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T H E O L D E ST C O L L E G E DA I LY · FO U N D E D 1 8 7 8

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2012 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 11 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY SUNNY

65 74

CROSS CAMPUS

NEW THESPIANS TIMING OF BAZAAR CAUSES CONCERN

ENV. STUDIES

E-BOOKS

W. SOCCER

Program expands offerings as course enrollments climb

NEW HAVEN LIBRARY EYES DIGITAL FOCUS

Offense explodes for eight goals from seven Elis in rout of St. Peter’s

PAGES 8-9 CULTURE

PAGE 3 NEWS

PAGE 5 CITY

PAGE 14 SPORTS

Y-NHH, St. Raphael’s close the deal

The wait is (almost) over.

Shake Shack, the burger sensation that has taken New York by storm, will land in New Haven tomorrow, hosting a ribbon-cutting ceremony with Mayor John DeStefano Jr. Thursday at 11 a.m. In the meantime, there’s a small, invite-only party at the burger joint today, but if you have to ask how to get in, you’ll never know.

BY CHARLES CONDRO STAFF REPORTER

The wait is (actually) over.

Members of the class of 2013 must submit their schedules to residential college deans by 5 p.m. today. Professors, breathe a sigh of relief: Shopping period is finally over. The battle continues.

Republican Linda McMahon may be winning the cash war, but U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy has some highprofile backers helping him out in Connecticut: NARAL, the pro-choice group, is running ads in Connecticut blasting McMahon for failing to demand that employers pay for their employees’ contraception.

Administrative details.

Though she’s firmly a Republican, McMahon will also be listed as an Independent on the ballot: she received the requisite 7,500 signatures to qualify as an Independent, according to a press release from Secretary of the State Denise Merrill. Murphy already qualified for a double-listing on the ballot, as a Democrat, and as a member of the Working Families Party.

KAMARIA GREENFIELD/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

The CEOs of Yale-New Haven Hospital and the Hospital of Saint Raphael signed paperwork Tuesday that made the merger of their hospitals official. BY BEN PRAWDZIK STAFF REPORTER After more than a year of planning and regulatory review, YaleNew Haven Hospital officially acquired the Hospital of St. Raphael for $160 million on Tuesday, making the newly merged 1,519-bed institution the fourth-largest hospital in the United States. Marna Borgstrom, the CEO of

Yale-New Haven, and St. Raphael’s CEO Christopher O’Connor signed the closing documents for the deal during a press event held in YaleNew Haven’s 55 Park St. auditorium on Monday afternoon. Over 100 attendees attended the signing, including administrators from both hospital systems as well as city and state officials. The hospitals legally merged assets and became one healthcare entity at 12:01 a.m. this

morning, according to Yale-New Haven spokesman Rob Hutchinson. “This integration will be critical to meeting the extraordinary healthcare challenges that lie ahead,” Borgstrom said. “We are delighted that with all of the necessary approvals and due diligence behind us, we can begin the important work of integrating these two SEE MERGER PAGE 4

Office Hours. Former Yale College Council President Brandon Levin ’14 will hold Office Hours today in Bass Café as he seeks student input to provide to the committee responsible for selecting Yale’s next president. Harvard cheating expands.

Some students accused in the cheating scandal up in Cambridge are taking preemptive measures: Sports Illustrated reported Tuesday that Kyle Casey, one of the Crimson’s star basketball players, is taking a leave of absence this year rather than face possible suspension. In all, 125 undergrads have been accused in the cheating scandal, which occurred at the end of last term in Introduction to Congress. Taking action. Dean Mary Miller reminded instructors on Tuesday of the University’s collaboration and plagiarism policies. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1979 New Haven’s new sewage system will cost the University $400,000 in water costs, officials announce. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE cc.yaledailynews.com

The Yale Visiting International Student Program, which began last year and currently accepts students from Mexico, Singapore and Hong Kong, is looking to partner with institutions in Japan and Brazil as well. Yale is negotiating Y-VISP partnerships with Waseda University

in Tokyo and several institutions in Brazil, said Kathryn Bell, assistant director of the Center for International Experience and director of Y-VISP. Bell said the one-year program received positive feedback from its first round of participants, and that by adding new schools the University is hoping both to grow the program’s enrollment and broaden its geographic scope. But since visiting students are not eli-

