Restaurant dining rooms open up more as Lane County enters moderate risk
The loosened restrictions also allow for six people to sit at one table at a time. Outdoor capacity is also raised to 150 people with eight people per table.
Posted: Mar 12, 2021 8:05 PM
Updated: Mar 12, 2021 8:25 PM
Posted By: Connor McCarthy
EUGENE, Ore. Lane County officially lowered to the moderate risk category Friday, allowing restaurants to open up their dining rooms to 50% capacity.
The loosened restrictions also allow for six people to sit at one table at a time. Outdoor capacity is also raised to 150 people with eight people per table. Nick Larsen, the co-owner of the Tap and Growler in Eugene said he s delighted the county is one step closer to be fully reopened.
Braintree Printing and Peczuh Printing Start 2021 with New Heidelberg Finishing Installations
Facebook Facebook
From left: Paul Shaver, Heidelberg service technician; Tom Cummings, Heidelberg account manager; Mike Lima, Braintree Printing operator; Jose Tafur, Braintree Printing owner; Jim Corliss, Braintree Printing marketing manager.
Looking to streamline efficiencies throughout their plants, print shops nationwide are turning to Heidelberg’s commercial postpress solutions to upgrade their aging finishing equipment. Both installed in January 2021, the new POLAR 115 cutter at Braintree Printing in Braintree, MA and the new Stahlfolder Ti 36 at Peczuh Printing in Price, UT are significantly improving the productivity and throughput of both companies.
Relief and disbelief as Biden takes oath, sets new tone
Jenna Johnson, Claire Gibson, Kathleen McLaughlin and Andrea Eger, The Washington Post
Jan. 20, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail 5
1of5Rubia Garcia, 34, of New Orleans, wipes away tears as her boyfriend, Nick Larsen, 30, of Wisconsin, embraces her while they watch the inauguration of Joe Biden as the 46th president on Garcia s phone on a street near the U.S.Capitol on Wednesday. The public had been discouraged from traveling to Washington for the inauguration.Washington Post photo by Amanda VoisardShow MoreShow Less
2of5Alice Boyer sits outside her home in Helena, Mont., on Wednesday after watching the inauguration on television. It feels like a weight has kind of lifted, Boyer said of the change in the presidency.Photo by Louise Johns for The Washington PostShow MoreShow Less
Chaotic protests haven't returned to Kenosha after a prosecutor declined charges against the police officer who shot Jacob Blake, and some who backed demonstrations following the August shooting say they're concerned about safety in a week extremists stormed the U.S. Capitol.
December 18, 2020
1221
THOMASTON Joan Ann “Magda” Mulhearn (McDermott), 94, of Thomaston, passed away on Dec. 5, 2020, after a long illness. She passed peacefully in her sleep during a brief admission at Cook-Willow Health Center.
Joan was preceded in death by her parents, George R. McDermott and Ann Marie Tiedemann, husband Francis X. “Pat” Mulhearn, and sister Patricia F. Mitchell.
Joan is survived by three children, Ann Marie Mulhearn Sayer, Francis X. “Frank” Mulhearn, Joan Louise Mulhearn-Neumann, and Joan Louise’s husband, Robert Neumann, whom Joan lovingly referred to as a “second son”; grandchildren Katherine Grace Larsen, Emily Wasley, Mary Jane Neumann-Cayton, and Patrick Neumann; and seven great-grandchildren, Claire, Ben, Sam and Nick Larsen, Dashiell and Milo Wasley, and Theo Cayton.