『亜空間通信』835号(2004/07/25) 阿修羅投稿を再録

911委員会勧告で米議会夏休み返上だが大統領を操る真のアメリカ支配層2千人は快適キャンプ

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『亜空間通信』835号(2004/07/25)
【911委員会勧告で米議会夏休み返上だが大統領を操る真のアメリカ支配層2千人は快適キャンプ】

※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※※

転送、転載、引用、訳出、大歓迎!

 昨夜(2004/07/24)、私は、阿修羅戦争57掲示板へに、以下に冒頭の部分のみを抜粋する投稿をした。

911委員会勧告に基づき異例の8月議会公聴会で法改正の議論へ
http://www.asyura2.com/0406/war57/msg/1024.html
投稿者 木村愛二 日時 2004 年 7 月 24 日 20:00:29:CjMHiEP28ibKM

911委員会勧告に基づき異例の8月議会公聴会で法改正の議論へ

いかにアルカイダ神話護持の911委員会報告でも、アメリカ人の安全保障に対する不安は、確実に増大した。
この記事の最後には、議員が、それに応える努力を夏休み返上で示す必要があることが、会話調で記されている。
対米従属の日本は、どうするのかな。
この記事の後に、911委員会報告の要約記事のURLと冒頭のみを紹介する。各自、研究されたい。

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/24/politics/24panel.html?th
July 24, 2004
Congress Plans Special Hearings on Sept. 11 Panel
[後略]

 アメリカの議員も、ついに、尻に火が付いたか、これは見物、聞き物と、気楽に流していたら、本日(2004/07/25)早朝、アメリカの歴史見直し研究所から届いた電子手紙雑誌には、別の「裏議会」の開始が、報じられていた。見出しの要点だけを先に示すと:

 THE CHOSEN FEW (選ばれた少数)、約2千人が、On Saturday(7月17日の土曜日)、Bohemian Club(ボヘミアン・クラブ)の涼しいキャンプ地に入ったのである。

 ボヘミアン・クラブに関しては、12年前の拙著、『湾岸報道に偽りあり』で、以下のように簡略に紹介した。

http://www.jca.apc.org/~altmedka/gulfw-45.html
『湾岸報道に偽りあり』
隠された十数年来の米軍事計画に迫る
第八章:大統領を操る真のアメリカ支配層(1)
(その45)原爆製造をも謀議した「紳士のみ」エリート・クラブ

  ベクテルの企業史は、アメリカが世界の憲兵を買って出る過程の一部をなしている。

 民主主義を掲げるアメリカが世界帝国に発展すると同時に、国内の政治支配機構にも大きな変質が起きた。一九三九年に大統領府が設置され、以来、議会の承認なしに大統領が任命できる「大統領補佐官」=「ホワイトハウス事務局」=「国家安全保障委員会」という側近体制と、CIAから通商代表部にいたる七つの大統領直轄行政機関が成立した。

 この大統領府は、旧来の、長官や幹部の任命に議会の承認を必要とする閣議・各省庁・各種委員会の行政体制と並存している。現在の実状に対しては、三権分立を形骸化する大統領独裁体制ではないかという批判もなされている。

 CIAの権力には「見えざる政府」の異名がつけられた。だがこれも、大統領直轄下の官僚機構の一つにしかすぎない。

 ところが、肝腎の大統領の陰にはさらに、大統領メーカーたちが潜んでいる。本当の権力、真の国家支配者たちは、「 Above the Line 」(ある線以上)と呼ばれ、もっと上のレヴェル、『ベクテルの秘密ファイル』の原題『 FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES 』が示すような「高い位置」に隠れている。ベクテルも、その強力な一員なのだ。たとえば、「裏議会」または「影の政府」の異名を持つボヘミアン・クラブの実態と役割は、まだまだ世間には知られていない。特に、日本では……。 『ベクテルの秘密ファイル』の第一章の題名は「秘密の社交クラブ」である。

