{"id":72133,"date":"2021-05-29T13:06:58","date_gmt":"2021-05-29T13:06:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/?p=72133"},"modified":"2021-05-29T14:27:03","modified_gmt":"2021-05-29T14:27:03","slug":"bonesman","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/?p=72133","title":{"rendered":">>> Bonesman <<<"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Biliyorum deli diyorsunuz bana\u2026<br \/>\nBilmiyorsunuz ki!<\/p>\n<p>Bildi\u011fin, tan\u0131d\u0131\u011f\u0131n kimi ismi ara istersen. T\u00fcrkiyeli de\u011fil\u2026<br \/>\nOnun listesini yay\u0131nlar\u0131m bir ara\u2026<br \/>\nM\u00fcsl\u00fcman Kalle\u015flerin.<\/p>\n<p><strong>>>> !!! >>> INCELE <<< !!! <<<<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Founding members (1832\u201333 academic year)<\/p>\n<p>William Huntington Russell, founder of Skull and Bones and the namesake of the society&#8217;s corporate body, the Russell Trust Association<br \/>\nFrederick Ellsworth Mather (1833), Democratic member of the New York State Assembly (1854\u20131857)[2]<br \/>\nPhineas Timothy Miller (1833), American physician[2]<br \/>\nWilliam Huntington Russell (1833), Connecticut State Legislator, Major General[3]:82<br \/>\nAlphonso Taft (1833), U.S. Attorney General (1876\u20131877), Secretary of War (1876), Ambassador to Austria-Hungary (1882) and Russia (1884\u20131885), father of William Howard Taft[3]:82<br \/>\nGeorge Ingersoll Wood (1833), American clergyman[2]<br \/>\n19th century<br \/>\n1830s<br \/>\nAsahel Hooker Lewis (1833), newspaper editor and member of the Ohio General Assembly[2]<br \/>\nJohn Wallace Houston (1834), Secretary of State of Delaware (1841\u20131844), associate judge Delaware Superior Court (1855\u20131893)[2]<br \/>\nJohn Hubbard Tweedy (1834), delegate to the United States Congress from Wisconsin Territory (1847\u20131848)[2]<br \/>\nWilliam Henry Washington (1834), Whig U.S. Congressman from North Carolina (1841\u20131843)[2]<br \/>\nJohn Edward Seeley (1835), US Representative from New York[2]<br \/>\nThomas Anthony Thacher (1835), Professor of Latin at Yale University (1842\u20131886)[3]:47<br \/>\nHenry Champion Deming (1836), U.S. Representative from Connecticut[4]:112<br \/>\nWilliam Maxwell Evarts (1837), U.S. Secretary of State, Attorney General, Senator, grandson of Roger Sherman[3]:131, 199[5]<br \/>\nChester Smith Lyman (1837), astronomer, Yale professor of Industrial Mechanics and Physics[2]<br \/>\nAllen Ferdinand Owen (1837), US Representative from Georgia[2]<br \/>\nBenjamin Silliman, Jr. (1837), Yale professor of chemistry[3]:64<br \/>\nMorrison Remmick Waite (1837), Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court[3]:89<br \/>\nJoseph B. Varnum, Jr. (1838), Speaker of the New York State Assembly[2]<br \/>\nRichard Dudley Hubbard (1839), Governor of Connecticut, US Representative[2]<br \/>\n1840s<\/p>\n<p>Orris S. Ferry (Bones 1844), United States Senator<br \/>\nJames Mason Hoppin (1840), Professor emeritus at Yale[6]<br \/>\nJohn Perkins, Jr. (1840), U.S. Representative from Louisiana, and then a senator in the Confederate States Congress[2]<br \/>\nWilliam Taylor Sullivan Barry (1841), U.S. Representative from Mississippi[4]:67<br \/>\nJohn Andrew Peters (1842), US Representative from Maine[7]<br \/>\nBenjamin Tucker Eames (1843), US Representative from Rhode Island[4]:69<br \/>\nRoswell Hart (1843), US Representative from New York[2]<br \/>\nHenry Stevens (1843), bibliographer[8]<br \/>\nOrris Sanford Ferry (1844), US Senator from Connecticut, US Representative, US Brigadier General[4]:70<br \/>\nWilliam Barrett Washburn (1844), US Senator, Governor of Massachusetts.[2]<br \/>\nConstantine Canaris Esty (1845), US Representative from Massachusetts[4]:71<br \/>\nRichard Taylor (1845), Confederate General, Louisiana State Senator[2]<br \/>\nLeonard Eugene Wales (1845), US District Court judge[4]:71<br \/>\nHenry Baldwin Harrison (1846), Governor of Connecticut[2]<br \/>\nStephen Wright Kellogg (1846), US Representative from Connecticut[2]<br \/>\nRensselaer Russell Nelson (1846), US District Court judge[4]:71<br \/>\nJohn Donnell Smith (1847), botanical researcher, Captain in the Confederate Army[9]:3[10]<br \/>\nDwight Foster (1848), Massachusetts Attorney General (1861\u201364), and a justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (1866\u201369)[2]<br \/>\nAugustus Brandegee (1849), US Representative from Connecticut.