

The leftover initiates choose their own names. Some Bonesmen receive traditional names, denoting function or existential status others are the chosen beneficiaries of names that their Bones predecessors wish to pass on.

New members of Skull and Bones are assigned secret names, by which fellow Bonesmen will forever know them. was "tapped" for Skull and Bones, at the end of his junior year, he, too, naturally became a Bonesman-but, it seems, a somewhat ambivalent one. to uncle Jonathan Bush to cousins George Herbert Walker IIIand Ray Walker. There were other Bush Bonesmen, a proud line of them stretching from great uncle George Herbert Walker Jr. Inside the temple on High Street hang paintings of some of Skull and Bones's more illustrious members the painting of George Bush, the most recently installed, is five feet high. George Herbert Walker Bush, George W.'s father, Yale '48, was also a Bonesman, and he, too, made a conspicuous success of himself.

Prescott Bush, one of a great many Bonesmen who went on to lives of power and renown, became a U.S. Prescott Bush, George W.'s grandfather, Yale '17, was a legendary Bonesman he was a member of the band that stole for the society what became one of its most treasured artifacts: a skull that was said to be that of the Apache chief Geronimo. Bush, Yale '68.īush men have been Yale men and Bonesmen for generations. This is the home of Yale's most famous secret society, Skull and Bones, and it is also, in a sense, one of the many homes of the family of George W. On High Street, in the middle of the Yale University campus, stands a cold-looking, nearly windowless Greco-Egyptian building with padlocked iron doors.
