a biophysicist, appeared on the initial membership list of the MJ-12 study group. Senior vice president of Chase National Bank with responsibility for supervising the economic research department and customer relations in the metropolitan New York area, including all the New York City branches 1952-1955. Attended the first Bilderberg meeting in 1954 and was one of its founders. When Chase National and the Bank of the Manhattan Company merged in 1955, David Rockefeller was appointed an executive vice president in charge of the bank development department. In 1957, he became vice chairman of the Board of Directors with responsibility for the administrative and planning functions of the bank as a whole. Briefly chairman of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in 1958. Again in 1962-1972, and again in 1987-1993. Life trustee of the University of Chicago (which his grandfather helped to establish) and an honorary trustee of International House (New York), established by his father. In 1958 David Rockefeller helped establish the Downtown-Lower Manhattan Association (D-LMA), serving as its chairman 1958-1975. Primary founder of the Dartmouth Conferences in 1960, which was initiated at Dartmouth College in an effort to prevent U.S.-Soviet nuclear conflict. Only influential private citizens with no government positions were supposed to meet here. President Chase Manhattan 1961-1969. In 1962, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey began plans to build the World Trade Center, which was pushed hard for by David and Nelson Rockefeller. Founding member of the Commission on White House Fellows, 1964. David had a two and a half hour meeting in Moscow with Nikita Khrushchev in the summer of 1964. He reported to president Johnson that Khrushchev would like to do more trade with the United States and David recommended that more credit should be extended to the Russians. Met Khrushchev's successor, Leonid Brezhnev, soon afterwards. Also met Chou En-lai in the 1960s, to discuss economic cooperation. Other leaders David met with are Deng Xiaoping, Nasser, Saddam Hussein, Fidel Castro, the Shah of Iran, etc. David is on very good terms with Nelson Mandela and they regularly meet each other. It's interesting to note that Mandela is one of George W. Bush's fiercest critiques. Instrumental in the formation of the International Executive Service Corps and chairman 1964-1968. Founder Americas Society in 1965 (then called Council of the Americas). Helped found the Rockefeller Family Fund in 1967. Helped form The Business Committee for the Arts in 1967. Chairman and CEO of the board of Chase Manhattan 1969-1981. Chairman Council on Foreign Relations 1970-1985. In May 1973 Chase Manhattan Bank opened it Moscow office at 1 Karl Marx Square, Moscow. Chairman of the Overseas Development Council of the US-USSR Trade and Economic Council, Inc., which was founded in 1973. Founder of the Trilateral Commission in 1973. Chairman Trilateral Commission 1977-1991. Founded the New York City Partnership in 1979 and was chairman 1979-1988. Chairman Chase Manhattan Bank Advisory Committee 1981-1999. Trustee Carnegie Endowment International Peace since 1981. President of the Harvard College Board of Overseers; life trustee of the University of Chicago; one of the most important members of the Bilderberg committee; visitor of the Bohemian Grove Stowaway camp; member American-Australian Association; chairman Americas Society 1981-1992; chairman Rockefeller Group 1981-1995. Helped to establish the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University in 1994. Chairman of Rockefeller Center Properties 1996-2001; became a director of the Shinsei Bank in 2000; chairman Rockefeller University; chairman of the Museum of Modern Art; member International Council of J.P. Morgan Chase; wrote 'Unused Resources and Economic Waste' (1940), 'Creative Management in Banking' (1964), and 'Memoirs' (2002); major shareholder of Atlantic Richfield Petroleum and International Petroleum Corporation (also a napalm manufacturer). David is the last of the "Fortunate Five" brothers. Winthrop died in 1972 after having been devastated by a chemotherapy procedure; John D. III died in a 1978 car crash; Nelson died in 1979 in bed with his mistress. Laurance died in 2004 of natural causes. David and Laurance were members of the Peace Parks foundation. David has attended meetings of Le Cercle and is a member of the Pilgrims Society. |
Rockwell, Willard F. Jr. |
|
Member of the founding family of Rockwell Company. Willard was chairman from 1967 to 1979. Rockwell wass the main B-1B bomber and space shuttle
contractor and they worked on the MX and Trident missiles. They also
produced plutonium and nuclear triggers for hydrogen bombs. |
Rogers, William P. |
|
Under Thomas E. Dewey he worked from 1938 to 1942 in the prosecution of organized crime in New York City. He entered the US Navy in 1942, serving on the USS Intrepid, including her action in the Battle of Okinawa. While serving as a Committee Counsel to a US Senate committee, he examined the documentation from the House Un-American Activities Committee's investigation of Alger Hiss at the request of then-Congressman Richard M. Nixon, and advised Nixon that Hiss had lied and that the case against him should be pursued. In 1950, Rogers became a partner in a New York City law firm, Dwight, Royall, Harris, Koegel & Caskey. Thereafter he returned to this firm when not in government service. It was later renamed Rogers & Wells, and subsequently Clifford Chance Rogers & Wells. He worked in the firm's Washington, D.C. office until several months before his death. Rogers joined the Administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower in a Deputy-Attorney-General position in 1953, and then served from 1957 to 1961, as Attorney General. He remained a close advisor to then-Vice-President Nixon, throughout the Eisenhower administration, especially in the slush fund scandal that led to Nixon's Checkers speech, and Eisenhower's two medical crises. He also served as Secretary of State in the Nixon Cabinet, from 1969 January 22 through 1973 September 3. Rogers is also notable for leading the investigation into the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger. This panel, called the Rogers Commission, was the first to criticize NASA management for its role in negligence of safety in the Space Shuttle program. Among the more famous members of Rogers' panel were astronauts Neil Armstrong and Sally Ride, Air Force general Donald Kutyna, and physicist Richard Feynman. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Romulo, Carlos |
|
English Professor and later member of the board of regents of the University of the Philippines (1923-1941), Philippine Resident Commissioner to the United States (1944-46), President of the United Nations General Assambly (1949), Philippine Secretary of Foreign Affairs (1950-51,1969-84), Philippine Ambassador to the U.S. (1952-53, 1955-62), President of the United Nations Security Council (Jan. & Dec., 1957), Philippine Secretary of Education (1962-68), President of the University of the Philippines (1966-68). Author of numerous bestsellers in the Philippines and the United States. |
Roosevelt, Theodore |
|
The twenty-fifth (1901) Vice President and the twenty-sixth (1901-1909) President of the United States, succeeding to the office upon the assassination of William McKinley. At 42, Roosevelt was the youngest person ever to serve as President of the United States. |
Rose, Charlie |
|
Acclaimed interviewer and broadcast journalist Charlie Rose engages
America's best thinkers, writers, politicians, athletes, entertainers,
business leaders, scientists and other newsmakers in one-on-one interviews
and roundtable discussions. Charlie Rose is also a correspondent for
60 Minutes II. Charlie Rose airs Monday through Friday on over 200
PBS affiliates throughout the United States. Rose gave a speech at
the Bohemian Grove in 2003. |
Rosenblatt, Toby |
Hill Billies |
Yale, chairman of the Presidio Trust under Bill Clinton and George
W. Bush, president and general partner of Founders Investments, Ltd.,
director of the State Street Research Mutual Funds, MetLife Series
Mutual Funds, AP Pharma, Inc., Pherin Corporation, Premier Pacific
Vineyards. |
Ross, Dickinson C. |
Tie Binders |
Former chairman Johnson & Higgins of California. Vice-president Fletcher
Jones Foundation. Director at Fremont General Corporation. |
Rostenkowski, Dan |
|
U.S. congressman, b. Chicago. A Democrat, he was first elected as a U.S. representative from Illinois in 1958. Rostenkowski became chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee in 1981. He helped secure (1983) legislation to keep the social security system solvent and played a major role in the passage (1986) of a new federal tax code. In 1994, Rostenkowski was indicted on corruption charges and stepped down as Ways and Means chairman; he lost his House seat in the Congressional elections later that year. He pleaded guilty to mail fraud in 1996, and was fined and served (1996–97) a 17-month sentence. He has subsequently worked as a political consultant and commentator. Rostenkowski was pardoned by President Clinton in 2000. |
Roth, William Matson. |
Moonshiners |
Graduated from Yale University in 1939 and began his career with
Barber Oil Corporation in 1947. He was also a director at the Honolulu
Oil Corporation from 1948-1950, chairman of the board of Pacific National
Life Assurance Company from 1948-1950, vice president of finance and
a director of the Matson Nav. Co. from 1952-1961 and director of the
McClatchy Newspapers. Roth was employed by the government, serving
as Deputy Special Representative for Trade Negotiations from 1963-1966,
and White House Special Representative to the Trade Negotiations from
1967-1969. He was also Delegate to Democratic National Convention
from California in 1960. Mr. Roth is known to have attended Bohemian
Grove and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations |
Rove, Karl |
|
In 1970, as a protégé of Donald Segretti (later convicted as a Watergate conspirator), Karl Rove sneaked into the campaign office of Illinois Democrat Alan Dixon and stole some letterhead, which he used to print fake campaign rally fliers promising "free beer, free food, girls and a good time for nothing," and distributed them at rock concerts and homeless shelters. Rove admitted the incident years later, saying "I was nineteen and I got involved in a political prank." Rove learned at age nineteen, during his parents' divorce, that the man who raised him, a mineral geologist, was not his biological father. Rove's mother committed suicide in Reno, Nevada, in 1981. Rove dropped out of the University of Utah in 1971 to become the Executive Director of the College Republican National Committee and held this position until 1972, when he became the National Chairman (1973-1974). In this role, Karl Rove had access to powerful politicians and government officials of the Republican party, and formed ties with George H. W. Bush, then Chairman of the Republican National Committee (1973-1974). For the next few years, Rove worked in various Republican circles and assisted George H. W. Bush's 1980 vice-presidential campaign. Rove is credited for introducing Bush to Lee Atwater, who would go on to play a critical role in Bush's 1988 presidential campaign. Like Atwater, Karl Rove is well known for his effective campaign tactics, employing push polls and frequently attacking an opponent on the opponent's strongest issue. In 1981, Rove founded direct mail consulting firm, Karl Rove + Company, based out of Austin, Texas. This firm's first clients included Republican Governor Bill Clements and Democratic Congressman Phil Gramm, who later became a Republican Congressman and United States Senator. In 1993, Rove began advising George W. Bush's gubernatorial campaign. He continued, however, to operate his consulting business until 1999, when he sold the