It was pure luck that a Time Warner journalist ran into<br >a Time Warner executive at a redwood retreat 70 miles<br >north of San Francisco. It was also bad luck, at least for the<br >journalist. The Time Warner executive threw him out.<br > You see, it wasn t just any retreat. The chance meeting<br >occurred at the exclusive, super-secret Bohemian Grove<br >where the old boys of America s government and corporate<br >elite gather each summer for two weeks of laid-back<br >schmoozing and speechmaking, not to mention the club s<br >mock-Druid fire rituals.<br > And it wasn t just any journalist. Dirk Mathison was,<br >until recently, the enterprising San Francisco bureau chief of<br >People magazine, owned by Time Warner. An uninvited<br >guest (reporters are banned from Bohemian Grove), Mathi-<br >son hiked over back-country trails to sneak into the Grove s<br >July 1991 "encampment" three different times. The third<br >time was no charm for Mathison: that s when he ran into the<br >Time Warner executive who recognized him and tossed<br >him out.<br > Mathison had already learned a lot. Contrary to the<br >claims of the Grove, Mathison saw that the male-only re-<br >treat is not just innocent summertime relaxation. Newswor-<br >thy events occur there. Former Secretary of the Navy John<br >Lehman, for example, gave a lecture in which he stated that<br >the Pentagon estimated 200,000 Iraqis were killed during<br >the six weeks of the Gulf War. The Pentagon believes the<br >public is not ready to hear the death count; among friends,<br >Lehman felt no need to go dumb on the subject. The title of<br >his speech: "Smart Weapons."<br > Other speakers included Defense Secretary Richard<br >2<br >The Media Elite<br >Cheney and former Health, Education and Welfare S~<br >tary Joseph Califano, speaking on "America s Health R<br >lution--Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Pays." For<br >Attorney General Elliot Richardson titled his speech "D~<br >ing the New World Order." That definition is sough<br >millions of Americans, but the speech wasn t aired ol<br >SPAN.<br > Expecting to read all about it in People? Don t cour<br >it. Even though Mathison embarked on the Boher<br >Grove story with his editors approval, and even thc<br >Mathison says his article was so well received that e<br >space was alloted for it, the story was mysteriously kilh<br > People s managing editor told our researchers<br >while he had authorized Mathison to infiltrate the Grow<br >later killed the piece (denying any input from Time Wa<br >higher-ups) after realizing that he had authorized "tresf<br >ing."<br > Mathison believes the reason People editors spikec<br >story "had to do with their bosses, not mine." He warne<br >we might never pin down the full explanation: "It s easi,<br >penetrate the Bohemian Grove than the Time-Life Bt<br >ing."<br > One need not penetrate the Time-Life Building to<br >ize what this episode says about journalism today. It tel<br >how difficult it can be for journalists to report full}<br >America s political and economic elite when their bosse<br >loyal members of that elite.<br > Every year at Bohemian Grove, media executives 1<br >nob with newsmakers. Walter Cronkite, for example<br >sides at the same lodge at the Grove as George Bush.<br >media figures enter into a pact of silence, agreeing thai<br >Grove--whose membership has included every Republ<br >president since Coolidge, and on whose premises presi~<br >tial campaigns were fueled and the Manhattan (A-bc<br >Project ~oncefved--is off-limits to news coverage.<br > <br ><br >
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