All Together NOW! October-November 2018

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YOUR USUAL NEWSPAPER IS INSIDE

‘We want to help even more people STEVE MORGAN CBE

OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2018

EVIE’S TRIKE WORKS WONDERS

CAN WE HELP YOU?

www.stevemorganfoundation.org.uk

Steve Morgan Foundation

MATT’S STUDENT LIFE  JUST GETS BETTER

NEW HORIZONS FOR DIMITRI

@stevemorganfdn

Tel 01829 782808


SUCCESSFUL!

We want to help even more people

Do YOU need a vital piece of equipment?

JULIE’S ALL-TERRAIN POWER CHAIR

HAND-PROPELLED TRIKE FOR AMELIA

CLAIRE’S ‘ORCAM’ EYE ASSISTANCE DEVICE

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STEVE MORGAN CBE

CHANGIN OR SEVENTEEN years the Steve Morgan Foundation has been changing lives for the better for people right across Merseyside, Cheshire, North Shropshire and North Wales.

So far, more than £300m has been committed for projects that help children and families, people with physical or learning disabilities, the elderly, or those who are socially disadvantaged. Now, through the Foundation’s innovative ENABLE programme, even

greater numbers of people are being given specialised equipment that cannot be supplied by the NHS or Social Services. Steve Morgan CBE, founder of the Steve Morgan Foundation, said: “There are many people in financial hardship who are not getting equipment they need. Items such as wheelchairs, buggies, communication aids, special beds - all the things that can make a huge difference to the quality of lives for these families. “This is why we are so excited and

extremely proud of our Enable programme. We have already helped lo of people. Now we want to help even more people.” Karen Charles, Enable Funding Offic with the Steve Morgan Foundation, sa “To be eligible for support, applicants must live in Merseyside, Cheshire (we of M6), North Wales and North Shropshire. “However, we must point out that the grants are discretionary and, sadly, we will be unable to grant every request.”

All powered up for action

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WENTY-FOUR year old Connor is all powered-up for an active autumn, thanks to an Enable grant from the Steve Morgan Foundation.

Connor was diagnosed with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy at the age of four, has been a wheelchairuser since 11 – but still manages to live independently with a 24-hour package of care. His previous wheelchair was proving uncomfortable and causing him pain, and an Enable grant of £12,500 has contributed towards the new Quantum Q6 Edge 2 powered chair. “I feel more safe, more secure and, above all, more comfortable,” he says. “I am now able to get out more. “I can’t thank the Steve Morgan Foundation enough – they do amazing work and I am very grateful.” Karen Charles, Enable Funding Officer with the Steve Morgan Foundation, said: “Unfortunately, the NHS was unable to provide Connor with the new powered chair which would better meet his needs and reduce the pain he was suffering.”

www.stevemorganfoundation.org.uk

Steve


COOL, JACK!

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WE ACCEPT APPLICATIONS FROM PEOPLE LIVING IN . . . Merseyside, Cheshire, North Shropshire and North Wales

Walking back to happiness

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N all-terrain walking aid – provided by an Enable grant from the Steve Morgan Foundation – is making a real difference to a man suffering from a progressive neurological disorder.

It is important for Bo, 56, to take regular exercise, and the Veloped walker enables him to get out and about safely in the countryside near his home in Criccieth, North Wales “It’s absolutely brilliant,” says Bo. “It has given me so much more freedom and independence. “This morning I was sitting in a small park under a tree, simply enjoying the beautiful quietness. “The park was accessed by a narrow path on rough terrain, and without the Veloped I just would not have been able to get there. “The vibrations of the previous contraption I used were painful, and the small, hard wheels weren’t suited to any outdoor use, let alone an uneven path.” “I just want to say thanks a million for the support of the Steve Morgan Foundation for this wonderful walking aid.”

Morgan Foundation

@stevemorganfdn

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HE family of a young boy from Shotton who has been supported by the Steve Morgan Foundation say his life has been “enriched” by a new state-of-the-art wheelchair.

Jack Gerrard, aged six, suffers from Angelman Syndrome, a severe genetic disorder that affects the nervous system, as well as epilepsy, and his NHS-funded wheelchair was unable to offer sufficient head or posture support. But a new state-of-the-art wheelchair, donated by the Steve Morgan Foundation’s Enable programme which provides specialised disability equipment, has made Jack far more comfortable and left him feeling “proud as punch”. “Due to his condition, Jack has never taken a step without support and struggles with balance and gait issues,” says mum, Cheryl. “He also has epilepsy and this is the biggest worry for us. “The wheelchair provided by the Steve Morgan Foundation gives Jack the utmost comfort, whilst making him feel happy, secure and safe. “I’m sure he also feels proud as punch as he cruises around the school and streets! He is the coolest boy on the block! “He is the envy of the local kids and knowing he is so comfortable makes life easier for the whole family.” Jane Harris, Director Regional Grants of the Steve Morgan Foundation, said: “Jack is such a happy little boy, and when he came to our Christmas party and met Steve in December, he couldn’t stop dancing away in the wheelchair. “We are keen to help other people of all ages with specialised disability equipment via our Enable programme, and are also prepared to work with other organisations to help with funding when required.”

n For more details of the criteria for Enable grants, contact us on (01829) 782808 – see back page.



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Can YOU help? n All Together NOW! is a registered charity set up to provide a tip top news service for anyone whose life is affected by disability, long-term health condtions or age. n The charity – the only one of its kind in the UK – relies entirely on support from its sponsors, advertisers, subscriptions and donations.

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Bikers sow the seeds . . .

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GROUP of ‘cyclists’ from Halton Council’s day services pedalled the distance of Wainwright’s Coast to Coast walk to raise funds for a sensory garden.

But instead of taking the long trek to the Lakes for the gruelling ride, the team of pedlers used three stationary spinning bikes at the Kingsway Leisure Centre in Widnes. The goal was to ride 192 miles in

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a day. But the cyclists were spinning from 9am until 5.30pm – clocking up 233 miles and raising £800. Organiser Phil Burrows, said: “The day was a huge success with 24 cyclists spinning for their lives. “Customers using Kingsway were dropping money into buckets and cheering people on. The spinning music was provided by Lynn Hillyer, our DJ, which gave everyone that extra motivation to

do the extra mile. I would like to thank Asda Community for providing dried and fresh fruit and water to keep everyone’s energy up and hydrated. “And also a big thanks to the staff at Kingsway for allowing us to use their venue and bikes.” The cash goes towards a sensory garden at Runcorn’s Independent Living Centre. n video lnk: www.youtube. com/watch?v=nwDYCyl7YDo

LECTIONS will be more accessible for people with disabilities, the Government has announced. A list of recommended actions to help deliver on this commitment have been published. But campaigners are furious, saying not a single new measure to improve access has been included in Government plans . . .

VOTING: will it be easier?

THE Government’s new report on access to voting includes a summary of about 250 responses to a call for disabled people’s views on voting and registering to vote. But of the 17 “actions” suggested by the Cabinet Office in its report, 13 state only that the government will “consider”, “reconsider” or “discuss” taking certain actions. They include asking advisers to consider what outreach services could be provided to support disabled people in care homes to vote. Another action is “to continue to consider the needs of disabled people when implementing changes to election or electoral registration processes”.

By JOHN PRING

Of the four that are not just considering further action, two call for the promotion of existing guidance or the use of existing equipment, one is to ensure effective training of polling station staff, and the other is a call for a review of existing guidance. Deborah King, co-founder of Disability Politics UK, said the report was “pathetic”. She said: “The Government response shows the huge political inertia which exists in relation to disability and political rights. “The government could develop an online training course on disability and voting rights. “All staff working in polling stations and electoral services

could be required to take the training. “The training course could be developed before Christmas.” There was further anger after the Minister for the Constitution, Chloe Smith, said in announcing the report: “Every voice matters and this government is going to take action to ensure that disabled people have their voices heard.” This came only days after Disability News Service had revealed how Sarah Newton, the minister for disabled people, had refused to meet a coalition of disabled people’s organisations (DPOs) to discuss how much progress the UK has made in implementing the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

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DISABLED and ethnic minority people’s careers are at risk because employers are failing to collect meaningful data on representation in the workforce, the national equality body warns. The Equality and Human Rights Commission is calling for mandatory reporting on staff recruitment, retention and promotion by disability and ethnicity. And it has published research that shows most employers fail to collect this data or do so inconsistently. The research found that while a clear majority (77%) of employers say that ensuring workforce diversity is a priority for their organisation: n Less than half (44%) record or collect data on whether employees are disabled or not. n Even fewer (23%) collect data on staff pay and progression that can be broken down by ethnicity and disabled and nondisabled staff. n Just over half of that say they face barriers to collecting this data, including that it is too intrusive and onerous. Commenting on the report, TUC General Secretary Frances O’Grady said: “TUC research found that disabled workers earn a whopping £2,730 a year less than their nondisabled peers, and we also know that significant pay gaps persist for black workers. So it’s good to see the EHRC recommending tough action. “New rules to make bosses reveal gender pay gaps have helped to shine a light on the problem. “A similar move to require employers to publish their disability and race pay gaps – along with the actions they will take to close them – would be a step in the right direction.”


Fitting tribute for James

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

October/November 2018

his condition. Shortly All Together NOW! is all afterwards he revealed he about highlighting was also battling cancer. inspirational stories of “Time has probably run people who are trying to out for me,” he said, “but I make a difference – even want every other person when they are battling being born with EB not only serious illnesses and to get to their 24th birthday having to cope with severe but know they have another disabilities. 30 or 40 years ahead of People such as 24-year-old them, not like me, getting to photographer James Dunn. my 24th birthday and James, from Whiston, had knowing it might be one of epidermolysis bullosa, a my last. condition that causes the skin “I am too young to pass to blister and tear at the away with this condition and slightest touch. I don’t want to. I want to For James this meant fight and beat EB.” having to have bandages Sadly, James died in April. changed every day. His also Deservedly, James’s relied on his dad to help him amazing achievements to operate his cameras. were recognised at the Two years ago he was James Dunn with TV presenter Simon Reeve, left, and designer Jude Pullen recent Liverpool Echo’s featured on BBC 2’s The Big behind for other people to look at. I want Outstanding Achievement awards, at Life Fix, a programme in which engineers people to remember that this is what I which judges paid tribute to his designed an app to enable James to take enjoyed and this is where I found remarkable bravery, his brilliant his own photographs. happiness.” fundraising and campaigning – and his “It was amazing and life-changing,” he Last year James launched the £500,000 extraordinary skills as a photographer. said. “While I’m here I’m having fun, FightEB campaign to help find a cure for Our thoughts are with his family. making memories and leaving something

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Exciting hopes for paralysed people

THE Spinal Injuries Association has welcomed the news that three American patients, all paralysed from the waist down, have been able to walk again after having an electrical patch fitted to their spinal cords. The device, placed below the level of injury, helps lost signals from the brain reach the muscles – but only when the stimulation is switched on. Neurosurgeon Dr Kendall Lee, who co-led the team from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said: “It’s very exciting, but still very early in the research stage.” Dave Bracher, from the SIA, said: “This breakthrough offers the genuine possibility that the lives of many thousands of spinal cord injured people could be transformed in the years ahead.” But he warned that spinal cord injured people’s immediate needs must be met as a priority. He said: “Although walking and mobility may be the most visible aspect of being spinal cord injured, it’s just one of a great many immediate challenges that face people after they’ve had a spinal cord injury. “Dealing with the psychological effects of injury, social isolation and continuing widespread discrimination as well as medical issues such as managing essential bladder and bowel function all have an impact on spinal cord injured people’s lives that in many ways are at least as great as issues with walking.” n SIA, tel 01908 604191

The Buzz word

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EET two of our all-important drivers who ensure the 100,000 copies of your FREE and favourite charity newspaper reach our hundreds of stockists across the North West. “It’s a labour of love,” says Ken Almond, above, who also helps with our

IT and photography needs. “I’ve been here since the start – back in 2005 – and it just keeps getting better. Hopefully, we’ll be doing this for many years to come!” Meanwhile, Alan Evans, right, is also seeing how much All Together NOW! is helping people. “I’ve only been delivering the paper since the spring,

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but I can’t get over how much people look forward to picking up a copy. In some stores and hospitals, readers are actually waiting for me to arrive! It’s great.” Our colourful van was donated by the Steve Morgan Foundation. n We are always on the look out for new stockists. Contact us on 0151 230 0307.

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YOUNG people with disabilities in Cheshire are getting a real buzz out of their local youth groups. BUZZ groups provide everything from wilderness survival skills to cookery classes, theatre trips and annual residential trips for young disabled people aged five to 18. Now Cheshire Centre for Independent Living is expanding the BUZZ groups to another four locations – making eight in total across the county. BUZZ Youth Groups are now available in Ellesmere Port, Neston, Frodsham, Malpas, Northwich, Wilmslow, Macclesfield and Crewe. n CCIL tel 01606 331 853

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NEWS

October/November 2018

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Six months’ driving ban for parking bay cheat AN IRISH judge has banned a motorist from driving for six months – and imposed a €750 fine – after his car was found parked in a disabled parking space in Ennis, Co Clare. Judge Patrick Durcan said: “Parking bays for disabled people are provided for by local authorities for a particular purpose and thankfully today, we have modern technology and engineering that enables disabled people to use motor vehicles.” Judge Durcan said that to add further to his attitude, Mr Ryan has not bothered to turn up in court. Disability rights campaigner Dermot Hayes welcomed the judge’s ruling. He said: “We are sick and tired of drivers abusing these designated spaces for disabled parking. We have fought long and hard to get designated parking spaces in towns and villages. “In some cases, motorists don’t give a damn. Traffic wardens should be given the power to clamp the cars concerned.”

Lego clubs are all talk

LEGO clubs are being used to help autistic young people to talk to people. The clubs consist of three members – engineer, supplier and builder – who can only complete the model by using verbal and non-verbal interaction to work together. Speech and language therapist Kristina Doran, who runs Lego clubs in two mainstream high schools in Edinburgh, said: “We have definitely seen positive progress, with some young people’s vocabularies improving

Sign language ‘disgrace’

DEAF people are being exposed to potentially life-threatening situations as a result of Government policy, a new union report claims. Unite’s “A Dossier of Disgrace” report highlights how in some cases no interpreters have been provided for child protection meetings, court and medical appointments, while deaf defendants in court cases have been misrepresented by inexperienced interpreters. The National Union of British Sign Language Interpreters, part of Unite, warns of a shortage of skilled British Sign Language/English interpreters. Unite national officer Siobhan Endean said: “British Sign Language interpreters provide an essential service. “This support is now at breaking point because of the Government’s ill-judged introduction of national framework agreements which has let agencies move in and put profit before people.”

MORE BADGES ON THE WAY

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OTORISTS with hidden disabilities, including autism and mental health conditions will soon be eligible for Blue Badges – removing the barriers to travel many face.

