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 Marge Schott, the tough-talking, chain-smoking owner of the Cincinnati Reds who won a World Series but was repeatedly suspended for offensive remarks, died Tuesday, a hospital spokeswoman said. She was 75.Schott was hospitalized about three weeks ago for breathing difficulties and frequently was hospitalized in recent years for lung problems. Christ Hospit stanley uk al would not release a cause of death.Schott had reportedly been on a ventilator during her treatment in the hospital s intensive care unit.Schott kept a low profile after she ended years of turmoil by selling her controlling interest in the club in Oc stanley cup tober 1999. She appeared at news conferences when she made donations to the zoo and other local organizations.She remained a limited partner in the team s ownership group, and sued owner Carl Lindner because she didn t like her seats in the new Great Ame stanley cups uk rican Ball Park, where the Reds moved in 2003.        The Reds had no immediate comment on her death.Her outspokenness as owner became her legacy and her downfall.Schott had inherited and expanded her husband s business empire after he died in 1968. Until she took over the Reds in the mid-1980s, she was known as a car dealer who made campy television commercials featuring her beloved St. Bernards.Once she got control of the front office, she became one of the most prominent figures in the history of baseball s first professional team.            The Reds won the 1990 World Series, sweeping the Oakland A s while Schott rubbed dog Rayo What happens when you swap the colors of famous logos
 We know that buildings can make us sick, and that they can also make us healthier. But can architecture make a difference in how we exper stanley cup website ience illness  What about cancer  That   a more complicated question.     At an exhibition at the New York School of Interior Design this month, we get a glimpse of an usual set of cancer care facilities called Maggie   Centres. These buildings happen to be designed by the most famous architects in the world, who n stanley mug ormally limit their clients to major cultural institutions and wealthy individuals, not charities. For example, one of the most recent centers to open, in Aberdeen, was designed by the Norwegian architects Sn酶hetta and looks more like a  stanley tumbler home than a hospital: Images: Philip Vile. How did these buildings come to be  In 1995, the famous architectural historian Charles Jencks ; wife passed away after a struggle with breast cancer. Before she died, Maggie Keswick Jencks spent more than a year developing an idea for a network of care centers that would give patients access to stress-reducing activities, support groups, information and more. These wouldn ;t be hospitals, exactly, but more like home bases, points of contact and support for patients outside of wards. The year after she died, the first Maggie   Centre opened in Edinburgh. And nearly 20 years later, there are dozens, each designed by a different notable architect, many of whom were longtime friends of the Jencks, like Pritzker Prize winner Richard