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Thousands queue across Merseyside for coronavirus test centres
Winding queues of people have been spotted across Merseyside as people rush for pre-Christmas covid tests
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Liverpool testing sites reach ‘hard to reach’ young people
Two new testing sites in Liverpool have helped reach young people who have been reluctant to come forward for testing, the city council says.
The Liverpool ONE walk-in centre and Liverpool Town Hall both opened their doors on Saturday 5 December and offer Lateral Flow Tests to Christmas shoppers who are not experiencing COVID-19 symptoms.
To date more than 6,500 have been tested in Liverpool ONE, and more than 2,160 in Liverpool Town Hall. The data also reveals that the test centres are managing to attract the 18-29 year old demographic, which have been previously classed as a ‘hard to reach’ group in the city.
Thousands of Christmas shoppers praised for helping tackle coronavirus
Young people coming forward as city battles to keep on top of the virus
Two new sites at Liverpool ONE and at Liverpool Town Hall opened this month
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Goodison Park, a Greyhound Stadium and Walton Hall Park
Everton and the Rise, Fall and Revival of Women’s Football
This December marks a centenary of one of the most significant football matches played at Goodison Park – but it did not involve Everton FC.
The participants were Preston’s Dick, Kerr Ladies FC and their St. Helens counterparts. The festive season match, in front of a record crowd for a women’s match, suggested that the women’s game was on the way to establishing itself as a mainstream spectator sport. 15 years later Dick, Kerr Ladies - rebadged as Preston Ladies - were back in the city, but were consigned to playing in a greyhound stadium. In spite of the presence of Dixie Dean, the crowd size was only a fraction of the one present at Goodison in 1920. How did this come to pass?