Margaret Clark
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Age | 82 |
Date of birth | April 20,1942 |
Zodiac sign | Taurus |
Born | Geelong |
Australia | |
Children | Stewart and Fiona |
Edited works | Many Eyes, Many Voices |
Genres | Children's Fiction |
Teen Fiction | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 618111 |
Fat Chance
Hot Or What (Another Fat Chance)
Shards and Shadows
Famous For Five Minutes
Pugwall's Summer
Secret Girls' Stuff
No Standing Zone
The Big Chocolate Bar
Pugwall
Secret Friends' Stuff
Trouble On Tuesdays: Another Secret Diary By Sara Swan
Love Charms
Web Watchers
Dollar for a Dolphin
Dog on the Job
Sheila the Heeler
Operation Wombat
Seal with a Kiss
Whale of a Time
Night Works
Wally the Whiz Kid
Tina Tuff
Camel Breath
Shark in the Dark
Butterfingers
The Worst Nurse
Licorice Shorts
Silent Knight
Llama Drama
Willie Tell Or Won't He?
Owl Express
A Horse of Course
Hair Raising Horrors (3 In 1)
Ripper & Fang
Duck for Luck
Alice and the Airy Fairy
Leap Frog
Joan of Art
Penguin Parade
Snap!
Kidding Around
Mouse Pad
Aussie Angels 1: Okay Koala
Ghost on Toast
Hooking Up
A Home for Gnomes
Understanding Religion and Spirituality in Clinical Practice
Aussie Angels 16: Pups 4 Sale
Friends Forever: A Secret Diary By Sara Swan
Hot Stuff
Margaret Clark Life story
Margaret Dianne Clark is an Australian children's author, using M.D. Clark and Lee Striker as pseudonyms. Some of her most famous works are the Aussie Angels series and the young adult novel Fat Chance.
Queen's jubilee £3m fund to help English village halls
Village halls in need of a facelift can apply to share a £3m fund marking The Queen 's Platinum Jubilee.
The Money will be divided between 125 halls in England to pay for renovations like wi-fi, building extensions and modernising facilities.
Rural affairs minister Lord Benyon described the venues as " the centrepiece of rural life".
The aim is to build on schemes that helped commemorate Queen Victoria and King George V.
Three years ago 125 villages halls in England benefitted from £17m of government cash with other sources for renovations.
Lord Benyon said of the support the halls offer: " In a changing world, they are important facilities for community groups, social clubs and local services.
" This funding [from The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs] will ensure they are central to the fabric of our villages for many more years to come. "
Charity Action with Communities in Rural England (Acre) said the 10,000 village halls across England are often the only place people can socialise locally, and refurbishments would help safeguard their futures.
Many of the volunteer-led halls are concerned about The Rising cost of energy bills and need support to adopt more affordable heating and energy efficiency measures.
Acre chair David Emerson said: " This is an announcement that is especially appropriate in the week that thousands of halls across the country are hosting local celebrations of The Royal jubilee. "
Margaret Clark , chairwoman of The Rural Coalition, said the venues " have a crucial role to play in helping levelling up in rural areas".
The Platinum Jubilee Village Halls Improvement Grant Fund follows a tradition of investments being made in village halls for Queen Victoria 's Diamond Jubilee in 1897 and King George V's Silver Jubilee in 1935.
Source of news: bbc.com