firm to focus his efforts on Bush's bid for the presidency. In 1986, just before a crucial debate in the election for governor of Texas, Karl Rove claimed that his office had been bugged by the Democrats. The police and FBI investigated and discovered that bug's battery was so small that it needed to be changed every few hours, and the investigation was dropped. Critics alleged that Rove had bugged his own office to garner sympathy votes in the close governor's race. Rove is thought to be behind misleading Swift Boat Veterans for Truth television ads that quoted Kerry as saying U.S. military personnel in Vietnam "had personally raped, cut off ears, cut off heads," "randomly shot at civilians," and "razed villages in a fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan," without Kerry's qualification that he was reporting what others said at a Vietnam veterans' conference, and not what Kerry had personally witnessed. Another ad from SBVT accused Kerry of lying to win his Vietnam combat medals. George W. Bush called Rove the "architect" of his 2004 Presidential Campaign in his 3 November 2004 acceptance speech. Rove has been accused of pulling many other dirty tricks over the years. In March 2001, Rove met with executives from Intel, successfully advocating a merger between a Dutch company and an Intel company supplier. Rove owned $100,000 in Intel stock at the time. In June 2001, Rove met with two pharmaceutical industry lobbyists. At the time, Rove held almost $250,000 in drug industry stocks. On 30 June 2001, Rove divested his stocks in 23 companies, which included more than $100,000 in each of Enron, Boeing, General Electric, and Pfizer. On 30 June 2001, the White House admitted that Rove was involved in administration energy policy meetings, while at the same time holding stock in energy companies including Enron. June 23, 2005, marked another controversial statement from Rove. "Conservatives saw the savagery of 9/11 in the attacks and prepared for war; liberals saw the savagery of the 9/11 attacks and wanted to prepare indictments and offer therapy and understanding for our attackers," said Mr. Rove at a fund-raiser in New York City for the Conservative Party of New York State. Presently embroiled in controversy concerning his involvement in revealing the identity of CIA employee Valerie Plame, allegedly in retaliation for her husband's criticisms of the administration. |
Rumsfeld, Donald H. |
Hill Billies |
Princeton University. Attended Cap & Gown events, according to Kay Griggs, just as Allen Dulles, William Colby, Frank Carlucci, James Baker, George P. Shultz, ang George R. Griggs (August 3, 2005, Rense). Naval aviator 1954-1957. Administrative assistant to a Congressman from Ohio 1957-1960. A.G. Becker investment firm from 1960-1962. Congressman 1962-1969. Various assistent jobs to the Nixon 1969-1973. According to Steven Greer, the Disclosure Project is in the possession of documents from the late 1960s that indicate Rumsfeld was spinning UFO information that had to be delivered to a member of Congress (November 30, 2005, Jim Fisher Show). U.S. ambassador to NATO in Belgium 1973-1974. White House Chief of Staff 1974-1975. He and Dick Cheney managed to keep the MK-ULTRA project in part under wraps in 1975. US Secretary of Defense under Gerald Ford 1975-1977. Presidential Medal of Freedom 1977. CEO, president, and finally chairman of G.D. Searle & Company 1977-1985. Chairman of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies 1983-1986. In this period he managed to ram aspartame through the FDA. Rumsfeld is believed to have earned around $12 million from the sale of Searle to Monsanto. Met with Saddam Hussein on December 19, 1983 and March 24, 1984 to discuss the selling of weapons, including WMD. Member of an endless stream of committees 1982-2000. Chairman of Gilead Sciences, Inc. and the RAND Corporation. Member of PNAC, the Council on Foreign Relations, Bilderberg, the Bohemian Grove, the Trilateral Commission, and the Atlantic Institute for International Affairs (identified as a governor in 1987). Former member of the Advisory Council of Forstmann Little & Co, just as Henry Kissinger and George P. Shultz. US Secretary of Defense under George W. Bush 2000-2008. |
Russell, D.J. |
|
Director Emeritus of Tenneco.Tenneco
operates the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co. and builds
nuclear submarines capable of carrying nuclear warhead armed missiles
and builds Nimitz class nuclear propelled aircraft carriers. He invited James L. Ketelsen to the Bohemian Grove. |
Safire, William |
|
Speechwriter for Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew. Public relations
executive. Radio and television producer. United States Army correspondent.
NY Times columnist. Author of 15 books. 1978 Pulitzer Prize winner.
Well-known critic of the Clintons and a big supporter of the Jewish
cause. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 2003. |
Sagdeyev, Roald Z. |
|
One of the leading figures in Soviet space science from the 1960s
to the 1980s. Sagdeyev was involved in virtually every Soviet lunar
and planetary probe in this period, including the highly successful
Venera and Vega missions. He also advised Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
on space and arms control at the 1986 Geneva, 1987 Washington, and
1988 Moscow summits. In the late 1980s, Sagdeyev left the Soviet Union
and settled in the United States where he headed the East-West Science
and Technology Center at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Present at the Bohemian Grove in 1989. |
Sage, Andrew G. C. |
Mandalay |
Andrew G.C. Sage, II, age 79, has been president of Sage Capital Corporation since 1974. Immediately prior to that time, he served as president of the investment banking firm of Lehman Brothers. Presently, Mr. Sage is chairman of Robertson Ceco Corporation, a prefabricated metal buildings company, and a director of Tom's Foods, Inc. Throughout his career, Mr. Sage has served in board and executive positions for numerous public companies. Director at American Superconductor Corporation. |
Salleo, Ferdinando |
|
Former ambassador from Italy to the United States. In 1998, he held a speech at the Bohemian Grove titled 'Diplomacy: Beyond Conventional Wisdom'. |
Sauter, Van Gordon |
|
President CBS News in the early 1980s. Producer of the syndicated
'Voices of America with Jesse Jackson' 1990-1991. |
Scalia, Antonin |
|
Assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Counsel at the
Justice Department under Gerald Ford. Since 1986 US Supreme Court
Associate Justice. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1997. |
Schilling, Gary |
|
President of A. Gary Shilling & Co., Dr. Shilling is well known for his forecasting record. A poll conducted by Institutional Investor magazine twice ranked him as Wall Street's top economist. Dr. Shilling has been a Forbes columnist since 1983, and his articles appear in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times , and other well known publications. It is widely speculated that if the ailing Chief Justice William Rehnquist were to retire during President Bush's term, which ends in January 2009, Justice Scalia would likely be Bush's nominee to replace Rehnquist as the Chief Justice. |
Schirra, Wally |
|
One of the original Mercury 7 astronauts chosen for the Project Mercury, America's first effort to put men in space. He was the only man to fly in America's first three space programs: Mercury, Gemini and Apollo and has logged a total of 295 hours and 15 minutes in space. He served as a flight leader with the 136th Bomb Wing, and then as operations officer with the 154th Fighter Bomber Squadron. He flew 90 combat missions between 1951 and 1952, Director, Rocky Mountain Airways; U.S. Department of Interior Advisory Board on National Parks, Historical Sites and Monuments; Honorary Belgian Consul, Colorado; Director, Electromedics, Colorado and Director Watt Count, Nashville, Tennessee. Freemason, just as many other astronauts. |
Schmidt, Helmut |
|
He was elected to the Bundestag in 1953 and in 1957 he became member of the SPD parliamentary party executive. Vocal critic of conservative government policy. In 1958 he joined the board of the SPD (Bundesvorstand) and campaigned against nuclear weapons and the equipping of the Bundeswehr with such devices. In 1958 he lost his seat. Minister of the Interior (Innensenator) on the Hamburg Senate from 1961 to 1965. Improved his reputation with the work he did during the 1962 flooding of Hamburg. In 1965 he was re-elected to the Bundestag and became head of the SPD faction in 1967. Deputy chairman of the party in 1968. First cabinet post in October 1969 as Defence Minister under Willy Brandt. From July to November 1972 he was both Minister for Economics and Minister of Finance, and from December onwards until May 1974 Minister of Finance. Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1974 to 1982. Tied his political future strongly to NATO expansion following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and tied his party firmly to the "double resolution" for the elections in 1980. In 1983 he joined the nationwide weekly Die Zeit newspaper as co-editor, in 1985 he became Managing Director. With Takeo Fukuda he founded the Inter Action Councils in 1983. Retired from the Bundestag in 1986, but remained active. In December 1986 he was one of the founders of the committee supporting the EMU and the creation of the European Central Bank. In his autobiography he mentioned the Bohemian Grove was his favorite retreat. His friend George Shultz invited him to it. |
Schmidt, Chauncey E. |
|
He has been Chairman of C. E. Schmidt & Associates, an investment firm, since April 1989. From 1987 to March 1989, he was Vice Chairman of the Board of AMFAC, Inc., a New York Stock Exchange-listed company engaged in diversified businesses. He has previously served as President of The First National Bank of Chicago and Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of The Bank of California, N.A. Mr. Schmidt is on the Board of Trustees of the U. S. Naval War College Foundation and is active in several civic and charitable organizations. Director at Docucon, Incorporated. Director of the Palo Alto Medical Foundation. |
Schmidt, Jon Eugene |
|
Head of Jon E. Schmidt & Associates Co. |
Schneider, Edward J. |
Pink Onion |
Unknown. |
Schwarzenegger, Arnold |
|
Famous bodybuilder, movie star and later politician. Quite controversial, because of his Nazi father and the continues accusations about people, especially women, he abuses. He's a Republican Catholic. |
Schwarzkopf, H. Norman |
|
Attended the 1990 Le Cercle meeting in Oman. Born in Trenton, New
Jersey to Norman Schwarzkopf, Sr., he graduated from West Point in
1956, and earned a masters degree in missile engineering from the
University of Southern California in 1964. After graduating from West
Point and receiving a commission in the infantry, Schwarzkopf had
assignments in the United States and Germany before going back to
school to earn his masters in guided missile engineering. Schwarzkopf
then returned to West Point as a member of the faculty. Following
Schwarzkopf's first year as a member of the faculty at West Point
he requested a reassignment to Vietnam. Schwarzkopf served as an adviser
to the Vietnamese airborne division during his two combat tours in
the Vietnam War and received the Purple Heart after being injured.
Schwarzkopf made general in 1978, and in 1983 was deputy commander
during the US invasion of Grenada, and in 1988 was appointed to the
U.S. Central Command. In 1990 he was chosen to run Operation Desert
Storm, and was responsible for the "left hook" strategy
that went into Iraq behind the Iraqi forces occupying Kuwait, and
widely credited with bringing the ground war to a close in just four
days. He was personally very visible in the conduct of the war, giving
frequent press conferences, and was dubbed "Stormin' Norman."