[11]:87<br \/>\nTimothy Dwight V (1849), Yale President (1886\u20131899)[3]:50<br \/>\nFrancis Miles Finch (1849), New York Court of Appeals judge, Cornell University professor[4]:74<br \/>\n1850s<\/p>\n<p>Daniel Coit Gilman (Bones 1852), president of several universities, formed the Bones&#8216; corporate body, the Russell Trust Association, in 1856, the same year the first wing of their building was constructed.[3]:83\u20135<br \/>\nEllis Henry Roberts (1850), US Representative from New York[12]:270<br \/>\nRichard Jacobs Haldeman (1851), Democratic member of the US House of Representatives from Pennsylvania[11]:91<br \/>\nWilliam Wallace Crapo (1852), US Representative from Massachusetts[13]:3<br \/>\nDaniel Coit Gilman (1852), president of the University of California, Johns Hopkins University, and the Carnegie Institution, founder of the Russell Trust Association[3]:83\u20135<br \/>\nGeorge Griswold Sill (1852), Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut[2]<br \/>\nAndrew Dickson White (1853), cofounder and first President of Cornell University[14]<br \/>\nCarroll Cutler (1854), President of Western Reserve College, now known as Case Western Reserve University.<br \/>\nLuzon Buritt Morris (1854), Governor of Connecticut[15]<br \/>\nWilliam DeWitt Alexander (1855), educator, linguist, and surveyor of Hawaii[2]<br \/>\nChauncey Depew (1856), Vanderbilt railroad attorney, US Senator[3]:165<br \/>\nEli Whitney Blake, Jr. (1857), American scientist and educator, great-nephew of Eli Whitney[2]<br \/>\nJohn Thomas Croxton (1857), Civil War Brigadier General, United States Ambassador to Bolivia[11]:103<br \/>\nMoses Coit Tyler (1857), professor of history at Cornell University[16]<br \/>\nBurton Norvell Harrison (1859), private secretary to Jefferson Davis[4]:90<br \/>\nEugene Schuyler (1859), US Ambassador, author and translator[4]:91<br \/>\n1860s<br \/>\nLowndes Henry Davis (1860), US Representative from Missouri[2]<br \/>\nWilliam Walter Phelps (1860), US Representative from New Jersey[4]:92<br \/>\nSimeon Eben Baldwin (1861), Governor and Chief Justice of the State of Connecticut, son of Roger Sherman Baldwin[3]:39<br \/>\nAnthony Higgins (1861), US Senator[4]:94<br \/>\nEdward Rowland Sill (1861), poet, professor at the University of California[11]:112<br \/>\nDaniel Henry Chamberlain (1862), Governor of South Carolina[4]:95<br \/>\nFranklin MacVeagh (1862), US Secretary of the Treasury[3]:182<br \/>\nHenry Farnum Dimock (1863), Whitney family attorney, Director of the Yale Corporation[2]<br \/>\nWilliam Collins Whitney (1863), US Secretary of the Navy[3]:183[17]:1099<br \/>\nCharles Fraser MacLean (1864), New York Supreme Court judge[18]<br \/>\nJohn William Sterling (1864), lawyer, co-founder Shearman &#038; Sterling[19]<br \/>\nGeorge Chandler Holt (1866), US District Court Judge[20]:14<br \/>\nHenry Morton Dexter (1867), clergyman, editor, author[4]:103<br \/>\nAlbert Elijah Dunning (1867), American theologian and author[18]:1081<br \/>\nThomas Hedge (1867), US Representative from Iowa[11]:123<br \/>\nGeorge Peabody Wetmore (1867), US Senator and Governor of Rhode Island[4]:104<br \/>\nChauncey Bunce Brewster (1868), Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut[21]:7<br \/>\nLeBaron Bradford Colt (1868), US Senator and Circuit Court Judge[22]:1302<br \/>\nWilson Shannon Bissell (1869), Postmaster General[23]:489<br \/>\n1870s<\/p>\n<p>William Howard Taft (Bones 1878), son of the society&#8217;s co-founder and the first of three Bonesmen to become US President<br \/>\nWilliam H. Welch (1870), Dean of Johns Hopkins University[24]:14<br \/>\nFrederick Collin (1871), judge, mayor of Elmira, New York[25]:9<br \/>\nEdwin Forrest Sweet (1871), US Representative from Michigan[26]:15<br \/>\nThomas Thacher (1871), lawyer[27]<br \/>\nWilliam Kneeland Townsend (1871), US Appeals Court judge[4]:111<br \/>\nGeorge Foot Moore (1872), author, Professor of theology at Harvard University[20]:31<br \/>\nTheodore Salisbury Woolsey (1872), co-founder of the Yale Review, professor of international law[3]:99<br \/>\nEben Alexander (1873), American scholar, educator, dean and ambassador[4]:114<br \/>\nSamuel Oscar Prentice (1873), Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Connecticut[22]:1320<br \/>\nFrank Bigelow Tarbell (1873), classicist, professor of Greek and history at Yale, Harvard, and the University of Chicago[11]:137<br \/>\nEdward Rudolph Johnes (1873), Attorney and Author[28]<br \/>\nAlmet Francis Jenks (1875), Justice of the New York Supreme Court[22]:1326<br \/>\nJohn Patton, Jr. (1875), US Senator[2]<br \/>\nEdward Curtis Smith (1875), Governor of Vermont[26]:22<br \/>\nWalker Blaine (1876), United States Department of State official[11]:144<br \/>\nCharles Newell Fowler (1876), US Representative from New Jersey[29]:35<br \/>\nArthur Twining Hadley (1876), Yale President 1899\u20131921[3]:48, 58, 142<br \/>\nRoger Sherman Baldwin Foster (1878), lawyer and author[18]:1018<br \/>\nTudor Storrs Jenks (1878), author[30]<br \/>\nWilliam Howard Taft (1878), 27th President of the United States, Chief Justice of the United States, Secretary of War[3]:182[31]<br \/>\nEdward Baldwin Whitney (1878), New York Supreme Court justice[11]:150<br \/>\nLloyd Wheaton Bowers (1879), Solicitor General of the United States[4]:127<br \/>\nAmbrose Tighe (1879), member Minnesota House of Representatives[9]:77<br \/>\nTimothy Lester Woodruff (1879), Lieutenant Governor of New York[2]<br \/>\n1880s<\/p>\n<p>Henry L. Stimson (Bones 1888), US Secretary of War and Secretary of State<br \/>\nWalter Camp (1880), father of American football and exercise proponent[3]:166[22]:1348<br \/>\nSidney Catlin Partridge (1880) Bishop of Kyoto, Japan, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Missouri[32]:80<br \/>\nHenry Waters Taft (1880), lawyer, Cadwalader, Wickersham &#038; Taft[33]:7<br \/>\nEdwin Edgerton Aiken (1881), missionary[3]:196[34]:6<br \/>\nThomas Burr Osborne (1881), chemist, co-discoverer of Vitamin A[9]:83\u201384<br \/>\nBenjamin Brewster (1882), Bishop of Maine and Missionary Bishop of Western Colorado[21]:19<br \/>\nWilliam Phelps Eno (1882), traffic planner called the &#8222;Father of Traffic Safety&#8220;[33]:9<br \/>\nJames Campbell (1882), son of businessman Robert Campbell, Harvard Law 1888.[35]<br \/>\nElihu Brintnal Frost (1883), lawyer, president of several early submarine companies[13]:112<br \/>\nEliakim Hastings Moore (1883), mathematician, namesake of the Moore\u2013Penrose pseudoinverse[36]:47\u20138<br \/>\nJoseph Robinson Parrott (1883), president of the Florida East Coast Railway[11]:162<br \/>\nHorace Dutton Taft (1883), educator, founder of the Taft School[37]:14\u201315<br \/>\nWilbur Franklin Booth (1884), US federal judge[38]:14<br \/>\nMaxwell Evarts (1884), member of the Vermont House of Representatives, attorney for E. H. Harriman[3]:165<br \/>\nFrank Bosworth Brandegee (1885), US Representative and Senator[22]:1369<br \/>\nAlfred Cowles, Jr. (1886), lawyer, director Chicago Tribune[39]:50<br \/>\nEdward Johnson Phelps (1886), president of Northern Trust Safe Deposit Company[39]:53<br \/>\nClinton Larue Hare (1887), lawyer, college football coach[40]<br \/>\nGeorge Griswold Haven, Jr. (1887), businessman[13]:126<br \/>\nOliver Gould Jennings (1887), financier, member of Connecticut House of Representatives[41]:42<br \/>\nWilliam Kent (1887), United States Congressman for California[42]:107<br \/>\nIrving Fisher (1888), economist and eugenicist[43]:14<br \/>\nRichard Melancthon Hurd (1888), real estate executive[21]:36\u201337<br \/>\nAmos Alonzo Stagg (1888), college football Hall of Fame coach[3]:126[44]<br \/>\nCharles Otis Gill (1888), clergyman, author, college football coach[11]:179<br \/>\nHenry L. Stimson (1888), Governor-General of the Philippines, US Secretary of War, US Secretary of State[3]:182[31]<br \/>\nGifford Pinchot (1889), First Chief of U.S. Forest Service[31]<br \/>\nGeorge Washington Woodruff (1889), College Hall of Fame football coach, Acting Secretary of the Interior and Pennsylvania Attorney General[24]:65<br \/>\n1890s<br \/>\nThomas F. Bayard, Jr. (1890), US Senator[37]:29<br \/>\nFairfax Harrison (1890), president Southern Railway Company[45]:56\u201357<br \/>\nPercy Hamilton Stewart (1890), US Representative from New Jersey[34]:15<br \/>\nFrederic Collin Walcott (1891), US Senator[46]:21<br \/>\nHugh Aiken Bayne (1892), lawyer Strong &#038; Cadwalader, Adjutant General&#8217;s Office and War Department during World War I[47]<br \/>\nHowell Cheney (1892), manufacturer, founded Howell Cheney Technical High School[4]:160<br \/>\nBenjamin Lewis Crosby, Jr. (1892), law student and football coach[2]<br \/>\nClive Day (1892), Professor of economic history at Yale[48]:10\u201311<br \/>\nHenry S. Graves (1892), co-founder and first Dean of Yale School of Forestry, 2nd chief of the U.S. Forest Service, founding member and 4th president of the Society of American Foresters[4]:160<br \/>\nJames William Husted, Jr. (1892), US Representative[22]:1392<br \/>\nPierre Jay (1892), first chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York[49]<br \/>\nThomas Lee McClung (1892), Treasurer of the United States, College Football Hall of Fame player[50]<br \/>\nEdson Fessenden Gallaudet (1893), aviation pioneer[33]:32<br \/>\nThomas Cochran (1894), partner in J.P. Morgan &#038; Company[41]:64<br \/>\nJohn Howland (1894), pediatrician at the Johns Hopkins Hospital[51]<br \/>\nRalph Delahaye Paine (1894), journalist and author[22]<br \/>\nHarry Payne Whitney (1894), investment banker, husband of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney[3]:187<br \/>\nFrank Seiler Butterworth (1895), member Connecticut State Senate, All-American football player and coach[34]:30<br \/>\nFrancis Burton Harrison (1895), US Representative from New York, Governor-General of the Philippines[4]:166<br \/>\nFrank Augustus Hinkey (1895), zinc smelting business, College Football Hall of Fame player and coach[13]:169\u201370<br \/>\nJules Henri de Sibour (1896), architect[39]:92\u201393<br \/>\nAnson Phelps Stokes (1896), clergyman and Secretary of Yale University (1899\u20131921)[3]:74<br \/>\nSamuel Brinckerhoff Thorne (1896), mining engineer and executive, College Football Hall of Fame[32]:149\u201351<br \/>\nHenry Sloane Coffin (1897), president of the Union Theological Seminary[3]:127<br \/>\nClarence Mann Fincke (1897), All-America football player[2]<br \/>\nAmos Richards Eno Pinchot (1897), Progressive leader[52]:88\u20139<br \/>\nJames Wolcott Wadsworth Jr. (1898), U.S. Senator from New York[48]:35<br \/>\nWilliam Payne Whitney (1898), Whitney family businessman and philanthropist[53]:171<br \/>\nFrederick H. Brooke (1899), architect from Washington, D.C.[54]<br \/>\nJames McDevitt Magee (1899), US Representative from Pennsylvania[46]:41<br \/>\nAlfred Gwynne Vanderbilt (1899), member of the Vanderbilt family[55]<br \/>\n20th century<br \/>\n1900s<br \/>\nFrederick Baldwin Adams (1900), railroad executive[56]<br \/>\nAshley Day Leavitt (1900), Congregational minister, Harvard Congregational Church, Brookline, Massachusetts, frequent lecturer and public speaker[4]:175<br \/>\nPercy Rockefeller (1900), director of Brown Brothers Harriman, Standard Oil, and Remington Arms[3]:165[26]:104[31]<br \/>\nCharles Edward Adams (1904), director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York[57]<br \/>\nRussell Cheney (1904), American painter and noted portrait artist.[3]:86<br \/>\nThomas Day Thacher (1904), US District Court judge, Solicitor General[3]:183[4]:183<br \/>\nJohn Gillespie Magee (1906), Yale Chaplain, documenter of the Rape of Nanking[11]:205<br \/>\nFoster Rockwell (1906), All-America football player and coach[58]:116<br \/>\nWilliam McCormick Blair (1907), American financier, heir to the McCormick reaper fortune[59]<br \/>\nHugh Smith Knox (1907), All-America football player[60]:102<br \/>\nSamuel Finley Brown Morse (1907), developer and conservationist, All-America football player[11]:206<br \/>\nLucius Horatio Biglow (1908), All-America football player and coach[4]:189<br \/>\nCharles Seymour (1908), President of Yale (1937\u20131951), founding member of The Council on Foreign Relations[3]:127, 147[31]<br \/>\nHarold Stanley (1908), co-founder of Morgan Stanley[61]<br \/>\nHarvey Hollister Bundy (1909), Assistant Secretary of State (1931\u20131933)[3]:183<br \/>\nAllen Trafford Klots (1909), New York City lawyer and president of the New York City Bar Association, partner at Winthrop &#038; Stimson[3]:183\u20134<br \/>\n1910s<\/p>\n<p>Archibald MacLeish (Bones 1915), poet, diplomat, three-time Pulitzer Prize winner, and Librarian of Congress<\/p>\n<p>Senator Prescott Bush (Bones 1916) has long been rumored to have played a role in Skull and Bones&#8216; alleged theft of the skull of Native American leader Geronimo.[3]:144\u20136<br \/>\nEdward Harris Coy (1910), College Football Hall of Fame player[60]:107\u20138<br \/>\nAlbert DeSilver (1910), co-founder American Civil Liberties Union[22]:1442<br \/>\nGeorge Leslie Harrison (1910), President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York[3][62]<br \/>\nStephen Philbin (1910), All-American football player, lawyer[62]<br \/>\nRobert Alphonso Taft (1910), US Senator from Ohio[3]:126[31][62]<br \/>\nRobert Abbe Gardner (1912), two-time U.S. Amateur-winning golfer[63]:142<br \/>\nGerald Clery Murphy (1912), painter[63]:237<br \/>\nAlfred Cowles III (1913), economist, founder of the Cowles Commission[64]<br \/>\nAverell Harriman (1913), businessman, founding partner in Harriman Brothers &#038; Company and later Brown Brothers Harriman &#038; Co., U.S. Ambassador and Secretary of Commerce, Governor of New York, Chairman and CEO of the Union Pacific Railroad, Brown Brothers &#038; Harriman, and the Southern Pacific Railroad[3]:127, 150\u20131<br \/>\nHenry Holman Ketcham (1914), College Football Hall of Fame[65]:218<br \/>\nEdwin Arthur Burtt (1915), philosopher[66]:983<br \/>\nArchibald MacLeish (1915), poet and diplomat[3]:185, 187\u20139<br \/>\nWesley Marion Oler, Jr. (1916), American baseball player and track and field athlete, competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics[67]:171\u20132<br \/>\nHoward Phelps Putnam (1916), poet[3]:155<br \/>\nDonald Ogden Stewart (1916), author and screenwriter, Academy Award-winner for The Philadelphia Story[3]:127[31]<br \/>\nPrescott Bush (1917), founding partner in Brown Brothers Harriman &#038; Co., US Senator from Connecticut.