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SO SILENT AT THE BOHEMIAN GROVE THIS SUMMER!
Bohemian activist has made her point.
No protests at encampment
July 15, 2000 by CHRIS SMITH � 2000, Santa Rosa Press Democrat Staff Writer


For years the grandest, most elaborate summer party in Sonoma County --
perhaps in all the world -- was the one where protestors shouted "Shame!
Shame! Shame!" to guests arriving at the front gate.

The two-week bash, the Bohemian Grove Encampment, is getting under way this
weekend in a splendid and private redwood retreat in Monte Rio. But the
demonstrators are staying home.

Mary Moore, the woman from nearby Camp Meeker who organized yearly protests
outside the grove, says she believes as firmly as ever that the present and
past presidents and cabinet secretaries, industrialists and other powerful
men who come to the male-only encampment bear responsibility for many of the
ills of the world.

"More and more power is in fewer and fewer hands," said Moore. Over the past
20 years, she and other activists have gathered outside the Bohemian Grove
in July to chide the arriving revelers for promoting or profiting from
Central American wars, environmental degradation, apartheid, the plundering
and bullying of the Third World, nuclear weapons proliferation, homelessness
and myriad forms of social injustice.

But Moore turned 65 Friday, the same day that dozens of private jets whisked
Bohemian Grove guests into the Sonoma County Airport. She said it's too much
to continue organizing the mid-summer protest against what she sees as
capitalist exploitation that benefits a wealthy few and victimizes many.

Besides, she said, "I personally feel the points have been made."

The grand camp-out, sponsored by the Bohemian Club of San Francisco, dates
back to 1878. The people who put it on say protesters and the press
exaggerate when they portray the Encampment as an opportunity for the rich
and powerful to hatch plots and partnerships.

"You come here to relax and enjoy the camaraderie of friends in a beautiful
setting," said Stephen DePetro, manager of the sponsoring Bohemian Club of
San Francisco. "You don't come here to do business."

The motto of the Bohemian Grove -- "Weaving Spiders Come Not Here" --
officially discourages talk of business or politics. DePetro said the
approximately 2,000 men who travel to Monte Rio from across the nation and
overseas come to unwind and take advantage of programs that focus on nature,
drama, literature and art.

The Bohemian Club was created by four newspapermen for the purpose of
engendering the arts in San Francisco, which in the late 19th century was,
compared to New York, an uncultured outpost. Club officials say that ever
since the first Encampment was held 122 years ago as a farewell party for a
departing member, its function as a social and cultural retreat has not
changed.

Major attractions each year include elaborate stage plays, lakeside talks,
musical performances, drink and golf.

On Friday, several dozen men from the Grove appeared at the Northwoods Golf
Course on River Road, just inland from Monte Rio.

"Probably about 40 guys play each day," said the course's PGA pro, Don Kite.

"We know them now," he said. "It's pretty much the same guys who keep coming
back every year."

Kite said the players include some celebrities, rock stars and big-name
political or business leaders. "We never know which dignitary is going to be
in which group," he said.

Over the years, the more prominent guests at the Bohemian Grove have
included nearly every Republican president and some Democrats. George Bush,
Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon all have attended.

Other big names in recent years have included Clint Eastwood, former Cabinet
members Henry Kissinger, George Schultz and Caspar Weinberger, and
industrialists Stephen David Bechtel, Leonard Firestone and David
Rockefeller.

The Bohemian Club never publicizes the names of guests, many of whom arrive
at the Sonoma County Airport aboard private jets and twin-propeller planes.

Airport tower chief Dayle Buschkotter said Friday several dozen corporate
aircraft -- Citations, Learjets, Falcon, Beechjets, Gulfstreams -- delivered
Bohemian Grove guests Friday.

"It's been steady," she said of the arrivals and departures of sleek,
privately owned and high-priced aircraft. "It provides eye candy for all of
us watching from the tower."

In some previous years, demonstrators greeted new arrivals at the airport,
holding up signs and shouting. Typically the demonstrators gathered at the
Grove's gate, sometimes under the supervision of sheriff's deputies.

It's been several years since the last Bohemian Grove protest. Moore said
from home Friday she feels that she and the others who demonstrated have
done their work, alerting the public about the dangers of allowing too much
power to fall into the hands of a fairly small group of men.

She said the cause has widened now, as witnessed by street protests against
the World Trade Organization.

"Twenty years ago, they weren't talking about corporate power, not the way
they are now," she said.

Only the men inside the Bohemian Grove know for sure what they're talking
about in the camps and beneath the redwoods. Club Manager DePetro said
business and politics are just the sorts of things the club members and
their guests are coming to Monte Rio to get away from.




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