The Blue Badge scheme enables those with physical disabilities to park closer to their destination than other drivers, as they are less able to take public transport or walk longer distances. It will extend to those with less visible conditions early next year. Although people with non-physical disabilities are currently not excluded from receiving a Blue Badge, the rules are open to interpretation. The new criteria will

Parking permits for drivers with hidden disability

extend the eligibility to people who: n Cannot undertake a journey without there being a risk of serious harm to their health or safety or that of any other person (such as young children with autism) n Cannot undertake a journey without it causing them very considerable psychological distress n Have very considerable difficulty when walking (both the physical act and experience of walking)

The changes follow an eight-week consultation and are part of the Government’s drive for greater parity between physical and mental health conditions. The new criteria will give clear and consistent guidelines. Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work Sarah Newton said: “We’re taking an important step forward in ensuring people with hidden disabilities get the support they need to live independently.” Jane Harris, Director of External Affairs at the National Autistic Society, said: “This will make a massive difference to many of the 600,000 autistic people in England, and their families.”

Government ‘forced’ to make changes

CAMPAIGNERS say the Government was forced into the blue badge changes because of its previous decision to tighten the rules in 2014. Linda Burnip, co-founder of Disabled People Against Cuts, said the way the changes had been presented had been “a complete lie”. And the Disability News Service reported: “The consultation had only been necessary because of a judicial review legal case taken on behalf of an autistic man with learning difficulties. “David (not his real name), who has since died, had had a blue badge for 30 years but was told by his local council that he no longer qualified because of new DfT rules. “His family took legal action against the Government and his local council because of new guidance issued by DfT in October 2014, after the Government had begun to replace disability living allowance (DLA) with the new personal independence payment (PIP) benefit the previous year.

“DfT was forced to settle the judicial review claim in 2016 by agreeing to review the new Blue Badge guidance. It was that review that led to this year’s consultation – which heard from more than 6,000 individuals and more than 230 organisations – and the announcement of changes to the scheme.” Ms Burnip said: “Until the changes were brought in with PIP, people in receipt of higher rate DLA mobility component always qualified for a blue badge.” She said the changes were “forced through” by the legal action, which was taken by a DPAC supporter. However, Sarah Lambert, head of policy at National Autistic Society, said the changes went further than correcting the problems introduced in 2014 and that NAS had been campaigning for blue badge eligibility to be widened for several years before 2014. She said: “However, we recognise that we haven’t acknowledged the role of the legal case in bringing about change, and we will add this detail to the news story on our website.”

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Chaos ahead, warns motoring charity

EXTENDING the Blue Badge scheme could have disastrous consequences for all badge holders, especially wheelchair users, say Disabled Motoring UK. The charity says there is simply not enough parking to meet demand and concessions could soon disappear because of increased numbers. In a statement, DMUK says: “There is no argument that people with hidden disabilities will benefit. DMUK also supports this group of disabled people. “However, the increase in demand may make the entire scheme not fit for purpose and it may let down the people it was originally intended to help as well as disabled people with hidden disabilities. “DMUK advised the DfT to consider proper enforcement of the scheme before it looked to extend it. However, we have been unsuccessful in this recommendation. “The charity predicts we will be contacted more and more by disabled people who find their Blue Badge completely meaningless as they can never find adequate parking because it will be so oversubscribed. “We implore the Government to look at the issue of proper Blue Badge provision and enforcement as a matter of urgency so that the scheme maintains its integrity.” Graham Footer, DMUK CEO, added: “We are particularly concerned about how this will impact on wheelchair users. DMUK would like to see the Government put more pressure on local authorities to enforce the scheme to make sure it benefits genuine Blue Badge holders.”


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For more than 50 years Park Christmas Savings have been helping people to do just that! Their high street vouchers and Christmas savings schemes have been real winners for hundreds of thousands of people all over the country. Their mouth-watering Christmas hampers have also been a massive hit with our readers. Now here’s your chance to win their top of the range Empire hamper, worth £562.50 It’s the TENTH successive year that Park have teamed up with All Together NOW! to make Christmas very special for one lucky reader. This monster of a hamper contains a huge amount

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NEWS

October/November 2018

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Wheelchair warning for coach companies

COACH operators will face tough action if they don’t comply with the law on the use of wheelchairs in vehicles, warns the Government’s Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency. The key requirements are: n To ensure that wheelchair users can use available wheelchair spaces, including those that require the removal, folding or tipping of other seats; and not to require passengers who use wheelchairs to book any further in advance than passengers who don’t. n Simply put, if a wheelchair space is available, wheelchair users must be able to use it, even if they buy a ticket on the day. n Coach operators should ensure all their staff – from drivers to ticketing and contact centre staff – know the law, too. Gareth Llewelyn, DVSA Chief Executive, said: “We’re currently investigating a number of cases where drivers, ticketing staff and even coach company call centres seem to be unaware of the law. So we’re working with the Confederation of Passenger Transport to put the record straight.” n Some coaches are not required to have wheelchair spaces until 1 January 2020. If a service is completely full, existing passengers are not required to allow the wheelchair space to be used, but if it’s not, then the driver should ask other passengers who do not have a legitimate need of the wheelchair space to move to alternative seats.

How to spot a liar...

PEOPLE with autism are at greater risk of being exploited because they can’t spot a liar, say experts. A new study shows the ability to distinguish truth from lies is diminished in people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). That ability is “significantly diminished” in those with a full ASD diagnosis. It is also related to how many ASD traits people in the general population have – the more traits they had, the poorer their deception detection ability, researchers found. Professor David Williams, of Kent’s School of Psychology, and researchers from four other universities in the UK and US conducted experiments with participants exhibiting varying degrees of ASD and compared them to those who were deemed “neurotypical” or not displaying autistic patterns of thought or behaviour. He suggested that limited social engagement among people with ASD, as well as neurotypical people with a high number of ASD traits, may result in a failure to learn the social cues that indicate deceit. The researchers said it was important to consider training individuals with ASD to detect behaviour that indicates lying, adding that it would “represent a significant opportunity to enhance the lives of people who are clearly susceptible to exploitation.”

Showstoppers!

DaDaFEST STARS: Sarah Fisher and comedian Francesca Martinez, inset,

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aDaFest International returns this autumn showcasing a series of highquality work that challenges stereotypes and celebrates disability and D/deaf cultures.

Comedian Francesca Martinez, theatre-maker and comedian Jess Thom, Stop Gap Dance Company, artists Faith Bebbington, Jonathan Griffith, Simon McKeown and Martin O’Brien, and multi-instrumentalist Sarah Fisher are among the line-up. They are part of a busy programme that includes more than 50 exhibitions, performances, talks and workshops by both well-known mainstream audience artists and new emerging artists, all responding to the festival’s theme Passing: What’s your legacy? Artists have been invited to explore the concepts of ageing, death and disability (passing time) and the changing nature of all our journeys and the legacies we leave (passing on). The festival will also commemorate the end of the First World War as a key moment for modern recognition of disability as a social construct. Events will be held at a wide range of venues across Liverpool and beyond including St George’s Hall, Royal Court Liverpool, the Bluecoat, Tate Exchange, Constellations, the Unity Theatre and World Museum. Award-winning artist Simon McKeown’s interactive No Passengers vintage disability cars installation will be seen at St George’s Hall from 21 November – 8 December. And this year DaDaFest is also expanding its geographical reach with a performance by the acclaimed Stop Gap Dance Company taking place at Storyhouse Chester.

Visual art is represented by Gina Czarnecki, whose special exhibition of eco-friendly coffins designed by local and national artists Who We Are Now, will be staged in the Oratory in the grounds of Liverpool Cathedral from November 1-18. The Unity will host Jonathan Griffith’s Retrospective throughout the festival period, and the artist will take part in special talks at the theatre on November 20 and in Chester Lane Library in St Helens on November 22. And Martin O’Brien’s video installation, Until The Last Breath is Breathed, comes to St George’s Hall from November 21 – December 8. He will also be doing a performance lecture at the same venue on 29 November. Jess Thom showcases Samuel Beckett’s Not I, the story of a woman’s life told at top speed by a disembodied character, ‘Mouth’, at the Bluecoat on November 23-24. Meanwhile laugh-out-loud comedy comes from Francesca Martinez (What the **** Is Normal) at the Unity Theatre on November 23 and to Chester Lane Library in St Helens on November 24. Laurence Clark will also be live at the Unity on November 24 with The Irresponsible Father’s Guide to Parenting. Finally, DaDaFest team up with Action Transport and Unity Theatre for a seasonal show collaboration, for the highly theatrical and bold retelling of the classic family tale - Beauty and the Beast! DaDaFest artistic director Ruth Gould said: “We have some fantastic, absorbing and thoughtprovoking work developed by hugely talented artists working across a wide range of genres, from dance to visual art, music to comedy.” n Dada, tel 0151 707 1733

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Deaf man to fight jury ban in court

A DEAF campaigner is taking the Government to court after he was stopped from serving on a jury. David Buxton was called up for jury service this year. But after informing officials that he was deaf, Mr Buxton was told he was no longer required. Mr Buxton, who is head of the Action on Disability organisation, is now seeking a judicial review of the Government’s failure to allow him to sit on a jury. His action, which is being funded by the Equality and Human Rights Commission, argues that justice secretary David Gauke is discriminating against him and breaching the Equality Act’s public sector equality duty, and the Human Rights Act. The legal move is aimed at stopping the Government discriminating against users of British Sign Language by preventing them from serving on juries with the assistance of an interpreter. The Ministry of Justice claims that allowing a nonjuror into the jury room during its deliberations breaches common law. But Buxton’s call is backed by the UN committee on the rights of persons with disabilities, which said last September that the UK government should enable BSL-users “to fully and equally participate as jurors in court proceedings”, under article 13 (access to justice) of the UN disability convention. Mr Buxton said: “This judicial review judgment shows how hard it is to protect our rights as Deaf people using BSL as our first or preferred language.” He said that one reasonable adjustment that would solve the problem of the “13th person in the jury room” would be for the court to provide an interpreter in another room while he watched a video relay screen in the jury room.


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October/November 2018

All Together NOW!

7

Changing lives T HE Steve Morgan Foundation aims to make a real difference by changing the lives of thousands of people across the region.

Founded by Steve Morgan CBE in 2001, the Foundation supports projects that help children and families, people with physical or learning disabilities, the elderly, and the socially disadvantaged across North Wales, Merseyside, Cheshire and North Shropshire. More than £30m has so far been awarded to over 650 charities and organisations, and this number will increase dramatically over the coming years after Steve committed £200 million additional funding

to the Foundation in 2017. Enable funding for individuals was also introduced to provide grants for adults and children with disabilities in financial hardship, who require specialised equipment. There are three types of funding available for organisations which fit the application criteria: n Major grants and one-off capital funding for large projects; n Regional grant funding; n Enable funding for specialised equipment, which includes the brand new Smiley Buses. If you need help, contact us – details at the foot of the page.

£3m for diabetes cure

We want to help all the ‘Hugos’ of the world . . .

Fact file

n Type 1 diabetes, which is an autoimmune condition, affects around 400,000 people in the UK; of whom 29,000 are children. n There is currently no cure for Type 1 diabetes, which occurs when a person’s pancreas produces no insulin, a vital hormone that allows the glucose in the blood to enter cells and fuel our bodies. n The UK is currently 6th in the world for the number of new cases of Type 1 diabetes in children and teens below 20 years old, with 4,000 new cases diagnosed each year. n The condition has a life-long impact on those diagnosed, as well as their families and requires complex monitoring and management.

T

HE Steve Morgan Foundation has gifted £3 million to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, an international charity dedicated to finding a cure for people with Type 1 diabetes.

The SMF donation – which is double the previous largest ever received by JDRF in this country – will help fund a research programme that includes artificial pancreas technology, ‘smart’ insulin and immunotherapy. It will also enable the charity to accelerate vital clinical trials and ensures research can be boosted in an attempt to cure Type 1 diabetes, and to enhance current technologies, making them available on the NHS. The donation follows the diagnosis, last year, of SMF founder and chairman Steve Morgan’s seven-year-old stepson, Hugo. Steve, who is also chairman of housebuilders Redrow plc, said: “My wife, Sally, and I have experienced first-hand the tremendous impact that Type 1 diabetes can have on a family. “From the initial stages of Hugo experiencing symptoms to him being diagnosed and finding out how we manage this life-long condition has turned our lives upside down.

BOOST: Karen Addington, JDRF chief executive, with Sally and Steve Morgan

EVERY MUM’S WORST NIGHTMARE – p 19

“Hugo was dangerously ill when we discovered he had Type 1 diabetes — his sugar levels had got to almost 10 times normal. The diagnosis hits you like a ton of bricks, and it is completely life-changing. It’s been a massive learning curve; you’ve got to think about everything you do. “We are in a fortunate position to be able to make a difference, and we hope this

donation will be a significant step towards funding research that we believe will be life changing for all the ‘Hugos’ of the world. “We fully support JDRF’s ambition to improve the lives of people with Type 1 diabetes and one day to eradicate the condition for good. “With an average of 16 people across the UK diagnosed each day, we want to raise

www.stevemorganfoundation.org.uk Tel 01829 782808

awareness of the condition so that other families are informed of the symptoms and treatments for the condition.” Karen Addington, chief executive of JDRF in the UK, said: “This £3 million donation from the Steve Morgan Foundation is an incredible sum of money and a transformational contribution towards our work to eradicate Type 1 diabetes. “We will find the cure – it’s just a question of time, great researchers and generous donors. “Everyone at JDRF is extremely grateful to the Morgans for their interest in, and support of our work and we look forward to a long, productive and collaborative relationship with the Foundation.”

Steve Morgan Foundation

@stevemorganfdn


8

All Together NOW!

WIN! WIN! WIN! A night on Mars!

FOLLOWING last year’s highly successful UK tour, Alex Thomas is back with his spectacular Live on Mars tribute to David Bowie. And we have TWO pairs of tickets to give away for his Manchester and Liverpool gigs. Featuring the electrifying vocals and uncanny likeness of the iconic pop hero, Alex, with a hand picked world-class band, covers Bowie’s 50-year back-catalogue from Space Oddity (1969) to Let’s Dance (1983) and everything in between. Live on Mars lands at Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall on Sunday 18 November, followed the next day at Liverpool Philharmonic Hall. To win a pair of tickets just tell us the decade Bowie launched his career. You can either send your answers on a postcard to All Together NOW! The Bradbury Centre, Youens Way, Liverpool L14 2EP OR enter online at www.alltogethernow.org.uk Please insert BOWIE in the subject line – and remember to include your full address and telephone number, indicate your preferred venue, and tell us where you picked up your copy of All Together NOW! Deadline: Friday 9 November. n Check out this montage of the show: www.youtube.com/watch?v=3unkRGAaWec

MPs fight for access

AUTISTIC MP Jared O’Mara is calling for parliament to be a more accessible place to work. There have been occasions when he has had to leave the Commons chamber because of the atmosphere, and he has only been able to attend one prime minister’s questions since being elected more than a year ago. Mr O’Mara, MP for Sheffield Hallam, also believes the Labour party should have warned him – before they accepted him as a parliamentary candidate – that if he won the seat he might not be able to secure the workplace reasonable adjustments he was used to, and legally entitled to, in his previous job. He said: “I am not planning on being an MP after this term ends. I don’t want to be the last MP with autism and I am certainly not the first MP and I will not be the last to have mental health problems.”