[3]:126, 144\u20135 His nickname was &#8222;The Japanese&#8220;.<br \/>\nE. Roland Harriman (1917), co-founder Harriman Brothers &#038; Company[68]<br \/>\nHarry William LeGore (1917), All-America college football player[69]<br \/>\nH. Neil Mallon (1917), CEO of Dresser Industries[3]:126, 145, 168<br \/>\nKenneth Farrand Simpson (1917), member of the United States House of Representatives from New York[21]:144[31]<br \/>\nHoward Malcolm Baldrige (1918), US Representative from Nebraska[70]<br \/>\nF. Trubee Davison (1918), WWI aviator, Assistant US Secretary of War, New York State Representative, Director of Personnel at the CIA[3]:108, 187[71][72]<br \/>\nJohn Chipman Farrar (1918), publisher, founder of Farrar &#038; Rinehart and Farrar, Straus and Giroux[3]:127<br \/>\nArtemus Lamb Gates (1918), businessman, US Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air[68]<br \/>\nRobert A. Lovett (1918), US Secretary of Defense[3]:184\u20138[73]<br \/>\nCharles Phelps Taft II (1918), son of President William Howard Taft, Mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio[74]<br \/>\nJohn Martin Vorys (1918), US Representative from Ohio[70][75]:427<br \/>\n1920s<br \/>\nLewis Greenleaf Adams (1920), architect[2][76]<br \/>\nBriton Hadden (1920), co-founder of Time-Life Enterprises[3]:127, 150<br \/>\nFrancis Thayer Hobson (1920), chair of William Morrow[2][76]<br \/>\nDavid Sinton Ingalls (1920), WWI Navy Flying Ace, Ohio State Representative, Assistant Secretary of the Navy[68]<br \/>\nHenry Luce (1920), co-founder of Time-Life Enterprises[3]:109\u201310<br \/>\nCharles Harvey Bradley, Jr. (1921), businessman[77]<br \/>\nJuan Terry Trippe (1921), Founder Pan American Airways<br \/>\nStanley Woodward (1922), US Foreign Service officer, State Department Chief of Protocol, US Ambassador to Canada[77]<br \/>\nJohn Sherman Cooper (1923), US Senator from Kentucky[78]:19<br \/>\nRussell Wheeler Davenport (1923), editor of Fortune magazine; created Fortune 500 list[79]<br \/>\nF. O. Matthiessen (1923), historian, literary critic[3]:126<br \/>\nEdwin Foster Blair (1924), lawyer[80]<br \/>\nWalter Edwards Houghton (1924), historian of Victorian literature, compiler of The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals, 1824\u20131900[80][81]<br \/>\nCharles Merville Spofford (1924), lawyer and NATO official[80]<br \/>\nJohn Allen Miner Thomas (1924), author[29]:139<br \/>\nMarvin Allen Stevens (1925), orthopedic surgeon, College Football Hall of Fame player and coach[82]<br \/>\nJames Jeremiah Wadsworth (1927), diplomat, US Ambassador to the UN[83]<br \/>\nGeorge Herbert Walker, Jr. (1927), financier and co-founder of the New York Mets; uncle to President George Herbert Walker Bush[3]:164<br \/>\nJohn Rockefeller Prentice (1928), lawyer and cattle breeder[84]<br \/>\nLanny Ross (1928), singer.[31][84][85]<br \/>\nGranger Kent Costikyan (1929), partner Brown Brothers Harriman[86]<br \/>\nGeorge Crile, Jr. (1929), surgeon[87]:50<br \/>\nRalph Delahaye Paine, Jr. (1929), editor and publisher (Fortune)[88]<br \/>\n1930s<br \/>\nCharles Alderson Janeway (1930), Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School[89]<br \/>\nH. J. Heinz II (1931), heir to H. J. Heinz Company; father of H. John Heinz III[3]:174<br \/>\nLewis Abbot Lapham (1931), banking and shipping executive[3]<br \/>\nJohn M. Walker (1931), physician, investment banker[3]:164<br \/>\nFrederick Baldwin Adams Jr. (1932), bibliophile, director of the Pierpont Morgan Library[90]<br \/>\nSamuel Hazard Gillespie Jr. (1932), U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, senior counsel at Davis Polk &#038; Wardwell[91]<br \/>\nTex McCrary (1932), journalist, public relations and political strategist to President Eisenhower[3]:125[92]<br \/>\nEugene O&#8217;Neill Jr. (1932), professor of Greek literature, son of Eugene O&#8217;Neill[34]:94<br \/>\nFrancis Judd Cooke (1933), composer[93]<br \/>\nSamuel Carnes Collier (1935), advertising, racecar driver[34]<br \/>\nLyman Spitzer (1935), theoretical physicist and namesake of