 最初の場面はサンフランシスコの高級住宅地。お抱え運転手つきのキャデラックに、ベクテルの三代目当主ステファン・ジュニアが乗り込む。行き先は「ボヘミアン・グローブ」(放浪者または芸術家の「小さな森」の意)と呼ばれる森の中のキャンプ場である。

 キャンプ場とボヘミアン・クラブの実態については、『星条旗のロビイスト』と『日本の錯覚 アメリカの誤解』に詳しい記述がある。この二冊の著者、高橋正武は、カリフォルニア州知事補佐官として十年勤務などの異色の経歴の持主で、実際にキャンプに参加したことがあるのだ。

 一般に「芸術家の溜り場」といえば、パリやニューヨークの裏町の安宿を想像するのだが、ここは大違いの豪華さ。世界的な巨木として有名なレッドウッドが生い茂る森林地帯の「私有地」。約二千平方キロの敷地の中に、川あり、湖あり、野外劇場あり。キャンプは一二二ユニットで、一ユニットに数十名宿泊可能。もちろん、超一流のまかないつき。周囲は高圧電流を通した有刺鉄線で囲まれ、完全武装のガードマンが二四時間体制で警備に当たっている。

 サンフランシスコのボヘミアン・クラブ本部は、レンガ造りで五階建てのビル。正面にはびっしりとツタが密生し、目立つ看板もない地味な建物だが、その奥行は底知れない。アメリカ各地の名門クラブの上に立つ、アメリカ随一の最高級名門クラブなのである。

 秘密主義に徹しているためか、会員数からして各種資料にくい違いがある。千四百人、千六百人、千八百人、といったところ。一応、千数百人としておこう。今から百三十年ほど前の一八七二年、荒らくれ者の港町として悪名高かったサンフランシスコに「文化と芸術の促進と交流」を目指して結成された当初の会員は、わずか十数人。それが今では、会員が死亡しない限り新入会を認めないという定員制度をとっており、入会選考委員会の厳しい審査を通った数百人の入会候補者が、早い場合でも五、六年は待たされている。

 現在は七月十日前後に開かれるキャンプに、例年、非会員五百人が招待されるが、これも二十人で構成されるゲスト選考委員会全員の賛成を必要とする。日本人で招待されたのは、今までに二人だけ。一人目の高橋正武は特別会員の資格も許されている。もう一人はユニデン・グループの会長、藤本秀朗。今までに招待を受けようと下工作した日本人の有力者は何人もいるそうだが、だれも成功していない。

 会員の資格は、会則第一条「文化・芸術に情熱を抱く『紳士』」。イギリスの「紳士」クラブを強引に訪問した実績を誇るサッチャー首相でさえ、このクラブでは、「将来、もし『ミスター』になったら歓迎します」と丁重に断わられ、抗議せずに引き下がったという。一九八〇年代には、ウーマンリブ組織が「アメリカ最大の攻撃目標」に定め、しきりとデモをかけたが、「紳士のみルール」は守り抜かれた。

 だが問題は「紳士のみルール」に止まらない。高橋正武が「WASP(純白人)のみ」と記す実態である。WASPは言葉通りに解釈すると「ホワイト・アングロ=サクソン・プロテスタント」だが、その境界線は実際にはあいまいなようだ。もともと、言葉どおりのWASPの範囲内で血統を守っているわけではないから、それは当然の結果であろう。ともかく、従業員さえも年配の白人にかぎられ、FBIが身元調査した上で採用されている。例外的にユダヤ系のヘンリー・キッシンジャーが会員になっているが、裏情報によるとこれは「特別」入会で、理由は「大学教授」「国務長官」の経歴で 「反共主義者」だからだという。政党系列では、九八%が共和党員もしくは共和党支持者、民主党系はたったの二%しかいない。それでもこの二%が、いざというときの橋渡し役になり、民主党の右派を味方に引き寄せているらしい。

