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CBS News QUINCY, Mass. - Nancy Holler s son, Brendan, was an honors student and stando
stanley cup ut baseball player until his senior year in high school. Nancy Holler and her son, Brendan. CBS News/Personal Photo A good kid,
stanley cup never gave us an ounce of trouble, she recalled in an interview.Then Brendan started sneaking pills of the opioid painkiller Percocet that had been prescribed to his father for a back injury.Brendan got hooked, and that caused him to drop out of college after six weeks and return home to Quincy, Mass., a city of 93,000 residents 10 miles south of Boston. Money started missing, more pills started missing, and that s when he admitted to me -- he said, Mom, I ve been taking OxyContin, Holler said, referring to another widely prescribed painkiller. That led to heroin, eventually. After years battling his addiction one night four years ago, Brendan experienced a heroin overdose. Brendan was face down on my bathroom floor, and he was blue, and he had fallen between the toilet and the wall, and I couldn t lift him up. That night paramedics saved Brendan s life with an injection of naloxone hydrochloride, better known as Narcan. The drug reverses overdoses from opioids -- heroin and painkillers derived from opium. It s been available to para
stanley cups medics and doctors in hospital emergency rooms for three decades, and more recently, in an easier-to-use nasal spr Opfg Miami Motorists Rated Rudest
Last week a Russian rocket called Proton-M exploded over a spaceport in Kazakhstan just seconds after it launched. Turns out, we can blame some dumb humans for the blast鈥攊nvestigators found t
stanley cup hat the rocket angular velocity sensors had been installed upside down.
https://gizmodo/a-russian-rocket-just-exploded-over-kazakhstan-as-it-l-643668107 According to a report, when sifting through the wreckage, investigators discovered that
stanley water bottle these key parts鈥攃alled DUS鈥攚ere put into place incorrectly, even though they had arrows on them showing which way was up and which was down. The result The flight control system was getting the wrong information about the rocket position, and when it tried to correct, it swung out of control and exploded. Apparently, the person culpable for the debacle was an inexperienced technician, and his work hadn ;t been double-checked, the report said. And even if it had launched successfully, there probably would have been more problems because the wonky DUS still haven ;t explained what appeared to be an engine fire when the rocket took off. Fortunately, the only casualties were three navigation satellites; no humans on the ground were injured. But it not th
stanley vaso e first time a Proton-M rocket has malfunctioned鈥攊t happened once in 2007 and again in 2010. So while we can ;t be sure if we won ;t see an accident again, at least one engineer has probably learned a very embarrassing lesson. [RussianSpaceWeb via AmericasSpace]