Word: hausers
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...hard times, facing financial troubles and the graduation of the original core staff. Last year, the magazine’s new president, Ming E. Vandenberg ’08, wanted to take H Bomb online as part of rethinking its mission. But that never happened. Faculty adviser Marc D. Hauser, a psychology professor, said he opposed a move online because of concerns about student privacy—but he also emphasized that he did not play a role in decisionmaking...
...HSA’s assistant managers, said Creamer’s vision for HSA is the biggest thing he brings to the presidency. “I think that we’ve spurred entrepreneurship in a lot of the agencies,” said current president, William B. Hauser ’08. Over the past year, the organization devoted significant resources to ensuring the survival of Let’s Go, whose long-time publisher announced in September that it will not continue its partnership with HSA after their contract expires in 2009. HSA came under fire from...
...keeps doing it, and keeps demanding nearly as much of his actors as of himself. He hypnotized the actors in Heart of Glass. He cast Bruno S., who had spent decades in mental institutions, as the star of The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser and Stroszek. When Nicholson backed out of Fitzcarraldo, Herzog got Jason Robards, who contracted amoebic dysentery and was forced to quit the shoot. (Mick Jagger, another member of the cast, also had to leave.) Herzog wound up with Klaus Kinski, an actor so extreme and unruly, he was his own volcano. They made five films together; Herzog...
...Office of Residential Life couldn’t find a suitable alternative.”“I think that Collegeboxes did a very poor job last time, and they shouldn’t be awarded with the contract again,” he said.HSA President William B. Hauser ’08 said he had expected that students would react negatively to the College’s decision, but noted that “the complaints and the issues raised by students last year have been examined thoroughly and were a huge part of the review process...
...theorists, rejoice: your proof has arrived. A study couthored by a researcher in Harvard’s Department of Psychology suggests that most referees are subconsciously biased in favor of the home team. Ryan H. Boyko ’05, a research assistant for Professor of Psychology Marc D. Hauser in the department’s Cognitive Evolutionary Laboratory, led the examination that spanned a 14-year period in England’s Premiership soccer league. He found that the fans do indeed spur teams on to victory at home games—but they do so by influencing...