1) A rather boring college town in Lancaster County, PA
2) An even boring-er suburb of Baltimore/Annapolis in Anne Arundel County, MD. Even people from other regions of Maryland will assume you mean Millersville, PA if you tell them where you're from. You won't be able to escape it without a car. Its main attractions are a truck stop (Transit) that may have cheap gas if they're slow to update their prices, and the "Steak n Shake" chain which is a rather newer development and is a great place to get diarrhea. The stereotype of Millersville residents is derived from other places on the map. Going southeast it becomes Severna Park for people who couldn't afford it. Go northeast if you want more chain stores/restaurants like Pasadena. Going north up 97 toward Glen Burnie (Old Mill, etc) it becomes much seedier in a "buying heroin from a guy named Travis behind the Home Depot" sorta way. Going southwest towards Gambrills/Odenton it becomes country living for dumb people who wanted an acre of lawn to mow but still wanted to pay half a million for their house (Though Waugh Chapel isn't far, I guess- if that's your thing).
Millersville? You mean Millersville, PA? Home to Millersville College? Yeah, I guess 80 miles isn't too far from Baltimore.
Everyone that goes here is psycho. Everyone knows everything about everyone. Everyone fucks each other. If you think someoneβs not crazy they defiantly have something wrong with them. Avoid this school at all costs.
Person 1: βDid you go to Millersville Universityβ
1.
A small town in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. This town hosts farmland on the edges of its boundaries, and would be completely unimportant if it didn't host Millersville University.
2.
Short for Millersville University, a small college of about 7,000 current students. The student body is so small, that the teacher to student ratio is about 1-10, allowing for a very personal experience. Millersville University is one of the top ten colleges in the Northeast, and one of the top fifteen colleges in the world for teaching.
A small parking lot in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, that is always filled. You will be charged over $100 a year to drive around this lot, but you will not find a space to park.