NEWS

October/November 2018

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

PICTURE: NORMAN LOMAX

Why Sue loves plunging the depths

WHEN Sue Austin was 29, she fell ill and had to rely on a wheelchair to get her out and about. But that didn’t stop her from doing an ambitious dive in Egypt’s Red Sea using a specially adapted wheelchair. Sue, 58, was inspired by that experience to challenge perceptions of people with disabilities, and created an immersive art project charting her own positive journey as a wheelchair-user. Her amazing Creating the Spectacle exhibition, which runs at the Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham, until Sunday 25 November, aims to reshape how we think about disability.

Lisa’s dream start

Check out Sue’s ‘Freewheeling’ video at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IIBTTXEt7M

W

HEN you can’t use your arms or legs – and are unable to speak – choreography may not be the obvious career choice.

cerebral palsy, communicates using her self-designed “Simpson Board” – with the support of a trained translator. She said: “I use my transparent eye pointing board and my PA, or whoever is with me at the time, holds it up between But who wants to be obvious . us. I then look at which letters I .? That’s what Lisa Simpson want to say and the translator thinks – and what she practises. says each letter out loud. It Ever since her schooldays sounds more complicated than it Lisa, from Kirkby, Merseyside, is, believe me! dreamed of running her own “I’m so passionate about raising dance business. opportunities for disabled people Well, two years ago that to access dance and dream became a reality. choreography so I think people And now Lisa has presume my work will always staged her first ever feature disabled dancers. professional “But this piece had a particular performance with aesthetic in mind and for that, I non-disabled knew I wanted to work with a dancers. company of non-disabled dance Migratory received professionals who could provide a standing ovations at Migratory features a company of graduate dancers from particular movement quality.” The Dukes Theatre, Edge Hill University in Ormskirk, Lancs. Kate Threlfall After her mini tour ends in Lancaster – and is now on is pictured, left, with Lisa. Rocky Widdowson, Ryan March, Lisa’s next ambition is to a short tour of the North West. Atherton and Rachel Gittins were also among the cast. create two more pieces that will sit “The opening night was so, so along side Migratory and enabling amazing,” said Lisa. show everyone exactly what I can create and her to offer a triple bill to venues. “I still can’t believe my ambition has finally that my work is on a par with any other n Lisa Simpson been achieved. Everyone really enjoyed it, in choreographer, disabled or able-bodied. Some Inclusive fact they want to watch it again!” people even said it could be toured in Dance: 0151 Her work uses hip hop dance styles and Europe.” 548 0204 / 0752 visual art to expore the theme of migration. Lisa, who was born with quadriplegic 5442377 Lisa continued: “It’s so great to be able to

HALF A MILLION READERS . . .


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October/November 2018

All Together NOW!

9

Receive the Warm Home energy discount? You could save on your water bills too If you qualify for the Warm Home Discount as you receive Pension Credit, United Utilities has D VFKHPH SURYLGLQJ LJQDQFLDO VXSSRUW LI \RXàUH KDYLQJ GLDžFXOWLHV ZLWK \RX ZDWHU ELOO SD\PHQWV Called Help to Pay, the scheme is aimed at customers who receive Pension Credit (either Pension Guarantee Credit and/or Pension Savings Credit) and caps your water bill at £250 for the year. Jane Haymes from United Utilities says: “We know that for some of our customers, meeting water bill payments FDQ EH GLDžFXOW LI WKH\ DUH RQ ORZ incomes. “Our Help to Pay scheme is one way in which we help those customers who are most in need of our support. “If you are eligible for the Warm Home Discount from your energy company due to receiving Pension Credit, I would encourage you to give us a call as it’s likely you will also be eligible for our Help to Pay scheme too. “Once accepted onto the scheme, we cap your bill at a reduced amount for the year. Typically, this helps to reduce your water bill by around £200 a year. “When you call, we’ll ask you a few simple questions about your income and outgoings to understand your current LJQDQFLDO VLWXDWLRQ ã 7R LJQG RXW PRUH DERXW WKH +HOS WR 3D\ scheme, call the team on 0800 072 6765. If you receive the Warm Home discount

based on criteria other than Pension Credit, please still give United Utilities a call if you’re struggling with your water payments so they can see if they can help you with your bill through one of their other support schemes. Says Jane: “We really do understand that making ends meet can be stressful sometimes so please call us if you’re struggling with your bill - the sooner you call, the quicker we can help. “For example, if you’re applying for Universal Credit, we can delay your water bill payments for up to eight ZHHNV XQWLO \RXU LJUVW 8& SD\PHQW arrives. “Also, if you’re struggling with your water bill due to losing your job, not able to work in the short term due to illness or injury or having to pay out for an unexpected household emergency, ZH RDŽHU D SD\PHQW EUHDN VFKHPH ZKLFK allows you to delay your payments for an agreed period of time. “Our advice is always to give us a call, rather than ignoring the situation, as we’re always happy to discuss how we FDQ KHOS ã <RX FDQ FRQWDFW WKH DDŽRUGDELOLW\ WHDP at United Utilities on 0800 072 6765.

6XSSRUW ZKHQ \RX need it most :H FDQ DOO EHQHLJW IURP D ELW RI extra help at some stage in our lives. This could be due to age, ill health, disability, mental health problems, LJQDQFLDO ZRUULHV RU ODQJXDJH barriers. Registering for Priority Services is IUHH DQG LW PHDQV \RX ZLOO EHQHLJW from additional services to support your particular needs. Services include: • Braille, large print, ‘talking’ bills DQG OHDLjHWV • Nominate a carer, family member or friend to speak to us on your behalf • Knock and wait service to give you extra time to answer the door if you have mobility needs and we need to visit • Protection from bogus callers with a password protection scheme • Alternative water supplies if your ZDWHU LV OLNHO\ WR EH RDŽ IRU PRUH than 12 hours • Support for dialysis patients • Notice of interruptions to your water supply You can register at XQLWHGXWLOLWLHV com/priorityservices or call our team on 0345 072 6093 09/18/SD/7998


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All Together NOW!

October/November 2018

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

TABLE TALK: Home Instead CAREGiver Catherine prepares a healthy meal with Marjorie, 99. PICTURE: Matt Bristow

Diabetes warning for care homes

CARE homes have been criticised over standards of care for people with diabetes. And experts say urgent steps are needed to restore the health and dignity of older people. A review of multiple studies carried out across 25 years involving residents with diabetes has slammed care home provision saying they often do not meet national standards of diabetes care and staff training is patchy. Professor Alan Sinclair, from the Foundation for Diabetes Research in Older People, said: “Our findings show the level of diabetes care remains fragmented which is quite worrying because figures suggest over a quarter of care home residents are believed to have the condition. “Without proper management, it can lead to frailty, dependency, disability and reduced life expectancy,” added Professor Sinclair, from the University of Aston in Birmingham. The findings also suggested that care homes often lack specialised monitoring, diabetes self-management programmes, regular exercise activities, and most staff have very little knowledge of hypoglycaemia treatment. Jenny Hirst, the co-chair of the InDependent Diabetes Trust, said: “Older people, particularly those with diabetes, are more likely to be admitted to hospital when they are unwell. This is because diabetes can have an additional effect on the illness and the illness can impact on their diabetes. “However, this can be often be avoided if care home staff are trained properly in how to treat diabetes, checking blood sugar levels, identifying when a person is suffering from high or low blood sugar levels and taking the necessary action, quickly and also encouraging light exercise activities.” To help counteract these problems, the researchers have made a series of recommendations for care home staff, health professionals, diabetes organisations and policy makers.

Find your local Carers’ Centre - page 19

You must eat more

B

RITAIN’S over-75s are not eating enough – with one in 10 older people malnourished or at risk of malnutrition.

New research shows one in every two adults over 75 eat smaller meals. And worryingly, nearly three in 10 don’t think they need to eat as much now that they are older. In the YouGov survey, 10% of those questioned said they don’t have as much money to spend on food and 12% thought they were losing weight as a result of getting older. Around 1.3 million older people in the UK are malnourished or at risk of malnutrition – with malnutrition costing the NHS an estimated £19.6 billion a year. The new YouGov survey of adults aged 50+ across Britain, was commissioned by home care provider, Home Instead Senior Care. Previous Home Instead research found more than a quarter of people seeking home care support for elderly relatives were worried about what, how much and with who their relatives were eating – making it their biggest worry. In response to the new findings, Home Instead is launching a national Stay Nourished campaign, designed in consultation with

Bournemouth University’s Ageing and Dementia Research Centre. It will help families and the company’s CAREgivers to understand the importance of nutrition, show them how to spot malnutrition in the elderly, and help dispel misconceptions around diet and appetite as we age. Martin Jones, managing director of Home Instead, which provides home care support for 13,000 older people across the UK, said: “Food and nutrition play such an important role in our wellbeing and health – particularly as we get older.

“Malnutrition is a serious issue, which is compounded by, and exacerbates, other serious health issues often experienced by older people.”

Professor Jane Murphy, Professor of Nutrition at Bournemouth University, said: “It’s a myth to assume that losing weight and becoming frail are an inevitable or natural part of the ageing process. “Malnutrition is largely preventable and treatable, and yet this growing problem for our ageing population is often overshadowed by

Malnutrition a serious issue for over-75s

the health concerns of obesity. It’s important to look out for the signs of unexpected weight loss, for instance clothes or jewellery might feel looser. “Appetite might also change because of illness or as result of social-related problem – so it’s crucial food is tailored to individual need. “And, if someone is eating less this may mean food needs to be fortified with extra calories to promote weight gain, or that they eat smaller meals more often. “Awareness training for care professionals and families will really help them to understand what older people need to eat for their needs and identify malnutrition earlier.” Mr Jones added: “Food and nutrition isn’t just a personal responsibility. We can all help by recognising when someone is struggling to prepare meals themselves, or when they are losing interest in eating. “By knowing what to look out for, and what nutrition requirements look like, we can help ensure our elderly relatives stay nourished and hydrated, keeping them healthy and out of hospital.”

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October/November 2018

11

We’re Electricity North West and we own, operate and maintain the power network from rural Cumbria to urban Manchester. Using less energy can save you money, help the environment and reduces network maintenance and investments costs, saving you even more.

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Energy saving advice Cumbria

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Check your windows, doors and letter box for any draughts and seal any you find.

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Sign up to our Priority Services Register online at: www.enwl.co.uk/priority or call us on 0800 195 4141


All Together NOW!

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October/November 2018

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VISIT: The minister, centre, with Gary and Andrea

TRANSPORT Accessibility Minister Nusrat Ghani took a test drive with a difference – using hand controls. Ms Ghani was visiting Chester Driveability’s centre, one of Driving Mobility’s network of 16 independent organisations, which offer information, advice and driving assessments. During her visit, the minister met Andrea Duckworth, who previously visited North Wales Mobility & Driving Assessment Service to look at options for stowing her scooter in a vehicle. Gary Jones, Chester Driveability’s centre manager, said: “Ms Ghani drove one of our centre’s vehicles, using remote secondary controls and an electric hand-operated accelerator. She was also very interested in the many different adaptations available.” n Tel. 01745 584858.

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Get into gear!

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October/November 2018

All Together NOW!

Special driving section targets young and old

O

N the lookout for a new vehicle or something to make life easier getting in and out of your car?

The annual William Merritt Centre Accessibility exhibition was taking place at Leeds United FC’s Elland Road stadium on Thursday, October 18. There’s a new element to this year’s show – a driving area partnered with Get Going Live and funded via the Department for Transport and the Driving Mobility network. David Blythe, general manager at The William Merritt Centre, said: “We are delighted to be extending our annual assistive technology and equipment exhibition to incorporate an area dedicated to all your vehicle mobility needs with Get Going Live. “This will mean our exhibition will have an

even larger appeal in terms of delivering more options and advice for the needs of disabled adults and attracting a larger audience to include young disabled individuals, older drivers with a newly acquired medical condition and Approved Driving Instructors. “This event is free to attend and is a convenient way to come and try out new

products and see innovations to help you keep up to date.” Expert, friendly, face-to-face advice is available from a selection of companies and the William Merritt Centre team, with help with everything from assessments to discussing the adaptations and vehicles which are right for your needs. n Tel. 0113 350 8989.

13

Autism friendly showrooms

NATIONAL car dealer, TrustFord, is now running a weekly Autism Hour. In all of its UK dealerships, the aim is to create an autism-friendly customer experience. Every Thursday from 10am-11am dealerships will make changes to their environments to make them more accessible to customers with autism. These include turning down music and other noise such as tannoy announcements and workshop noise, and dimming dealership lights. Training will also be given to staff to ensure they know how to best serve customers with autism. Stuart Foulds, chairman and chief executive of TrustFord, said: “It is essential that the automotive industry continually adapts to make itself accessible to all customers, so we hope the industry more widely will make similar commitments.” Research from the National Autistic Society has shown that more than 3m autistic people avoid going to the shops as they find the noise and light overwhelming, as well as feeling socially isolated due to a lack of public understanding of autism.


The walker that TALKS All Together NOW!

14

R

OBOTIC walking frames could help older people recover from a fall or injury,

The electronic walker acts as a “virtual physiotherapist”, encouraging people to be as active as possible and assessing how well they have carried out exercises. It is even fitted with technology enabling it to issue voice commands to patients, persuading them to complete regular activities like going for a walk, gripping, standing and balancing. The robotic frame is also a walking companion, travelling with its patient as they walk prescribed distances, to monitor their progress as well as offer physical support if it’s needed. A team from Northumbria University is helping to develop the frame, as part of a wider European project to design technology that can support our ageing population.

October/November 2018

It is intended to be used in hospitals to begin with, where it would stay by the patient’s bed to encourage them to complete regular mobility and strength exercises – meaning they could potentially leave care earlier. Information gathered by the walker can be fed back to the care team monitoring the patient’s progress. This provides detailed data of walking patterns or gait that would allow the care team to assess if the patient was at risk of future falls. Professor Lynne Coventry, director of Northumbria’s Communication Technology Lab, said: “Mobility is a critical factor when it comes to the aging process. Reduced mobility can have a serious impact on health, and once an older person gets to a certain level of immobility, their decline can really accelerate. “This technology aims to help maintain the mobility of older adults, by

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VIRTUAL PAL: Pauline being shown how to use the robotic walker by researcher Mia Campbell

understanding what goes wrong if they have a fall, encouraging them to be physically active as much as possible, or helping to prevent falls in the first place.” The walker is now being tested with a group of volunteers aged 65 or older at Northumbria University. Retired teacher Pauline, 68, is one of the volunteer testers. She suffers from a number of chronic health issues which impact her agility and mobility, including fatigue and rheumatoid arthritis. She said: “This is exactly the kind of thing I need to keep me moving. It means I don’t have to rely on a professional; instead it can guide me and cope with me being variable in my condition and mobility – which is a big thing. “Keeping active is really important, but as you get older that becomes more difficult. This frame could encourage and enable you to keep on your feet.”