He was awarded the United States Republican Senatorial Medal of Freedom
and the British Order of the Bath. Attended a 1990 meeting of Le Cercle in Oman. |
Scripps, Charles E. |
Friends of the Fores |
Charles E. Scripps served as chairman of the board of The E.W. Scripps Company from 1953 until 1994. He continues as chairman of the board of trustees of The E.W. Scripps Trust and chairman of The E.W. Scripps Company executive committee. Scripps is a grandson of E.W. Scripps, who founded the newspapers that eventually grew into the Cincinnati-based media company known as The E.W. Scripps Company, or Scripps Howard. |
Seaborg, Glenn T. |
Owl's Nest |
In 1939, Dr. Seaborg was appointed an instructor in chemistry at
the University of California, Berkeley, where he was promoted to Assistant
Professor in 1941, and to Professor of Chemistry in 1945. In 1946,
he also took responsibility for direction of nuclear chemical research
at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, operated for the Atomic Energy
Commission by the University of California; from 1954 to 1961, he
was Associate Director of LRL. In the same year, he was appointed
by President Truman to be a member of the AEC's first General Advisory
Committee, a post he held until 1950. In 1958, he was appointed Chancellor
of the University of California at Berkeley. In that capacity he served
until his appointment by President Kennedy to the Atomic Energy Commission
in 1961, when he was designated Chairman of the Commission. His term
of office expires in 1968. From 1959 to 1961, he was also a member
of the President's Science Advisory Committee. Dr. Seaborg was given
a leave of absence from the University of California from 1942-1946,
during which period he headed the plutonium work of the Manhattan
Project at the University of Chicago Metallurgical Laboratory. He
was co-discoverer of plutonium and all further transuranium elements
through element 102. In addition to the discovery of transuranium
elements, Dr. Seaborg and his colleagues are responsible for the identification
of more than 100 isotopes of elements throughout the Periodic Table. |
Seeligson, Arthur, Jr. |
Woof |
Unknown. |
Seitz, Frederick |
Hideaway |
Princeton University, one of two inventors of the Wigner-Seitz
unit cell, which is an important concept in solid state physics,
president of the National Academy of Sciences 1965-1968, president
of the Rockefeller University 1968-1978, questions the reasons for
global warming, was a director and shareholder of a company that
operated coal-fired power plants, chairman Science and Environmental
Policy Project, Chairman George Marshall Institute, violently opposes
the Kyoto protocols and is being criticized for that, member of
the New York City Commission for Science and Technology, chairman
of the United States delegation to the U.N. Committee on Science
and Technology for Development.
|
Shaughnessy, Frank |
|
President of the San Francisco Stock Exchange in 1937. |
Shultz, George P. |
Mandalay |
Born December 13, 1920, in New York City, the son or Birl E. and Margaret Pratt Shultz. Charles Pratt (1830-1891), Margaret's grandfather, became a partner of John D. Rockefeller after merging his oil company with Standard Oil in 1874. His son, Shultz's grandfather, Charles Millard Pratt (1858-1933), was treasurer of Standard Oil and his widow bequeathed their New York mansion, the Charles Pratt House, to the Council on Foreign Relations in 1945, which serves as its headquarters ever since. Birl Earl Shultz (1883-1955), George's father, was a personnel director with the American International Corporation and founded the New York Stock Exchange Institute (November 10, 1955, NY Times, obituary). B.A. degree in economics from Princeton University in 1942. Attended Cap & Gown events, according to Kay Griggs, just as Allen Dulles, Donald Rumsfeld, William Colby, Frank Carlucci, James Baker, and George Griggs (August 3, 2005, Rense). U.S. Marine Corps 1942-1945, attaining the rank of Captain. Faculty member at MIT 1946-1947. At MIT, according to several accounts, Shultz teamed up with the German social engineer Kurt Lewin, who was setting up a psychological research institute there (died in 1947). Lewin emigrated from Germany to the US in 1932 and is said to have been a leading member of the Tavistock Institute (at the very least he served as a source of inspiration to many of their psychiatrists). Taught in both the MIT Department of Economics and the MIT Sloan School of Management 1948-1957. Earned a Ph.D. from MIT in industrial economics in 1949. Chairman of MIT's Industrial Relations Division 1954-1957. Leave of absence in 1955 to serve on President Dwight Eisenhower's Council of Economic Advisers as a senior staff economist. Joined the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business as professor of industrial relations in 1957 and served as dean of the school from 1962 to 1968. Involved in Nixon's election campaign of 1968. Nixon's Secretary of Labor 1969-1970. One of the main organizers of the US-USSR Trade and Economic Council in 1972. Nixon's Secretary of the Treasury 1972-1974. It was during this period that Schultz, along with Paul Volcker and Arthur Burns, supported the decision of the Nixon administration to end the gold standard and the Bretton Woods system. Shultz also regularly played golf with Stephen Bechtel Jr. at Burning Tree. President and director of the Bechtel Group 1974-1982, a privately-held huge construction company strongly linked to the intelligence agencies. Also acted as president of the Bechtel Foundation. Ran Ronald Reagan's election campaign in 1980, together with Bechtel vice-president Caspar Weinburger. Chairman of the President's Economic Policy Advisory Board from 1981-1982. Reagan's Secretary of State 1982-1989. Hosted his good friend Helmut Schmidt at the Bohemian Grove in 1982 and has stayed at Camp Mandalay. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations and Atlantic Council of the United States. Member National Security Planning Group. On Oct. 25, 1984, speaking at the Park Avenue Synagogue in New York, Shultz delivered remarks calling for the U.S. to adopt a preemptive first-strike policy, such was implemented 20 years later by the Bush-Cheney administration. According to John Perkins, former chief economist and "economic hitman", Shultz functioned as the heir to Robert Strange McNamara (1001 Club) as one of the top figures in the new imperial pyramid of power, which employed the structure of economic hitmen to bleed and crush nations. Examples are the Philippines' Ferdinand Marcos in 1986, and such as the various attacks on Panama, culminating in the 1989 invasion. Then-Secretary of State Shultz had spoken one day earlier, Sept. 30, threatening the nations present that they had better stay in line, and pay their debts to the IMF. As Secretary of State, he automatically became a honorary member of the Pilgrims Society and gave at least one speech to this club in 1985. In August 1988, while travelling from the airport to La Paz, Bolivia, Shultz's motorcade was bombed, supposedly by drug dealers. There was only material damage. In 1989 he rejoined Bechtel as a director and senior counselor (he still is anno 2005). Director at Gilead Sciences since 1996. Director Fremont Group, Inc. (owned by the Bechtel corporation) and the Charles Schwab Corporation. Chairman of Accenture's Energy Advisory Board. Former member of the Advisory Council of Forstmann Little & Co. (Henry Kissinger, Colin Powell, and Donald Rumsfeld have been other members). Has visited the Trilateral Commission in the 1990s. Teamed up with George Soros in 1998 to promote a series of referenda to legalize narcotics. According to author James Mann, who wrote the Rise of the Vulcans book about Bush's inner Cabinet, Shultz initiated a discussion with George W. in the Spring of 1998, whereby the future President sat down in Shultz's living room on the Stanford University campus, in order to see if he would be the right man for the presidency. At that meeting were Martin Anderson, the former advisor to both Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan; Abraham Sofaer, a former Shultz aide; John Cogan and John Taylor, two economics professors; and Stanford's provost, and Shultz protege, Condoleezza Rice. After the scholars associated with the Hoover Institution indicated that they thought Bush would make a good Presidential choice, Bush invited Shultz, Rice, and Anderson down to Austin, Texas for a follow-up meeting in the Summer. Out of that meeting, which was joined by Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz, came the public decision for Bush to run for President. Soon Richard Perle and Dov Zakheim were holding Monday morning conference calls with Bush. Bush W. became president in 2000, selecting the above individuals as his primary staff members. Initial member of the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq in 2002, a year before that country was invaded. Co-chairman of the economic taskforce for California gubernatorial candidate Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2003. Co-chairman of the Commonwealth Club Centennial meeting in 2003, sponsored by Goldman Sachs and Carnegie Corporation. Anno 2005, Shultz is chairman of J.P. Morgan Chase's International Advisory Council, co-chairman of the Committee on Present Danger (together with James Woolsey), and an advisor to the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (together with Alexander Haig, Lawrence S. Eagleburger, Richard Perle, James Woolsey, and, until recently, Paul Wolfowitz). Honorary director of the Institute for International Economics (headed by Peter G. Peterson. Other directors are Paul Volcker, Maurice R. Greenberg, and David Rockefeller). Member of the Hoover Institution and the American Enterprise Institute New Atlantic Initiative. Shultz's most senior advisor and confidant is Charles Hill, a former diplomat to Israel, the Far East, and to the secretary-general of the UN, who now holds positions at Yale and Stanford. Shultz has been a long time associate of Henry Kissinger. |
Shumway, Forrest N |
River Lair |
Retired vice-chairman of Allied-Signal Corporation (now called Honeywell) and life trustee of University of Southern California. |
Shustak, Seth |
|
Astronomer at the SETI Institute. |
Sigler, Andrew Clark |
|
Chairman and CEO of Champion International. Trustee Emeritus of Dartmouth College. |
Silha, Otto A. |
|
During his senior year at the University of Minnesota he "tried out" for a newsroom job at the Minneapolis Star, where he was hired in May 1940 as a copyeditor. Following four years of service in the Air Force, Mr. Silha was named promotion director of the Minneapolis Star and Tribune Company. Four years later, in 1952, he took on the added responsibilities of personnel director. In 1954 he became the company's business manager. Within two years he was general manager and was elected vice president. In 1968 he became executive vice president and publisher of The Minneapolis Star and The Minneapolis Tribune. In 1973 he was elected president of the company. He served as chairman of the Board of Directors of the company, now renamed Cowles Media Company, from 1979 until his retirement from the Board in 1984. He then founded his own consulting firm, Silha Associates. Active in a variety of professional and civic organizations and projects, Mr. Silha served as a member of the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota and is a trustee and senior vice president of the University of Minnesota Foundation. Silha has played a leadership role in several major professional groups, including the American Newspaper Publishers Association, the Associated Press, the Newspaper Advertising Bureau, the International Newspaper Promotion Association, the Newspaper Readership Project, and the Newspaper Joint Postal Task force. |
Simon, William E. |
|
William E. Simon became the 63rd Secretary of the Treasury on May 8, 1974. In August, he was asked to continue to serve in this position by President Ford, who shortly afterward appointed him Chairman of the Economic Policy Board and chief spokesman for the Administration on economic issues. On April 8, 1975, President Ford also named him Chairman of the newly created East-West Foreign Trade Board, established under the authority of the Trade Act of 1974. At the time of his nomination as Treasury Secretary, Mr. Simon was serving as Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, a post he had held from January 22, 1973. As Deputy Secretary, he supervised the Administration's program to restructure and improve U.S. financial institutions. He also served as the first Administrator of the Federal Energy Office. From December 4, 1973, Mr. Simon simultaneously launched and administered the Federal Energy Administration at the height of the oil embargo. He also chaired the President's Oil Policy Committee and was instrumental in revising the mandatory oil import program in April 1973. Mr. Simon was a member of the President's Energy Resources Council and continued to have major responsibility for coordinating both domestic and international energy policy. Castigated George H.W.
