Zarnock's obsession with toy car collecting prompted him to write the book Ultimate Guide to Hot Wheels Variations Krause, now out of print after two printings (2002 and 2003).
Krause Publications | Konstantin Krause | Dagmar Krause | Peter Krause | James Krause | Paul Krause | Benjamin Krause | Moose Krause | Krause's corpuscles | Krause Milling Co. | Krause | Karl Christian Friedrich Krause | Kai Krause | Jerry Krause | Günther Krause | George Krause | Fred Krause House | Fedor Krause | Emil Krause | David W. Krause | Charles I. Krause | Brian Krause |
Allison Beth Krause (April 23, 1951 – May 4, 1970) was an honor student at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, when she was shot and killed by the Ohio Army National Guard in the Kent State shootings, while protesting against the invasion of Cambodia and the presence of the National Guard on the Kent State campus.
†Beelzebufo Evans, Jones, & Krause, 2008 (fossil)
One of the first 1,000 men recruited to join the nascent United Auto Workers (UAW) in 1935 by John L. Lewis, then-president of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), Krause participated in the famed sit-down strike at a General Motors plant in Flint, Michigan in 1936.
The show ran for seven years, and featured such luminaries as Bob Gibson, John Hartford, Alison Krause and Union Station, John Gorka, Tom Russel, Tish Hinojosa, The Austin Lounge Lizards, Norman and Nancy Blake, John McKuen and Trout Fishing in America... among others.
Edited by Kevin Deegan-Krause, Rainbow Murray and Daniele Caramani, the PDY was formerly edited by Tim Bale and Ingrid van Biezen.
Gesa Felicitas Krause (born 3 August 1992 in Ehringshausen) is a German athlete who specialises in the 3000 m steeplechase.
Gottlob Adolf Krause (born January 5, 1850 in Ockrilla near Messen, died February 19, 1938 in Zürich) was a German Africanist and linguist.
Krause was born in Bönhof, West Prussia, (Benowo, Poland), the youngest of five children.
Wilce was survived by his wife, Minerva Connor Wilce, sons Jay and James M. "Jim" Wilce (1922–1988), and daughters Roseanne Wilce Pearcy and Dorothy Wilce Krause, along with many grandchildren, amongst whom are the nationally known sports and outdoors photographer Anne Krause (1952–2006) and James M. "Jim" Wilce, Jr., a linguistic anthropologist at Northern Arizona University.
Konstantin Krause (born 8 October 1967, in Bad Langensalza) is a retired German long jumper.
His fragments, several of which are preserved in Nonius, are to be found appended to the editions of Sallust by Joseph Wasse, Corte, and Havercamp; and also in Krause's Vitae et Fragmenta vet.
Notable areas and gravesights in the cemetery include the gravesites of Henry Laurens Mitchell, John T. Lesley Family, Samuel Friebele, Charles Wall, the Hooker Family, James McKay Jr., James C. Field, Joseph B. Lancaster, the Krause Family, the Wall Family, mass graves, gravesite of James T. Magbee, the gravesites of William and Nancy Ashley the "Rural Cemetery", gravesites of John P. Wall, James Gettis, grave art, and the "Cradle Graves".
Krause then began a career in the Argentine railways, working in the planning department of the Buenos Aires Western Railway in 1879 and later contributing to the lines' extension into then-remote Tucumán and Salta Provinces.
Many railway photographers of the 1960s, most notably Colin Gifford and also Ian Krause, Malcolm Dunnett and many others had adopted what came to known as the 'new approach', an attempt to portray railways as a part of the environment and to inject a much needed sense of realism into their work rather than the standard sun over the shoulder three-quarter views prevalent at the time.
University president Jon Wefald denied any prior knowledge of this agreement and immediately called for Krause to resign, which he did, effective May 20, 2009.
Krause is known for the discovery and description of mechanoreceptors that were to become known as "Krause's corpuscles", sometimes referred to as "Krause's end-bulbs".