In the pink – that’s Amelia

NINE-year-old Amelia finally has the wheelchair that gives her the independence she longed for. The schoolgirl had been struggling for four years with an NHS wheelchair far too heavy to allow her any real freedom. Amelia, from Knaresborough, north Yorkshire, wanted independence and individuality, but her local NHS Wheelchair Service provider could only offer a larger version of her existing chair. So her family visited Yorkshire Care Equipment, their local mobility shop that specialises in wheelchairs, to see if they had anything better to offer. Yorkshire Care’s showroom advisor Gary Hornsby-Shawe said: “We did a wish list of things she could have in her new wheelchair, and then we set to work arranging it all.” Amelia’s wheelchair was funded by The Lions Club of Knaresborough, the Rotary Club of Knaresborough, the Newlife charity, and a private donor.

Call us: 01423 799960 Look online: www.yorkshirecareequipment.com

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CODE BREAKER! October/November 2018

New glasses to make things easier for blind shoppers

A

NEW barcode recognition feature has been designed to help blind and visually impaired people with their shopping.

The feature will identify tens of thousands of wide-ranging consumer products quickly and easily. An item’s barcode is automatically checked with a pre-loaded database and, if a match is made, the device tells the user the product name and other important information, for example its weight or if the product is a multipack. OrCam Technologies, who develop wearable assistive technology for blind and visually impaired people, has rolled out the barcode recognition feature on its next generation artificial vision device. Users across the UK can now operate the feature on the OrCam MyEye 2.0, harnessing the same technology that also allows the reading of printed and digital text off

l 0151 230 0307

of any surface, and face recognition. The device, which clips on to the wearer’s glasses, uses artificial intelligence software to analyse and communicate visual information through audio. OrCam say they will continue to expand the existing barcode database so that the OrCam can identify an increasing number and range of products. n Price: £3,500. Tel. 0800 358 5323.

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Eye control lets people ‘talk’ again

THE words artificial intelligence are enough to strike a chill into many people’s hearts. Stories warning how robots threaten everything from factory jobs to the existence of the human race dominate the headlines. But artiificial intelligence, or AI, can also be a force for good – like in the case of a revolutionary healthtech device giving a voice to the voiceless. The EyeControl system lets people who are unable to speak to communicate without the use of a screen – something previous solutions have not been able to address. Or Retzkin, head of EyeControl, says it is the world’s first AI-powered, wearable eye-tracking device, enabling immediate 24/7 communication, both for emergency and social purposes. He added: “Individuals are now able to communicate immediately upon waking, while in the bathroom, indoors, outdoors and even while travelling – situations that alternative devices have not been able to accommodate. We hope to inspire a new sense of independence for these individuals.” It works by using a head-mounted infrared camera and a small processing unit that translates eye movements into communication. EyeControl has opened a crowdfunding campaign with the aim of sponsoring devices for people in the UK. The company will match all support from the public to ensure that as many people as possible are gifted an EyeControl device, while ensuring that no cost is incurred by patients. Prices are around £1,000. n www.eyecontrol.co.il/

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SHOPMOBILITY

n ALTRINCHAM . Tel 0161 929 1714 n ASHTON-UNDER-LYNE. Tel 0161 339 9500 n BARROW. Tel 01229 434039 n BIRKENHEAD. Tel 0151 647 6162 n BLACKBURN AND DARWEN. Tel 01254 690566 or 07757 502217 n BLACKPOOL. Tel 01253 349427 n BOLTON. Tel 01204 392946 n CARLISLE. Tel 01228 631564 n CHESTER. Tel 01244 312626 n CHORLEY. Tel 01257 260 888 n COLWYN BAY. Tel 01492 533822 n CREWE. Tel 01270 580 031 n ELLESMERE PORT. Tel 0151 355 1420 n KENDAL. Tel 01539 740 933 n LEIGH, Wigan. Tel 01942 777 985 n LIVERPOOL. Tel 0151 707 0877 n MANCHESTER Trafford Centre. Tel 0161 747 2684 n MANCHESTER Arndale Centre. Tel 0161 839 4060 n NELSON. Tel 01282 692 502 n NORTHWICH, Vale Royal Tel 01606 288820 n OSWESTRY. Tel 01691 656882 n PENRITH. Tel 01768 895 438 n PRESTON. Tel 01772 204 667 n RHYL. Tel 01745 350665 n ROCHDALE. Tel 01706 865 986 n RUNCORN, Halton Lea Tel 01928 710144 n SHREWSBURY. Tel 01743 236900 SKELMERSDALE. Tel 01695 550066 n ST HELENS. Tel 01744 613 388 n STOCKPORT. Tel 0161 666 1100 n WARRINGTON. Tel 01925 240064 n WARRINGTON. Birchwood Tel 01925 822 411 WIDNES: 0151 511 8833 n WIGAN. Tel 01942 776 070 n WINSFORD Tel 01606 557550 n WREXHAM. Tel 01978 312390 MIDLANDS n BIRMINGHAM. Snow Hill Railway Station. Tel 0121 236 8980. Level 2, Centre Car Park, Bullring. Tel 0121 616 2942 n STAFFORD. Tel 01785 619456 n STOKE ON TRENT. Tel 01782 233333 n SUTTON COLDFIELD. Tel 0121 355 1112 n TAMWORTH. Tel, 01827

October/November 2018

WINNERS of our competition to win a pair of super sharp pruning saws from tool experts Darlac are: Ken Taylor, Leigh Way, Weaverham, Northwich (“I picked up my copy at Asda Runcorn”) Maria Perry, Trispen Close, Halewood, Liverpool (St Helens Hospital) E Kilshaw, Plover Avenue, Winsford (Minshull’s Garden Centre) Paul Carter, Poplar Close, Halewood, Liverpool (Whiston Hospital) Lesley Simons, Kingfisher Drive, Winsford (Leighton hospital) Mrs Lorraine McGlashon, Alton Close, Hightown (Tesco Formby) For the full range of Darlac tools and list of stockists, go to www.darlac.com

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Put on your dancing shoes

F

ROGTASTIC – the inclusive dance night for adult clubbers with learning disabilities and friends – celebrates 13 fantastic years of fun at The Frog & Bucket, Oldham Street, Manchester, on Wednesday, October 24.

The club attracts thousands of clubbers from across the North West and beyond. Events are staged in tightly controlled environments that are safe and secure, with the additional comfort of a strict admissions policy. n Tickets, £6, can be reserved from ‘The Heroes Project’

COME AND JOIN US A

BIG thanks to the Big Lottery’s Awards for All team comes from members of this fun-loving group who are helping lots of people affected by amputations. ACSIL – amputees and carers’ support in Liverpool – received almost £10,000 towards running costs and to fund several day trips.

“This funding has been really great,” says Peter Walthew, the group’s treasurer, “and has enabled us to carry on with helping people who are affected by amputations across the region. It’s also helped us to arrange a few fun events at Haydock races, Llandudno, and giving members an exciting day on a barge. Next on the agenda is a trip to Rivington Hall Barn.

“We are always happy to meet new members – and volunteers are especially welcome to help run our busy office!” The group meet every Thursday (10.30am-4pm) at Liverpool Six Community Association’s premises in Queens Road. n Want to get involved? Call them on 0151 261 1166

HELP AT THE END OF A PHONE

n ANGLESEY: TARAN Tel 01407 721933 n BLACKPOOL Disability Information and Support. Tel 01253 472 202. Textphone 01253 476 450 n CHESHIRE CIL Tel 01606 331853 n CHESTER Dial House Tel 01244 345655 n DENBIGHSHIRE Tel 01745 354445 n ELLESMERE PORT

DICE Tel 0151 355 1420 n HALTON Disability Service Tel 01928 717222 n KNOWSLEY DISABILITY CONCERN. 0151 480 4090 n LANCASTER DISC Tel 01524 34411 n LIVERPOOL Association of Disabled People. 0151 263 8366. Text 0151 260 4076 n THE BRAIN CHARITY Tel 0151 298 2999

n MANCHESTER (GTR) Coalition of Disabled People Tel 0161-273 5154 n MOLD Flintshire Disability Tel 01352 755546 n NELSON: Pendle Pakistan Welfare Association. Tel 01282 603 616 n PRESTON DISC: Tel 01772 558 863. Text 01772 204 787 n RHYL Tel 01745 350665

n STOCKPORT: Disability Stockport. 0161 480 7248 n WARRINGTON Disability Partnership. 01925 240064 n WIRRAL WIRED Tel 0151 670 1500 n WEST LANCS HELPLINE Freefone 0800 220676 n ST HELENS DASH Tel 01744 453053

MIDLANDS n BIRMINGHAM Disability Resource Centre Tel 0121 789 7365 n Disabled People’s Network Solihull Tel 0121 788 1544 n STOKE: Disability Solutions Tel 01782 683800 n WOLVERHAMPTON Elder and Disabled Group Tel 01902 448552


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All Together NOW!

October/November 2018

Shed all your stress . . .

THE humble garden shed could very well be the key to better mental health and wellbeing. Liverpool City Council and health and social care charity Person Shaped Support have created the “shed model”, which is now being used at PSS’s urban farm in Garston. One of the specific target groups is men aged between 45 and 60 who may be experiencing mental health

SIR BOBBY’S GOAL C

ALLING all professional sports clubs and other visitor attractions – look what one major British football club is doing for disabled fans.

A new virtual reality tour, the first of its kind in the UK, is letting supporters experience Scottish Championship side Dundee United’s stadium like never before. Home and away fans can navigate their way round the accessible areas of Tannadice Park, see into the changing rooms, “walk” down the tunnel and “run” on to the pitch. Richard Meiklejohn, managing director at OOVIRT, the company that produced the project, said: “Research has shown that disabled people, their families and friends, believe many venues could do more to help disabled people access information they need.”

VISUAL PROBLEMS n ACCRINGTON Tel 01254 233332 n BARROW Tel 01229 820698 n BIRMINGHAM Action for Blind Tel 0121 665 4200 n BLACKBURN Tel 0125 554143 n BLACKPOOL: N-Vision Tel 01253 362696 n BURY Tel 0161 763 7014 n BURNLEY Tel 01282 438507

issues such as anxiety and depression – but anyone who wants to look after their mental health and wellbeing can use it. Nicky McGovern, service manager for PSS’s Wellbeing Centres said: “Spending time in nature can improve your mood, reduce feelings of stress and anxiety and help you feel more relaxedy.” n Want to know more? Call 0151 708 0415 www.psspeople.com

Sir Bobby, right, and Stuart at Old Trafford

FOOTBALLING legend Sir Bobby Charlton continues to inspire people all over the world. The Find a Better Way charity he founded seven years ago has helped thousands of landmine victims. Now the ex-Manchester United and England hero is promoting a new short film that highlights the devastating effects that landmines cause. BBC’s Senior World Affairs producer Stuart Hughes shares his story of working in northern Iraq in 2003, where he triggered a landmine. The blast blew off his right heel and just days later Stuart’s right leg was amputated below the knee. n www.youtube.com/ watch?v=BO9NmM5R8Pw

HELP AT THE END OF A PHONE

n CARLISLE: Action for Blind People Tel 01228 595121 n CHESHIRE & N WALES: Vision Support. Tel 01244 381515 n CUMBRIA (West) Tel 01946 592474 n CUMBRIA (Sth Lakeland) Tel 01539 726613 n GUIDE DOGS Tel 0118 983 5555 n HENSHAW’S 0161 872 234 or 0151 708 7055

n LIVERPOOL: Bradbury Fields.Tel 0151 221 0888: Action for Bind Tel 0151 298 3222 n MANCHESTER: Action for Blind Tel 0161 787 9252 n PRESTON: Action for Blind People Tel 01772 320550 n OLDHAM Tel 0161 682 8019 n ROSSENDALE Tel 01706 873256 n SIGHTLINE (North West) Tel 0800 587 2252

n WIGAN Tel 01942 242891 n WIRRAL Tel 0151 652 8877 HEARING ISSUES n BIRMINGHAM Institute for Deaf Tel 0121 246 6101 n CHESHIRE Deaf Society Tel 01606 47831 n CUMBRIA Deaf Society Tel 01228 606434 n LANCASHIRE (EAST) Deaf Society Tel 01282 839180 n MANCHESTER Deaf Centre. Tel 0161 273 3415

Genie Networks. Tel 0161 941 4549. Text 18001 0161 941 4549 n MERSEYSIDE Society for Deaf Tel 0151 228 0888 n ST HELENS: Deafness Resource Centre Tel 01744 23887 n WOLVERHAMPTON Centre for Deaf Tel 01902 420904 n N WALES Deaf Association, Tel 01492 542235

CARERS’ CENTRES

n ACCRINGTON Tel 01254 387 444 n BLACKBURN with DARWEN Tel 01254 688 www.bwdcarers.org n BLACKPOOL Blackpool Borough Council, Tel 01253 477 716 nCUMBRIA Carlisle. Tel 01228 542 156 Penrith. Tel 01768 890 280 Barrow-in-Furness. Tel 01229 822 822 Kendal. Tel 01539 732 927 Whitehaven, Tel 01946 592 223 n CHESHIRE & WARRINGTON Helpline:0300 102 0008 n KNOWSLEY Tel 0151 549 1412 n LANCASTER Tel 01524 66475 nLIVERPOOL Tel 0151 705 2307 n MANCHESTER Tel 0161 835 2995 n MORECAMBE Tel 01524 833456 n PRESTON Tel 01772 200173 n RUNCORN Tel 01928 580182 n WIDNES Tel 0151 257 9673 n SALFORD Tel 0161 833 0217 n SEFTON Tel 0151 288 6060 n ST HELENS Tel 01744 675 615 n STOCKPORT Tel 0161 442 0442 n WARRINGTON (WIRED) Tel 01925 633 492 n WEST LANCS Tel 01695 711243 n WIGAN & LEIGH Tel 01942 683711 MIDLANDS n BIRMINGHAM Tel 0121 675 8000 n SOLIHULL Tel 0121 788 1143 n WALSALL Tel 01922 610 810 NORTH WALES n ANGLESEY Tel 01248 722828 n BANGOR Tel 01248 370 797 n CONWY Tel 01492 533714 n DENBIGHSHIRE: NEWCIS, Tel: 0845 603 3187 nDOLGELLAU Tel 01341 421167 n FLINTSHIRE: NEWCIS, Tel: 01352 751436 n WREXHAM CARERS SERVICE

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MEDICAL NOTES

Acupuncture ‘could help with pain relief’ ELDERLY patients with a variety of health issues should be referred for regular acupuncture sessions to help reduce pressure on the NHS, the British Acupuncture Council (BAcC) says. The comments follow a report that showed continuity of care resulted in “significantly fewer deaths” among patients and halved the risk of an emergency hospital admission. Mark Bovey, research manager at the BAcC, says there is significant evidence suggesting acupuncture is effective in relieving pain in conditions such as back pain, osteoarthritis, fibromyalgia and other musculoskeletal complaints and acupuncturists could be playing a much bigger role. He said: “Conventional health and social care resources are overstretched. Acupuncture could offer a useful additional resource.”