 会員のうち、約四百名はクラブの趣旨にもとづく芸術・教育関係の著名人で、レーガンもかつては映画俳優として名を連ねていた。だが、この入会審査も、芸術的技量よりは「政治的スクリーン」の結果というのが裏情報である。元・現大統領はニクソン、レーガン、ブッシュ、いずれも共和党。上院・下院の議員が約二百名。元・現州知事が百名以上。元・現閣僚や司法関係の有力者多数。そしてなによりも、財界の有力者がほとんど網羅されている。これはまさに、現代アメリカ新貴族の宮廷である。ベクテル一族は創業百年に満たない成り上がり者だが、二代目当主ステファンに引き続き、三代目当主ステファン・ジュニアが会員になった。

 ボヘミアン・クラブの地位上昇は、カリフォルニア州のそれと正比例の関係にある。今ではアメリカ一の人口(選挙の票数)と経済力を誇るカリフォルニアを抜きにして、ワシントンやニューヨークだけで政治を動かすことはできない。カリフォルニア州の地位上昇とともに、ボヘミアン・グローブの男たちだけのキャンプで、重大な決定がなされる仕組みができあがったのだ。また、そこでファーストネームで呼び合う仲になった同士なら、電話一本で話がつく。

「ウヌ……」とはいっても、それほど驚くには当たらない現象であろう。日本でも、料亭とかゴルフ場で、重大な政治的取引が行なわれているのだから。

 各種資料から、ボヘミアン・クラブで実質的に「決定」または「論議」されたといわれている重大問題の一部を、抜き出してみよう。 一九四一年七月(真珠湾攻撃の五ヵ月前)……日本への経済封鎖の強化。原爆製造の極秘「マンハッタン」計画。第二次世界大戦直後……アイゼンハワー陸軍大将(のち元帥)が朝鮮戦争を予告。一九六七年……ニクソンがレーガンから大統領選挙不出馬の約束取りつけ。一九八〇年……イランのホメイニ革命で発生した米大使館占拠・人質事件に関して、民主党カーター大統領への非難、共和党レーガン大統領候補への支援体制。

 となれば、いわゆる「湾岸危機」への対処もしくは「イラク処分」の方針も、議論の対象にならなかったわけはないのだが……。

 さあ、この紳士クラブの今年の最大の話題は、何であろうか。以下、英文情報を、全文紹介する。

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/07/18/MNGH57NJL51.DTL
THE CHOSEN FEW
S.F.'s exclusive clubs carry on traditions of fellowship, culture -- and discrimination
- Adair Lara, Chronicle Staff Writer
Sunday, July 18, 2004

On Saturday, some 2,000 CEOs and politicos and arty types arrived at the cool redwoods and lily-choked lake of the Grove, the famous Russian River playground of the powerful Bohemian Club.

They say it's the place to be seen in America in July.

Except, of course, you can't see them.

Signs abound: No Thru Traffic. No Trespassing. Members and Guests Only. No Turn Around. Sentries scan the paths from above with binoculars, helped out by infrared sensors.

And what are those important men doing out there for 17 days behind that elaborate security?

Slipping into frocks and putting on pageants. The Bohemian Club, a beguiling mix of ultra-power hangout and high school play, is one of several elite private clubs in San Francisco, curious islands of conservatism amid a forest of Kerry for President signs.

Of these, the Big Four are the Bohemian Club, the stodgy Pacific-Union Club atop Nob Hill, the gigantic sports-minded Olympic Club, and the tiny ultra-exclusive San Francisco Golf Club straddling the line between San Francisco and Daly City.

Two admit women. Two do not. One admits women in town, but not in the country -- and not after dark.

None admits the poor, except in white jackets.

Or so sources say. Information is not easy to come by. It's secret stuff, very hush-hush. Members consent to talk to a reporter only if their names are withheld, and then say only the most laudatory things. They're just following the rules. The bylaws for the Pacific-Union Club, for example, read: "No information regarding any Club activity or function shall be released by anyone to the media."