Bush in 1994 at the Bohemian Grove for abandoning the Reagan agenda. The son of an insurance executive, Mr. Simon was born in Paterson, New Jersey, on November 27, 1927. He was graduated from Newark Academy and, after service in the U.S. Army (infantry), received his B.A. from Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania, in 1951. He began his extraordinary career with Union Securities in 1952. He served as Vice President of Weeden & Company before becoming the senior partner in charge of the Government and Municipal Bond departments at Salomon Brothers, where he was a member of the seven-man Executive Committee of the firm. Following government service, Mr. Simon co-founded Wesray Corporation, a successful pioneer in mergers and acquisitions. Seven years later he launched WSGP International, which concentrated on investments in real estate and financial service organizations in the western United States and on the Pacific Rim. Most recently, in 1988, he founded William E. Simon & Sons, a global merchant bank with offices in New Jersey, Los Angeles and Hong Kong. During his remarkable business career, Mr. Simon served on the boards of over thirty companies including Xerox, Citibank, Halliburton, Dart and Kraft, and United Technologies. In recognition of his visionary leadership in business, finance and public service, the Graduate School of Management at the University of Rochester was renamed the William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administration in 1986. Mr. Simon was an active member of the United States Olympic Committee for over 30 years. He served as Treasurer from 1977 to 1981 and as President of the U.S. Olympic Committee for the four-year period, which included the 1984 Games in Sarajevo and Los Angeles. He chaired the U.S. Olympic Foundation, created with the profits of the Los Angeles games, from 1985 through 1997, and was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame in 1991. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations . |
Skinner, David .E. |
|
David "Ned" Skinner took over Alaska Steamship after the death of his father, G. W. Skinner, in 1953. Increased competition from state-subsidized ferries and barge operations had put the company into a decline and Skinner had to close it in 1971, a major disappointment in his business life. But as head of the Skinner Corporation, Ned branched out into real estate (the Skinner Building and 5th Avenue Theatre in Seattle, Carillon Point in Kirkland), Pepsi-Cola bottling, and NC Machinery tractor sales. By 1988, the Skinner Corporation was the 10th largest privately held corporation in the U.S. In 1960, Skinner joined with other investors to form the Pentagram Corporation to build the Space Needle, a futuristic, 605-foot tower and revolving restaurant that would become the icon for the Century 21 Seattle World’s Fair and for Seattle itself. The 1962 World’s Fair marked the shift in Seattle from "provincial backwater into a genuinely cosmopolitan port city" (Crowley). Skinner is said to have raised more than $5 million for the fair and was prepared to take a loss on his own investment if it raised Seattle’s profile in the world. Skinner sat on the boards of the Boeing Company, Safeco, Pacific Northwest Bell, Pacific National Bank, and actively guided corporate policy. Skinner died of cancer in 1988. |
Smith, F. Allen |
Jinks Band |
Unknown. |
Smith, Mark D. |
|
President & CEO, California HealthCare Foundation since its formation in 1996. Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1999 titled "Is the Healthcare System Headed for a Meltdown?" Smith is a member of the Institute of Medicine and on the board of the Washington Business Group on Health. He has served on the Performance Measurement Committee of the National Committee for Quality Assurance and the editorial board of the Annals of Internal Medicine. A board-certified internist, he is a member of the clinical faculty at the University of California San Francisco and an attending physician at the AIDS clinic at San Francisco General Hospital. Prior to joining the California HealthCare Foundation, Smith was executive vice president of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation and served as associate director of the AIDS Service and assistant professor of Medicine and Health Policy and Management at Johns Hopkins University. |
Smith, Robert Michael |
T-N-T |
Professor of sculpture, 3D computer visualization/animation and philosophy of aesthetics at the New York Institute of Technology and Fine Arts. Smith is a member of the Board of Directors for the New York City chapter of SIGGRAPH (Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics) and president of the Sculptors Guild. He is also a board member of the International Sculptors Symposium, Inc., the Washington Sculptors Group, and the Philadelphia Sculptors. |
Smith, William French |
Mandalay |
In 1946 he joined the law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher in Los Angeles, where he was a senior partner when he was appointed Attorney General by President Ronald Reagan. Smith was a member of the American Law Institute, American Judicature Society, and the Institute of Judicial Administration's Board of Fellows, as well as a fellow of the American Bar Foundation. He served as Attorney General from 1981 to 1985 and then joined the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. He has served as a member of the U.S. Advisory Commission on International, Educational and Cultural Affairs in Washington, D.C. from 1971 to 1978; a member of the board of directors of the Los Angeles World Affairs Council since 1970 and its president since 1975; a member of the Los Angeles Committee on Foreign Relations from 1954 to 1974; and a member of the Harvard University School of Government since 1971. He has also served as a member of the advisory board of the Center for Strategic and International Studies at Georgetown University, since 1978 and was a member of the Stanton Panel on International Information, Education and Cultural Relations in Washington from 1974 until 1975. His business affiliations included service as a director of the Pacific Lighting Corp. of Los Angeles from 1967 to 1981 and the Pacific Lighting Corp. of San Francisco from 1969 to 1981, a seat on the board of directors of Jorgensen Steel Company from 1974 to 1981, and a seat on the board of directors of Pullman, Inc. of Chicago from 1979 to 1980. He was a member of the California delegation to the Republican National Convention in 1968, 1972, and 1976, serving as chairman of the delegation in 1968 and vice chairman of the delegation in 1972 and 1976. |
Snyder, William Paul |
Hillside |
Snyder served as Chief Counsel of the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge Operations Office from 1979 to 1991 and served on the U.S. Commission on Government Procurement. He received the rank of Meritorious Executive from President Reagan for his work on various energy projects. Mr. Snyder's practice includes litigating contract claims before courts and administrative bodies dealing with environmental regulatory compliance and defending against environmental claims, and defending against qui tam actions brought under the False Claims Act. |
Sparks, Jack D. |
Owl's Nest |
After being enlisted in the Army Air Corps (WWII) he advanced to
the rank of captain before returning to his job on the assembly line
at the 1900 Corporation. People in positions of authority knew Sparks
and recognized his potential. Within a few years, Sparks was moved
out of the factory into personnel work and labor relations. Later,
he moved into sales and marketing where he became producer of a strong
Whirlpool product line. In the Whirlpool sales department he was promoted
to director of marketing, and later, became chairman, president, and
chief executive officer of the Whirlpool Corporation. He started the
employee-training programs now in place at Whirlpool. |
Spencer, John |
Woof |
Unknown. |
Spencer, William I. |
|
President of Citicorp from 1970 to 1982. Director of United Technologies. Died in 1987. |
Spencer, William M. |
Parsonage |
Unknown. |
Stamper, Malcolm T. |
|
Malcolm Stamper graduated from Georgia Institute of Technology with a degree in electrical engineering and joined Boeing in 1962 as director of the company's aerospace electronics operations. In 1965, he was elected company vice president and named general manager of the Turbine Division. In the years that followed he led the 747 program and, as vice president-general manager of the Boeing Commercial Airplane Company, directed all the activities involving production, sale and development of the 707, 727, 737, 747 and SST. He served as president of the company and a member of the board of the directors from 1972 until 1985, when he became vice chairman of the board. He retired in 1990. |
Stansbury, Herbert E. |
Highlanders |
Director of ACR Group, Inc. |
Starr, Kevin |
|
University Professor of History at USC and California state librarian emeritus. Pro-Schwarzenegger. Member of the Bohemian Grove Annals Committee in 1997. |
Stephens, Donald R. |
|
Unknown. |
Stephens, Paul H. |
Hill Billies |
Co-founder of Robertson Stephens & Company in 1978, which became
one of the world's premier boutique investment banks, helping to finance
hundreds of Silicon Valley growth companies. (sold in 1997) Manager
of Robertson Stephens venture capital group 1984-1990, chairman Stephens
Investment Management LLC, co-founder and Managing Director of RS
Investments (San Francisco-based mutual fund group that manages over
$7 billion in assets), chairman and board member of the Haas Business
School Advisory Board at the University of California, active board
member of DUMAC (the Duke Management Company), which manages Duke
University's endowment fund, as well as a director of the U.C. Berkeley
Foundation. |
Sterling, George |
|
In 1892, Sterling, a real estate speculator, met the dominant literary figure on the west coast, Ambrose Bierce, at Lake Temescal and immediately fell under his spell. Bierce -- to whom Sterling referred as "the Master" -- guided the young poet in his writing as well as in his reading, pointing to the classics as model and inspiration. Sterling also met adventure and science fiction writer Jack London. Sterling also maintained a room at the Bohemian Club in San Francisco, to whose exclusive fold Bierce had given him entrée. This Club (founded in 1872, it was the first in the U.S.) sponsored summer outings on the Russian River, north of San Francisco, which were called "High Jinks" and were attended by Sterling, London, Stewart Edward White, and many others. Sterling wrote and directed a number of plays for these events, including 'The Triumph of Bohemia: A Forest Play' and 'Truth; A Grove Play'. |
Sterling, J. E. Wallace |
Cave Man |
Served as the president of Stanford University between 1949 and 1968. |
Stevens, Roger L. |
Dragon |
Real estate impresario, together with David Rockefeller he worked
on the Business Committee for the Arts. |
Stever, Horton Guyford |
Hideaway |
Phi Beta Kappa, CalTech Ph.D. in physics, member of the MIT Radiation
Lab since 1941, Aeronautics and Astronautics professor and head of
two MIT engineering departments, chairman Scientific Advisory Board,
Chief Scientist of the Air Force Advisory Board, consultant to the
United Aircraft Corporation and Space Technology Laboratories, Scientist
and consultant for TRW Inc., but also companies like Goodyear and
Schering Plough, president of the Carnegie Mellon University, Director
National Science Foundation, chairman of the White House Energy R&D
Advisory Commission, chairman of the US-USSR Commission on S&T
Cooperation, founding Chairman of the US-Israel Bi-national Science
Foundation, member of the National Academy Sciences, the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, the National Academy Engineering
and the Carnegie Commission on Science Technical and Government, also
president of the Universities Research Association, chairman of an
independent panel of experts established by the National Research
Council to advise NASA and monitor its compliance with the recommendations
of the Rogers Commission that investigated the Challenger explosion
in 1986. |
Stewart, James E. |
Wohwohno |
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of cement manufacturer Lone Star Industries (1970's and 1980's).
