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Limerick s Live 95
Search By Live95 News Team Adrian McNamara, the husband of Limerick’s Euromillions winner Dolores McNamara has died.
Mr McNamara, who was in his late 60s, passed away peacefully on Thursday morning at his son Lee s home.
The McNamara family are originally from Patrick’s Road in Limerick city but moved to Kilalloe in County Clare after Dolores won what was a record-breaking Euromillions jackpot at the time of €115 million in 2005.
The family suffered from intense media scrutiny at the time with the win becoming public news very quickly when Dolores discovered her €2 Quickpick ticket was the winner while socialising with friends at the Track Bar in Garryowen.
The underground COVID economy: Businesses say they sidestepped rules to survive [Los Angeles Times :: BC-CORONAVIRUS-UNDERGROUND:LA]
The businesses appeared closed, but there were telltale signs of life: light seeping out from behind boarded-up windows, customers coming and going through employee entrances, Instagram posts alluding to in-home appointments.
The COVID-19 shutdown orders imposed in March and again during the holidays crippled large swaths of the California economy. But even before an easing of restrictions announced this week by Gov. Gavin Newsom, some business owners continued to carry on covertly. In Los Angeles and other counties with forced closures, you could still get your nails done and your hair trimmed, practice Pilates inside a studio and eat a restaurant meal with a group of friends no takeout containers involved.
Some L.A. Businesses Survive on Underground COVID Economy As Gov. Newsom enacted statewide stay-at-home orders that closed and restricted businesses for months, some business owners had to sidestep the rules to make ends meet while risking costly fines and contracting COVID. Andrea Chang, Los Angeles Times | January 27, 2021 | Analysis
(TNS) The businesses appeared closed, but there were telltale signs of life: light seeping out from behind boarded-up windows, customers coming and going through employee entrances, Instagram posts alluding to in-home appointments.
The COVID-19 shutdown orders imposed in March and again during the holidays crippled large swaths of the California economy. But even before an easing of restrictions announced this week by Gov. Gavin Newsom, some business owners continued to carry on covertly. In Los Angeles and other counties with forced closures, you could still get your nails don