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.
By adam weiner
Adam Weiner is a senior Meteorology major with minors in Mathematics as well as Environmental Hazards and Emergency Management (EHEM). He was first introduced to the topic of his research through an internship conducted under the NOAA Ernest F. Hollings Scholarship Program at the National Weather Service office in Raleigh, NC. There, he had the opportunity to explore the character of tornadic thunderstorms in North Carolina. This paper provided a platform to share the latest developments in his research, which focused on one particularly notable storm. Adam plans to attend graduate school in the Fall, where he plans to continue research related to supercells and tornadoes.
Want to learn more about this presentation? Contact Adam at this email address to start a conversation.