HackYale to launch open workshops BY APSARA IYER AND JULIA ZORTHIAN CONTRIBUTING REPORTER AND STAFF REPORTER The roughly 240 students not admitted to this fall’s HackYale lecture course will have the opportunity to attend new workshops HackYale is planning to introduce later this semester. HackYale, a student group founded last year by Will Gaybrick LAW ’12 and Bay Gross ’13, received roughly 300 applications for its survey lecture course, which provides an introduction to website design and programming. Zack ReneauWedeen ’14, HackYale director, said the new workshop series will give students a chance to learn about their interests without making a semester-long commitment, adding that some students’ attendance diminished in courses offered last spring as the semester progressed. “In the workshops, students can get the same knowledge and

I don’t think there’s any more pressure at all [on Eric Williams ’16]. He’s got 10 guys [with him]. TONY RENO Head coach, football

gible for Yale financial aid, she said Y-VISP must primarily consider whether its potential partner institutions are able to finance a year abroad for their students. Bell said the program is “very close” to formalizing an agreement with Waseda University. While Yale has also considered collaborating with institutions in Europe, Bell said SEE INTERNATIONAL PAGE 6

SEE QUARTERBACK PAGE 6

Int’l student program weighs expansion BY ALEKSANDRA GJORGIEVSKA STAFF REPORTER

When the football team leaves campus Thursday evening for its season opener at Georgetown, quarterback John Whitelaw ’14 will not be on board. Whitelaw announced his departure from the football team in an email to his teammates Tuesday, the News has learned. His decision comes in the wake of head coach Tony Reno’s announcement that Eric Williams ’16 would start at quarterback against Georgetown on Saturday. After spring practice last year, Whitelaw had widely been expected to be named starter in the fall. The loss of the veteran Whitelaw is the latest in a string of offseason obstacles for the Bulldogs. Following controversies over the resignation of former head coach Tom Williams and the Rhodes Scholarship candidacy of Patrick Witt ’12, the team experienced another setback in August when linebacker Will McHale ’13 had his captaincy suspended following a fight at Toad’s Place in May.

Prior to his leaving the team, Whitelaw was featured in head coach Tony Reno’s game plan for Saturday and both Whitelaw and Williams were listed as possible starters on the media depth chart. “Eric will start, I made a decision over the weekend,” Reno said at a lunch with members of the media yesterday, prior to Whitelaw’s announcement. “[But] John [Whitelaw] will play.” Reno said that Whitelaw left the team “to pursue other interests.” He added, however, that Whitelaw’s departure would not affect his young quarterback. “I don’t think there’s any more pressure at all [on Williams],” Reno said. “He’s got 10 guys [with him].” Although he has never taken a collegiate snap, Williams has already gained the confidence of his teammates.

Volunteer in New Haven.

Dwight Hall, Yale’s main undergrad volunteer group, will hold its Bazaar from 7 to 9 p.m. at Dwight Hall on Old Campus.

Quarterback Whitelaw ’13 quits team

Whitney gains new leader

reward from HackYale without the time-block commitment all semester,” Reneau-Wedeen said. “[The workshops will be] a lot more flexible, and Yale students who are busy need that flexibility.”

In the workshops, students can get the same knowledge … without the time-block commitment. ZACK RENEAU-WEDEEN ’14 Director, HackYale Reneau-Wedeen said he hopes to hold workshops twice per week and cover a range of programming topics, such as how to use Adobe Photoshop SEE HACKYALE PAGE 6

YALE

Professor Gary Tomlinson will serve as the Whitney Humanities Center’s director for five years. BY DHRUV AGGARWAL AND MONICA DISARE CONTRIBUTING REPORTER AND STAFF REPORTER A new director took the helm of the Whitney Humanities Center this academic year, with broad but currently undetailed visions for strengthening the humanities at Yale. The University appointed music and humanities professor Gary Tomlinson to a five-year term as the center’s director in April, and he assumed the post in July.

Now three months into his tenure, Tomlinson said he is still in the “listening stage” and declined to offer specifics on any of his initiatives for the 2012-’13 academic year, but said he generally hopes to makes the humanities more central to discussions about the future of education at the University. “A university without the humanities at its heart is going to be an impoverished SEE WHITNEY PAGE 4


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