Sleep mindfully

MINDFULNESS is more than just a buzzword for our times – evidence suggests it helps with everything from stress and anxiety to recovering from illness. Now it seems it can also help people with fibromyalgia get a better night’s sleep. A team at the University of Derby have conducted the first-ever study looking at whether mindfulness can improve the sleep of those with the condition. Dr William Van Gordon, from the University’s Centre for Psychological Research, conducted the study with colleagues from Spain and Chile. And the results showed those using mindfulness experienced significant improvements in sleep quality, insomnia and sleepiness during the day.

Hepatitis C appeal

ABOUT 80,000 people with the lifethreatening condition Hepatitis C in the UK are unaware of their condition, say the British Liver Trust. Worldwide 71 million people are affected by the virus and approximately 160,000 across the UK, with 40-50% remaining undiagnosed. The charity’s chief executive, Judi Rhys, said: “We would urge anyone who has ever dabbled in drugs (even if it was many years ago); had unprotected sex with someone who may have been infected; had a tattoo or received healthcare in a country with a high prevalence of the virus, or who may have been put at risk in their workplace, for example from a needlestick injury, to get tested to be sure.”

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October/November 2018

21

A daily drop of fish oil can work wonders

Medicine at the University of JUST a small daily drop of fish Surrey, which carried out the oil could help reduce the pain of n Osteoarthritis is the most prevalent form of arthritis in the world with almost one in five women and one in 10 men aged study, said: “The importance of patients with osteoarthritis, a 60 and over being diagnosed with the painful condition. a good diet and regular new study suggests. n True numbers are likely to be higher than that as the global exercise should never be In the largest, most up-to-date burden of osteoarthritis has been much under-estimated. underestimated. study of its kind, researchers “Not only does it keep us fit examined the link between diet and n By 2050 an estimated 130 million people will suffer with osteoarthritis placing a substantial burden on health services. and healthy, but as we have the effective self-management of n Currently there is no effective treatment for this painful learned from this study, it can osteoarthritis. ailment, with only painkillers available to treat symptoms and also lessen painful symptoms They found that a low-dose no known cure. of osteoarthritis. supplement of fish oil (one and a “We are what we eat and it is half standard capsules) could result mobility could also help ease the symptoms. important that we have the right amount of in pain reduction for patients with Adopting a healthier lifestyle will also help nutrients from our food to ensure that our osteoarthritis and help improve their reduce cholesterol levels in the blood – high body systems work as they should.” cardiovascular health. blood cholesterol is known to be associated Ali Mobasheri, Professor of Essential fatty acids in fish oil reduce with osteoarthritis. Musculoskeletal Physiology at the University inflammation in joints, helping to alleviate An increase in foods rich in vitamin K of Surrey, said: “A combination of good diet pain. such as kale, spinach and parsley, was and regular exercise are necessary to keep Researchers also found that a reduction of also found to deliver benefits to patients joints healthy; you can’t have healthy joints weight for overweight and obese patients living with osteoarthritis. with just one, you need both.” and the introduction of exercise tailored to Margaret Rayman, Professor of Nutritional

Brain training

W

IDESPREAD lack of knowledge of brain tumour symptoms causes unfounded anxiety among millions of people – and leads others to delay seeking help.

That’s the warning from top brain surgeon Dr Gene Barnett who says the symptoms are similar to those of strokes. “Instead of a sudden onset there are gradually progressive symptoms: weakness in a limb, numbness, difficulty walking, difficulty with speech, change in personality, and gradually progressive change in vision. “There are, however, a few more abrupt things: the onset of a seizure can be a warning sign.” A brain tumour is a collection, or mass, of abnormal cells in the brain. Because the skull is rigid, any growth inside this restricted space can cause problems, whether or not it is cancerous (malignant). Dr Barnett said the condition could affect anyone, at any time, with primary tumours typically occurring “out of the blue”. Brain tumours are rarely linked to lifestyle,

unlike those affecting some other parts of the body, such as the lungs, liver, or mouth, added Dr Barnett, director of Cleveland Clinic’s Rose Ella Burkhardt Brain Tumor and Neuro-Oncology Center, in Ohio, US. “There is a small group of patients for which there is a hereditary predisposition, but that is thought to be uncommon. “The evidence that suggests that cell phones have anything to do with brain tumours is exceedingly weak, and there is a preponderance of evidence that suggests there is no relationship, so I really wouldn’t worry about that as being a cause,” he said. Dr Barnett says the most common malignant tumours that appear in the brain are those that start elsewhere, such as the lung or breast. In these cases, the widespread availability of radiosurgery – a targeted radiation treatment – has improved outcomes significantly. Often, a combination of methods is used, including surgery, laser treatments, radiation, chemotherapy, and other drug therapies such as

immunotherapy. A procedure called “tumour-treating fields”, offered at Cleveland Clinic, was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration two years ago, for use in newly-diagnosed as well as recurrent malignant primary tumours. With this groundbreaking therapy, electrodes are placed on the head and electrical waves passed through the brain to prevent a tumour’s growth. “By passing electrical waves through the brain at certain frequencies, we can suppress tumour cells from dividing,” Dr Barnett says. “We were the first worldwide to use this particular device in human brain tumours, and it’s still in development,” Dr Barnett added. “Right now, it’s a treatment you can get for a number of brain tumours in the United States and certain parts of North America, “Eventually, however, I see this spreading out throughout the world and being an important instrument in the neurosurgeon’s toolbox.”

New treatment chases cancer out of hiding

A “PROMISING” treatment for the brain cancer, glioblastoma, is being developed in the UK. “Brain tumour patients have been ignored for too long,” says Dr Paul Mulholland, who is leading the Dartrix project at University College London. The project has developed an extremely novel and promising treatment, which sees proteins coated with a

particle injected directly into the tumour. The head is then exposed to magnetic resonance, which heats up the particles and exposes the once hidden tumour cells to the body’s own immune system. Dr Mulholland says: “We have the tools to fight this disease, but the cancer cleverly hides from the immune system. Dartrix exposes it.

“This is very promising research and a great success story for UK science, along with other European partners.” Tessa Jowell, the former Minister for Public Health and Culture Secretary, who died in May, had a rare form of glioblastoma, and had been told that there was no further treatment available to her on the NHS. She campaigned for cancer

HALF A MILLION people are reading these pages . . .

patients to have the choice to trial new treatments and stop those that are not working for them when they want. Despite being the biggest killer of children and adults under 40 than any other cancer, brain cancer receives only one to two per cent of total research funding in the UK. n www.youtube.com/watch?v= YucBXvLSb8g

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EVERY MUM’S WORST NIGHTMARE

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SALLY MORGAN on how her family’s world was turned upside down on learning her son, Hugo, was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes

S

EEING your child suffering from a severe illness, and not being able to do a thing about it, is every mother’s worst nightmare.

Not really knowing what is happening, or what the symptoms mean, is equally as concerning. That was the experience I went through last year, when my son Hugo, then 7, was taken seriously ill. In July last year, Steve, Hugo’s stepdad, and I were all set for a family holiday in Antigua. In the lead up to our trip, I began to notice a few small changes in Hugo’s health – nothing overwhelmingly alarming on its own – some weight loss, drinking a lot of water, frequent urination and generally being a little more lethargic than normal. I made a mental note to book Hugo in at the doctor’s when we got back, but at the time felt many of those symptoms could be explained by the fact he was an active and growing young lad and that it was the end of the school year so he might be feeling tired. Given that we would soon be on holiday, I thought that perhaps he just needed some rest, recuperation and sunshine. Surely it couldn’t be anything too serious? Sadly, Hugo fell very ill very quickly after our arrival in Antigua. He was rushed straight to the emergency room of the nearest hospital, and was clearly very sick, deteriorating rapidly. There was a time when things were very serious, and that is when, as a mother, all those horrible feelings come to the surface. Just what exactly is wrong with him? What have we done wrong? Why didn’t we get him

All Together NOW!

October/November 2018

Sally and Steve Morgan with Hugo at a fundraising event for the Juvenile Diabtes Research Foundation

checked out when we were at home? We both felt completely powerless as we sat in that hospital waiting, wondering and just hoping for good news. People may think the medical care in Antigua might have been below the standards we are used to in the UK. But it was nothing of the sort – they were fantastic. Very quickly they identified that Hugo suffered from Type 1 diabetes, even more impressive when you consider it isn’t a condition that is common in Antigua. Knowing what was wrong meant they were able to stabilise his condition before he was flown back to the UK for further treatment. And that is when we started to learn more about diabetes, what the disease is, and how best to manage living with it.

The different types

There are a lot of misunderstandings about diabetes. It is important to know the difference between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes and to understand that Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition, which can occur at any age but is most commonly diagnosed from infancy to the late 30s. We all need insulin to allow the glucose in our bodies to enter our cells and provide us with energy. But Type 1 diabetes sees the body’s insulin-producing cells killed off. Because that glucose can’t break into the cells, it remains in the bloodstream, which leads to needing to empty our bladders more often, thus bringing about extreme thirst, when the condition is undiagnosed. These were all the factors we had to learn, and learn quickly. It was all about educating ourselves, and

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19

Hugo, to try and manage the effect that diabetes would have on his body. With a seven-year-old boy who is only just starting on his journey and learning about life, that was quite a challenge. Management of the condition started with daily blood-sugar tests and insulin injections, as well as learning about the impact of carbohydrates in food and how these can impact sugar levels. It was all very new to us and there have been many hours spent trying to understand how to manage Hugo’s insulin while trying to keep his life as normal as possible. It was at this early point that we came into contact with the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and began to understand more about the fantastic work that it does in advising people how to manage and live with diabetes, alongside their continuing research to try and find the cure. It was also via JDRF that we first set eyes on Rufus the Bear. Rufus is a fairly standard teddy bear with a difference – he has different coloured patches on his arms, legs, tummy and bottom, which show children where to inject insulin and where to take their blood tests. Rufus was a huge help to us and a comfort to Hugo in those early days and weeks of injections. Hugo has continued to improve, and has been able to move away from daily injections to using an insulin pump, which allows him to control the gradual release of insulin into his body. Through our work as Chairman and Trustee of the Steve Morgan Foundation, we’ve come to really value the work that JDRF is doing and fully support its ambition to improve the

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lives of people with Type 1 diabetes. It is for this reason that we, together with the charity trustees, have chosen to donate £3 million to JDRF as together we seek to eradicate the condition. JDRF is funding valuable and pioneering research around the world, including at both Cambridge and Birmingham Universities as they seek to help those affected to manage the illness. We recently had the opportunity to visit the professors and researchers conducting ground-breaking work in this sector. With this substantial investment from the Steve Morgan Foundation, JDRF will be able to make further inroads into treatment and ultimately a cure, helping all the Hugos of this world.

A relentless challenge

A year after his diagnosis, Hugo is back to being the active and driven little boy that he was before he fell ill. For Steve and I, it is very important that he continues to live a full and active life – we are never going to wrap him in cotton wool. Today, he continues to play rugby, go swimming and even skiing. Managing his condition, however, is relentless and requires our attention 365 days a year to monitor and control. Diabetes is an illness where the medicine that helps keep you alive has the potential to kill you, too, so ensuring that we are always alert to the risks of too much or too little insulin is a daily challenge.

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All Together NOW!

October/November 2018

‘till Oct 13: By the Waters of Liverpool. Liverpool Empire. Based on the best-selling book by Helen Forrester. BSL Oct 11, 7.30pm. Audio described, Oct 12, 7.30. Captioned, Oct 13, 7.30. Oct 9-13: Jane Austen’s Persuasion. Playhouse, Liverpool. Witty and wonderfully emotional production by the award-winning Theatre6. Oct 9-13: FUP. Everyman, Liverpool. The Santee family are unconventional, to say the least. Oct 9: Where We Began. Unity , Liverpool. Wild and vivid vision of the future, combining storytelling, movement and live music. Oct 9-13: My Mother Said I Never Should. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. Bittersweet story about love, jealousy and the price of freedom. Oct 9: Withering Looks. Charter Theatre, Preston. Authentic look at the lives and works of the Bronte sisters. Oct 11: Russian National Ballet – Swan Lake. Pavilion, Rhyl. Oct 12-Nov 10: Maggie May. Royal Court, Liverpool. Her dream was New York. Her reality was Liverpool. BSL, Oct 23 8pm, Audio described, Oct 24, 8pm. Oct 10-13: Blood Runs Deep. Unity, Liverpool. Brillant new psychological thriller. Oct 10-13: Awful Annie. Venue Cymru. David Walliams’ amazing tale of frights, fights and friendship Oct 11-27: Thick as Thieves. Theatr Clwyd. Captioned and audio described Oct 20, 2.30. Relaxed, Oct 23 7.45. Audio described and Talkback, Oct 25 7.45. Oct 12-13: Private Peaceful. Regent, Stoke. Heart-wrenching story of Tommo, a young First World War soldier awaiting the firing squad at dawn. Oct 15: Madame Butterfly. The Brindley. Performed by Heritage Opera. Oct 15: Crewe Male Voice Choir. Lyceum, Crewe. 60th anniversary concert. Oct 15-20: Dirty Dancing. Regent, Stoke. All the hits from the film’s soundtrack. Oct 16: James Martin On The Road Again. Liverpool Empire. Oct 16-20: The Unreturning. Everyman, Liverpool. Three young men are coming home from war. Their stories are set at different times over the last 100 years. Oct 16: The Greatest Show. Lyceum, Crewe. Songs from Holywood. Oct 16-20: Told by an Idiot: All You Need is LSD. Unity Liverpool. World premiere by Leo Butler. Oct 17-20: The Animals and Children Took to the Streets. Playhouse, Liverpool. Welcome to a stinking tenement block, where curtaintwitchers and peeping-toms live side by side, and the wolf is always at the door. Oct 17: Welsh National Opera La TraviataVerdi. Venue Cymru. Oct 17-20: Manon. Opera House, Manchester. English National Ballet performs Kenneth MacMillan’s masterpiece.

