After her third tattoo healed, Cassandra Jacinto went into her job interview for an assistant position. Though covered by her watch, the wrist tattoo managed to be seen by her potential employer.
After inspecting it, he asked her to leave.
After her third tattoo healed, Cassandra Jacinto went into her job interview for an assistant position. Though covered by her watch, the wrist tattoo managed to be seen by her potential employer.
After inspecting it, he asked her to leave.
New Years resolutions are supposed to give people a fresh start for the new year. Those who made themselves aim to either start doing something that they did not do the year before, or to put an end to a bad habit which they want to live without during the new year.
Psychology instructor Abby Delman has ran the gantlet of life, holding multiple jobs and taking care of child to overcoming severe chronic depression and breast cancer.
Immersing himself into professional art since the 1970s, Jim Morphesis has a list of accomplishments to show for it.
PCC students Zachary Miller and Brandon Bateman know exactly what they want to do in life—and that is ceramics.
“In the Next Room or The Vibrator Play,” written by Sarah Ruhl and directed by the Assistant Professor of Performing and Communication Arts Whitney Rydbeck, opened Nov. 9 to a rather surprised audience.
The Communication Arts Division presented the Piano Ensembles Concert that filled Harbeson Hall as they told the story of the Nutcracker and the Mouse King on Nov. 3 at 8 p.m.
The 13 person percussion ensemble lead by Tad Carpenter, director of percussion and assistant band director at PCC, performed in an hour long program in The Forum on Nov. 18.
Students from the music department embraced the Chinese culture on Nov. 19 with their annual Chinese Music Ensemble at Harbeson Hall.