Also, one suspects, secrecy is part of the fun.

It's impossible to talk about private clubs in this day and age without sounding censorious, but people have always liked having the right to choose who joins their private associations. Mills College in Oakland resisted a demand to let male students in. Many book clubs ban men because the women want to read "The Hours" and the men would want to read the new Alexander Hamilton biography. There are a number of fancy women's clubs here, such as the Town & Country (said to be the female Pacific-Union Club).

We all like to gang together with people like us, and men seem to like it even more than women do. If there were only five men in all of North America, three of them would sneak out behind the house and start a club. The other two would not be asked to join.

Clubs are reproved for excluding various sets of people, but excluding is, after all, the point. If there is to be an "us," there has to be a "not us." (Or your club is Costco.)

And as one member remarked, when it comes to women, "It's not excluding. It's getting away from."

When Augusta National in Georgia was pressured, unsuccessfully, to accept women two years ago, the appropriately named Mary Anne Case, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, couldn't think of a reason for its refusal to admit females "that doesn't involve somehow girls having cooties."

These relics of the age of exclusion seem to be in no danger of going the way of other 19th century institutions. John van der Zee, who lives in Healdsburg, posed as a waiter at the Bohemian Grove one summer and wrote the 1974 book "The Greatest Men's Party on Earth." "When I did the book," he said, "I thought it would be valedictory. A way of life that was ending."

That was 30 years ago. Today these clubs have long waiting lists. Paul B. "Red" Fay Jr., former undersecretary of the Navy who's on the roster of the San Francisco Golf Club (SFGC), the Bohemian Club (BC) and the Pacific-Union Club (PU), said, somewhat tautologically but sincerely, "The reason there's such a big demand is because everybody wants to get in them. "


"PU is the pre-eminent club," said Sally Debenham, a San Francisco socialite. "The creme de la creme. Big, big heavy players in the PU Club. They take it seriously, the little darlings."

The Pacific-Union's prohibitions have been characterized, said Merla Zellerbach, as "no women, no Democrats, no reporters."

It's old guard, old money -- and many of the members are just plain old. The joke is that guest speakers must stop "when you hear the canes rattle." It's housed in what travel writer Jan Morris described as an "inconceivably gloomy" mansion standing on a block by itself on the crest of Nob Hill.

Belonging to a club like this says a lot about who you are. Tell someone you're a member of the Pacific-Union Club, and you are saying you made it through a rigorous vetting to filter out the "not us."

One local intellectual property lawyer joined seven years ago when he was 40. The selection process included a preliminary statement on his behalf by a Proposer and Seconder after which he got 12 sponsoring members and then took 10 members of the committee to dinner individually.

One member described how it feels to play squash at the Pacific-Union Club and have a glass of wine afterward with his male friends. "It's an incalculatingly wonderful feeling, that of belonging," he said.

Mostly, the members are old white guys. They want younger faces at all these clubs, but by the time people work their way up the waiting lists, the dew is off the bloom. The lawyer who went through the lengthy process to join the PU is also on a waiting list for the Bohemian Club. He's been on it for 20 years.

Even stringent latter-day lunch policies haven't discouraged membership. Like many clubs, the PU has always asked members to dine there so many times a quarter. But members can no longer deduct the meals as a business expense. That's illegal if a club discriminates based on age, sex or race. In fact, club rules forbid talking business at all -- or even reading the business page. Architect George Livermore, who belongs to this club, the Bohemian Club and the Olympic Club, said, "They recently put out a notice saying it's been called to the attention of managers that papers have been brought to the table! " He said the place is now almost empty at lunch.

Women can't lunch in the main dining room, only in a side room. When venture capitalist Annette Campbell-White worked for Hambrecht & Quist, the firm had a luncheon at the PU Club to welcome new partners and told her she couldn't attend -- then she could, but had to come in the back door. One partner accused her of ruining the party and suggested, she recalled, that next time she "take a business trip."