|
Stewart, Samuel B. |
Toyland |
Unknown. |
Sticht, J. Paul |
Owl's Nest |
Sticht began his career with United States Steel Corp. and then
Trans World Airlines Inc. He joined Campbell Soup Co. where he became
Vice President of Marketing and later President of its international
subsidiary. He left Campbell to join Federated Department Stores as
Executive Vice President and a member of its board of directors, and
soon after became President of Federated. "He became a member
of the Board of Directors of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company in 1968
and in 1972, after retiring from Federated, was elected Chairman of
the Executive Committee. In 1973, Paul was elected President of RJR,
which by that time had changed its name to R.J. Reynolds Industries,
Inc. He was elected Chief Executive Officer in 1978 and Chairman of
the Board in 1979. After his retirement as a full-time employee in
1984, Paul remained on the Board of Directors serving as Chairman
of the Executive Committee and a coinsultant. Paul was brought back
twice from his retirement at R.J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. He first
returned from April until October of 1987 to serve as Chairman of
the company which had by then become known as RJR Nabisco, Inc. and
then returned from February until April of 1989 as acting Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer, following the acqusition of RJR Nabisco
by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Company." He has been a member
of the boards of directors of Celanese Corp., Chrysler Corp., S.C.
Johnson & Son, Inc., McKesson Corp., Textron Inc., Wachovia Bank
and Trust Co. and Wachovia Corporation. |
Stone, Michael P.W. |
Hill Billies |
Michael P. W. Stone was born in London, England, on 2 June 1925;
has resided in the United States since 1929; served in the British
Royal Navy during World War II as an aviator with the Fleet Air Arm
of the British Royal Navy and was assigned to the British carrier
HMS Glory , operating in the Mediterranean and Far East, 1943-1945;
received a B.A. degree from Yale University, 1948; studied at New
York University Law School, 1948-1949; founding partner in Sterling
International, a paper marketing and manufacturing business, 1950-1964;
was vice president of that company and several of its subsidiaries
including Sterling Vineyards, 1960-1982; was Director of the U.S.
Mission in Cairo, Egypt, of the Agency for International Development,
1982-1985; Director of the Agency for International Development Caribbean
Basin Initiative, 1985-1988; was Assistant Secretary of the Army (Financial
Management), 27 May 1986-12 May 1988; served concurrently as Acting
Under Secretary of the Army, 28 February 1988-23 May 1988; was Under
Secretary of the Army and Army Acquisition Executive, 24 May 1988-13
August 1989; while serving as Army Under Secretary, performed the
duties of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 13 May 1989-10
August 1989; was Secretary of the Army, 14 August 1989-19 January
1993; chairman of the board of the Panama Canal Commission, 1990-1993;
died in San Francisco, California, 18 May 1995. |
Sullivan, Louis W. |
|
One of the few black man that have attended the Bohemian Grove. He gave a
speech in 1997. Louis W. Sullivan, president emeritus, Morehouse School
of Medicine, Atlanta, Ga. Since completion of his medical training,
Sullivan has held both professional and administrative positions in
health care facilities and medical training institutions. He joined
Morehouse College as Professor of Biology and Medicine in 1975 and
was the founding dean and director of the Medical Education Program
at the college. He was named president of Morehouse School of Medicine
in 1981. He served as secretary, United States Department of Health
and Human Services, from 1989 to 1993. He returned to Morehouse School
of Medicine in 1993. Sullivan retired as president in 2002. Sullivan
is on the boards of the following public companies in addition to
3M: Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., CIGNA Corp., Equifax Inc., Georgia-Pacific
Corp., Henry Schein Inc. and United Therapeutics Corp. He also is
affiliated with certain nonprofit organizations, including chairman
of Medical Education for South African Blacks and trustee of the Little
League Foundation. |
Swain, Robert |
|
One of the persons who was thinking about establishing what would
become the Stanford Research Institute. |
Swartz, Thomas B. |
Land of Happiness |
Class I Director of Capital Alliance Advisors, Inc. (San Francisco
based) since 1995; current term expires in 2006; Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, Capital Alliance Advisors, Inc. (1989 to date);
Chairman, Sierra Capital Acceptance (1995 to 2000); Founder, Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of Sierra Capital Companies and its Affiliates
(1980 to date); Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Trustee of seven
equity real estate investment trusts (1980-1991); Attorney at Law,
Thomas Byrne Swartz, Inc. (1980 to date), and Bronson, Bronson, &
McKinnon, San Francisco, California (Senior Partner 1960-1980); Past
President (1989-1990) and Member, Board of Governors (1983 to 1993),
National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts; Director (representing
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) of two subsidiaries of American
Diversified Savings Bank (in liquidation)) (1990 to 1992) Member of
the Real Estate Advisory Committee to California Commissioner of Corporations
(1972-1973); University of California at Berkeley Boalt School of
Law, L.L.B. 1959; Lieutenant, U.S.N.R. 1954-1956 (active) and to 1967
(reserve); Yale University, A.B. 1954. |
Swearingen, John E. |
Cave Man |
Received a master of science degree from Carnegie–Mellon University
in 1939, honorary degrees by 15 colleges and universities, among them
the University of South Carolina and Carnegie–Mellon, chairman
Standard Oil Company of Indiana (BP) 1965-1983, chairman National
Petroleum Council 1974-1975, chairman American Petroleum Institute1978-1979,
chief executive officer Continental Illinois Corporation 1984-1987,
director of the Organization Resources Counselors, Inc., served as
a director of Aon Corporation, Lockheed Martin Corporation, Sara Lee
Corporation, Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation, Chase Manhattan Corporation,
First Chicago Corporation, American National Bank and Trust Company
of Chicago, and McGraw Wildlife Foundation. Member of the National
Academy of Engineering, the Junior Achievement National Business Hall
of Fame, the Chicago Business Hall of Fame, and the South Carolina
Business Hall of Fame, and he is a fellow of the American Institute
of Chemical Engineers. He has been decorated by the governments of
Egypt, Italy, and Iran. Received the Herbert Hoover Humanitarian Award
by the Boy Scouts of America in 1980, the Charles F. Rand Memorial
Gold Medal by the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical &
Petroleum Engineers in 1980, the Washington Award by the Western Society
of Engineers in 1981, and the Gold Medal for Distinguished Achievement
by the American Petroleum Institute in 1983. |
Swim, Dudley |
|
One of the persons who were thinking about establishing what would
become the Stanford Research Institute. |
Symington, James W. |
Hill Billies |
U.S. representative 1969-1977. Chief of protocol of the Department
of State 1966-1968. Counsel in the law firm of O'Connor & Hannan since 1986. Director at Saul Centers, Inc. since 1993. Chairman Emeritus of National Rehabilitation Hospital. Member of the Atlantic Council of the United States. Trustee of the Center for Russian Leadership Development (Open World Program), together with Bill Frist (Bohemian Grove) and George Soros (Le Cercle). The program has brought nearly 4,000 young Russian leaders from 87 regions to 680 communities in the United States, including 150 members of the two houses of the Russian Parliament, the Federation Council and the State Duma. It has also brought 169 Russian judges to the United States. These Russians will return to Russia after having experienced the American way of life. Symington is a member of the National Peace Foundation's Advisory Board. |
Symonds, J. Taft |
Seven Trees |
Chairman of the Board at TETRA Technologies, Inc. (Texas). He has served as Chairman and a director of Maurice Pincoffs Company, Inc., a private international marketing company, and as President and a director of Symonds Trust Co., Ltd., a private investment firm, since 1978. Mr. Symonds also serves as a director and a member of the audit and compensation committees of the board of directors of Plains Resources, Inc., an energy company, and as a director and member of the audit committee of Plains All American Pipeline, L.P., which is engaged in crude oil transportation, terminaling and storage. Mr. Symonds received his B.A. degree from Stanford University and his M.B.A. from Harvard Business School. |
Taft, William H. |
|
Son of the co-founder of the Yale Skull & Bones Society, himself
Skull & Bones 1878, Cincinnati Law School 1880, member Ohio Superior
Court 1890-1892, solicitor general of the United States 1892-1900,
Governor of the Philippines 1901-1904, Secretary of War 1904-1908,
President of the United States 1909-1913, Chief Justice of the United
States Supreme Court 1921-1930, member of the Pilgrims Society. |
Teller, Edward |
|
Associate Director emeritus of the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory.