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BOX OFFICE CONTACTS

BLACKPOOL Grand Theatre: 01253 290190 BOLTON Octagon: 01204 520661 CREWE Lyceum: 01270 368 242 LIVERPOOL Empire: 08444 999 999 Everyman & Playhouse: 0151 709 4776 Royal Court: 0870 787 1866 Unity 0151 709 4988 LLANDUDNO Venue Cymru: 01492 872000 MOLD: Theatr Clwyd: 0845 3303565 MANCHESTER Opera House: 0870 401 9000

Palace: 0870 401 3000 SALFORD The Lowry: 0843 208 6000 NEW BRIGHTON Floral Pavillion: 0151 666 0000 PRESTON: Charter Theatre: 0845 344 2012 RHYL: Pavilion: 01745 330 000 RUNCORN The Brindley: 0151 907 8360 SOUTHPORT: Floral Hall: 0844 847 2380 ST HELENS: Theatre Royal: 01744 756000 STOKE: Regent Theatre: 0844 871 7627

Here comes Trouble

OPERA North has released an online film of its critically acclaimed production of Trouble in Tahiti in accessible formats for D/deaf/ hard of hearing and visually impaired people. A satire on the American Dream, Trouble in Tahiti is set in 1950s suburbia, where Sam and Dinah appear to have the perfect life in their little white house. But their growing detachment exposes a mutual feeling that they are trapped in a life that has turned into a lie. Sam escapes to the hyper-masculine, win-or-lose world of work and the gym, while Dinah loses herself in the movies, where the hit picture of the day is the ominously-titled Trouble in Tahiti. It stars Canadian mezzo-soprano Wallis Giunta and Dutch baritone Quirijn de Lang. n The film can be viewed via www.operanorth.co.uk/access

TAKE YOUR SEATS! Compiled by CHRIS GROVES

Oct 18: Welsh National Opera La Cenerentola. Venue Cymru. Oct 18: Des O’Connor & Jimmy Tarbuck Live. Floral Pavilion, New Brighton. Oct 19: Eclipse - Pink Floyd Experience. Floral Pavilion, New Brighton. Oct 19: Welsh National Opera La TraviataVerdi. Vunue Cymru. Oct 19-20: Dad’s Army Hour. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. Based on the classic BBC sitcom. Oct 19: The Rolling Stones Story. Liverpool Empire. Celebrating the music of the “World’s Greatest Rock ‘n’ Roll Band”. Oct 20: The Johnny Cash Roadshow. Lyceum, Crewe. The only show to be endorsed by the CASH family! Oct 20: Baggage. Royal Court, Liverpool. A Christmas tale with a difference. Oct 20: Welsh National Opera War and Peace. Venue Cymru.

Oct 20-28: Beauty and the Beast. Theatre Royal, St Helens. Oct 21-Nov 1: And Did Those Feet. The University of Bolton Stadium. FA Cup Final 1923 Bolton Wanderers V West Ham United. A group of Bolton fans find their lives transformed, Dementia Friendly/ Relaxed Performance, Oct 23. Oct 21: Wishbone Ash – XLIX. Floral Pavilion, New Brighton. Oct 22-27: Let It Be. Opera House, Manchester. The Beatles concert you never got to see Oct 22-27: Blood Brothers. Regent, Stoke. Willy Russell’s musical masterpiece. Oct 23-27: Rock of Ages. Liverpool Empire. Hilarious musical comedy. Oct 23-27: Alan Bennett’s The Habit of Art. Playhouse, Liverpool. The joy, pain and emotional cost of creativity. Oct 23-27: Calendar Girls The Musical. Venue Cymru. Musical. Audio described and BSL, Oct 25 7.30. Oct 23-24: The Return of Neverland. The Brindley. New musical.

Oct 24: David O’Doherty: You Have To Laugh. Everyman, Liverpool. Oct 24-25: That’ll be the Day. Lyceum, Crewe. Rock & Roll musical. Oct 25: 10cc in Concert plus Support. Pavilion, Rhyl. Oct 25-27: Silence. Unity Liverpool. Nicola Werenowska’s funny and fascinating new play. Oct 25-27: To Have to Shoot Irishmen. Everyman, Liverpool. New play with songs by Lizzie Nunnery. Easter morning, 1916. Gunshots ring out in the Dublin streets. Oct 26: Swan Lake - Russian National Ballet. Lyceum, Crewe. The greatest of all romantic ballets. Oct 26-27: Murder at Cadbury Manor. The Brindley. Whodunit mystery. Oct 28: Sing-a-long-a Rocky Horror. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. The iconic movie – not the live stage show! Oct 28: The Hits of Motown. Lyceum, Crewe. Oct 28: Brendan Cole. Liverpool Empire. He’s back with his 10th anniversary dance tour. Oct 29: The Greatest Show. Lyceum, Crewe. Songs from Holywood.

YOU CAN PLAY A STARRING ROLE IN THE FUTURE OF THIS


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October/November 2018

All Together NOW!

OH, WHAT A NIGHT! A

WEDDING. A free bar. A blast from the past . . . Get ready for a night to remember.

Pop Music is a brand new play from Bruntwood award-winner Anna Jordan that’s guaranteed to get us thinking! G and Kayla’s lives are a mess. As their veins course with adrenaline and cheap prosecco we follow them on an epic journey through 30 years of pop. Can the DJ save them as they become Dancing Queens, reliving their Teenage Dream, Staying Out For The Summer and Spicing Up Their Lives? Pop makes promises it can’t keep, and soon they’ll discover they have more in common than their taste in tunes.

n Oct 30: Unity Theatre, Liverpool. Tel 0151 709 4988 n Nov 9: The Edge Theatre & Arts Centre, Manchester. Tel 0161 282 9776 n Nov 14: The Continental, Preston. Tel 01772 499425 n Dec 8: Rosehill Theatre, Whitehaven. Tel 01946 692422

Lourdes above - what’s going on here?

FOR some people, a trip to Lourdes in France means prayer, contemplation and quiet self-reflection. For one group of young, disabled Scousers it means alcohol, debauchery, fornication and definitely no miracle cures! Cured – the new work from Laurence Clark – opens at Liverpool’s Royal Court on November 12 during the Oct 30-Nov 3: They Don’t Pay? We Won’t Pay! Playhouse, Liverpool. Fast and furious political satire on the plight of the working poor. Oct 30: Brendan Cole - All Night Long. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. Brendan Cole’s 10th anniversary tour. Oct 30-Nov 11: Calendar Girls - The Musical. The Lowry. Audio described, Nov 10, 2.pm. Oct 30-Nov 3: Rebus: Long Shadows. Opera House, Manchester. Oct 31: Maximum Rhythm and Blues. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. The legendary Manfreds and Georgie Fame. Oct 31-Nov 4: Nativity the Musical. Liverpool Empire. Feel-good, funny and full of yuletide joy. Oct 31-Nov 2: Murder Ballads, Royal Court, Liverpool. The regulars of O’Malley’s Bar gather to drink and sing. Oct 31: The Witching Hour. Floral Pavilion, New Brighton. Montague Rhodes James with another selection of unsettling tales of terror. Oct 31-Nov 3: The Sound of Music. Theatr Clwyd. Musical. Nov 1: The South. Lyceum, Crewe. They’re

annual DadDaFest, Merseyside’s celebration of disability arts. The script is being developed through workshops and mentoring involving the theatre’s creative team and director Robert Softley Gale. n Look out, too, for Laurence’s one-man show – An Irresponsible Father’s Guide to Parenting at the Unity Liverpool on November 24.

back – pop group The Beautiful South. Nov 1: A Hundred Different Words for Love. Unity, Liverpool. Hilarious, heart-lifting story of romance, despair, and friendship. Nov 2-3: The Missing Light. Everyman, Liverpool. Enchanting show about hopes, dreams, togetherness and true friendship. Nov 3: Liverpool Male Voice Choir: WWI Commemorative Concert. Unity, Liverpool. Nov 3: The Whitney Houston Show. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. Honouring the memory of Whitney Houston. Nov 4: Beauty and the Beast Ballet. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. Performed by Ballet UK. Nov 4: Swan Lake. Charter Theatre, Preston. The Russian State Ballet and Opera House is back. Nov 6-10: Still Alice. Playhouse, Liverpool. Alice strives to remain true to the woman she has always been, while relationships shift within her family, Nov 6-8: The Paper Cinema’s Macbeth. Everyman, Liverpool. Captivating silent film created before your eyes. Nov 7: Grayson Perry: Them & Us. Opera House, Manchester.

UNIQUE CHARITY NEWSPAPER

LAURENCE CLARK

Nov 7-9: WNO - La Traviata. Liverpool Empire. Nov 8: Dylan Moran. Opera House, Manchester. Nov 8: WNO - La Cenerentola. Liverpool Empire. Rossini’s delightful retelling of Cinderella. Nov 9: Back to Bacharach. Southport Theatre. Celebrating the magical music of Burt Bacharach. Nov 9: Hip, Hip I’m Gay! Unity, Liverpool. Comedy cabaret following real-life stories and experiences of coming out. Nov 9: An Audience with Simon Reeve. Lyceum, Crewe. Travel broadcaster Simon Reeve’s first-ever theatre tour. Nov 9-10: Frankenstein: How to make a Monster. Everyman, Liverpool. Creative urban beats with raw rhythmic storytelling. Nov 10: An Evening with King Crimson. Liverpool Empire. Nov 10: The Sensational 60’s Experience. Opera House, Manchester. Nov 10: Emerging Talent. Unity Liverpool. Fresh, exciting talented emerging LGBTQ. Nov 12: Cured. Royal Court. A

rehearsal reading of a new comedy play by Lawrence Clark. Nov 12-17: Benidorm. Liverpool Empire. A dose of Benidorm sunshine live on stage for the very first time. Audio described, Nov 15, 7.30. Captioned, Nov 16, 7.30. Nov 12- Dec 1: Kinky Boots. Opera House, Manchester. From the factory floor to the glamorous catwalks of Milan. BSL, Nov 22, 7.30. Audio described, Nov 28, 7.30. Captioned, Nov 29, 7.30. Nov 13-17: Dracula. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. New adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Audio description, BSL, Captioned, Nov 14, 7.30. Nov 13-17: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Lyceum Crewe. Nov 14-16: Opera North’s Tosca. The Lowry. Audio described, Nov 16, 7.30. Nov 15-17: Oliver – The Musical. Pavilion, Rhyl. Aaward-winning musical. Nov 18: We Three Kings – of Rock ‘n’ Roll. Theatre Royal, St Helens. Tribute to Billy Fury, Buddy Holly, and Elvis. Nov 18: Beyond the Barricade. Lyceum , Crewe. Best of Broadway and the West End. Nov 20-Dec 1: Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake. The Lowry. Audio described, Nov 29, 2pm. Nov 21: On the Tracks. Unity, Liverpool. DaDafest 2018. New interpretation of accessible theatre will take you on a multi-sensory journey. Nov 21-24. Swan Lake. Liverpool Empire. English National Ballet brings the timeless classical ballet to life. Nov 23: Buddy Holly and the Cricketers. Grand Theatre, Blackpool. Nov 23-Jan 19: Dick Whittington. Theatr Clwyd. Nov 23-Jan 19: The Scouse Cinderella. Royal Court, Liverpool. Nov 24: Laurence Clark: An Irresponsible Father’s Guide to Parenting. Unity, Liverpool. DaDafest 2018. Growing up Laurence never saw Dads with cerebral palsy, which made him think he’d never be a parent himself. Nov 24-Jan 19: The Snow Queen Rock ‘n’ Roll Panto. Everyman, Liverpool. Nov 25: An Audience with Stan Boardman. The Brindley. Nov 25: Jessie J. Liverpool Empire. Nov 26-Dec1: Benidorm. Palace, Manchester. ITV’s award-winning comedy. BSL, Nov 28, 7.30. Audio described, Nov 29, 7.30. Nov 27-Dec 1: Calendar Girls - The Musical. Liverpool Empire. Musical comedy. Nov 27: Roy Wood and his Rock ‘n’ Roll Band. Lyceum, Crewe. Nov 29: Elkie Brooks. Southport Theatre. Nov 30-Jan 5: Beauty and the Beast. Unity, Liverpool. Nov 30: Buddy Holly & the Cricketers. Lyceum, Crewe. Tribute show. Dec 4-Jan 5: Wicked. Opera House. BSL Dec 6, 7.30. Audio described Dec 11, 7.30. Captioned, Dec 13, 7.30.

. . . SEE BACK PAGE

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All Together NOW!

Books

Mark’s inspirational journey through life I CAN I WILL, Amazon, 12.99 via www.iWillOrderNow.com

THE true story of an inspirational businessman who contracted polio as a child, was tortured and beaten by his father, taken to a witch doctor to try to “cure” him of the disease and make him walk again, and then subjected to unimaginable bullying and racism. Mark Esho was born in Leicestershire in 1962. He was five when polio struck, leaving him paralysed from the neck down. He was given just a 10% chance of survival, but was eventually able to regain limited mobility. Aged eight, Mark moved to Nigeria to start mainstream school, before returning to Leicester at 18. He later completed an MBA at De Montfort University and now runs three companies. A member of Leicester Rotary, Mark is now backing the charity’s Purple4Polio Campaign to End Polio Now. Mark said: “It was a hard decision to write this book. But my story had to be told. “Not only as an incredible affirmation on why the work to eradicate this awful disease should continue and why children should be immunised, but also to show people that they can survive almost everything and anything life throws at them.”

Beagle on wheels!

Hector’s Wheels, by Victoria Haddon, Troubador, £7.99

THIS is the true story of a remarkable disabled beagle on his adventures with his brother, Reggie. HECTOR the beagle was born with serious problems with a front leg and was set to go and live his life in a dogs’ home, until the perfect human family and a very special American wheelchair came along. Now you can follow Hector and his brother, Reggie, as he faces the trials and tribulations that his disability brings. Owner Victoria Haddon says: “I have told the true story of a disabled dog who knows no boundaries “ I hope the book will be enjoyed by any dog or animal lover.” Victoria is a mother of three children, owner of two beagles, and wife to James. This is is her debut book.

August/September 2018

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

ARIES (March 21st-April 20th)

wardrobe will lift your spirits. On the 23rd, a bonus or royalty payment will be less than you expected. Trying to recoup more money will be an exercise in futility. When one door closes, another opens, but you must be on the lookout for this opportunity.

OCTOBER’S New Moon on the 9th puts strain on a close relationship. Just when you thought you were making a breakthrough with a romantic or business partner, an argument breaks out. On the 24th, the Full Moon could bring an influx of income. Use this money to treat yourself to something you’ve set your heart on and wanted for a long time. Things are getting serious on the romantic front in early November. A supportive New Moon on the 7th makes it a great time to let down your defences with someone who has demonstrated their loyalty. On the 23rd, the Full Moon brings troubling news about a legal matter. It may be better to settle out of court or drop this fight altogether.

