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...Protonesis, Inc., a science-based competitive intelligence group, uncovered information revealing Rudy Boesch, the 72-year-old retired Navy Seal contestant, to be the winner of the CBS reality series. Protonesis, Inc., used its proprietary Touch-Free CI process, a proprietary linguistic analysis technology available only to Protonesis clientele, to obtain the information. Today, any competitive intelligence research is simply incomplete without Protonesis Analysis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: I Know Who it Is! Everyone's a 'Survivor' Expert | 7/21/2000 | See Source »

...cash--is that although Survivor cast all ages, only three of the 16 were outside the 18-to-49 demo. It was like a dotcom company: the seniors were demographic and cultural outsiders. As the hotties showed off their abs and pierced nipples, ex-Navy SEAL Rudy Boesch, 72, groused about the kids who wouldn't accept military discipline. "I've got to fit in, not them," he admitted. "There's more of them than there is of me." All the stereotypes came into play: the young are lazy, the old intransigent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Survivor: Age Takes Atoll | 6/12/2000 | See Source »

...brought a ukulele to the island. Christopher doubts she fell to ageism but says, "At that point, strength and endurance were very important...If I were twentysomething and saw a 63-year-old woman, I probably would assume she'd be the weak link." Judging from the expulsion vote, Boesch might soon follow: Christopher barely edged him out. And (spoiler alert!) though neither contestants nor CBS will say who gets bumped when, the Kansas City Star reported that B.B. Andersen, 64, of Mission Hills, Kans., returned home early in the show's taping...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Survivor: Age Takes Atoll | 6/12/2000 | See Source »

Observations of apes in the wild provide further insights. In the Tai forest in the Ivory Coast, Swiss biologist Christophe Boesch points out a flat piece of granite with two small hollows on the top. The rock has marks from heavy use for some purpose. "If an anthropologist came upon this in the forest," says Boesch, "he might think he had found a human artifact." Instead, it is used by chimpanzees for nut cracking. The chimps place a panda nut in one of the depressions and then smash it with a smaller stone. Boesch has watched a mother chimp instruct...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Animals Think? | 3/22/1993 | See Source »

Meanwhile, though modern Swiss experts had lost track of the panels, they had not given up mourning their loss. A recent article by one of them, Curator Gottfried Boesch of the Lucerne museum, was passed along to Honegger by friends. Reflected Honegger: "I was fortunate enough to find them. What more appropriate than that I should return them?" He sent word to Curator Boesch that the panels were safe. Then he took them out of his own window frames and turned them over to the Swiss to be crated and sent home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Wandering Windows | 1/2/1950 | See Source »

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