the NASA Spitzer Space Telescope[94]<br \/>\nSonny Tufts (1935), actor[95]<br \/>\nJonathan Brewster Bingham (1936), U.S. Representative (D-New York)[3]:165<br \/>\nBrendan Gill (1936), author and New Yorker contributor[3]:127<br \/>\nJohn Hersey (1936), author[3]:127<br \/>\nJohn Merrill Knapp (1936), musicologist, professor at Princeton University[2]<br \/>\nWilliam H. Orrick Jr. (1937), United States federal judge, brother of Andrew Downey Orrick[96]<br \/>\nPotter Stewart (1937), U.S. Supreme Court Justice[3]:127, 171[96]<br \/>\nJ. Richardson Dilworth (1938), Rockefeller family lawyer[97]<br \/>\nClinton Frank (1938), advertising, College Football Hall of Fame and Heisman Trophy-winning player[98]<br \/>\nAlbert Hessberg II (1938), lawyer, first Jewish member of Skull and Bones[99][100]<br \/>\nWilliam P. Bundy (1939), State Department liaison for the Bay of Pigs invasion, brother of McGeorge Bundy[3]:186<br \/>\nWilliam Welch Kellogg (1939), climatologist, associate director National Center for Atmospheric Research[101]<br \/>\n1940s<br \/>\nMcGeorge Bundy (1940), Special Assistant for National Security Affairs; National Security Advisor; Professor of History, brother of William Bundy[3]:53<br \/>\nAndrew Downey Orrick (1940), acting chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission[102]<br \/>\nBarry Zorthian (1941), American diplomat, most notably press officer in Saigon for 4+1\u20442 years during Vietnam War[3]:173[103][104]<br \/>\nDavid Acheson (1943), author, lawyer, son of Dean Acheson[3]:188<br \/>\nHarold Harris Healy, Jr. (1943), lawyer, partner Debevoise &#038; Plimpton[2]<br \/>\nJames L. Buckley (1944), U.S. Senator (R-New York 1971\u20131977) and brother of William F. Buckley, Jr.[3]:168, 174[105][106]<br \/>\nJohn Bannister Goodenough (1944), solid-state physicist at the University of Texas at Austin[107] and winner of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry<br \/>\nTownsend Walter Hoopes II (1944), historian, Under Secretary of the Air Force (1967\u201369)[3]:188<br \/>\nWilliam Singer Moorhead (1944), US Representative from Pennsylvania[75][108]<br \/>\nJames Whitmore (1944), actor[109]<br \/>\nJohn Chafee (1947), U.S. Senator, Secretary of the Navy and Governor of Rhode Island, father of Lincoln Chafee[3]:168, 171<br \/>\nJosiah Augustus Spaulding (1947), lawyer, partner Bingham Dana &#038; Gould[110]<br \/>\nCharles S. Whitehouse (1947), CIA Agent (1947\u20131956), U.S. Ambassador to Laos and Thailand in the 1970s.[3]:174<br \/>\nThomas William Ludlow Ashley (1948), US Representative from Ohio[3]:167\u201372<br \/>\nGeorge H. W. Bush (1948), 41st President of the United States, 11th Director of Central Intelligence (CIA), son of Prescott Bush, father of George W. Bush. His Skull and Bones nickname was &#8222;Magog&#8220;.[3]:167\u20138[111]<br \/>\nWilliam Sloane Coffin (1949), CIA agent (1950\u20131953), clergyman and peace activist[3]:127, 196<br \/>\nDaniel Pomeroy Davison (1949), banker, president United States Trust Corporation[112]<br \/>\nTony Lavelli (1949), basketball player[3]:169[113]<br \/>\nDavid McCord Lippincott (1949), novelist and composer[114]<br \/>\nCharles Edwin Lord II (1949), banker, Vice-Chairman of the Export-Import Bank of the United States[115]<br \/>\n1950s<br \/>\nWilliam F. Buckley, Jr. (1950), founder of National Review,[3]:41 former CIA officer<br \/>\nWilliam Henry Draper III (1950), Chair of United Nations Development Programme and Export-Import Bank of the United States[3]:174\u20135, 179<br \/>\nEvan G. Galbraith (1950), US Ambassador to France; managing director of Morgan Stanley[3]:181, 187[116]<br \/>\nThomas Henry Guinzburg (1950), president Viking Press[117]<br \/>\nVictor William Henningsen, Jr. (1950), president Henningsen Foods Inc.[118]<br \/>\nRaymond Price (1951), speechwriter for Presidents Nixon, Ford, and Bush.[3]:173<br \/>\nFergus Reid Buckley (1952), author and public speaker[2]<br \/>\nCharles Sherman Haight, Jr. (1952), Connecticut District Court judge[2]<br \/>\nJonathan James Bush (1953), banker, son of Prescott Bush[3]:145, 179<br \/>\nWilliam H. Donaldson (1953), appointed chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission by George W. Bush; founding dean of Yale School of Management; co-founder of DLJ investment firm[3]:166, 173[119]<br \/>\nJohn Birnie Marshall (1953), Olympic medal-winning swimmer[2]<br \/>\nJames Price McLane (1953), Olympic medal-winning swimmer[120]<br \/>\nGeorge Herbert Walker III (1953), US Ambassador to Hungary[3]:164<br \/>\nDavid McCullough (1955), U.S. historian; two-time Pulitzer