Word: chloe
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...never really thought in my wildest dreams that this could be possible,” said women’s co-captain and foilist Chloe Stinetorf. “Coming in as a freshman four years ago, we weren’t that strong of a team. Even at the beginning of this year, we thought we could maybe take third at NCAAs—but winning was just a wild dream that...
...next Ralph Lauren is ... a nice gal from Texas? CHLOE DAO, 34, says she was "totally shocked" to be crowned "the next great American designer" by Bravo's fashion reality show Project Runway. Dao, who runs her own boutique in Houston and who wowed the judges with a line of soft, tailored evening wear, beat presumed favorite Daniel Vosovic and unofficial runway villain Santino Rice to win $100,000 for her line and a fashion spread in Elle. "I can't wait to go back in my garage and start cutting," says Dao, who has already heard from Bergdorf Goodman...
Previous to last year the Harvard women’s team had never been Ivy Champions either, and Co-captain Chloe Stinetorf said that it was exciting to prove that last year’s success was no fluke with this consecutive victory...
...victorious—the foil. Harvard finished fourth. In that weapon, junior Enoch Woodhouse led the way with seven wins. Competing a day later, the Harvard women won 85 of 99 bouts to finish an impressive +263. In the foil, only one Crimson competitor lost a match, with seniors Chloe Stinetorf and Anne Austin going 11-0 and sophomore Emily Cross following right behind with a 10-1 record. All three of them won the divisions in which they competed. In the individual portion of the competition, Cross and Austin both advanced to the championship round. Cross dispatched her teammate...
...Chloe L. Stinetorf ’06, the artist of “Constellation 1, 2, and 3,” the pieces at the entrance, was thrilled to work with the variety of media her class allowed. For “Visual and Environmental Studies 123r, Post Brush,” Stinetorf silk-screened diagrams, drawings, and NASA images of constellations onto canvas, then moved to collage, adding layers of paper, cloth cut-outs, and plastic flowers to convey a depth she finds lacking in ordinary silk-screening...