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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 12 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY CLEAR

83 61

CROSS CAMPUS

SHOES TO FILL REPLACING YALE’S GRADUATED STARS

MEET-AND-GREET

NEW FRIENDS

Surgeon General Vivek Murthy emphasizes relationships at the SOM.

“FIVES,” A NEW APP, FACILITATES LIKEMINDED MATCHES.

PAGE 12 SPORTS

PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY

PAGE 5 SCI-TECH

“Mind your own business.”

Such is essentially what GOP candidates Carly Fiorina and Donald Trump, both being accomplished executives, have been barking at each other over the past few days as part of emerging campaign beef. Trump brought the fight to the stage on Wednesday night, invoking “Head of Yale Business School” Jeffrey Sonnenfeld’s harsh criticisms of Fiorina’s time as the CEO of Hewlett-Packard. STEPHANIE ADDENBROOKE/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Lyon for President. After a wildly successful sophomore campaign, men’s ice hockey goalie Alex Lyon ’17 is preparing to get his name on a few ballots by the end of the year. Anticipating that the Baudette, Minn., native will continue dominating in net, SBNation’s college hockey season preview listed Lyon as the top goalie in the ECAC. We don’t bite. James Bennet

’88, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, will be on campus for a discussion with The Yale Politic exploring his career path, views on the journalism industry and decision not to join the News while at Yale.

Bond that never breaks. The

University will be receiving a little gift on Monday, after discovering that it was due $153 in interest payments for buying a bond originally issued in 1648 by Dutch water authority de Stichtse Rijnlanden. No word yet on how much of that money will be picked up by Yale’s private equity fund managers, though.

Band that never ages. If you’re

still preoccupied with 1985, you’re in luck: The Doobie Brothers are in town, playing at the College Street Music Hall at 7:30 p.m. “This event is all ages,” promotional materials read — not that we’d expect a diversity of generations to be in the crowd tonight.

Incumbent Ward 1 Alder Sarah Eidelson ’12 successfully fended off a primary challenge from Fish Stark ’17.

Union-backed candidates sweep primaries BY DANIELA BRIGHENTI AND ERICA PANDEY STAFF REPORTERS Six of the eight Democratic primaries across the city resulted in incumbent victories. In addition to Ward 1 — where incumbent Sarah Eidelson ’12 won the Democratic nomination over challenger Fish Stark ’17 — seven other wards held aldermanic primaries Wednesday: Ward 11 (Fair Haven Heights), Ward 12 (Quinnipiac Meadows), Ward 14 (Fair Haven), Ward 18 (Morris Cove), Ward 20 (Newhallville), Ward 28 (Beaver Hills) and Ward 30 (West Rock). UNITE HERE Local 34, Yale’s technical and office workers’ union, had SEE PRIMARIES PAGE 8

BY NOAH DAPONTE-SMITH STAFF REPORTER What many had expected to be a tight race proved to be anything but. After a seven-month campaign, Fish Stark ’17 suffered a hefty defeat in his bid for the Democratic nomination for Ward 1 alder at the hands of incumbent Sarah Eidelson ’12. Stark garnered only about 35 percent of the vote, after out-fundraising Eidelson by a margin of 10-to-one. Despite the fundraising differences, both candidates spent similar amounts of money on their campaigns. Stark’s supporters gathered in Wall Street Pizza shortly after 8 p.m., just as results were announced. In his speech to the group of roughly 20 supporters, nearly all of them undergraduates, Stark argued that the campaign was not a complete failure. More importantly, though, Stark vowed to stick to his promise to support the Democratic nominee in the

YNHH sees further cuts BY AMAKA UCHEGBU STAFF REPORTER In the midst of weathering a $67 million decrease in Medicaid reimbursements, Yale-New Haven Hospital will face another 1.3 percent decrease in revenue, a result of failing to meet readmission rate standards for the fourth year in a row. Though YNHH’s 1.3 percent reduction is

Sarah Eidelson ’12 on Wednesday beat back a primary challenge from Fish Stark ’17, overcoming the most significant hurdle toward a third term as Ward 1 alder. Shortly after 8 p.m., when polls at the New Haven Public Library closed, chants of “I believe that we will win” filled a narrow hallway outside the voting area. Exit polls had consistently showed Eidelson in the lead throughout the day. Those polls were quickly confirmed after voting ended, with official results counting 307 votes — 64 percent — for Eidelson compared to 176 for Stark. The total turnout of 483 voters in the Democratic primary is only a small fraction of eligible voters in the world.. Eidelson now faces a less daunting obstacle in the general election, in the form of Ugonna Eze ’16, a Republican. Ward 1, comprised mainly of Yale students, leans overwhelmingly Democratic, as does New Haven as a whole. In 2013, Paul Chandler ’14 mounted a spirited effort

to unseat Eidelson, but fell short with only 285 votes to Eidelson’s 513. “There is no misunderstanding the results of this election,” Eidelson said in an interview Wednesday night. “Yale students have been clear about what they want to see, and that consensus is just going to grow leading up to the general election and beyond.” If reelected in the Nov. 3 general election, Eidelson will serve her third consecutive term as Ward 1 alder. Such a victory would overturn a generation of precedent. For well over two decades, the Ward 1 alder has been either a Yale student or someone who recently graduated. Voter turnout in Ward 1 was comparable to that in the Morris Cove, Newhallville and Beaver Hills wards, which all had voter turnouts close to 500. The other four wards with primaries all had fewer than 450 constituents cast ballots. Eidelson said she expects the total vote count to increase in the general election as students, particularly freshmen, will have had more time on campus to form SEE EIDELSON PAGE 8