TAURUS (April 21st-May 21st) Despite your best efforts, it will be difficult to get organised on the 9th. That’s when a tense New Moon keeps calling you away from your duties. The Full Moon on the 24th invites you to enjoy some self-pampering. Instead of pouring all your energy into a close relationship, do something nice for yourself. Early November brings an exciting opportunity to team up with a highly creative person The Full Moon on the 23rd could bring a challenge to your financial position. A contractor could deduct money for expenses or delays, making you very upset. In future don’t begin work on a project until you have the terms set down in black and white. Ask a lawyer to review all contracts before signing them. GEMINI (May 22nd-June 21st) If you’re already in relationship, your partner will reveal some upsetting financial information during the first half of October. Put your heads together to craft a plan for paying off a sizable debt. On the 24th, the Full Moon will bring a welcome chance to rest and recharge your batteries. If an appointment or trip is cancelled at the last minute, don’t complain. Instead, treat it as a chance to relax. November’s Full Moon on the 23rd tempts you to overhaul your look. Any changes you make should be temporary, as there is a good chance you won’t like the results. If you shop for clothes, make sure you understand the return policy before buying anything. Keep the receipts in a safe place, as you’ll probably need them.

CANCER (June 22nd-July 23rd) The New Moon on the 9th warns against confiding in an untrustworthy person. A relative who pretends to have your best interests at heart is really jealous. After sharing sensitive information with them, you could be betrayed. The Full Moon on the 24th brings a group project to its successful conclusion. Much to your surprise, you’ll be named most valuable player. November’s New Moon on the 7th will put you in the path of an attentive admirer who makes you excited to be alive. The Full Moon on the 23rd urges you to let go of an old grudge. Dwelling on a betrayal will stop you taking advantage of new opportunities. A terrific job offer is on the horizon; be on the alert for it. Attend a party instead of staying home sulking.

LEO (July 24th-August 23rd)

Acquiring a skill will be more difficult than expected on the 9th. That’s when the New Moon puts you in the path of a relentless critic. It will be hard to study with their disdainful voice in your ear. On the 24th, the Full Moon marks an impressive turning point in your life. A domestic matter will command your attention on or around the November 7th, courtesy of the New Moon. On the 23rd, you will be inspired to break ranks with a troubled organisation. You don’t want your reputation tarnished by some underhanded activities. Don’t bother to explain your defection to angry members. These guilt

SAGITTARIUS (November 23rd-December 21st)

On the 9th, the New Moon will spark a group project. It may be better to steer clear of this assignment altogether. Some situations aren’t worth the trouble; this is one of them. The Full Moon on the 24th is perfect for getting organised. Getting rid of clutter will make space for new energy in your life. Make three piles: Donate, discard and sell. November’s Full Moon on the 23rd puts strain on a close relationship. It will be difficult to discuss your feelings with a loved one who seems intent on twisting your words. The second half of November will make you decide whether it’s worth maintaining this relationship or not.

RUSSELL GRANT CALLING . . .

trips are just sheer manipulations. Block phone calls and emails if you feel harassed.

VIRGO (August 24th-September 23rd)

The New Moon attracts a moneymaking opportunity on the 9th. Taking this job will limit your personal life. The Full Moon on the 24th finds you returning from a trip, finishing an ongoing project or collecting a diploma. There will be a surprise bonus for your hard work. November’s New Moon on the 7th will showcase your communication abilities. Being able to share your ideas with an adoring public will be a good use of this talent. If you’ve been thinking of taking up writing, this would be an ideal time to begin. Ideas will flow like a mighty river. Taking charge of a study group could also be rewarding. Whenever you feel discouraged, lean on your family for support. They’ll give you the strength to continue.

LIBRA (September 24th-October 23rd)

You yearn to break out of your shell on the 9th, when the New Moon prompts a personal change. Instead of asking your family’s approval, go ahead and follow your heart’s desire. The Full Moon on the 24th brings a cheque and bonus that is much bigger than you expected. Use this windfall to upgrade some technical equipment. November’s New Moon on the 7th is an exciting time for you. On the 23rd, a Full Moon will create legal difficulties. It may be impossible to move forward with a business plan until you get official permission. If your company sends you on an overseas trip, make sure your passport is up to date. You may have to wait for other people to make decisions at the end of November.

SCORPIO (October 24th-November 22nd)

The New Moon on the 9th makes you yearn for privacy. Unfortunately, a relative or neighbour keeps trying to pry into your personal business. On the 24th, your romantic or business partner will have some surprising news. A big promotion or hefty raise will increase your standard of living. If you’re single, you won’t be for long. November’s New Moon on the 7th invites you to undergo a makeover. Updating your hairstyle, getting a cosmetic procedure or revamping your

CAPRICORN (December 22nd-January 20th)

A professional opportunity will beckon on the 9th, but think carefully before accepting it. The Full Moon on the 24th marks an exciting turning point in your personal life. November’s New Moon on the 7th is great for joining a sports team, political organisation or humanitarian group. Donating your time and energy to a meaningful cause will lift your spirits. On the 23rd, the Full Moon will bring a health concern to your attention. Talk to a doctor about a nagging ache or pain. It will be necessary to alter some routines to get better. Be willing to cut certain foods from your diet. Taking gentle exercise will also improve your energy level. Resist the temptation to stay up all hours.

AQUARIUS (January 21st-February 19th)

The New Moon on the 9th will bring an enticing opportunity to travel, study or write. Unfortunately, you won’t be able to make the most of this chance. Instead of dwelling on your disappointment, try making the best of a bad situation. On the 24th, there will be unexpected changes at home. An exciting opportunity will arrive on November 7th, courtesy of the passionate New Moon. The Full Moon on the 23rd warns you against taking risks. Confessing a crush or making an investment will result in a big disappointment. Maintain the status quo during the second half of November, even if it bores you to do so. Sometimes it’s better to lead a predictable life than stir the pot.

PISCES (February 20th-March 20th)

A physical relationship forces you to make a decision on the 9th. That’s when the New Moon causes someone very close to you to question your feelings towards them. Surprising news will reach your ears on the 24th, when the Full Moon brings hidden information to light. Avoid getting caught in a rut during the second half of October. November’s New Moon on the 7th invites you to expand your horizons. On the 23rd, family matters will weigh on your heart. Arguing about religion and politics with a relative creates stress. It may be best to put this on hold, at least until tempers subside. If you can no longer maintain ties with a narrow-minded family member, break things off as civilly is possible. When in doubt, follow your moral code. It will never let you down.

HALF A MILLION PEOPLE ARE READING THESE PAGES


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All Together NOW!

October/November 2018

WIN YOURSELF A SENSATIONAL SPRING DISPLAY

W

IN one of five £20 vouchers for superb spring flowers from Suttons Seeds in this competition.

The winners will receive a Suttons’ Bulb Catalogue with their vouchers and will be able to choose from a vivid selection of bulbs – for planting this autumn and flowering next spring – and spring bedding plants. The bulbs range from dazzling daffodils, colourful crocuses, tremendous tulips and many more – while the bedders include pansies, primulas, sweet williams and wallflowers, all in a glorious range of shades. The bulb range includes Suttons’ new and exclusive double daffodil Salou, which is white with a ruffled yellow heart, plus specialities for flowering

indoors such as amaryllis, scented hyacinths and dwarf daffodils. To enter the competition, answer this question: What is the name of Suttons’ new double daffodil?

Send your entry with your name and address on a postcard or sealed envelope, stating where you picked up your copy of All Together NOW!, to Suttons Bulb Competition, All Together NOW!, The Bradbury Centre, Youens Way, Liverpool L14 2EP, to arrive by Friday 16 November. You can also or enter online at www.alltogethernow.org.uk. Please insert SUTTON SEEDS in the subject line.

n For the full range of Suttons plants and products, go to www.suttons.co.uk

FABULOUS: Rudbeckia Summerina Orange and Gladiolus Prins Claus

SHOWSTOPPERS I TOOK a stroll down memory lane this year to see the Royal Horticultural Society’s Tatton Park flower show near Knutsford, Cheshire, on its 20th anniversary.

I wondered how it had developed since I covered the first few shows and also wanted to check out the facilities for disabled visitors – I wear two hearing aids and walk with a stick most of the time and my wife Jackie is registered partially sighted. Especially eye-catching was a stunning display by the Conwy Valley nursery Roualeyn Fuchsias, appointed “master grower” at the show. Among other eye-catching exhibits were Rudbeckia Summerina Orange, a real dazzler with the advantages of hybrid flowering performance (it is crossed with echinacea), being a perennial (the brightest rudbeckias have generally been annuals) and growing no taller than a manageable 60cm (2ft). Others included the dwarf gladiolus Prins Claus, white with cerise blotches; heucheras with foliage in an array of colours – great for bringing interest

to shady corners; and a violet-pink hybrid tea rose with copper-coloured centre, bred by Fryers of Knutsford and called Twentieth Anniversary – to mark the show’s eponymous landmark. Access around the show was generally good for people with mobility problems. A limited number of manual wheelchairs and mobility scooters are available for a fee, and one companion is admitted free for each disabled visitor who needs assistance. Check the conditions when booking. Hearing loops are installed in the talks theatres, though I did not need to use the loop when watching some of the excellent flower arrangement demonstrations. Sections of the car parks are reserved for blue badge holders but there is no easy-access drop-off point due to the geography of the site For disabled visitors arriving by coach an adapted shuttle bus operates between the coach park and the showground. However, Jackie and I both encountered a slight problem due to the long-handled trolleys like boxes

on wheels provided by the RHS for visitors to transport their plants and products. As the day progressed the trollies became more numerous and some of the users charged along inconsiderately. Those who do not have a full field of vision or cannot dodge swiftly can find such matters difficult. We wondered whether these trollies were necessary, given that the RHS advertises prominently that a plant and product crèche is available. I raised this with the RHS who apologised and explained: “The trollies are intended to make it easy for people to carry their purchases to and from the plant crèche, sometimes on multiple visits, as well as providing an alternative for those who don’t wish to use the plant crèche. “We do try to encourage visitors to make use of the plant crèche as much as possible, especially for larger purchases, and we will continue to advertise this facility to all. We will certainly pass this along to the show team to look at for the future.”

Our secret garden under the decking

MY WIFE and I have downsized to a bungalow a small southfacing garden totally covered in decking – as reported in the last issue. Our conservatory is complete but progress on the garden is

slow. Beneath the decking were sheets of membrane and beneath those was a totally different garden, with steps leading down to a paved area – covered in masses of rubble. However, I have secured the

tenancy of a mini-plot on nearby allotments and the redundant concrete paving makes indestructible edging for raised beds. The question that nags me now is: Will the garden be ready in time for autumn

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23

CHECKLIST

FLOWERS: Split the roots of older herbaceous perennials such as phlox, delphinium, Shasta daisy (marguerite) and peony. Dig up overgrown clumps, cut off sections from the edge, each with a few shoots and some roots attached, and plant these. SHRUBS AND TREES: Plant new roses, hedging, shrubs and trees. Water camellias, rhododendrons and azaleas thoroughly if the ground is dry. Shortage of water during early and mid-autumn can cause the flower buds to drop next spring. LAWNS: Damp or mossy lawns should be spiked 10cm (4in) deep and the same distance apart, ideally with a hollow-tined aerator, otherwise with a garden fork. Make a 50:50 mixture of gritty sand and good soil and brush this into the holes then treat with a moss-killer such as lawn sand. PONDS: Keep ponds clear of debris by cutting back dead foliage of aquatic plants, removing any blanketweed and clearing fallen leaves regularly with a net. Continue to feed fish as long as they take the food promptly. VEGETABLES: Sow the over-wintering broad bean Aquadulce in late October and plant sets of overwintering onions such as Radar and shallots such as Jermor. Split rhubarb plants when they are three or four years old and plant young sections from the edge of the root, each with a strong shoot showing. FRUIT: Tie the new canes of summer-fruiting raspberries to support wires. Prune gooseberry bushes, thinning the branches and trimming sideshoots back to three or four buds. HERBS: Split wellestablished clumps of perennial herbs such as tarragon, chives and mint. PATIOS: Move pots into the sunniest position and raise them on bricks or pot feet so they do not stand in puddles after autumn rains. HOUSEPLANTS: Those that flowered earlier in the year require just enough water to keep the compost slightly moist. Plants that are still to bloom, like Christmas cactus and cyclamen, need food and water regularly.


All Together NOW!

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October/November 2018

The Accumulator Quiz

STARSPOT CROSSWORD Can you find the celebrity name hidden in this Starspot Crossword? Complete the crossword in the normal way then make a note of the letters contained in all the squares which are marked with shaded stars. These letters will make an anagram of the name you are looking for. 1

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ACROSS

DOWN

1. 4. 8. 10. 11. 12. 14. 16. 17. 19. 22. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32.

1. 2. 3. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10. 13. 15. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

Spouted vessel (6) Self-centredness (6) Annul (6) Clinging gastropod (6) Psalmist (5) Intelligent (6) Amalgamation (6) Tear asunder (4) Poetic name for Ireland (4) Chair (4) Sculpture of head (4) Cope with (6) Discomfort (6) Artist’s material (5) Disclose (6) Kitchen utensil (6) Narrative song (6) Fireside (6)

Each question has four possible answers and is worth from one to 15 points. Circle your chosen answers and keep a record of your points total. Maximum total points 120. QUESTION 1 – for 1 point: What was the name of Mickey Mouse’s pet dog?

QUESTION 10 – for 10 points: At which course is the classic horse race the St Leger run?

A B C D

A B C D

Bluto Pluto Juno Sumo

A B C D

Doncaster Epsom Ascot Newbury

QUESTION 11 – for 11 points: What is the capital of the Sultanate of Oman?

QUESTION 2 – for 2 points: Who composed the music for the ballet Swan Lake?

A B C D

William Byrd Franz Liszt Michael Tippett Pyotr Tchaikovsky

Dubai Muscat Abu Dhabi Doha

QUESTION 3 – for 3 points: What is a young whale called?

QUESTION 12 – for 12 points: Which fictional crimefighter shares their name with a city in Turkey?

A B C D

A B C D

Calf Foal Elver Cub

Naturalist David Attenborough. See Question 14

QUESTION 4 – for 4 points: Which of the following letters indicates the softest pencil lead? A B C D

Cherry liqueur (6) Opera hat (inf.) (6) Dull grey (6) Non-powered aircraft (6) Call in question (6) Ripen (6) Cooking fat (4) Citrus fruit (4) Irked (5) Wash lightly (5) Angelic being (6) Run at the nose (6) Woolly animal (6) Freshwater duck (4) Stopper (4) False (6) Rag (6) Quest (6)

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H HH HB BB

QUESTION 5 – for 5 points: Which Sousa march became the signature tune of Monty Python’s Flying Circus? A B C D

Semper Fidelis The Washington Post The Liberty Bell King Cotton

QUESTION 13 – for 13 points: Which Pre-Raphaelite artist painted The Light of the World?