Gave a speech in 1980. Teller is a physicist who played a major role
in developing the hydrogen bomb and he is a leading promoter of Star
Wars weaponry. The Livermore Lab is the number one recipient of Strategic
Defense Initiative Star Wars research dollars. (1987 description) |
Terry, Walter E. |
Aviary |
Unknown. |
Thacher, Carter P. |
River Lair |
Became President and CEO of Willbur Ellis and its chairman in the 1980's. Recently, Thacher stepped back a little and became Vice-Chairman. Willbur Ellis is a California-based leading international marketer and distributor of agricultural and industrial products, with sales exceeding $1.474 billion in 2004. |
Thomas, Lowell |
Cave Man |
The first roving newscaster, a film maker through the 1920s, a radio presenter in the 1930s, an adventurer who wrote more than 50 books, he was heralded as the father of 'Cinerama'. He was also the first man to film the Dalai Lama in Tibet. Thomas died in 1981 in New York at the age of 89. |
Thomas, Lowell, Jr. |
Cave Man |
Son of the roving newscaster Thomas Lowell. Former lieutenant governor of Alaska, who is credited with leading the battle to establish Alaska's Chugach State Park. He fought to protect the Alaska wolves from aerial hunting and helped to preserve the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Director of the Alaska State Bank. |
Thomason, A. Mims |
Cave Man |
He was president, general manager, and director of United Press International from 1962 to 1972. Deceased. At the Bohemian Grove, he was the guest of Jack R. Howard, president
of Scripps-Howard Newspapers. |
Thomson, Hunter S. |
|
Well-known reporter who committed suicide in 2005. He was named by Paul Bonacci as a participant in an off-season
pedophile homosexual snuff film made at the Bohemian Grove. Bonacci would eventually
be granted 1 million dollars by the court. Senator John DeCamp wrote a book about the affair. |
Tight, Dexter C. |
Faraway |
Unknown. |
Todd, William H. |
Pink Onion |
Unknown. |
Tollenaere, Lawrence R. |
Stowaway |
Headed the Beavers association for one year, Director Newhall Land
and Farming Company, Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, Parsons
Corp. (engineering giant), and Avery Dennison Corporation (since 1964),
trustee of the Claremont Graduate University, has been a chairman,
chief executive officer, president and director of Ameron Inc. (manufacturer
of construction products) |
Traub, Marvin S. |
|
Former CEO and Chairman of Bloomingdales, serves as senior advisor to Financo, Inc. and is Chairman and CEO of Financo Global Consulting (FGC), the consulting arm of Financo. He also serves as President of his marketing and consulting firm, Marvin Traub Associates, Inc. (“MTA”) Mr. Traub served as Chairman of The Home Company, which he founded in 1997, and the Johnnie Walker Collection which he created in 1998. Prior to creating MTA, Mr. Traub was Chairman and CEO of Bloomingdale’s for 14 years. Mr. Traub began his career at Bloomingdales in 1950 and served in various capacities including Vice Chairman and Director of Campeau Corporation and a Director of Federated Department Stores. Mr. Traub‘s consulting clients include American Express, Ralph Lauren, Jones New York, Saks Fifth Avenue, Federated Department Stores, Nautica Europe, Lanvin - France, Coin - Italy, Men’s Health magazine, Yue Sai Kan – China, Aishti, - Lebanon, Quartier 206 – Berlin, and AOL Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle – New York. |
Trent, Darrell M. |
Parsonage / Mandalay |
Currently a Senior Research Fellow with the Hoover Institute at Stanford University, Darrell Trent served as Chairman of the US delegation to the European Civil Aviation Commission. He has held various other government positions that include Deputy Secretary of the US Department of Transportation and Director of the President’s Office of Emergency Preparedness. His corporate positions include: Chairman, President and CEO of Rollins Environmental Services, Inc.; President and CEO of Food Service, Inc. and Supermarkets, Inc. He served as a member of the National Security Council and of the NATO Senior Civil Emergency Planning Commission. Ambassador Trent was Deputy Campaign Manager for Ronald Reagan’s Presidential Campaigns of 1976 and 1981. Ambassador Trent, who is a graduate of Stanford University with post-graduate degrees from Columbia University and the International Law School at The Hague, is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Acton Development Inc. (since 1988). Hosted CIA director William Casey in the Bohemian Grove in 1980. The year before Trent went to Mandalay. |
Trione, Victor |
|
Son of financier and philanthropist Henry Trione |
Turner, Fred L. |
Outpost |
Was one of the first employees of McDonald's in 1956. He rose up
the ranks of the company and eventually became CEO in 1974 and was
names Senior Chairman in 1990. In 2004 he retired as Senior Chairman.
Turner is also a director of Aon Corporation, Baxter International,
Inc., and W.W. Grainger, Inc. He has received an honorary doctor of
laws degree from Drake University in 1983 and an honorary doctor of
business administration in foodservice management from Johnson &
Wales University in 1991. |
Turner, William Cochrane |
Parsonage |
William C. Turner served as the US Ambassador to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) from 1974-1977. He also held the following governmental positions: Member of the US Advisory Commission on International Educational and Cultural Affairs; Member of the National Review Board of the East-West Center; Member of the Advisory Committee for Trade Negotiations; US Representative of the Consultative Group of the parent organization of COCOM. He sat on the Boards of Directors of Rural/Metro Corp., AT&T International, Salomon Inc., Pullman Corporation, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., Microtest Inc., and Nabisco Brands Inc.; Chairman of the AT&T International European Advisory Council and Asia Pacific Advisory Council; Chairman of the International Advisory Council of Avon Products; Member of the Europe Advisory Council of IBM, the Asia Pacific Advisory Council of American Can, the Brazilian Advisory Council of General Electric Company, and the Brazilian and Asia Pacific Advisory Councils of Caterpillar Tractor Co. Since returning to the US, he has been chairman of Argyle Atlantic Corp. that advises multinational corporations on international strategy, investments, acquisitions, joint ventures and strategic alliances. He also is a trustee and past chairman of Thunderbird, The American Graduate School of International Management; a former director and member of the executive committee of the US Council for International Business; former chairman of the board and director of Mercy Ships International; and former Governor of the Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He has been a member of the National Council of the World Wildlife Fund, the Conservation Foundation, the Bohemian Grove, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Atlantic Council of the United States, and the Atlantic Institute for International Affairs (governor in 1987). Received an Honorary Doctorate of Laws degree from Thunderbird, The American Graduate School of International Management, and the Distinguished Service Award from the East-West Center. |
Twain, Mark |
|
Also a Pilgrims Society member. Mark Twain (pseudonym of Samuel
Langhorne Clemens) was an American writer, journalist and humorist,
who won a worldwide audience for his stories of the youthful adventures
of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. Clemens was born on November 30,
1835 in Florida, Missouri, of a Virginian family. He was brought up
in Hannibal, Missouri. After his father's death in 1847, he was apprenticed
to a printer and wrote for his brother's newspaper. He later worked
as a licensed Mississippi river-boat pilot. The Civil War put an end
to the steamboat traffic and Clemens moved to Virginia City, where
he edited the Territorial Enterprise. On February 3, 1863, 'Mark Twain'
was born when Clemens signed a humorous travel account with that pseudonym.
In 1864 Twain left for California, and worked in San Francisco as
a reporter. He visited Hawaii as a correspondent for The Sacramento
Union, publishing letters on his trip and giving lectures. He set
out on a world tour, traveling in France and Italy. His experiences
were recorded in 1869 in The Innocents Abroad, which gained him wide
popularity, and poked fun at both American and European prejudices
and manners. The success as a writer gave Twain enough financial security
to marry Olivia Langdon in 1870. They moved next year to Hartford.
Twain continued to lecture in the United States and England. Between
1876 and 1884 he published several masterpieces, Tom Sawyer (1881)
and The Prince And The Pauper (1881). Life On The Mississippi appeared
in 1883 and Huckleberry Finn in 1884. In the 1890s Twain lost most
of his earnings in financial speculations and in the failure of his
own publishing firm. To recover from the bankruptcy, he started a
world lecture tour, during which one of his daughters died. Twain
toured New Zealand, Australia, India, and South Africa. He wrote such
books as The Tragedy Of Pudd'head Wilson (1884), Personal Recollections
Of Joan Of Arc (1885), A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
(1889) and the travel book Following The Equator (1897). During his
long writing career, Twain also produced a considerable number of
essays. The death of his wife and his second daughter darkened the
author's later years, which is seen in his posthumously published
autobiography (1924). Mark Twain was present at a February 1908 Pilgrim
dinner in New York, as reported by the New York Times (The newspaper
wrote a huge amount of articles about him). |
Valentine, Jack |
|
Has been chairman, CEO, and president of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA). |
Vanderjagt, Guy |
|
Congressman. Chairman of the House Republican Campaign Committee, which put George H.W. Bush into the office of President.. Went to the Bohemian Grove in 1989. |
Volcker, Paul A. |
Mandalay |
Volcker was born on September 1927 in Cape May, New Jersey. He earned a bachelor of arts degree, summa cum laude, from Princeton in 1949, and a master of arts degree in political economy and government from the Harvard University Graduate School of Public Administration in 1951. Research assistant in the research department of the New York Fed during the summers of 1949 and 1950. Pilgrims Society member and later Rockefeller Foundation vice-chair Robert Vincent Roosa was his mentor there, and Paul Volcker became part of his 'Brain trust', or 'Roosa bloc' in the following years. Volcker would also become a member of the Pilgrims Society. From 1951 to 1952, he was Rotary Foundation Fellow at the London School of Economics (Rotary International and the Lions Clubs are still seen today by some as the most important recruiting centers for the Masonic movement). He returned to the New York Fed as an economist in the research department in 1952, and special assistant in the securities department from 1955 to 1957. Financial economist at Chase Manhattan Bank 1957-1961. Director of the Office of Financial Analysis at the Treasury 1962-1963. Deputy Undersecretary for Monetary Affairs at the Treasury 1963-1965. Rejoined Chase Manhattan as vice president and director of forward planning 1965-1968. Undersecretary of the Treasury for Monetary Affairs 1969-1974. Senior fellow at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University for the 1974-1975 academic year. Director Council on Foreign Relations 1975-1979 & 1988. President Federal Reserve Bank of New York 1975-1979. On July 26, 1979 the New York Times stated: "David Rockefeller, the chairman of Chase, and Mr. Roosa were strong influences in the Mr. Carter decision to name Mr. Volcker for the Reserve Board chairmanship." Chairman Federal Reserve System 1979-1987. Identified by BND officer Hans Langemann as a person who attended the December 1, 1979 meeting of Le Cercle in the Madison Hotel in Washington. Others that attended the meeting were the German Karl-Heinz Narjes (Bundestag; soon went to the ECC), William Colby (the recently retired CIA director at the time), Ed Feulner (president of the Heritage Foundation), Julian Amery (later chairman of Le Cercle; Privy Councillor; father was one of the closest Rothschild allies in building up Israel), and Jean Violet (French intelligence officer; Habsburg employee; Le Cercle co-founder and chairman; Fascist militant before WWII). Volcker became a member of the advisory board of Power Corporation in 1988 and is a friend to Canadian Paul G. Desmarais, Sr., a Privy Councillor and controlling shareholder of Power Corporation since 1968 (Desmarais and the Belgian Albert Frère jointly own about half of the major industries in France and Belgium, including Suez, Société Générale, Total, Imerys, and Groupe Bruxelles Lambert). Director of Prudential Insurance 1988-2000. Chairman of Wolfensohn & Co. in New York 1988-1996. North American chairman of the Trilateral Commission 1991-2001. Chairman of the newly created J. Rothschild, Wolfensohn & Company from March 1992 to 1995, Wolfensohn & Co.'s London-based joint venture. Visited Bilderberg in 1997. Attended meetings of the Ditchley Foundation and has chaired some of them. Advisor to the Japan Society and the International House. Member of the advisory board of Hollinger, together with Henry Kissinger, Richard Perle, and Zbigniew Brzezinski. Director of UAL Corporation, Bankers Trust New York Corporation, and Nestle, S.A. Director United States/Hong Kong Economic Cooperation Committee. Public member of the Board of Governors of the American Stock Exchange American Stock Exchange. Honorary trustee of the Aspen Institute. American Council on Germany, and the American Assembly. Co-chairman of the advisory board of Leadership Forum International and a principal of the Council for Excellence in Government. Member Circle of Presidents RAND Corporation, which means he has donated at least tens of thousands of dollars if not millions. Trustee International Accounting Standards Committee. Honorary chairman Financial Services Volunteer Corps, a firm founded by Cyrus Vance and John C. Whitehead in 1990. Honorary chairman Committee to Encourage Corporate Philanthropy. Chairman Independent Inquiry Committee into the Oil-For-Food program, which also employed Rockefeller’s granddaughter, attorney Miranda Duncan. Chairman board of trustees Group of Thirty (2005). Paul Volcker is a visitor of the Bohemian Grove camp Mandalay. Director of the United Nations Association of the United States of America 2000-2004. Director of the Fund for Independence in Journalism. Wrote the foreword of George Soros' 2003 book 'The Alchemy of Finance'. Director of the Institute for International Economics, Washington, headed by Peter G. Peterson. Other directors of the institute are Maurice R. Greenberg and David Rockefeller. Trustee of the American Assembly anno 2005, together with Admiral Bobby Ray Inman (former NSA head; director SAIC; Bohemian Grove; CFR; Trilateral Commission), David Gergen (Bohemian Grove; CFR; Trilateral Commission), and Frank A. Weil (governor Atlantic Institute; CFR). The American Assembly is sponsored by the Carnegie Corporation. |
Volkmann, Daniel G., Jr. |
Derelicts |
Director of the San Francisco Opera. |
Walker Brooks, Jr. |
Stowaway |
Chairman of San Francisco Real Estate Investors, chairman of the
Board of USL Capital Corporation, director of the Schwab Fund for
Charitable Giving (1999), W.M. Beaty & Associates Inc. (CA area
land and forest management), emeritus chairman and trustee of the
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2004 and 2005). |
Walker, Robert W. |
Ladera |
Unknown. |
Walters, Vernon |
|
General Walters occupied a front- row seat at an array of historic
events in the post-World War II era, as a translator, adviser, administrator
and diplomat. He spoke seven or eight languages, five of them fluently,
and served part time as an interpreter to five presidents. Vernon
Anthony Walters was born in New York City on January 3, 1917, and
attended Stonyhurst College in England. He joined the United States
Army in 1941, and served in North Africa and Italy during World War
II, retiring in 1976 as a Lieutenant General. From 1955 to 1960, he
was a staff assistant to President Eisenhower, acting as interpreter
for the President, Vice President and senior diplomatic and military
officials. Appointed by President Nixon, General Walters was deputy
chief of the C.I.A. from 1972 to 1976. Just weeks after Mr. Nixon
sent him to the agency, the White House tried to involve the C.I.A.
