A Date for Your Diary - Cambridge in November!
The Moller Centre in Cambridge has become one of our best-loved venues in recent years and we are returning there on Monday 23rd November for our ‘Energising the Economics Classroom’ conference. I am putting together the programme over the next few weeks but the theme of the day will be based around utilising new technologies in teaching Economics - in particular Web 2.0 media and macroeconomic simulation games. We hope to have an exciting announcement to make on this in the near future.
The Moller Centre has just been voted as the top business training venue in the United Kingdom, it is a wonderfully relaxing place to be and there are seventy very well equipped and peaceful study bedrooms on site for delegates wanting to stay before the conference and recharge the batteries. As is customary, tutor2u will be hosting an informal supper for bed and breakfast delegates on the Sunday night - the food at the Moller is excellent! - and there will be a free minibus service for delegates to get to the station immediately after the conference has concluded.
This is a weekend in the academic calendar that I always look forward to and we hope to see many of you there - old friends and new ones - in November! Provisional bookings can now be made - please give the tutor2u office a ring and let the girls know whether you would like to also stay on the Sunday night.
Cambridge feels the downturn
A quick stroll around the environs of Market Square, a setting that I have known and loved for over a quarter of a century, illustrates the changing face of the high street as the recession deepens. The Vodafone store where I bought my Blackberry last year has gone. Cambridge University Press, having announced a large number of redundancies, has opened a store where hard back academic books can be taken away for less than £2 each (max 20 books per customer!).
Ringtons the specialist tea maker and distributor which opened up a new store on a fashionable high street has disappeared in less than a year. There are plenty of other stores plastered with closing down signs and posters advertising deep discounts of seventy per cent or more.
But a ray of hope among the gloom.......
The market stall selling ostrich meat was doing a roaring trade when I visited it on Sunday morning. Bisbrooke Ostrich Farm is based in Rutland, Leicestershire and from what I could tell at the weekend, their ostrich burgers at a very reasonable £2.50 are proving quite a hit! Their continued success contrasts starkly with the sad closure of the Rington’s retail store (I admit that I have a love of fresh tea leaves and was a little distressed to find the store had gone!) where the rental costs will be sigificantly higher than a pitch within a busy and bustling market place.
Farmers’ Markets became in vogue a few years ago and I wonder if they have passed the peak of their popularity? Will the recession lead to a stampede towards the heavy discounts on meat products offered by the supermarket giants?
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