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Afternoon Update: USC Dean in Drug Scandal Got $850,000 in Severance

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chronicle.com

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newsletter@newsletter.chronicle.com

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Fri, May 17, 2019 08:40 PM

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Boston's colleges stiff city on payments in lieu of taxes; which campus anti-drinking rules work; ho

Boston's colleges stiff city on payments in lieu of taxes; which campus anti-drinking rules work; how diplomas get their Latin; and more. [Afternoon Update] Compensation [USC Paid Former Medical-School Dean, Accused of Drug-Fueled Double Life, Nearly $1 Million in Severance]( By Dan Bauman The saga of Carmen Puliafito at the University of Southern California is just one of dozens of scandals in recent years that have cost colleges plenty. PREMIUM ADVERTISEMENT Government [Every Year, Boston Asks Its Colleges to Pay for Their Footprint. Every Year, They Come Up Short.]( By Zipporah Osei The city created a voluntary program to collect revenue from its largest tax-exempt institutions, like Harvard and Boston Universities. But as contributions fall off, activists demand that the city get tougher. PREMIUM The Chronicle Review [The Humanities Without Nostalgia]( By Devin M. