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The Dartmouth
June 27, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Dartmouth receives $300k grant

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Since 1992, the government has required that food packages carry a "nutrition facts" label. Now, a team of Dartmouth researchers wants prescriptions to have their own fact boxes, and they are set to receive a $394,333 grant to develop that idea. Lisa Schwartz and Steven Woloshin, researchers at Dartmouth Medical School and the Veterans Affairs Hospital in White River Junction, Vt., are getting the money in a government effort to combat pharmaceutical company spin. These boxes would show doctors the pros and cons of drugs they might prescribe without their having to search through the fine print of FDA-mandated drug information or look up clinical trials on the internet. "The idea is to give them simple tabular data so they can have some sense of the size of the effect of the drug," said Gilbert Welch, another researcher on the project. Welch said the ultimate goal would be to have the FDA include these boxes with the required insert, which patients get with their medicines or see on the back of magazine ads. The grant is one of 22 being distributed to medical institutions across the country. According to Julie Brill of the Vermont Attorney General's Office, the grant winners were selected from more than 30 proposals by an association of state attorneys general in association with outside consultants. She said they were looking for a variety of possible approaches that would help give doctors unbiased information they might otherwise not have time to get. "We thought they were worth funding to see how successful they are," Brill said. The money comes from a 2004 government settlement with Warner-Lambert for marketing the anti-seizure drug Neurontin for unapproved uses.



News

Tovbulatov sanctioned, Duszlak withdraws

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Yesterday, the Elections Planning and Advisory Committee sanctioned vice-presidential candidate Ruslan Tovbulatov '09, and presidential candidate Eddie Duszlak '07 announced that he would drop out of the race, citing time management and social pressures. "I underestimated the time it would take to run and to be president," he said.



News

Judge finds DeGeare '99 insane, not guilty

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Last Friday, Senior District Judge Richard Hall accepted a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity from Nathaniel DeGeare '99, sparing him from a murder trial in the death of his 60-year-old mother, Mary "Gwen" DeGeare.



News

Daily Debriefing

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College Trustee T.J. Rodgers '70 was featured on the front page of Monday's Business section of The New York Times for his role in cutting-edge developments in solar power technology.







Zantop Memorial Lecturer Carlos Fuentes
News

Fuentes charms audience in Zantop memorial lecture

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Courtesy of Vox of Dartmouth Evoking frequent laughter from an overflowing audience, renowned author Carlos Fuentes spoke on Friday about literature in a speech entitled "The Creative Spirit as a Force for Humanism." Fuentes, a champion of Mexican and Latin American political issues, was invited to deliver the annual Susanne Zantop Memorial Lecture, named in honor of the late comparative literature professor who was murdered along with her husband in 2001. "He's a really important figure in political science, history, government, Spanish and literature.


News

Leb. airport moves ahead with major expansion

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The Lebanon Municipal Airport in West Lebanon is requesting a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to begin construction on a new south apron and roughly 20 hangars as early as this May. Airport manager Steve Miller said that the primary goal of the construction is to increase the income of the town.


News

Study suggests teacher certification is ineffective

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The teacher accreditations and certifications set forth by the No Child Left Behind Act are ineffective at increasing teacher efficacy, according to a new paper from the Brookings Institution co-authored by Dartmouth economics professor Douglas Staiger. Some schools also use accreditations as a structure for pay increases, but teachers with these qualifications are no better at increasing test scores than those who have not been certified. Staiger, who has worked on similar education policy-related questions before, used data from the Los Angeles school district to determine that students with accredited teachers did not receive higher test scores than students whose teachers lacked accreditation. "The answer to all of those comparisons," Staiger said, "is that certification is essentially unrelated to their effectiveness in the classroom." Staiger has also compared scores from students of certified teachers to scores of students whose teachers are in the Teach For America program, which places recent college graduates as teachers in low-income schools without going through a certification process.


Tuck Students pass by the
News

Tuck Global Consultancy program celebrates first decade

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Phil Bracikowski The Tuck Global Consultancy program, which helps second-year Tuck students provide consulting services to international corporations abroad, is celebrating its 10-year anniversary this year. The program, established in 1997 and managed by Tuck's Center for International Business, sends selected students around the world to embark on 13-week-long projects where they work in teams to gain real-world experience by developing solutions to fit a corporate client's needs. Offered through the Field Study in International Business course, Tuck's most selective and popular second-year elective, the Tuck Global Consultancy program has sent teams abroad to complete 104 assignments for over 70 clients in 51 countries.


News

Endowment manager advises seniors

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With graduation less than two months away, many seniors who will soon face the financial responsibilities of adulthood attended a lecture on investing by Dartmouth endowment manager David Russ in Collis Commonground on Thursday evening. "I'm here because I don't know anything about money management," Emily Bussigel '06 said.


News

Larimore to interview for Swarthmore job

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Dean of the College James Larimore may be leaving Dartmouth in the near future for Swarthmore College, where he was named a finalist for the position of Dean of Students last Friday. According to Larimore, who said that he had not decided whether he would take the job if it were offered to him, a Swarthmore search consultant contacted him about the position several months ago, but he only agreed to be considered as a candidate late last week. He said that, if selected, one of his biggest considerations will be "trying to understand whether the dean is able to have more of an impact at a smaller school." The Dean of Students at Swarthmore has more academic responsibilities and influence than does the Dean of the College at Dartmouth.


Alyssa Minsky '06 works on filing her taxes as the deadline quickly nears.
News

Students face financial aid, tax deadlines

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Jeewon Kim / The Dartmouth Senior Staff While April 15 is well-known as the deadline for submitting tax returns, Dartmouth students who receive financial aid must face the additional burden of filing for financial aid this year on the same day. "The financial aid process is a very frustrating process for me," Agatha Erickson '09 said.