Prize winner[3]:127<br \/>\nCaldwell Blakeman Esselstyn, Jr. (1956), Olympic medal-winning rower, physician, author[121]<br \/>\nJack Edwin McGregor (1956), Pennsylvania State Senator, founder Pittsburgh Penguins[109]<br \/>\nR. Inslee Clark, Jr. (1957), former Director of Undergraduate Admissions for Yale College; former Headmaster of Horace Mann School[3]:153, 176<br \/>\nLinden Stanley Blue (1958), aviation executive[2]<br \/>\nRobert Willis Morey, Jr. (1958), Olympic medal-winning rower[2]<br \/>\nStephen Adams (1959), American businessman, founder Adams Outdoor[3]:180<br \/>\nWinston Lord (1959), Chairman of Council on Foreign Relations; Ambassador to China; Assistant U.S. Secretary of State[3]:174\u20135, 189[116]<br \/>\n1960s<\/p>\n<p>John Kerry (Bones 1966) faced off against George W. Bush (Bones 1968) in the 2004 US presidential election, the first time two Bonesmen had run against one another for that office.[122]<br \/>\nEugene Lytton Scott (1960), tennis player, founder Tennis Week[123]<br \/>\nMichael Johnson Pyle (1960), National Football League player[2]<br \/>\nJohn Joseph Walsh, Jr. (1961), art historian, director J. Paul Getty Museum[124]<br \/>\nWilliam Hamilton (1962), New Yorker cartoonist[125]<br \/>\nDavid L. Boren (1963), Governor of Oklahoma, U.S. Senator, President of the University of Oklahoma[3]:124, 158[126]<br \/>\nMichael Gates Gill (1963), advertising executive, author[127]<br \/>\nWilliam Dawbney Nordhaus (1963), Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale University and winner of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economics[2]<br \/>\nOrde Musgrave Coombs (1965), author, editor, first black member of Skull and Bones[128]<br \/>\nJohn Shattuck (1965), US diplomat and ambassador, university administrator[109]<br \/>\nJohn Forbes Kerry (1966), 68th United States Secretary of State (2013\u20132017); U.S. Senator (D-Massachusetts; 1985-2013); Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts (1983\u20131985); 2004 Democratic Party Presidential nominee;[3]:112<br \/>\nDavid Rumsey (1966), founder of the David Rumsey Map Collection and president of Cartography Associates[2]<br \/>\nFrederick Wallace Smith (1966), founder of FedEx[3]:172, 180\u20131[129]<br \/>\nDavid Thorne (1966), United States Ambassador to Italy[3]:85<br \/>\nVictor Ashe (1967), Tennessee State Senator and Representative, Mayor of Knoxville, Tennessee, US Ambassador to Poland[3]:181\u20132[130]<br \/>\nRoy Leslie Austin (1968), appointed ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago by George W. Bush[3]:177, 181\u20132[131]<br \/>\nGeorge W. Bush (1968), grandson of Prescott Bush; son of George H. W. Bush; 46th Governor of Texas; 43rd President of the United States. His nickname was &#8222;Gog&#8220;.[3]:4~3:33<br \/>\nRex William Cowdry (1968), Acting Director National Institute of Mental Health (1994\u201396)[3]:177<br \/>\nRobert McCallum, Jr (1968), Ambassador to Australia[3]:177, 181[132]<br \/>\nDon Schollander (1968), developer; author; US Olympic Hall of Fame inductee; four-time Olympic Gold medallist swimmer[3]:126, 177<br \/>\nBrian John Dowling (1969), National Football League player, inspiration for B.D. in Doonesbury[2]<br \/>\nStephen Allen Schwarzman (1969), co-founder of The Blackstone Group[133][134]<br \/>\nDouglas Preston Woodlock (1969), US federal judge[135]<br \/>\n1970s<br \/>\nCharles Herbert Levin (1971), actor[2]<br \/>\nGeorge Lewis (1974), trombonist and composer[136]<br \/>\nChristopher Taylor Buckley (1975), author, editor, chief speechwriter for Vice President George H. W. Bush[3]:173<br \/>\nRobert Curtis Brown (1979), American Film, Television and Stage Actor[2]<br \/>\n1980s<br \/>\nRobert William Kagan (1980), neoconservative writer[2]<br \/>\nMichael Cerveris (1983), American singer, guitarist and actor[2]<br \/>\nEarl G. Graves, Jr. (1984), president of Black Enterprise[137]<br \/>\nEdward S. Lampert (1984), founder of ESL Investments; chairman of Sears Holdings Corporation[3]:180[137]<br \/>\nJames Emanuel Boasberg (1985), judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia[109]<br \/>\nSteven Mnuchin (1985), United States Treasury Secretary[109]<br \/>\nJames Bosquez (1988), political reporter for ViceDead Man&#8217;s Jacket Guitarist[138][139][140]<br \/>\nPaul Giamatti (1989), American Actor and Producer[141]<br \/>\n1990s to present<br \/>\nAustan Goolsbee (1991), staff director to and chief economist of President Barack Obama&#8217;s Economic Recovery Advisory Board[142]<br \/>\nAngela Warnick Buchdahl (1994), senior rabbi at New York&#8217;s Central Synagogue[143]<\/p>\n<p>https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/List_of_Skull_and_Bones_members<\/p>\n<p><strong>Veee\u2026<br \/>\nYorumsuz devam edecek \u00d6nder:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>&#8222;Kommt mit der indischen Variante die vierte Welle? &#8222;Das Virus wird noch einige seltsame, unerwartete Dinge tun&#8220;<br \/>\n Fanny Jimenez vor 1 Std.