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  CBS News  Former all-pro defensive tackle Warren Sapp is dismayed at the bounty scandal currently unfolding in the National Football League.  We d stanley cup on t keep many secrets in the NFL. If you [are] knocking a dude out [and] you getting paid - that s going to get around,  Sapp said Tuesday on  CBS This Morning.   Once that gets out, the league s going to come down on you even more then.  Teams are going to start coming after stanley cup  your guys.  NFL to look for bounties beyond SaintsThe NFL is investigating the New Orleans Saints and coach Gregg Williams, who has admitted to running a bounty for knocking opposing players out of the game. Williams met with league officials Monday and could face a long suspension.  We play a game, a kid s game,  Sapp said.  We could all get it. We could all get injured out on the football field. Why would you send out that type of vibe from your defense, your special teams knowing that it could come back at any moment and somebody finds out about it, it s going to be harsh penalties.  Sapp ret stanley website ired from the NFL in 2008 after a 13-year career.  He made the Pro Bowl seven times, and ranks second among all defensive tackles with 96.5 career quarterback sacks. He s currently an analyst on NFL TV.        Sapp said it s never the intent to take out the other team s quarterback. Rather the defense hopes to disrupt the quarterback s timing and  make him have a bad day.  There s no reason to go out there and go after this man. He s a father, a husband,  Sapp said.  T Typf Anne Morrow Lindbergh Dies At 94
 The history of the elevator, if you define it as a platform that can move people and objects up and down, is actually a rather l stanley cup ong one. Rudimentary elevators are known to have been in use in ancient Rome as far back as 336 B.C., with the first reference of one built by the talented Archimedes.     These early elevators were open cars rather than enclosed ones, and consisted of a platform with hoists that would enable the car to move vertically. The hoists were typically worked manually, either by people or animals, though sometimes water wheels were used.  Romans continued to use these simple elevators for many years, usually to move water, building materials, or other heavy items from one place to another. As for the dedicated passenger elevator, this was created in the 18th century, with one of the first used by King Louis XV in 1743. He had an elevator constructed at Versailles that would carry him from his apartments on the first floor to his mistress ; apartments on the second floor. This elevator wasn ;t much more technologically advanced than those used in Rome. To make it work, men stationed in a chimney pulled on the ro stanley trinkflaschen pes. They cal stanley termoska led it a flying chair. It wasn ;t until the 1800s that elevator technology really started to advance. For starters, elevators no longer needed to be worked manually. In 1823, two British architects鈥擝urton and Hormer鈥攂uilt a steam-powered ascending room to take tourists up to a platform for a view