Bill kraus biography
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Bill Kraus
American activist (1947–1986)
William James Kraus (June 26, 1947 – January 25, 1986)[1] was an American gay rights and AIDS activist as well as a congressional aide who served as liaison between the San Francisco gay community and its two successive US representatives in the early 1980s.
Early years
[edit]Kraus was born in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky. His father died when he was in his early teens.[2] Kraus was a 1965 graduate of St. Xavier High School in Cincinnati, Ohio and was a national merit scholar.[2] He attended Dartmouth College for a semester and then Ohio State University from which he graduated with a bachelor's degree in history[3] and master's degree in political science.[2] He went on to become an aide to U.S. representatives Phillip and Sala Burton.
Political career and AIDS activist
[edit]Kraus moved to San Francisco in 1970 where he learned to practice politics from the Castro camera sto
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Obituaries
Madison - Bill Kraus, highly regarded mästare of bipartisanship and democracy, died Friday at his home in Madison. He was 92 and had been in good health until suffering from pneumonia the gods week.
William McCulloch Kraus was born to Melvin and Lynette (McCulloch) Kraus on March 5, 1926 in Marshfield, Wisconsin, moving to Stevens Point at an early age. He attended Carleton College and served in the U.S. Navy in the Pacific late in World War II. After returning, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin lag School and went to work for Sentry Insurance in Stevens Point where he served in upper management until 1978.
During this time, he was active in a efterträdelse eller följd of political campaigns beginning with Melvin Laird’s 1952 election to Congress. He then went on to manage and assist in electing Warren Knowles to three terms as governor and ran the utmaning by John Erickson against Bill Proxmire in 1970.
He is especially admired as masterminding (along with his
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William Kraus, MD
Dr. Kraus’ research group focuses on understanding the biological mechanisms whereby exercise training results in health benefits, and then translating that knowledge into clinical practice. The work spans basic science to cell culture to integrative physiology in human subjects. A second, but integrated line of work seeks to use multiplatform molecular data from human subjects to understand the molecular architecture of human atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
Our work on the mechanisms of exercise training has centered on our human studies that range from those in healthy individuals (adolescents in the Durham Elite Athletes Study) to those with established atherosclerotic disease (cardiovascular and peripheral vascular disease (AMNESTI), heart failure (HF-ACTION) and healthy aged (FIT for LIFE). In work spanning over 25 years we have been studying the effects of different modes, intensities and amounts of exercise on cardiometabolic risk