City of Joy
If you love sports, then Chelmsford has a vast choice to offer. The town is
home to Essex County Cricket Club who play their home matches at the Ford
County Ground. Known as the Essex Eagles, they now play in Division 1 of the
County Championship after being promoted in the 2009 season by just a single
point. They have also enjoyed recent success in one day competitions and
continue to produce young, talented players who are destined to become England
captain such as Graham Gooch, Nasser Hussain and Alistair Cook.
Chelmsford City Football Club, known as the Clarets, play their home matches
at Melbourne Stadium, which also houses modern athletics facilities and a state
of the art sports centre. After a few years in the doldrums, the club are now
making a concerted effort to reach the next level, with their main aim to
achieve a place in the football league. Recent success includes strong FA Cup
& FA Trophy campaigns and winners of the Essex Senior Cup.
Chelmsford is also proud to be the only town in Essex with an ice skating
rink. Based at the Riverside Ice & Leisure Centre, it is an incredibly
popular venue for the locals of all ages and abilities and can often get very
busy at peak times. It is also home to a number ice skating clubs & ice
hockey teams, the main one being the Chelmsford Chieftains.
Whatever you are looking for, Chelmsford really is a great place for
entertainment. Why not see what you can find today?
For more useful information about Chelmsford and its surrounding area,
please visit [http://www.activchelmsford.com].
As the most comprehensive online guide to Chelmsford, we cover everything
from what's on, cars for sale, jobs, business directory, properties for sale,
classifieds, dating, saving money, hotels, news and restaurants.
April 7th, 2013 - Your story must have a plot. Most books have more than
one. This plot is usually apparent within the first few pages. Consider Agatha
Christie's The Body in the Library, which is probably one of the
most intriguing and darkly humored openings in classic tea-cozy mysteries. It's
early morning in Gossington Hall, the maids are brewing tea and opening the
drapes room by room. Mr. and Mrs. Bantry are just barely waking up. A maid
cheerfully, dutifully enters the library, pulls open the drapes, turns around and
nearly trips over the body of a young fair-haired girl. The maid screams, bolts
out of the room. It's one of the most simple, but informative and direct way to
present the plot. Readers and movie-goers know, without a single line of
dialogue and hardly any set up, know precisely what the plot is.
The plot is the storyline. It's what happens to the characters and why. In
some cases, such as character-driven stories, the storyline may not be the bulk
of your story, but will serve as a conduit for your reader, moving from one
place to the next. Your story is the embodiment of the plot, dramatized of your
idea. The subject is action and character. Action is the physical movements and
"blocking" and character is who your story is about. So action is a
person, in a place, doing something. Characters and their
dialogue may hold the plot, the plot must be able to stand on it's own.
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