
Massachusetts man mistakenly buys extra Powerball ticket, wins $2 million
Paul Corcoran, a Fitchburg resident, bought two separate Powerball tickets for the July 9 drawing that each won $1 million before taxes. The first was bought at a Fitchburg Market Basket, and the second came from Country Farms on North Main Street in Leominster.
The Massachusetts State Lottery explained that Corcoran purchased the second Powerball ticket without realizing that the "multi-draw" ticket he had bought earlier already covered him for last Wednesday's drawing.
"Corcoran noted that he initially bought a ticket for seven Powerball drawings and mistakenly thought the final drawing on that ticket had already occurred, leading him to purchase another multi-draw ticket that also included the July 9 drawing," the Lottery said in a statement.
Corcoran's tickets both matched every winning number, except for the Powerball. The winning numbers for the July 9 drawing were 5-9-25-28-69 with a Powerball number of 5.
Corcoran, who claimed his prizes at Lottery headquarters on Friday, told the Lottery that the wins "feel good," but he hasn't decided how to spend the money yet. The stores that sold the winning tickets will each get a $10,000 bonus.
No one has won the Powerball jackpot recently, which is up to $264 million for the July 16 drawing. Powerball tickets are $2 per play, and drawings take place every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday night.
The chances of winning any Powerball prize are 1 in 24.9. The odds of hitting the jackpot are 1 in 292.2 million.
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Starting in the coming school year, researchers say there will be dramatically fewer high school graduates available to fill the country's higher-ed classrooms, stemming from a decline in birth rates that started around the 2008 financial crisis. Meanwhile, more than 10,000 people are turning 65 each day in the US. By 2050, the number of older adults is expected to reach 88 million people and make up more than 20% of the country's population, exceeding those under 18. Higher education's shrinking student base has already forced at least 40 US colleges to announce plans to shut down since 2020, and experts predict as many as 80 more schools may find themselves in the same situation in coming years, under a worst-case drop in enrollment. On the other side of the divide, the rising tide of seniors is placing more urgency on the need for housing to accommodate the oncoming 'silver tsunami,' with current trendlines pointing to a supply-demand imbalance of worrisome proportions. 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Since then, different iterations have blossomed across the US, from communities such as Lasell Village, which are on campus and require residents to agree to log 450 hours of learning each year, to those with looser affiliations. Some, like University of Alabama's Capstone Village community, are also on campus and have official partnerships with the university, but don't require residents to partake in programming. Others are simply located near a campus and share a less-formal connection with a university, like Legacy Pointe just off the main University of Central Florida campus. Schools often receive revenue through a land lease, royalty agreement or management contract. In rarer instances, they set up full or partial ownership of the retirement communities, sometimes through separate nonprofit organizations. Lasell Village was the brainchild of former President Tom de Witt, who landed on senior living as a way to leverage Lasell University's valuable land and bring another source of income onto its struggling balance sheet. With insolvency closing in, de Witt proposed transforming an unused parcel of land near the edge of campus as a place for retirees. It opened in 2000. 'I had to take Lasell Junior College literally out of bankruptcy,' he said in an interview, 'or there would be nothing here now.' Some abandoned campuses have been transformed into senior-living communities. That was the case for Newbury College in Boston, which shuttered in 2019, bowing to 'weighty financial challenges' driven by low enrollment and higher expenses. In the 20 years leading up to Newbury's closure, its headcount dropped from more than 5,300 students to about 600. Kisco Senior Living opened The Newbury of Brookline, an upscale senior living center on the closed college's campus, in December 2024. 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