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The Dartmouth
June 24, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Walt and Ernie's barber celebrates 40 years in Hanover

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Bob Trottier, who today celebrates his 40th anniversary working in Hanover, has a unique perspective on the College -- the view from behind the barber's chair in Walt and Ernie's Barber Shop. Trottier first came to work in Hanover on May 1, 1957, the day he celebrated his 31st birthday. Although the popular barber shop -- founded in 1938 -- bears the names of its founders, Walt and Ernie, it has been Trottier that has been the familiar face in the shop for four decades of Dartmouth students. Trottier has seen the College go through many changes, including coeducation, the growth of the student body and the introduction of year-round operation. "We've gone through all kinds of different styles," Trottier said.



Opinion

Foolish Generalizations Can Be Misleading

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To the Editor: After reading the article "Major Gender Discrepancies" [April 30, 1997, The Dartmouth], I found myself quite disturbed by, among a number of things, certain quotations, or better, generalizations, by WISP Director Mary Pavone.


Sports

Athlete of the Week

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Senior tri-Captain Kelly Hannigan is saving the best for last. Last week, she had what Head Coach Amy Patton called "the game of her life" against Harvard, as she scored two of the Big Green's first three goals en route to a 7-0 lead.



Opinion

Congress, Wake Up!

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Earlier this month, Cara Abercrombie '97 and I had the opportunity to attend the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Annual Conference in Washington, D.C.



News

Students' pilfering plagues DDS

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Although profit losses from food theft are only a tiny part of Dartmouth Dining Service's $600,000 a year financial woes, DDS has posted new signs in Food Court warning students of the penalties of eating without paying. Food Court Grill Chef Rebecca Waters said employees see food theft "constantly." A common way students steal food is by eating it while they are in line for grill items.


Sports

Sports Roundup

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BASEBALL: Matt Tarver-Wahlquist '98 pitched six strong innings and third baseman Mike Conway '99 set Dartmouth's single-season hit record to lead the Big Green to a 13-10 victory over NH College yesterday. With the win, Dartmouth broke a five-game losing streak and improved to 21-12. While Conway set the new record by going 3-for-5 to reach 57 hits on the season, Tarver-Wahlquist (2-1) allowed three runs in his six innings. SOFTBALL: The softball team dropped the opening game of a doubleheader at Vermont, 7-2, but rebounded with a 12-3 victory in the nightcap. The Big Green used a 19-hit offensive effort in the second game to take the win.





News

Major gender discrepancies?

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Ian Campbell '99 noticed something odd about one of his classes Fall term. He was one of about 15 men in a women's studies class of 120 students.


News

Assembly to vote on ethnic studies

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The Student Assembly will vote next week on a resolution supporting the creation and expansion of ethnic and cultural studies courses at the College. Sarah Cho '97 was the main sponsor of the original resolution last night, which requested only the initiation of ethnic studies courses. During a discussion of the resolution last night, many Assembly members suggested increasing the scope of the resolution to include issues of sexual identity as well.


Arts

Sheba 'turns up the heat' in Collis show

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Though the temperature in Collis Common Ground on Saturday night was already high, the dance troupe Sheba managed to turn up the heat. With new routines, props, costumes and a sexual tone, Sheba captured and held the attention of the audience. Sizzling with sensuousness, the group blazed through thirteen dances in a performance that capitalized on talent and choreographic variety. An opening video of assembled clips from prior performances grabbed the audience's attention, while the pulsing theme song from "Mission Impossible" prepared them for the high-energy production. Sheba took the stage amidst a smoke screen with Janet Jackson's "Rhythm Nation." In tight formation, the twenty members impressed the audience with their smooth controlled dancing.


News

Steve and Doug bring insight, innuendo to Tuesdays on DCR

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Tonight at 6 p.m., while other students crowd into Food Court, finish sports practice at the gym or study in the Reserve Corridor, two juniors will go on the air at WDCR-AM for two hours of hilarity that has already won them a loyal following. Steve Zrike '98 and Doug Young '98, acknowledged by their peers as WDCR's "biggest personalities," host the funny, fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants "Steve & Doug Show" every Tuesday from 6-8 p.m. The sound booth from which the show originates -- on the third floor of Robinson Hall -- was chaos during last week's program. Zrike's microphone continued to fall off its stand and Young's attempt to complain about the misuse of toilet paper at the College was continually interrupted by a caller or by an interjection from Zrike. By the end of the show, matzoh crumbs and jam littered the floor and desk, and the booth became a bit more crowded, as Ryan Broderick '98, Alison Carter '98, Justin Littlefield '98 and Avery Rueb '98 all stopped by to join the fray. Satire and sarcasm The Steve & Doug Show seems more like a humorous conversation among friends which the listener has the fortune of overhearing than a structured "act" that the pair puts on. Zrike and Young -- who have been friends since their freshman year -- first went on WDCR together in early March as co-hosts of a sports talk show that followed Dartmouth basketball broadcasts. The pair began the first show of Spring term with the idea of converting their post-game show into a weekly sports talk show. But when an unidentified caller named "Linda" dialed in during that first show to tell Zrike that he had a "sexy voice," Young and Zrike decided not to limit themselves to sports. Now the show's format consists of the pair's commentary on campus and local events, call-ins, in-studio guests, and spoofs and skits. "People are a little high strung," Zrike said. "We like to have fun on the air," Young added. The pair, who have been likened to "a bickering old couple" by their friends, continually interrupt each other to get in the last punch-line. Their conversations are satirical and sarcastic, not necessarily grounded in the truth of the matter, but always highly entertaining. Zrike typically plays a bit of the straight man to Young's outlandish humor. Young and Zrike said they will talk on their show about anything they see on campus during the week or anything that a caller wants to bring up. Last week, conversations on the show bounced at a sometimes-frenzied pace between Passover, Earth Day, "Prom from Hell" stories, complaints about strange student activities on the Green and awkward shower situations. And two weeks ago, Zrike and Young tried to launch a "massive kissing spree," complaining to listeners that there is entirely too little kissing on campus and urging the audience remedy the situation. One of the themes of last week's show was "personal hygiene" and featured stories of flagrant disregard for hygiene that Zrike and Young said they have witnessed in College bathrooms. Big personalities The show's slightly off-color humor is perpetuated by the "special guests" that appear, making use of Young's acting ability and wide range of accents. Young's cousin, "Phil Mancuso," frequently visits the show from Philadelphia, bringing his latest shipment of cheese to the Hanover area.