MultiDisciplinary
Anterior Cruciate Ligaments
By Alexis Jenkins
Alexis Jenkins definitely is very active from the start. Sports have always been her passion; growing up, you could always catch her outside at the softball field playing with her high school, tournament team, or family. This all was until she had an almost career-ending injury occur not just once but twice. Luckily, she could continue to play two years of college softball, but she always wondered why tearing your ACL, also known as your Anterior Cruciate Ligament, was such a big deal. Now years later, she is a Senior here at Millersville studying Sports Journalism. After graduation, she plans to work her way into the ESPN world to eventually become an ESPN Broadcast Journalist.
history
Godless Propaganda: The Soviet Union’s Anti-religious Propaganda Posters during the 1920s and 1930s
By allison cook
Allison Cook is a senior transfer student, and this is her first year here at Millersville University. She originally began her college education at Salisbury University where she studied anthropology and history. During that time she focussed heavily on cultural anthropology with an emphasis on religion, and ancient history, specifically ancient Greece and Rome. Since transferring to MU, she is now a history major and works at the Millersville University Writing Center. Her interests have also developed to include Eastern European and Balkan history during the 19th and 20th centuries and are reflected in the two projects she submitted for Made in Millersville. She is very grateful to have been given the opportunity to work on Godless Propaganda, her departmental honors thesis, with the support of her advisor Dr. Khiterer. Additionally, she is very excited to have the chance to work on The Truman Doctrine with the assistance of Dr. Frankum.