Even the wives of members are asked to come in by the back door, Debenham said. She had foot problems once and used the front. It felt strange. "I was so trained to come in the back door."

Livermore doesn't know why women can't come as guests. "Anything you include women in is always exciting," he said, noting the Olympic Club was smart to always allow women as guests. "Now that women are almost people," he joked, "why don't the other clubs do that?"


The San Francisco Golf Club is so shy, Debenham said, it won't give out directions. "Even members get lost trying to find the place."

Notice to lost members: You can find those undulating greens and gingerbready clubhouse behind those unnaturally tall eucalyptus trees in back of the "John Daly Blvd" freeway sign on I-280 just past San Francisco State. Slow at the sign for Thomas Moore Church and drive past the discreetly blocking shrubbery until you see the small sign: "SF Golf Club, Private."

This club wishes to continue to fly way, way under the radar. Calls were not returned. So our information has not been confirmed or denied by anybody representing the club.

David Burgin, former editor in chief of the San Francisco Examiner, said, "All your tycoons are over there." But that's not true. The club recently said no to one tycoon -- Scott McNealy, the CEO of Sun Microsystems. He was named the best CEO golfer in the country by Golf Digest magazine. Whatever this club is holding out for, it's not members with a great swing.

Neither the club nor McNealy cared to comment. One should note, though, that McNealy's other sport is hockey, and computer money is new, not old. And, as you see, he brings the attention of the press with him.

"It's the most difficult club to get into," said Paul Fay Jr., member since 1946.

"It's just impossible," said Livermore, who has tried to get friends in. "They say, 'Forget it!' "

Which means forget using the club's fabled fast course overlooking the windy Pacific. Designed by the revered A.W. Tillinghast, it's ranked among the best in the world.

"The women are allowed to play on certain days at certain times," Fay said. "I think Thursday is their special day when they play in the morning, and then Sunday afternoons they can go out there and have their social activities and everything they want to run."

Fifteen years ago, this club lost its role as host to PGA golf events because it had no minority members, either. It has not returned to hosting public tournaments.

But clubs make sacrifices to keep their membership the way they like it. Farther south, Cypress Point, which Burgin described as "stinking rich," withdrew from the AT&T Pebble Beach tournament it had hosted for years. "Rather than admit minorities, they shattered their own tradition. How could you have that tournament without TV pictures of the 16th hole at Cypress Point?" Burgin asked. The 16th hole there is 230 yards airborne across an inlet.

The San Francisco Golf Club, tiny and with no public functions, can be as persnickety as it likes about whom it lets in. And whom it keeps out.

"They don't take Jewish people, which is outrageous," Livermore said. Others familiar with the club said this is true. Fay preferred not to comment on the policy but, when asked if there were any Jewish members, said, "I don't think they have one right now."


"The Bohemian Grove is woodsy," said Astrid Hoffman of Tiburon, whose husband belongs to the St. Francis Yacht Club. "They have these little houses or clubs. They're like Cub Scouts with their dens. They try to outdo each other in drinks and food, have private concerts and get-togethers."

There are 125 different camps -- Toyland, Dog House, Sons of Toil, etc. George H.W. Bush will be in Hill Billies, along with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

The bylaws say that at least 100 members must be connected professionally with literature, art, music or drama. Such "associate" members pay much less - - but must sing for their supper, in an arrangement worthy of a Medici.

"If you're a theatrical type, you shoot to the top of the list," Debenham said. "The Bohemian Grove is marvelously eclectic."

Every year at the Grove, a freshly written play with a cast of hundreds is performed the last Sunday of the retreat. "We know in advance that the hero will be a king or commander adored by his men, and that he will see his duty and do it," said Healdsburg author van der Zee of what he calls "these lumbering pageants."

