Word: millstein
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...which favors a quicker, aggressive form accentuated with spinning kicks that narrowly miss their target. “It’s hard because it uses a lot of muscles people don’t even know they have,” says Capoeira Club Co-Founder Brenden S. Millstein ’06, “and it makes you flexible, graceful, agile and strong in order to execute most of the moves.” To complement the athleticism, Capoeira is also a form of artistic expression and is set to music for performance...
...work on her skills at college after having discovering Capoeria through gymnastics, one of the first things Krieger asked herself when she arrived at Harvard was, “Where’s the Capoeira?” After a futile search, she teamed up with high school classmate Millstein and this semester they’ve taken it upon themselves to introduce Capoeira to others, with about 15 students currently in the club. “Anybody can learn,” Krieger says, “and everyone’s welcome to join...
Kerouac was the linchpin that held together this strange mix of personalities. On the Road was similarly the central work supporting the movement. Gilbert Millstein wrote prophetically in the New York Times’ first review of the book: “Just as, more than any other novel of the Twenties, The Sun Also Rises came to be regarded as the testament of the Lost Generation, so it seems certain that On the Road will come to be known as that of the Beat Generation.” But true as Millstein’s words are, his predictions...
...they don't look it, which can lead to all sorts of problems. For one thing, it makes these girls very obviously different from their peers--a position that can be deeply embarrassing for early and late developers alike. More ominously, says Susan Millstein, a professor of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, "people think they're older, and the kinds of pressures put on them are more than they can handle." Marissa Carter, Sharon's mother, puts it more bluntly. "Girls who look more mature for their age are like honey," she says. "They attract older boys...
...couldn't have had Dinosaur without [digital] technology," says Andrew Millstein of Disney's ambitious new special-effects division, the Secret Lab, which is computer-generating puppies for its upcoming 101 Dalmatians sequel. "As technology evolves, it's going to unfetter our imaginations." The Perfect Storm, in fact, is a perfect example of a story told in a new way thanks to digital know-how. Says visual-effects supervisor Stefen Fangmeier: "Here we are really creating the whole environment of the movie...