in the Watergate scandal that eventually forced Mr. Nixon's resignation.
According to later Congressional testimony by John W. Dean 3d, the
President's counsel at the time, Mr. Nixon had picked General Walters
for the job in order to have a "good friend" in the intelligence
agency. Two Nixon aides, H. R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman, asked
General Walters to caution the Federal Bureau of Investigation to
limit its inquiries lest they compromise C.I.A. operations. "It
simply did not occur to me that the chief of staff of the President
might be asking me something that was illegal or wrong," Mr.
Walters wrote in his memoir. But on orders from his superior, Richard
M. Helms, the director of central intelligence, the general rescinded
his advisory to the F.B.I. According to General Walters, Mr. Dean
subsequently asked him repeatedly to pay off the Watergate burglars
with secret C.I.A. funds, but he refused to do so and threatened to
resign publicly if there was one more such call. In 1981, President
Reagan offered General Walters the job of roving ambassador, which
he accepted. Finally, he served as ambassador to the United Nations
from 1985 to 1988, and as ambassador to West Germany from 1989 to
1991. He had many opportunities in his career to witness the making
of history. He was W. Averell Harriman's aide in the early years of
the cold war, accompanied President Truman to a meeting with an insubordinate
General Douglas MacArthur during the Korean War and shuttled with
President Eisenhower to a series of summit meetings, held in Geneva
and White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, among other places. As translator
for Vice President Nixon during his good-will tour of Latin America
in 1958, General Walters was cut in the mouth by broken glass when
a mob stoned their car in Caracas. Later, as a military attaché
in Paris, General Walters is remembered for borrowing the private
plane of President Georges Pompidou to smuggle Henry A. Kissinger
in and out of France for clandestine meetings with Le Duc Tho of North
Vietnam."He was great as our James Bond, getting us in and
out secretly, even giving us code names," said Winston Lord,
former president of the Council on Foreign Relations, who accompanied
Mr. Kissinger to the secret talks with the Vietnamese. General Walters,
a bachelor, leaves no immediate survivors. Walters was a Knight of
Malta. |
Warner Rawleigh, Jr. |
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Director AT&T (American Telephone and Telegraph). |
Warren, Earl |
|
Earl Warren was an immensely popular Republican governor when President Dwight Eisenhower appointed him to the Supreme Court. Ike later regretted his choice; he had hoped toappoint a moderate conservative; Warren proved to be an unabashed liberal.Went to the Bohemian Grove in the 1960s. Became the president of the Warren Commission. Pilgrims Society members John J. McCloy, Allen Dulles, and Gerald Ford (at least honorary member later on) were members of the commission. |
Waste, Stephen |
|
Gave a speech at the Bohemian Grove in 1999 titled "The Alaska Oil Spill Revisited" |
Watson, Ray |
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Walt Disney’s director and later chairman of its executive committee (1999). |
Watson, Thomas J., Jr. |
Mandalay |
Eldest son of Thomas J. Watson, the founder of IBM, known to have
struggled throughout his life with depression, earned a business degree
from Brown University in 1937, and worked a few years as an IBM salesman.
In May of 1956 Watson Jr. was named CEO of the company. Only six weeks
later his father died. Thomas Jr. took the single biggest risk in
IBM's history when he decided to make all of its previous computer
software (and hardware, for that matter) obsolete, by developing a
uniform range of new IBM mainframe computers. The new machines were
compatible within the range—i.e., they could run the same software
and use the same peripherals—but incompatible with the former
mainframes. The new series, called the System/360, almost completely
bankrupted the entire company; its highly successful launch in 1964
was called by Fortune magazine "IBM's $5 Billion Gamble".
That same year, because of this success, Dwight D. Eisenhower at the
New York World's Fair awarded Thomas J. Watson Jr. the Medal of Freedom,
the highest award a U.S. President can bestow on a civilian. Watson
was CEO of IBM from 1956 to 1971 and became a US ambassador to the
Soviet Union 1979-1981. He also was a trustee of the China Institute
and was called by Fortune Magazine “the most successful capitalist
who ever lived” (1976) He was a member of the Pilgrims Society,
the 1001 Club, and the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Webster, William H. |
|
Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 1978 to 1987 and director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from 1987 to 1991. He was a former federal judge who ascended to the CIA after his successful coups against the New York mafia families while director of the FBI under President Jimmy Carter. Since 1991, Webster has practiced law at the Washington D.C. firm of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy where he specializes in arbitration, mediation and internal investigation. He served as Co-chairman of the Homeland Security Advisory Council. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. |
Wedemeyer, Albert |
Cave Man |
Born in Omaha, Neb., he graduated from West Point and served in China, the Philippines, and Europe until World War II. As a staff officer in the war-plans division of the U.S. War Department (1941–43), he was the principal author of the 1941 Victory Program for U.S. entry into the war and helped plan such strategies as the Normandy Campaign. He became chief of staff to Gen. Chiang Kai-shek and commander of U.S. forces in China (1944–46). He retired in 1951 and was promoted to general in 1954. Went to the Bohemian Grove in the 1960s. Barry Goldwater was his guest. |
Weinberger, Caspar Williard |
Isle of Aves / Mandalay |
Harvard. Entered U.S. army in 1941. Captain on General Douglas MacArthur's
intelligence staff at the end of the war. California
State Assembly 1952-1958. Chairman California Republican Party 1962-1967.
Chairman of the Commission on California State Government Organization
and Economy from 1967 (appointed by governor Reagan). State director
of finance from 1968-1970. Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission.
Deputy director Office of Management and Budget 1970-1972 and as director
from 1972 to 1973. Secretary of health, education, and welfare 1973-1975.
