Max falkenstein biography

Max Gene Falkenstien

Max Gene Falkenstien, the voice of the Jayhawks for 60 years, died on July 29, 2019 at age 95. Max was born in Lawrence, Kansas on April 10, 1924, to Earl and Edith Gosper Falkenstien. He graduated from Liberty Memorial High School and after a year at the University of Kansas, where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi Fraternity, he entered the United States Air Force/Army Signal Corps. After the war, he returned to Kansas University and received a degree in mathematics. On March 20, 1949, he married Isobel Atwood at the Danforth Chapel on the KU campus.

Max began his broadcasting career while in high school at WREN radio and began his sportscasting career there in 1946. In all, between 1946 and 2006, he broadcast over 650 football games and more than 1,750 basketball games. He aired every KU basketball game played in Allen Field House from its opening in 1955 until his retirement and received multiple awards during his tenure; perhaps the most memorable was having his jersey with the Number 60 retired in Allen Field House next to all the great KU athlet

In Making Gavin Brown a Partner, Barbara Gladstone Is Betting That You Can Get Big and Still Think Small

In 2011, as she was celebrating 30 years in business,Barbara Gladstonetold the Wall Street Journal, “there’s a relationship between being an art dealer and raising a family. Being a parent, a mother, means that you’re responsible for helping someone develop to the best of their potential.” She was speaking from experience: she had three children when she opened her gallery at age 40 in 1980. As a gallerist, she had helped artists develop to the best of their potential, among them Matthew Barney, to whom she gave over the gallery in 1991 so that he could climb the walls naked among sculptural implements that towed the line between medical harnesses and football equipment, and whose elaborate films she readily produced.

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By the time Gladstone gave that 2011 interview, a new model had started to emerge among a handful of international art dealers—the mega-gallery. Pace, Gagosian, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth

Falkenstein

Falkenstein or Falckenstein ("falcons' stone" in German) may refer to:

Places

Austria

Germany

  • Falkenstein, Bavaria, a market town in the district of Cham
  • Falkenstein, Rhineland-Palatinate, a municipality in Donnersbergkreis
  • Falkenstein, Saxony, a town in Vogtlandkreis
  • Falkenstein, Saxony-Anhalt, a town in Harz district
  • Falkenstein (Thuringia), a rock formation near Tambach-Dietharz in the Thuringian Forest
  • Falkenstein, Königstein im Taunus, a small town north of Frankfurt am Main
  • Großer Falkenstein, a mountain in the Bavarian Forest

Castles

Austria

Czech Republic

France

Germany

  • Falkenstein Castle (Bad Emstal), a ruin near Bad Emstal, Hesse
  • Falkenstein Castle (Gerstetten), a ruin near Gerstetten in Heidenheim district of Baden-Württemberg
  • Falkenstein Castle (Harz), a preserved medieval castle in the Harz mountains in Saxony-Anhalt
  • Falkenstein Castle (Höllental), a ruin near Freiburg-im-Breisgau, Baden-Württemberg
  • Falkenstein Castle (Palatinate), a ruin near Falkenstein on the

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