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Lady Bird Johnson, the former first lady who championed conservation and worked tenaciously for the political career of her husband, Lyndon B. Johnson, died Wednesday, a family spokeswoman said. She was 94.Johnson, who suffered a stroke in 2002 that affected her ability to speak, returned home late last month after a week at Seton Medical Center, where she d been admitted for a low-grade fever.She died at her Austin home of natural causes and she was surrounded by family and friends, said spokeswoman Elizabeth Christian.Even after the stroke, Johnson still managed to make occasional public appearances and get outdoors to enjoy her beloved wildflowers. But she was unable to speak more than a few short phrases, and more recently did not speak at all, Anne Wheeler, spokeswoman for the LBJ Library and Muse
stanley cup deutschland um, said in 2006. She communicated her thoughts and needs by writing, Wheeler said. Photos: Lady Bird JohnsonLyndon Johnson died in 1973, four years after the Johnsons left the White House.The longest-living first lady in history was Bess Truman, who was 97 when she died in 1982. Johnson was born Claudia Alta Taylor in 1912. A nurse called her Lady Bird, a nickname she hated, but it stuck, reports CBS News Harry Smith. The daughter of a Texas businessman, Johnson grew up to be one of the country s most influential environmentalists. After her mother died when she was 5, sh
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Dan Barasch, the co-founder of the Lowline, gets calls all the time from people who think his underground culture park already exists. In fact, the projects successful 2012 Kickstarter campaign was only the first s
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stanley cup tt Street was standing room only on May 3 for Pitching the City: New Ideas for New York. Co-sponsored by old-guard Municipal Arts Society and new-guard social-networking site Architizer, the event offered the founders of five urban initiatives the chance to present their projects, TED Talk-style, to a roomful of interested urbanists and a panel of judges. First up, Dan Barasch, co-founder with James Ramsey of the Lowline, the 1.5 acre underground, day-lit space proposed for an abandoned trolley terminal under Delancey Street on Manhattans Lower East Side. Baraschs spiel is undermined by a wonky PA system, but its most effective tool is the projects seductive renderings showing the space as a high-tech grotto, its ceiling remade as swirling domes engineered with fiber-optics to provide enough daylight for trees to grow. Then the questions from the panel begin. NY1 anchor Pat Kiernan is first: I love the idea of green space in this area, he says, but Im concerned about security. Barasch responds that the site may be managed mor