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Gazetteer
Hauser, ID -- U.S. city in Idaho
Population (2000): 668
Housing Units (2000): 296
Land area (2000): 0.886638 sq. miles (2.296381 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.886638 sq. miles (2.296381 sq. km)
FIPS code: 35830
Located within: Idaho (ID), FIPS 16
Location: 47.770399 N, 117.017401 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Hauser, ID
Hauser
Wikipedia
Hauser

Hauser is a German-language surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Arnold George Hauser (1888–1966), American baseball player
  • Arnold Hauser (1892–1978), Hungarian art historian
  • Dwight Hauser (1911–1969), screenwriter, actor, and producer, and father of actor Wings Hauser
  • Eduard Hauser (cross-country skier) (b. 1948), Swiss former cross-country skier
  • Eduard Hauser (soldier) (1895–1961), Generalleutnant in the Wehrmacht during World War II
  • Erich Hauser (1930-2004), German sculptor
  • Gayelord Hauser (1895–1984), German-American nutritionist and author
  • Henri Hauser (1866–1946), Algerian-born French historian
  • Hermann Hauser (b. 1948), Austrian entrepreneur and cofounder of Acorn Computers
  • Hermann Hauser, Sr. (1882–1952), German luthier
  • Julius Hauser (1854–1920), NYS Treasurer 1907-1908
  • Kaspar Hauser (1812–1833), German foundling
  • Marc Hauser (b. 1959), American ethologist found guilty of scientific misconduct
  • Otto Hauser (1874–1932), Swiss pre-historian
  • Philip Hauser, demographer
  • Samuel Thomas Hauser (1833–1914), American politician, Governor of the Montana Territory
  • Stjepan Hauser (b. 1986), Croatian cellist
  • Walter Hauser (1837–1902), Swiss politician and member of the Swiss Federal Council from 1888 to 1902
  • Wings Hauser aka Gerald Dwight Hauser (b. 1947), American actor, director, and screenwriter

Usage examples of "hauser".

And if the rent was high, it meant Marcus Aurelius Hauser was a successful private investigator.

An elevator whisked him up to the thirtieth floor, and he was soon at the cherry doors leading into the offices of Marcus Hauser, PI.

Philip found himself wondering if this was the same Marcus Hauser who had tramped through the jungles with his father in search of lost cities and ancient tombs.

At this, Hauser smiled, slid open his desk drawer, turned out a humidor, and removed an enormous Churchill.

Philip felt annoyed that Hauser was doing other business in front of him, wasting his time.

Marcus Hauser, a private investigator formerly with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms.

What Hauser had said was true: If they got their hands on the manuscript, the announcement alone would turn around their stock.

Forty years ago he spent some time in Honduras with his old partner, Marcus Hauser, looking for tombs and picking bananas to earn money.

The boat angled toward the swimming animal while Hauser positioned himself, legs apart, in the prow.

But in the end he agreed, if only to keep Hauser from doing something stupid or illegal.

It surprised him how competent Hauser had proven to be at jungle-craft, organizing and laying out a camp and directing the soldiers about their various tasks.

Philip turned to see Hauser coming back from the hunt, with a dead tapir slung on a pole, carried by four soldiers.

As usual, Hauser was out hunting with a couple of soldiers while the others were at their own fire, playing cards.

Aurelius Hauser examined his white shirtfront, and, finding a small beetle making its laborious way up it, he plucked it off, crushed it between spatulate thumb and forefinger with a satisfying chitinous crackle, and tossed it away.

He had almost made good his escape, which Hauser had only prevented by the most dogged pursuit.