The 2000 film The Skulls concerns a highly elaborate secret society with clear parallels to Skull and Bones. Skull and Bones is known by many names, including The Order of Death, The Order, The Eulogian Club, and Lodge 322. Initiates are most commonly known as Bonesmen, Knights of Eulogia, and Boodle Boys.
George H. W. Bush called it a “marvelous book,” listing it among the books that have inspired him.
The speaker here, Holden Caulfield of J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye, inhabited the world that also belonged to George Bush — the world of the northeast prep schools of the 1940s. Apart from the obvious parallels between George and Holden, there is the interesting question of whether Bush might have a closer relation to this literary personage. In the course of the errant Holden Caulfield’s time in New York City, he takes a girlfriend to a matinee theatre performance; during the intermission the girlfriend, named Sally, spots “some jerk she knew on the other side of the lobby. Some guy in one of those very dark grey flannel suits and one of those checkered vests. Strictly Ivy League. Big deal.”
reagan and lennon shot by catcher killer
bad bad boys
http://www.aidd.org/conspiracy/03/psalm-080.htm
we don’t need no mind control