Stark throws weight behind Eidelson general election, effectively throwing his weight behind Eidelson. “We have a Democratic nominee now,” Stark said in his speech. “We’ve got to get behind the Democratic nominee and make sure this city keeps moving forward.”

We’ve got to get behind the Democratic nominee and make sure this city keeps moving forward. FISH STARK ’17 Fmr. alder candidate, Ward 1 Eidelson will face Republican Ugonna Eze ’16 in the general election on Nov. 3. Stark has also said he has no plans to run for a second time in 2017. In an interview with the News

after his speech, Stark said he believed Eidelson had deployed superior resources, especially in the final days of the campaign. “I think if you look at the numbers, she had more folks on the doors,” Stark said. “Our team was largely students, people who weren’t professional.” Still, Stark’s field effort was far from anemic — his team knocked on every door on Old Campus and in the eight residential colleges in Ward 1 on Tuesday. Sergio Lopez-Valdez ’18, Stark’s campaign manager, thanked the campaign’s volunteers for their work and commended Stark on the leadership he had displayed during the campaign. Stark said he would not characterize the campaign as a failure. Instead, he said the campaign will leave positive traces on the city. “We have a lot of people on our team and beyond who are talking SEE STARK PAGE 8

Sig Ep brothers will stand trial in suit

the lowest relative penalty that the federal government levies against hospitals that have failed to meet readmission standards, the penalty will still cost the hospital millions of dollars. It comes after the closure of two Yale-New Haven Health System clinics, the upcoming consolidation of two urgent care centers and concerns that job SEE YNHH PAGE 6

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

2014 As the University prepares to break ground on the new residential colleges, City Hall continues to push for the construction project to proceed with the objectives of spurring local business and hiring New Haven residents. Follow along for the News’ latest.

Twitter | @yaledailynews

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

PAGE 12 SPORTS

BY ERICA PANDEY STAFF REPORTER

expected, sparks flew during last night’s Republican presidential debate — thanks, in part, to CNN’s seeming desire to actively turn the candidates against each other. And beyond Ben Carson ’73 speaking third-most frequently on the night, Yale’s fingerprints were everywhere.

conveniently, Sonnenfeld and Trump met face-to-face in the latter’s New York office, where Trump attempted to convince the SOM senior associate dean why he should be president. Sonnenfeld was joined by ISPS Director Jacob Hacker GRD ’00 and wrote about the conversation for Fortune Magazine on Wednesday.

Men’s soccer team looks to Quinnipiac and Iona for a long-awaited win.

Eidelson bests Stark, easing route to third term

Blue amidst the red. As

All about the hair. Rather

STILL STRUGGLING

YALE DAILY NEWS

Yale-New Haven Hospital faces a 1.3 percent decrease in Medicare reimbursements for failing to meet readmission rate standards for the fourth year in a row.

BY VIVIAN WANG STAFF REPORTER For 85 former Yale students and brothers of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, simply being present at the 2011 Harvard-Yale tailgate crash that left one woman dead and two injured may be enough to be held responsible for the accident, a Waterbury superior court judge ruled Wednesday. Eighty-five students who were members of Yale’s chapter of Sig Ep at the time of the crash, plus the driver of the vehicle, Brendan Ross ’13, who was also a brother, will face a jury trial in December, judge Kari Anne Dooley wrote, denying their March 2015 motion for summary judgment. The students were all named in a lawsuit filed by Sarah Short SOM ’13, one of the injured women, because they were members of Yale’s chapter of Sig Ep at the time of the crash, which resulted when Ross lost control of a U-Haul truck

while on his way to a fraternity-sanctioned tailgate and collided with a group of pedestrians. Short sued all the active members of Yale’s chapter of Sig Ep at the time because the national Sig Ep fraternity resisted claims of liability, according to an interview early last year with Joel Faxon of the Faxon Law Group, the firm representing Short. Dooley ruled last month that the national fraternity must also proceed to jury trial to determine their responsibility. Keidel, Weldon & Cunningham LLP, the firm representing the individual members, filed a motion for summary judgment in March, which would have allowed them to bypass a jury trial and have a decision rendered by judge. But Dooley rejected that motion on Wednesday, writing that the defendants — in this case the 84 individual members — had not met the “very heavy burSEE SIG EP PAGE 6


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