<\/p>\n<p>Mit der &#8222;britischen&#8220; Variante B.1.1.7 kam Ende des Winters die dritte gro\u00dfe Corona-Welle \u00fcber Europa. Noch einmal schossen die Zahlen der Neuinfektionen nach oben, wenig sp\u00e4ter die der Intensivpatienten und der Todeszahlen durch Covid-19. Noch einmal gingen die meisten L\u00e4nder in einen mehr oder weniger strengen Lockdown.&#8220;<\/p>\n<p>https:\/\/www.msn.com\/de-de\/gesundheit\/medizinisch\/kommt-mit-der-indischen-variante-die-vierte-welle-das-virus-wird-noch-einige-seltsame-unerwartete-dinge-tun\/ar-AAKvq1v?ocid=msedgntp<\/p>\n<p>*<\/p>\n<p>&#8222;Vietnam meldet neue Variante des Coronavirus<br \/>\n AFP vor 1 Std.<\/p>\n<p>Die vietnamesischen Beh\u00f6rden haben nach eigenen Angaben eine neue Variante des Coronavirus nachgewiesen, die sich \u00fcber die Luft rasch weiterverbreitet. Es handele sich um eine Kombination aus dem indischen und dem britischen Virusstamm, sagte Gesundheitsminister Nguyen Thanh Long am Samstag laut Staatsmedien. &#8220;<\/p>\n<p>https:\/\/www.msn.com\/de-de\/nachrichten\/panorama\/vietnam-meldet-neue-variante-des-coronavirus\/ar-AAKvBQ8?ocid=msedgntp<\/p>\n<p>*<\/p>\n<p>&#8222;Corona-F\u00e4lle in Alten- und Pflegeheimen auch nach Impfung<br \/>\n dpa vor 7 Std.<\/p>\n<p>Hessenweit sind in knapp 60 Alten- oder Pflegeheimen Infektionen mit dem Coronavirus nachgewiesen worden, obwohl dort bereits Impfungen verabreicht wurden. Das geht aus einer Antwort der Landesregierung in Wiesbaden auf eine parlamentarische Anfrage des fraktionslosen Landtagsabgeordneten Rolf Kahnt hervor. Die Daten haben den Stichtag 31. M\u00e4rz 2021 und beziehen den Angaben zufolge sowohl Erst- als auch Zweitimpfungen mit ein.&#8220;<\/p>\n<p>https:\/\/www.msn.com\/de-de\/gesundheit\/medizinisch\/corona-f%C3%A4lle-in-alten-und-pflegeheimen-auch-nach-impfung\/ar-AAKv7oL?ocid=msedgntp<\/p>\n<p>*<\/p>\n<p>&#8222;Stiko-Mitglied gegen generelle Kinderimpfkampagne<br \/>\n dpa vor 1 Std.<\/p>\n<p>Stiko-Mitglied Christian Bogdan hat sich in der Debatte um Corona-Impfungen f\u00fcr Kinder gegen eine \u00abgenerelle Kinderimpfkampagne\u00bb ausgesprochen. \u00abEine Impfempfehlung kann nicht einfach deswegen ausgesprochen werden, weil es gerade gesellschaftlich oder politisch opportun erscheint\u00bb, sagte der Erlanger Immunologe, der der St\u00e4ndigen Impfkommission (Stiko) angeh\u00f6rt, den \u00abN\u00fcrnberger Nachrichten\u00bb (Samstagsausgabe).&#8220;<\/p>\n<p>https:\/\/www.msn.com\/de-de\/gesundheit\/medizinisch\/stiko-mitglied-gegen-generelle-kinderimpfkampagne\/ar-AAKvFSm?ocid=msedgntp<\/p>\n<p>*<\/p>\n<p>&#8222;Experte rechnet mit erneutem Anstieg der Corona-Zahlen<br \/>\n dpa vor 5 Std.<\/p>\n<p>Trotz derzeit sinkender Corona-Zahlen sieht der Saarbr\u00fccker Pharmazie-Professor Thorsten Lehr noch keine komplette Entwarnung in der Pandemie. \u00abIch glaube schon, dass es noch eine Welle geben kann. Aber sie mag kleiner ausfallen. Und das Gesundheitssystem w\u00fcrde deutlich weniger belastet sein als in der dritten Welle\u00bb, sagte der Experte f\u00fcr Corona-Prognosen der Deutschen Presse-Agentur in Saarbr\u00fccken.&#8220;<\/p>\n<p>https:\/\/www.msn.com\/de-de\/gesundheit\/medizinisch\/experte-rechnet-mit-erneutem-anstieg-der-corona-zahlen\/ar-AAKve4i?ocid=msedgntp<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Biliyorum deli diyorsunuz bana\u2026 Bilmiyorsunuz ki! Bildi\u011fin, tan\u0131d\u0131\u011f\u0131n kimi ismi ara istersen. T\u00fcrkiyeli de\u011fil\u2026 Onun listesini yay\u0131nlar\u0131m bir ara\u2026 M\u00fcsl\u00fcman Kalle\u015flerin. >>> !!! >>> INCELE<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/72133"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=72133"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/72133\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":72137,"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/72133\/revisions\/72137"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=72133"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=72133"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/wordpress.gurbuz.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=72133"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}