If you care about injecting new life in Downtown Regina you might not want to miss this note passed along to me by Marian Donnelly:
Regina ArtsAction Inc., October 20, 2006 at 3:00 pm, RC 050, University of Regina
You might have seen the current issue of the Prairie Dog, and their feature section on Regina ’s Downtown. Full page coverage was given to Regina ArtsAction Inc., and their plans to rejuvenate two historic landmark buildings as arts-related facilities.
This Friday, the Regina ArtsAction team, comprised of University of Regina faculty Dr. Christine Ramsay, Kathleen Irwin and Rory McDonald, and EMBA student Marian Donnelly, will be presenting their collective vision for this exciting project as part of the Fine Arts Lecture Series.
The opportunities for research across various disciplines abound with this project. Join us on Friday at 3 pm in the Riddell Centre 050 (in the basement) to hear first hand how this project has the capacity to provide an urban “living laboratory” to the University of Regina in areas as diverse as environmental engineering, business administration, marketing, theatre production, human resource management, social planning, urban development and Aboriginal business development and training.
We look forward to your input and ideas!
Regina ArtsAction Inc., October 20, 2006 at 3:00 pm, RC 050, University of Regina
You might have seen the current issue of the Prairie Dog, and their feature section on Regina ’s Downtown. Full page coverage was given to Regina ArtsAction Inc., and their plans to rejuvenate two historic landmark buildings as arts-related facilities.
This Friday, the Regina ArtsAction team, comprised of University of Regina faculty Dr. Christine Ramsay, Kathleen Irwin and Rory McDonald, and EMBA student Marian Donnelly, will be presenting their collective vision for this exciting project as part of the Fine Arts Lecture Series.
The opportunities for research across various disciplines abound with this project. Join us on Friday at 3 pm in the Riddell Centre 050 (in the basement) to hear first hand how this project has the capacity to provide an urban “living laboratory” to the University of Regina in areas as diverse as environmental engineering, business administration, marketing, theatre production, human resource management, social planning, urban development and Aboriginal business development and training.
We look forward to your input and ideas!
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