One year, San Francisco novelist Herb Gold said he was offered an associate membership if he would help write the Grove play. Gold took fellow writer Earnest Gaines ("A Lesson Before Dying"), an African American, to a Wednesday night entertainment at the six-story downtown club. Five members, he said, were in blackface. One member clapped Gaines on the back. "Looks like you've played a little football," Gold heard him say. Shortly thereafter, the writers took their leave. "I guess I'm not clubbable," Gold said wryly.

Those who are clubbable find themselves strolling past faces any American would recognize. "Never mind just plain CEOs and presidents," Hoffman said, "they have president presidents" -- such as former President George H.W. Bush, who has brought his sons.

William F. Buckley was a member until he resigned last year. He'd play Bach pieces on the harpsichord at dusk on Friday nights (to campers who'd have preferred the Cal fight song, one member told me).

The arts are a genuine part of the spirit of this club. But a bit more goes on. In 1971, President Richard Nixon, a member since 1953, was to be the lakeside speaker, but reporters had finally raised a ruckus about a sitting president giving an off-the-record speech at the Grove. Nixon sent sugary regrets in a telegram that hangs in the city clubhouse today, saying that anyone could be president of the United States, but only a few could aspire to be president of the Bohemian Club.

Privately, he said to domestic affairs adviser John Ehrlichman and Chief of Staff Bob Haldeman (and the hidden tape recorder) in the Oval Office that May: "The Bohemian Grove, which I attend from time to time -- it is the most faggy goddamned thing you could ever imagine, with that San Francisco crowd. I can't shake hands with anybody from San Francisco."

That testy remark could have been pique. He didn't get to deliver his speech, and, as van der Zee noted, the Grove, its powerful members pledged to secrecy, provides an ideal audience on which to test a major policy address. "Every elected official knows there's no place more conducive to the conduct of political affairs than a gathering that has been declared nonpolitical," he said.

Many have taken advantage. At www.sonomacountyfreepress.com, the Web site of the protest group called the Bohemian Grove Action Network (their logo depicts a tuxedoed patrician in a top hat swilling a martini as he straddles an MX missile) shows that speakers who have "given a Lakeside" include Vice President Dick Cheney, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, George H.W. Bush and Michel Rocard, former prime minister of France.

Nelson Rockefeller gave up a run for the presidency after his speech failed to move his fellow campers. And this is where, according to van der Zee and many other published sources, Bush asked Cheney to be his running mate in 2000, where Nixon advised Ronald Reagan to stay out of the coming presidential race in 1967, where Edward Teller and others in the Manhattan Project mapped out the atomic bomb in the autumn of 1942.

Mary Moore of Occidental, a founder of the Action Network, which has helped organize demonstrations outside the Grove since 1980, said the speeches -- sorry, talks -- have been hard to acquire because her source inside moved on and the club took to locking the texts of the speeches in the guardhouse. (She did send us the 2002 membership roster.)

The club would like all this secret stuff to stay secret, which means that the curious are always breaking in (Mother Jones, National Public Radio, the Los Angeles Times, CBS).

Media CEOs have had to interrupt their conversations to throw out their own reporters. When Dirk Mathison, San Francisco bureau chief for People magazine, sneaked onto the grounds, a Time Warner executive recognized him and walked him to the gate. The piece never ran.

In fact, whole newspaper empires have been flung out. The club has an offshoot called the Family that came into being after the Hearst-owned Examiner ran a 1901 piece in which Ambrose Bierce predicted the assassination of President William McKinley. When McKinley was assassinated soon after, the club threw out its Hearst people and removed its newspapers from the clubrooms. The Family flourishes to this day, letting all kinds of people in and supporting a hospital in Nicaragua. Its new members are called Babies, and the president is the Father. "There is no mother," a member said. "The babies are brought by the stork."

Curiously, the Bohemian Club was started by newspapermen much like the ones now landing in a heap of dust outside the gate. In 1872, an editorial writer for The Chronicle proposed a club so reporters could meet somewhere other than saloons.

