Broncos Neil Smith
SBP98012523- 25 JANUARY 1998 - SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, USA: Broncos Neil Smith (90) holds up the Vince Lombardi trophy after def.eating the Green Bay Packers at Superbowl XXXII, January 25. sk/Jim Ruymen
UPI Related News
BRISBANE, Australia, Oct. 31 (UPI) -- Police in Brisbane, Australia, said a fleeing armed robbery suspect made an unlucky move when he hopped into a police dog's yard.
SAYANOGORSK, Russia, Oct. 22 (UPI) -- A 52-year-old British man was treated like a celebrity in Siberia after he was mistaken for a member of the Rolling Stones.
UNIONDALE, N.Y., June 8 (UPI) -- The New York Islanders Thursday named Ted Nolan as head coach and former Islander player Pat LaFontaine was named senior advisor to owner Charles Wang.
Hawaii court links golf to getting bean... Massive German bomb found off Liverpool... Restaurant admits promotional 'mis-steak'... Japan marts to sell canned oxygen... Watercooler stories from UPI.
LIVERPOOL, England, May 16 (UPI) -- A routine survey by the British Navy turned up a massive World War II-vintage German bomb submerged not far from a busy ferry terminal in Liverpool, England. "It was a huge device absolutely massive," said Ministry of Defense spokesman Neil Smith Monday.
LOVELAND, Colo., Dec. 9 (UPI) -- A 74-year-old Loveland, Colo., man was put under house arrest for killing two of his neighbor's cats by feeding them anti-freeze laced gelatin.
LONDON, April 26 (UPI) -- A British mom has confessed that she deliberately ran her car into her son in a stunt filmed for a "Jackass"-type Web site. Beverley Clare of Darwen, Lancashire, admitted she drove at her 15-year-old son as a friend videotaped the scenario for the "Live N
TORONTO, Aug. 30 (UPI) -- John Ferguson will take over as the new general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Toronto had been without a general manager since coach Pat Quinn gave up his dual role June 27.
TORONTO, Aug. 29 (UPI) -- The Toronto Maple Leafs have named John Ferguson Jr. as their new general manager.
As video war games gain popularity throughout the armed forces, some military trainers worry the more the games seem like war, the more war might start to seem like a game, The New York Times reports.