Vice president and general counsel of the Bechtel Group of Companies
in California 1976-1980. Secretary of Defense 1981-1987. Pushed for
dramatic increases in the United States' nuclear weapons arsenal and
was a fervent supporter of the Star Wars program, indicted in the
Iran-Contra Affair but received a presidential pardon from George
H.W. Bush. Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1987. Publisher
and chairman of Forbes magazine since 1989 (Forbes is long time Pilgrims Society family). Knight Grand Cross of
the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. Advisor to the American
Ditchley Foundation (2005). |
Welch, John F. |
|
General Electric Chairman. G.E. operates a plant in Florida that
makes neutron generators for nuclear bombs. They made the reentry
vehicle for the Minuteman missile. They make propulsion systems for
nuclear submarines and jet aircraft engines and are involved in electronic
warfare work. They are developing the engine for the Stealth bomber. |
Wheat, Francis M. |
Silverado Squatters |
Harvard Law School, commissioner of the Securities and Exchange
Commission 1964-1969, partner of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher (LA law
firm), member of the Board of Governors of the NASD, member of the
Legal Advisory committee of the New York Stock Exchange, president
of the Los Angeles Country Bar Association 1975-1976. |
White, Robert M. II |
Owlers |
He graduated from the Missouri Military Academy in Mexico in 1933, and Washington and Lee University in 1938. His grandfather and father both served as editors of the Mexico Evening Ledger. After his graduation from Washington and Lee, White served as reporter for the Evening Ledger until 1940, when he entered the armed services. During the war White went to Australia with General R. L. Eichelberger and was involved in missions for General Douglas MacArthur's headquarters. After serving overseas White returned to the United States where he was on duty as a reporter at the White House. White served as a reporter for the U.S. Press Bureau in Kansas City and was briefly editor of the New York Herald Tribune. White returned to Mexico as the co-editor and publisher of the Evening Ledger in the late 1940s. |
White, Stewart Edward |
|
Author who published a number of books of "channeled'' material. Born March 12, 1873, at Grand Rapids, Michigan, he studied at the University of Michigan (Ph.D., 1895; M.A., 1903). In 1904 he married Elizabeth (Betty) Grant, and they settled in California where he became well known as an author of many books, articles, and short stories dealing with his experiences around the state in mining and lumber camps, and on exploration trips. In March, 1918, Betty and Stewart Edward White had their first experience with the spirit world. At a party with friends, the Ouija board, being used as a parlor game, spelled the name "Betty" over and over again. When Betty took over the pointer, it spelled out a number of messages, including the advice to try "automatic writing." For over a year Betty and Stewart experimented with "automatic writing," receiving a number of messages which proved evidential. Betty was slowly led into another method in which she entered a higher state of consciousness, speaking in her own voice or the voice of another entity. The entities communicating through Betty declined to be identified, wishing to remain anonymous, and thus were named "the Invisibles" by the the Whites. "The Invisibles" led her into another, higher world, teaching her to create a new identity. Stewart recorded the messages and experiences which Betty reported in her higher state of consciousness. "The Invisibles" indicated that they were not only teaching Betty to enter a higher world of spiritual consciousness but were interested in teaching all humans how to enter this world. Betty and Stewart White continued the sessions with "the Invisibles" from 1919 to 1936. Having waited for seventeen years, they finally decided to publish their first book outlining their adventures in learning about and entering the higher spiritual world. |
Wiegers, George A. |
Lost Angels |
B.A. from Niagara University and an M.B.A. from the Columbia University,
lLong time private investment banker, general partner of Lehman Brothers,
managing director of Dillon, Read & Co. since 1983, director of
Darby Overseas Investments Ltd., active in the development and financing
of industrial, natural resource and media/communications companies,
trustee of the University of Colorado Foundation, Wiegers fellowships
at Columbia University are named after him. |
Wilbur, Ray Lyman |
|
Dean of the Stanford University School of Medicine from 1911 to 1916. President of Stanford from 1916 to 1943. Physician of president Warren G. Harding 1921-1923. 31st United
States Secretary of the Interior 1929-1933. From 1943 until his death in 1949 he served as the university's chancellor. Friend President Herbert C. Hoover.
His brother Curtis Wilbur became chief justice of the California state
supreme court. |
Wilde, Oscar |
|
An Anglo-Irish playwright, novelist, poet, and short story writer. One of the most successful playwrights of late Victorian London, and one of the greatest celebrities of his day, known for his barbed and clever wit. He suffered a dramatic downfall and was imprisoned after being convicted in a famous trial of "gross indecency" for his homosexuality. Died in 1900. |
Williams, Barry Lawson |
Sons of Rest |
Williams spent seven years as a consultant with McKinsey, several of those in Latin America. He then joined Bechtel, the global engineering and construction firm, to help launch and manage their investment program. For the past 14 years, he has run Williams Pacific Ventures, a consulting and investment business based in San Francisco. During this time, he has been CEO of a communications company and a specialty construction services firm. Mr. Williams has been a member of the American Management Association Board since April, 1998 and became its president in 2000. He also serves on the board of directors of several public companies in the insurance, energy, and engineering fields. |
Williams, James Prior |
Valhalla |
Unknown. |
Williams, John H. |
Cave Man |
Senior vice president of First Union Securities (investment banking)
until 1999, director and later chairman of Clear Channel Communications
since 1984 where he made 7.2 million just in 2003, director of GAINSCO,
Inc. Clear Channel owns over 1,200 radio stations and 37 television
stations, with investments in 240 radio stations globally, and Clear
Channel Entertainment (aka SFX, one of their more well-known subsidiaries)
owns and operates over 200 venues nationwide. They are in 248 of
the top 250 radio markets, controlling 60% of all rock programming.
|
Williams, Joseph D. |
|
Williams entered Warner-Lambert through a merger with Parke-Davis, where he was President and CEO. When elected president of Warner-Lambert, and later as chairman and CEO, he invested heavily in research. This investment helped Warner-Lambert to generate over $4 billion in revenues by 1990. Director AT&T (American Telephone and Telegraph). |
Wilson , Harry Leon |
|
Writer Harry Leon Wilson won wide popularity with his humorous novels and plays. Among the best known of Wilson's novels are Bunker Bean (1912), Ruggles of Red Gap (1915), and Merton of the Movies (1922). Each of these novels, along with other Wilson works, were adapted for Hollywood films. |
Witter, William David |
Uplifters |
He joined his father’s firm, Dean Witter Inc., in 1956 and founded his own company, William D. Witter Inc., in 1967, specializing in asset management and research for institutional investors. A founding investor of National Semiconductor, he was a longtime trustee of the San Francisco-based Dean Witter Foundation and a member of the Hoover Institution’s board of overseers. |
Wriston, Walter B. |
|
His father was a president of Brown University who in 1950 became a governor of the New York Stock Exchange. After graduate school, Wriston became a junior Foreign Service officer at the State Department in which he helped negotiate the exchange of Japanese interned in the United States for Americans held prisoner in Japan. He was drafted into the US Army in 1942 and served in the Signal Corps on Cebu in the Philippines. Immediately after World War II in 1946, Wriston entered the banking sector as a junior inspector in the comptroller's division at the First National City Bank (which would later be known as Citicorp). Wriston's ascended quickly within the Bank, becoming head of the overseas division in 1959. As a close adviser to then chairman James Stillman Rockefeller, Wriston became executive vice-president in 1960, chief executive of Citibank in 1967, and chairman of Citicorp in 1970. He remained chairman until 1984. He was chairman of President Reagan's Economic Policy Advisory Board, a member and chairman of the Business Council, and a co-chairman and policy committee member of the Business Roundtable. Director of the Council on Foreign Relations 1981-197.
Trustee of the Rand
Corporation. Died in 2005. Wriston was venerated as a the most influential commercial banker of his time. |
Woolsey, Robert James |
|
Went to Stanford, Oxford (Rhodes scholarship), and Yale University
(Phi Beta Kappa). Director CIA 1993-1995, director Atlantic Council,
chairman Smithsonian Institute, member advisory board America Abroad
Media, member advisory board Jewish Institute for National Security
Affairs. Held a lakeside talk; ‘The Long War of the 20th Century'.
He went in 1980 and was still a member in 2004. Supposedly, Woolsey
invited dr. Steven Greer of the Disclosure Project in 1993 to inform
him about the back-engineering of alien technology. According to Greer,
Woolsey was quite shaken by the fact that he wasn't informed about
any of this. Woolsey never denied having talked to Steven Greer; he
only disputes the characterization of the meeting after the book of
Steven Greer came out. Chairman of the Board of Freedom House, the
Chairman of the Advisory Boards of the Clean Fuels Foundation and
the New Uses Council, and a Trustee of the Center for Strategic &
International Studies. He also serves on the National Commission on
Energy Policy. He has been the Chairman of the Executive Committee
of the Board of Regents of The Smithsonian Institution, and a trustee
of: Stanford University, The Goldwater Scholarship Foundation, and
the Aerospace Corporation. He has been a member of: The National Commission
on Terrorism, 1999-2000; The Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile
Threat to the U.S. (Rumsfeld Commission), 1998; The President's Commission
on Federal Ethics Law Reform, 1989; The President's Blue Ribbon Commission
on Defense Management (Packard Commission), 1985-1986; and The President's
Commission on Strategic Forces (Scowcroft Commission), 1983. Woolsey
is presently a principal in the Homeland Security Fund of Paladin
Capital Group (supposedly sent a gag order down the line of the NY
fire department relating 9/11) and a member of the Board of Directors
of four privately held companies, generally in fields related to infrastructure
protection and resilience. He also serves as Vice Chairman of the
Advisory Board of Global Options LLC. He has served in the past as
a member of the Boards of Directors of a number of other publicly
and privately held companies, generally in fields related to technology
and security, including: Martin Marietta; British Aerospace, Inc.;
Fairchild Industries; Titan Corporation; DynCorp, Yurie Systems, Inc.;
and USF&G; he has also served as a member of the Board of Governors
of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange. |
Wouk, Herman |
Wayside Log |
Novalist. Wrote a book about Judaism. Held a lakeside talk titled 'Bohemia'. |
Yeager, Chuck |
|
Chuck Yeager is unquestionably the most famous test pilot of all time. He won a permanent place in the history of aviation as the first pilot ever to fly faster than the speed of sound, but that is only one of the remarkable feats this pilot performed in service to his country. 2004 lakeside Talk: 'Flight'. |
Yew, Lee Kuan |
|
Educated in England, Lee Kuan Yew led Singapore to independence and served as its first prime minister. He was regularly re-elected from 1959 until he stepped down in 1990. Under his guidance, Singapore became a financial and industrial powerhouse, despite a lack of abundant natural resources. Lee ruled with ultimate authority, and his zeal for law and order was legendary. In 1990 he stepped down (though he remained in the cabinet as senior minister) and was succeeded as prime minister by Goh Chok Tong. At the Bohemian Grove he was supposedly mistaken
for a waiter once. Member of the International Council of J.P. Morgan Chase, together with Kissinger, Andre Desmarais, Riley Bechtel (Bohemian Grove), and others. |
York, Michael |
|
Unknown. |
Yorty, Samuel |
|
Mayor of Los Angeles 1961-1973. |
Some other guests for entertainment and service purposes
Hart, Micky |
Hill Billies |
Member of the Grateful Dead, Produced their first album in 1967. Went in 2004. |
Bob Weir |
Rattlers |
Member of the Grateful Dead. Produced their first album in 1967. Went in 2004. |
Steve Miller |
|
Singer of the classic-rock band the Steve Miller Band. Produced their first Album in 1968. |
Robert C. Bailey |
Aviary |
Opera company executive. |
Chad Savage |
|
Famous gay porn star, worked as a valet in 2004. Probably 'serves' some of the gay guests. |
Bluestein, Ron |
|
Former stint waiter at the Bohemian Grove. Wrote about the it in his pamphlet 'A Waitress in Bohemia'. |
Bergen, Edgar |
|
Went in the 1960. Ventriloquist. |
Robert Mondavi |
|
Wine expert |
Jim Bundschu |
|
Wine expert |
Daniel Duckhorn |
|
Wine expert |
Eric Wente |
|
Wine expert |
Phil Wente |
|
Wine expert |
|
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