Van der Zee said, "It's not uncommon for founding principles to become institutional embarrassments, but few social clubs have made such a turnabout."

It is called "social" because business is the last thing on anyone's mind at this club to which hundreds of CEOs and former and current government officials belong.

"Oh, please," Debenham said. "The contacts are amazing."

Ehrlichman once told a reporter, "Once you've spent three days with someone in an informal situation, you have a relationship -- a relationship that opens doors and makes it easier to pick up the phone."

(This is reportedly called the "Mandalay effect," after the camp where the Bechtels stay, along with Kissinger, Colin Powell and San Francisco's own George Shultz.)

Women don't get to experience the Mandalay effect because they aren't allowed in, except on certain family weekends, and then they must be off the grounds by dusk. It's not clear what will happen to them if they're not. Maybe it has never happened.

"Periodically a wife makes noise, and then it dies down," Hoffman said.

She believes men need retreats like this. "It's that Masonic thing, the touching of the ring. Goes back to before the Crusades. The men feel safer without women. It's the same thing in a way when women get together. First it's jolly and then gets weird. Clannish."

The importance of male bonding aside, it seems wrong to some for all this political talk to be going on with the press and half the population absent. Case finds it alarming that no women are at the Grove, especially when the policy discussions concern them. "People I know -- definitely not friends of mine -- say they've discussed the role women should be playing in the armed forces at the Grove."

What's the law on this? The Supreme Court has held that the Constitution protects two kinds of associations: private or intimate associations (fewer than 400 members, such as the SFGC) and expressive associations formed to put forth a principle or idea. "You have to look at how big the club is, how committed to an ideology, and how exclusion is necessary matters to its purposes," Case said. "The Bohemians are principally Republicans. They discuss politics. They have, as it were, a point of view. That may qualify them as an expressive association." And don't forget this club has artistic leanings. It expresses itself in a Druid-like opening ceremony called Cremation of Care that features red pointy hats, torches and Care getting badly singed.

Case has heard about that and has her own theory about why the club is all male. "The things they do would look too silly if women saw them."

The huge athletic Olympic Club, with two golf courses by the ocean and a more tie-and-suit headquarters downtown, is the oldest and one of the most famous clubs in the country, and one of the biggest.

Of the three clubs he belongs to, this is George Livermore's favorite. He lives across the street from the downtown site. "I go swimming at the Olympic Club and get drunk next door at the Bohemian Club," he said, merrily.

His grandfather, Horatio P. Livermore, was a founder of the Olympic Club back in 1860 in a downtown firehouse and added two gorgeous 18-hole golf courses by the ocean in the 1920s. It has since hosted four U.S. Open championships.

Like many clubs, it was begun by people who couldn't get in elsewhere -- in this case, Germans, Italians, Irish and Catholics.

"I used to play golf there with a florist and another guy who sells vegetables and hauls lettuce and celery around the backseat of a Rolls-Royce," said Burgin, a member since 1969. "It's not a place merely for the rich and the swells."

There's a 10-year wait for golf memberships. The lakeside clubhouse was designed by Arthur Brown, who designed San Francisco's City Hall and the Opera House.

The club has lots of sport teams, bay swims, dinners, power pacing classes, an annual hike and dip on Ocean Beach, relays around Lake Merced and crab feasts. "It's the best club in the world," said Stuart Kinder, president last year. "We have a broad-based membership that crosses all social and economic lines. You don't have to be a blue blood to be a member. You don't have to be wealthy."

Marcus Musante, 25, is glad to have joined as a junior member, though he got scolded for wearing cargo pants to a golf lesson. "People are talkative. It's a social atmosphere. When you're young, just starting out, there're few things as valuable as talking to an older professional. It's nice to pick their brains, and at the club they're willing to be open and share their pearls."