QUESTION 7 – for 7 points: What is the average gestation period for a female dog? A B C D

Poirot Batman Columbo Lewis

A B C D

Seven weeks Nine weeks Eleven weeks Thirteen weeks

William Holman Hunt John Everett Millais Dante Gabriel Rossetti John Ruskin

QUESTION 8 – for 8 points: Who was the mother of King Henry VIII?

QUESTION 14 – for 14 points: Which of the following David Attenborough TV programmes was made first?

A B C D

A B C D

Elizabeth of York Anne of Denmark Margaret of Anjou Catherine of Valois

The Living Planet Life on Earth The Private Life of Plants The Trials of Life

QUESTION 6 – for 6 points: The song Back for Good was a 1995 UK hit single for which boy band?

QUESTION 9 – for 9 points: Which Gilbert and Sullivan operetta character boasted of leading his regiment from behind?

QUESTION 15 – for 15 points: What type of game bird is also known as a francolin?

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

Westlife Take That Backstreet Boys Boyz II Men

SUDOKU

Colonel Fairfax The Duke of Plaza Toro The Mikado Captain Corcoran

A pheasant A snipe A partridge A woodcock

KAKURO

There is just one simple rule in Sudoku. Each row and each column must contain the numbers 1 to 9, and so must each 3 x 3 box. This is a logic puzzle, and you should not have to guess.

EASY

DIFFICULT

7 1

9 8 6 4

9 3 8 3 5 9 6 7 5 7 9 8 2 4 9 3 4 8 7 3 4 6

2 1 6 3 7 4 5 6

5 3 9 6 7 8 3

8

1 9 4

REACH 500,000 READERS

1 9 2 6

9 1 3

4

3 5

7 4 5 2

9

Fill in the blank squares in the grid with numbers so that each horizontal or vertical line adds up to the total given in the box either to the left or above it. Horizontal totals are given in the top right corners of the shaded boxes; vertical totals in the bottom left corners. You can use the numbers 1 to 9, but may not use the same number more than once in any run. The number may be used again, however, in the same row or column but as part of another run.

MEDIUM 37

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ADVERTISE HERE 0151 230 0307


Telephone dialling pads combine several letters on one key. Here we have encoded several sets of words or items by using numbers rather than letters. Then we have divided them into groups of three characters and run all the names one after another to make your task a little more difficult. Can you crack the codes?

Each number in our Cross Code grid represents a different letter of the alphabet. You have three letters in the control grid to start you off. Enter them in the appropriate squares in the main grid, then use your knowledge of words to work out which letters should go in the missing squares. As you get the letters, fill in other squares with the same number in the main grid and control grid. Check off the alphabetical list of letters as you identify them.

$ 7

/

1 []’–

2 ABC

3 DEF

4 GHI

5 JKL

6 MNO

7 PQRS

8 TUV

9 WXYZ

Spaces and any punctuation marks are represented by 1.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

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DIALLING CODES

CROSS CODE

All Together NOW!

October/November 2018

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

––––

ROAD

SEX

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COURT

MILITARY

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DOG

SOFT

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CRUDE

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NORFOLK

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TYPE FIELD PIPE

3. adventure sports 752 832 627 346 417 593 484 641 944 831 928 371 723 846 413 733 178 664 641 762 512 546 246 419 463 787 346 412 273 158 674 641 227 345 464

4. states in the USA 225 436 764 212 666 328 428 817 688 413 256 821 568 474 262 164 663 768 216 382 321 356 743 213 352 927 316 477 477 477 419 378 184 744 642

5. operas 243 218 672 212 276 361 843 122 723 716 317 384 553 126 741 326 188 883 134 335 461 337 176 736 528 254 371 366 144 682 664 141 724 542 224

6. female singers 363 541 726 331 526 213 351 739 123 353 174 821 672 172 566 213 248 412 396 623 127 486 391 773 277 152 391 424 216 425 416 462 517 442 662

PATHWORDS

SPOT CHECK

Starting from the central shaded letter, move one letter at a time (up, down, right or left, but not diagonally) to find 14 breeds of horse and pony.

Can you place the six dominoes (right) into the grid below in such a way that the number of spots in all four rows across and all four rows down totals 9?

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WORD WIZARD

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Here is an unusual word with three definitions, only one of which is correct. Can you identify the right definition?

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HAND

extreme and

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MISSING LINK Each pair of words has a missing word between them that acts as a link to both (e.g. FRONT – DOOR – MAT). The initial letters of the six answers (reading downwards) will spell out an alternative name for a bird of prey.

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In which year did all three of these significant historical events take place?

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1. Chancellor Gordon Brown cuts the basic rate of income tax to 22%.

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H E R S R M X TRANSFORMER

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1) A dark volcanic rock, with many crystals and rock fragments;

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2) A purplestriped, pale yellow fruit with sweet flesh, oval in shape;

2. The European Union Commisssioners resign en masse after a report on EU corruption is released.

A

3) A highly spiced Italian soup made from a selection of pulses.

3. Queen Elizabeth II opens the new Scottish Parliament.

Add the given letter to the first word to make a new word. Clue: Make a slow change into a complete turn.

WAS IT? a) 1995; b) 1996; c) 1997; d) 1998; e) 1999.

_________ +R=R_________

ALL THE ANSWERS Pathwords Clydesdale; Suffolk punch; mustang; Appaloosa; Shetland; Welsh Cob; Haflinger; Paso Fino; Thoroughbred; Hanoverian; percheron; Friesian; Exmoor; shire.

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Accumulator Quiz 1 – B; 2 – D; 3 – A; 4 – D; 5 – C; 6 – B; 7 – B; 8 – A; 9 – B; 10 – A; 11 – B; 12 – B; 13 – A; 14 – B; 15 – C. Starspot Crossword Across – 1 Kettle; 4 Egoism; 8 Repeal; 10 Limpet; 11 David; 12 Clever; 14 Merger; 16 Rend; 17 Erin; 19 Seat; 22 Bust; 26 Handle; 27 Unease; 28 Paint; 29 Reveal; 30 Grater; 31 Ballad; 32 Hearth. Down – 1 Kirsch; 2 Topper; 3 Leaden; 5 Glider; 6 Impugn; 7 Mature; 9 Lard; 10 Lime; 13 Vexed; 15 Rinse; 18 Cherub; 19 Snivel; 20 Alpaca; 21 Teal; 22 Bung; 23 Untrue; 24 Tatter; 25 Search. Star Name: PETER GABRIEL

Word Wizard No 1 is correct. Peperino is a volcanic rock. Dialling Codes 1. jellied eel; rollmop herring; kipper; anchovy fillet; smoked salmon; bloater; potted shrimp; dressed crab; scampi. 2. Horatio Hornblower; Long John Silver; Sinbad The Sailor; Jack Aubrey; Billy Budd; Captain Pugwash; Jack Sparrow. 3. skateboarding; skydiving; white water rafting; free running; rock climbing; windsurfing; base jumping; abseiling. 4. California; Connecticut; South Dakota; Louisiana; Minnesota;

Nevada; Florida; Delaware; Mississippi; West Virginia. 5. Aida; Tosca; Carmen; The Barber Of Seville; Cosi Fan Tutte; Fidelio; Der Rosenkavalier; Don Giovanni; I Pagliacci. 6. Emeli SandĂŠ; Lana Del Rey; Adele; Rita Ora; Paloma Faith; BeyoncĂŠ; Britney Spears; Lady Gaga; Nicki Minaj; Rihanna. Spot Check A = 5; B = 6; C = 1; D = 2; E = 3; F = 4. Missing Link rail; appeal; police; touch; oil; reed. Bird of prey: raptor. Make a Date The year was 1999. Transformer Evolution + R = Revolution.

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Please send this coupon and a cheque payable to All Together NOW! to: Subscriptions Dept., All Together NOW! The Bradbury Centre, Youens Way, Liverpool L14 2EP — THANKS!

October/November 2018

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

ALFIE HEWETT on his way to US victory in New York

Alfie’s American dream

A

LFIE Hewett produced an exemplary performance to win his first US Open men’s singles title and his second career Grand Slam singles title in New York, defeating world No.1 Shingo Kunieda, of Japan, 6-3, 7-5.

Hewett, 20, said: “Three titles out of a possible four was something I really didn’t think would happen. “To come here and play the way I did, after a nightmare travelling experience I had

between St. Louis and New York, it’s hard to believe I made it past the first match, let alone win both titles without dropping a set. “I worked hard in my training up to this, so to get the rewards is a great a feeling. Shingo played a great match and he gave me nothing out on court. He worked me hard for every point and I had to earn that victory; that shows what a true competitor he is. “I’m looking forward to taking a break when I get back,” added Hewett. Hewett’s victory means Brits completed

the US Open wheelchair tennis event with three titles after Hewett and Gordon Reid beat top seeds Houdet and Nicolas Peifer in the final of the men’s doubles for the second year in a row. Andy Lapthorne also partnered David Wagner, of the USA, to win the quad doubles title for the second year in a row. Lapthorne said: “It’s great to win my eighth Slam and retain the title and it’s a good way to end the week. I really enjoyed playing doubles again with David and I look forward to trying to defend the title again next year.”

Chris back on the road to glory

IT TAKES courage and determination to get back on the saddle within six months of a life-changing motorcycle accident. After sustaining horrific injuries in 2014, including the loss of his left arm, Chris Ganley could be forgiven for giving up on his racing dreams. But the accident has only served to increase his drive to succeed and the Army veteran has returned to the grid. Chris, who served two tours of Afghanistan, took a step towards his ultimate dream of competing in the Isle of Man TT by 2023 by racing in the Thundersport GB Golden Era Superbikes & GP1 Classic/Cup at Donington recently. Unfortunately, mechanical problems meant Chris was forced to retire from the race with just two laps to go. “The bike handled really well and I improved my lap time from 1.30.8 to 1.25.2,” said Chris. “Due to my performance I gained all the signatures needed to upgrade my license. “It was disappointing to retire, but it was still a really good day and I’d like to thank everyone for the support that I have received to make all this possible. “My dream is coming together and I couldn’t do it without my sponsors, family and friends.” Chris is being supported by oil manufacturer FUCHS Silkolene.

HALF A MILLION readers across the North West . . .


October/November 2018

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

This could be your start to stardom!

A

MPUTEES of all ages are being invited to take part in an exciting ‘Multisport’ event in Manchester.

For many years, the LimbPower Junior and Adult Games have provided children, young people and adults with limb impairments with a great opportunity try out new sports and activities in a fun, friendly and supportive environment. Now the national charity is taking the event to Manchester’s National Squash Centre on Saturday 27 October. Sports and activities on offer this year will include climbing, wheelchair basketball, track athletics, cycling, sitting volleyball, tennis, cricket and football. Kiera Roche, chief executive of LimbPower, said: “More work is needed at a local level if we are to reach amputees and people with limb impairments and support them in becoming more active.

All Together NOW!

“Difficulty with transport and travel and the cost of participation are two of the barriers which prevent our community from participating in activity. We hope that running the Multisport event in Manchester, like we did in Birmingham last year will enable LimbPower to engage with local amputees and individuals with limb difference and support them back into activity.” A morning session for 5-18 year olds is planned, followed by an afternoon adults’ session n Contact Andy Brittles, LimbPower National Sport Development Officer. Email andy@limbpower.com or call 07503 030502 www.limbpower.com

Time to saddle up and get riding

F

ROLE MODEL: World double amputee marathon champion and Paralympian gold medallist Richard Whitehead runs with prosthetic legs

IFTY equestrian centres across the UK have signed up to a national scheme that encourages more disabled people to take up horse riding.

The Riding for the Disabled Association (RDA), in partnership with the British Equestrian Federation (BEF), launched the Accessibility Mark scheme to help centres create more opportunities for riders with disabilities. Lizzie Hill, lead Accessibility Mark Support Officer, said: “When we launched the project four years ago we knew there were centres who felt they needed more support but we couldn’t predict how popular they would become. “The centres we work with are really trying to open their doors to more disabled clients and we are definitely seeing a difference in numbers of people taking up the sport, and also a growth in confidence of those centres we work with.” The milestone is particularly significant as the RDA head in to their 50th anniversary year in 2019, with events planned

throughout the year, including the opening of the new National Training Centre.

North West accredited centres: PRESTON: Wrea Green – Chris/Mike Kidd 01772 686576 PENRITH: Happy Hooves – Alison Noble 01768 862153 Other riding centres: LIVERPOOL: BEECHLEY STABLES. Tel, 0151 724 4490 EAST LIVERPOOL. Tel, 07963 270387 CROSBY. Tel, 07975 751880

THE FORESTERS HORN GROUP. Tel, 0151 648 6015 WIRRAL AND CHESTER. Tel, 0151 648 6308 WEST LANCS. Tel, 07792 444181 FORMBY & SOUTHPORT. Tel, 01704 875007 NORTH MEOLS CARRIAGE DRIVING. Tel, 01704 566728 RED ROSE CARRIAGE DRIVING. Tel, 01704 229311 NORTHWICH: SANDY LANE EQUESTRIAN. Tel, 01606 854244 WIGAN: FRIENDS OF LANDLORDS. Tel, 07789 320638 WARRINGTON: CAMSLEY GRANGE. Tel, 07379 905163 FLINTSHIRE: CLWYD SPECIAL RIDING CENTRE. Tel, 01352 770446 WREXHAM: DYFFRYN CEIRIOG. Tel, 07774 460594 HOPE MOUNTAIN. Tel, 01978 897 896

RDA, tel 01926 492915 www.rda.org.uk

news@alltogethernow.org.uk www.alltogethernow.org.uk Tel 0151 230 0307

27


28

THE PERFECT KICK START! All Together NOW!

All Together NOW! sends a HUGE thanks to Liverpool Scooter Club for the fantastic £850 donation to help keep your free and favourite newspaper up and running.

Club leader Ernie Lundstrom said: “We are always looking to help local charities and when we heard that All Together NOW! needed a bit of support we decided to donate this year’s collections to this wonderful newspaper. “The paper is packed with news and information that is helping so many vulnerable people across Merseyside – it really has become a lifeline. In these tough economic times, it must be really difficult to keep a free charity paper going, and we just wanted to show our support and give a helping hand.” The club, formed in 1996, meet Thursday nights at the Cambridge Pub in Mulberry Street, Liverpool. n Liverpool Scooter Club, tel 07877 909478

October/November 2018

www.alltogethernow.org.uk

ON PARADE: Liverpool Scooter Club ‘rideout’ at Alder Social Club

CAN YOU help to keep this newspaper alive and kicking? Contact editor Tom Dowling, tel 0151 230 0307 or email: news@alltogethernow.org.uk

POWER TO YOUR ELBOWS: Ernie Lundstrom with editor Tom Dowling


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