Eight year veteran Phil Luckett. Click on the 'Heads or Tails?' link below to read about that incident.
The Green Bay Packers defeated the New England Patriots 35-21 in Super Bowl XXXI. Click on the 'Super Bowl XXXI' link on this page to read about the game. Super Bowl XXXI was played on January 26, 1997 at the Louisiana Superdome. The Green Bay Packers beat the New England Patriots by the score of 35 to 21.
The Oakland Raiders won the Super Bowl XI on January 9, 1977. Final score, 32-14 against the Minnesota Vikings. Click on the 'Super Bowl XI' link on this page to read about the game.
the Pittsburgh was the fris..the squad was the defense. In fact, they are considered to be one of the greatest defenses of all time, hence the moniker, "The Steel Curtain". The defense was led by "Mean" Joe Greene, who ironically received his nickname for a hit on Tarkenton years earlier. The game started out as expected, as a defensive struggle. The first quarter was scoreless as both teams struggled to move the ball, but after a Rocky Bleier fumble, the Vikings found themselves on the Pittsburgh 24-yard line. The Steelers came up empty though, when Fred Cox missed a field goal from 39 yards. The first and only score of the first half came midway through the second period when Dave Osborne fumbled a pitch out from Tarkenton, and fell on it in the endzone. The Steelers went into the locker room with a 2-0 lead. The second half started with a Minnesota fumble of the kickoff on the 30-yard line, and after three runs by Franco Harris that resulted in a touchdown, the score was 9-0. The Vikings first score came after Chuck Foreman had fumbled on the Steelers' five-yard line. But after Pittsburgh failed to make a first down, their punt was blocked by Matt Blair and recovered in the end zone by Terry Brown for a touchdown. The extra-point attempt struck the left upright and bounded away, leaving the score at 9-6. With ten minutes remaining in the game, Terry Bradshaw led the Steelers on a drive that ate up more than seven minutes before hitting tight end Larry Brown for the final score of the game. The Steelers won Super Bowl IX, 16-6.
President Kennedy read the book, or the serialized version of it in The New Yorker. Kennedy asked his President's Science Advisory Council to check the book for accuracy, and they did. They reported on May 15, 1963, that pesticides posed a great problem for Americans, that Rachel Carson's book was accurate, and that the government should speed action to control pesticide use and reduce damage from pesticides.See the report at the Related Link below.
Ben Roethlisberger
Matt Kenseth in 2003 during his championship run.
The Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Dallas Cowboys 35-31 in Super Bowl XIII. Click on the 'Super Bowl XIII' link on this page to read about the game.
The Pittsburgh Steelers defeated the Arizona Cardinals, 27-23, to win Super Bowl XLIII. Click on the "Super Bowl XLIII" link below to read about the game.
Eight year veteran Phil Luckett. Click on the 'Heads or Tails?' link below to read about that incident.
== == It was read in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Click on the 'Pittsburgh Steelers HOFers' link on this page to see all players that played with the Steelers that are in the HOF and read a history of the team. The official Pittsburgh Steelers website has the list along with the dates. Click on the link below to see all of the Steelers that are in the Hall of Fame.
Perez Hilton has it on his site
I searched the internet and couldn't find anyone posting that they had read the entire minimum wage poster. It is very long,but you can buy a copy of it online.
Not all posters are where people wait some are in a shop window and some people don’t even look in there to read it. If the poster isn't colorful or attractive then no one will look at it.
His name is Sgt. John Jones from the HBO documentary "Alive Day Memories: Home From Iraq" From what I have read, the "No Regrets" poster was photo-shopped from his picture on HBO and then a caption added.
There are many different employment-related posters in the state of Maryland. Visit this site to read more about them and find the poster you need: http://dllr.maryland.gov/oeope/poster.shtml.