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Skull and bones tomb
Skull and bones tomb







skull and bones tomb

Bush ’48 and grandfather of former President George W. Geronimo is reportedly buried in a prisoner of war cemetery in Fort Sill, Okla., but according to an old legend, Prescott Bush - Yale graduate, Bonesman, father of former President George H.W. The objective of the original suit is to gather Geronimo’s remains and reinter them near his birthplace at the head of the Gila River in New Mexico, thereby fulfilling what plaintiff Harlyn Geronimo says were his great-grandfather’s wishes. “We believe that is awfully important, not only to the wishes of Geronimo himself, but to the spirit of the Indian people and their relationships to the government of the United States.”

skull and bones tomb

“We’re obviously disappointed,” Clark said in a phone interview. But their lawyer, Ramsey Clark - who has represented controversial figures such as Saddam Hussein and Slobodan Milosevic - said Monday that he is not giving up. The plaintiffs are 20 descendants of the legendary Native American chieftain Geronimo hoping to reclaim their ancestor’s remains.

  • 5.It looks like the public will not be learning any times soon whether the secret society Skull and Bones keeps an Apache warrior’s skull in its tomb.Ī District of Columbia judge on July 27 dismissed a case that had been brought against the mysterious society, as well as the University and senior members of the U.S.
  • Or, what if Dauphin was actually innocent, and it was all a frame, because he knew too much? Check out this commenter at the Yale Herald:Ĭonspiracy theorists, start your engines. (Little known hazing task: Destroy the economy of a third-world nation of your choosing.) Then all we have to do is nuke the tomb, and radical Islam will go away. Unless, of course, Dauphinish is actually a 58-year-old Syrian, which could actually be a good thing: If the Skull & Bones mythos has reached the Muslim world, perhaps we can convince them that the failed international policies of the Presidents Bush were not symptomatic of an actual strain of political thought in America, but some peculiar Skull & Bones mating ritual. Who was the Dauphin, anyway? Did his paranoid Yale fantasies exist before he got there? And, does admissions screen for that? His YouTube upload was on December 4, 2009. The Dauphin's identity was never confirmed or made public. He also showed them books he had stolen from Scroll and Key and had chalked the word "Dauphin" on walls throughout Yale's campus. Those who considered the student a friend said he told them he had broken into the tomb of Skull and Bones and shown them video footage to prove it. A Yale Daily News article from November 2007 says a mysterious Branford frosh-thought to be responsible for vandalism, death threats, and vehicular assault-"withdrew from the University for medical reasons." This paragraph, however, becomes the money shot, in retrospect: Dauphinish has tracked his video with what can only be described as conspiracy theory electronica:īut here's the rub: Though Dauphinish claims he is a 58-year-old Syrian, he sounds an awful lot like a certain Yale frosh who used to call himself the Dauphin. (Yalies, take a stab in comments?) There are gothic arches, dust, skull imagery, and a stray coffin lying around. Unfortunately, vaunted secret societies don't really have publicists, so it's hard to confirm.

    skull and bones tomb

    The video, uploaded by new YouTube user Dauphinish and caught first by IvyGate, looks like it could belong the vaunted secret society that counts three generations of Bushes as its members. Among his rumored loot: Secret society video footage, which has since surfaced on YouTube. A Yale freshman who called himself the Dauphin is believed to have terrorized his peers with death threats, ritualistic vandalism, and a hit and run accident.









    Skull and bones tomb