

Joe Oliveto is a staff writer at Supercompressor and former member of the chess club, which was a secret society for a totally different, much more lame reason. There isn't exactly evidence to suggest that's the case, but at the very least, it is almost as creepy as Scientology.

That's all well and good, but plenty have accused the group over the years of being an evil occult society.


Male society members are called Bonesmen, and many have ascended after graduation to positions of prominence in business or government. Membership involves graduating to different degrees, based on the apprentice system, and once you reach a new degree, you're not allowed to discuss its secrets. Skull and Bones, secret society of senior (fourth-year undergraduate) students at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, that was founded in 1832. As such, little is known about their practices, aside from the fact that members consider Freemasonry to be "a beautiful system of morality." It doesn't help that the lodges, where membership is granted and rituals are held, often act independently of one another. If that sounds vague, it's because it's not entirely clear just when this ritualized organization came to be. Who they are: The king of all secret societies, the Freemasonry has been nabbing major members since its inception hundreds of years ago. Three of themWilliam Howard Taft, George H.W. David Boren will not necessarily make a decision that benefits fans of the college game, but will make a decision that lines the pockets of his Skull and Boner friends.James Buchanan, Gerald Ford, James Garfield, Warren Harding, Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson, William McKinley, James Monroe, James Polk, Franklin Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Harry Truman, George Washington Skull and Bones, secret society of senior (fourth-year undergraduate) students at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, that was founded in 1832. The power elite have smelt money and power in college football for years and this "conference realignment" taking place that we will be talking about 25 years from now is the manifestation of "greedhead" lust. As College Football is too important and valuable to leave to the unwashed masses who, by purchasing tickets, are largely paying for this dog and pony show anyway, the move was made ((conspiracy) theoretically) by government interests to place the decision in the capable fatcat hands of Boner David Boren who will work as "Boner-mouthpiece". If Boren decides to head west, OU will be the last domino in a chain that will topple the Big 12. The OU board of regents has made David Boren the de facto plenipotentiary of the rapidly-dying Big 12 by giving him authority to make the decision to stay in or leave for the Pacific Athletic Conference. The Big 12 is now officially out of the hands of the people, and into the slimy domineering hands of the Illuminati. They believe this gives them superpowers to make good decisions on behalf of a country that they will inevitably inherit not only because they are Skull and Boners, but because they are rich and their daddies are very rich. Whilst at Yale, Skull and Boners meet underground to drink chalices of former member's blood and give each other cute nicknames like "Baal" and "Magog". Secret societies on college campuses have enjoyed prestige and influence since the founding of Phi Beta Kappa in 1776. The Skull and Bones Society is a "secret society" at Yale University with members counting among the creme de la creme of Washington bureaucrats. It's all right here in Wikipedia, which of course means it is undeniably true. Skull and Bones, also known as The Order, Order 322 or The Brotherhood of Death, is an undergraduate senior secret student society at Yale University in New. You see, David Boren is a noted Skull and Bones member. Boren lived in a dorm, studied for tests, took dates to sock-hops, and also while at Yale, DAVID BOREN WORSHIPED SATAN TO INFILTRATE THE RANKS OF THE U.S. When Oklahoma University president David Boren was an undergraduate at Yale, he was your average, typical, all-American son of a congressman on the campus at New Haven.