When Musante told an older member that he was interning at a district attorney's office, "he recommended for me to go into a government agency right out of school and try to cure the world of its problems until you realize you can't."

Until 1992, women could golf but not go to the downtown club. That year it was discovered the club had three holes on public property. Louise Renne, then city attorney, said, "We told them, 'Stop discriminating or play with 15 holes.' " Women now are full members.

"These days, athletic clubs would be mad to exclude women -- they're so much more involved in athletics than they ever have been," said Ron Fimrite, who's at work on a history of the club. The club is building new facilities on Sutter Street, largely for the women.

Burgin doesn't go to the Olympic Club much anymore. "When girls come in, it flat changes," he mourned. "Used to be, you'd go in and the ballgame's on, tablecloths are plain, no flowers on the tables. You can sit down at anybody's table without formality, yell across the room and talk dirty. So goddamn annoying. Breaks my heart.

"Ferchrissakes, can't a man have a place to go?"


Bohemian Club

Addresses: 624 Taylor St., and Bohemian Grove, 75 miles northwest of San Francisco near Guerneville

Membership: 2,700 (one member per acre)

Waiting list: 3,000

Average number of years on waiting list: 15 to 20

Members: George H.W. Bush, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Donald Rumsfeld, George Shultz, Alexander Haig, Colin Powell, rocker Steve Miller, Clint Eastwood.

Slogan: "Weaving Spiders Come Not Here."

Books to read about it: "The Bohemian Grove" by G. William Domhoff and "The Greatest Men's Party on Earth" by John van der Zee.

Accept minorities: Yes, especially if they can play an instrument.

Best place to spy: Put your canoe in the Russian River at Northwood, just west of Johnson's Beach in Guerneville, and head downstream past their floating boathouse. The Bohemians couldn't buy the whole river. One suspects they are irked by this fact.


San Francisco Golf Club

Address: Brotherhood Way and Junipero Serra Boulevard

Founded: 1895

Membership: 300

Good movie for them to watch: "Gentlemen's Agreement"

Historical tidbit: Hole 7 is site of the last official duel in California, between Sen. David S. Broderick and California Supreme Court Justice David S. Terry in 1859


Pacific-Union Club

Address: 1000 California St.

Founded: 1881, when the Pacific Club (1852) and the Union Club (1854) joined ranks.

Membership: 775

Members: David Packard, Ronald Pelosi, Peter McGowan, Henry Kaiser, Walter Haas, five Bechtels

General manager: Tom Gaston Jr.

Admit women: No

Slogan: None

Dues: "They keep raising them because nobody cares," said member George Livermore.

Protests: Four years ago, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence carried huge altered portraits of the members dressed in gowns to complain that the city's transvestites had no access to the club. "After all, just because you have a dress on doesn't mean you don't like to enjoy the club's osso bucco and Grgich reds," noted Supervisor Tom Ammiano.

Movies: Has a cameo in "Vertigo."


Olympic Club

Addresses: 524 Post St. and 599 Skyline Blvd. on Highway 35 near Palo Mar Stables

Membership: 6,000

Founded: 1860

Slogan: "O Realm Where Stalwart Manhood Rules."

Stalwart womanhood: Yes, since 1992

Web site: www.olyclub.com

Fun facts: The women's Metropolitan Club and the Olympic Club talked about merging about 20 years ago. The Metropolitan Club (formerly the Women's Athletic Club) turned the boys down.


This week's question:

Should private clubs be discriminating on the basis of sex, race and religion when choosing members?

-- Yes. Through fund-raisers and donations, the benefits of these clubs extend far beyond their memberships.

-- Yes. Members of these groups receive no government funding and are allowed to choose their associates.

-- No. Because many members are influential in government, law and business, it is unfair that their discussions are private.

-- No, but these clubs are relics and probably will die of natural causes within a few years.

Vote at sfgate.com/polls

E-mail Adair Lara at alara@sfchronicle.com.

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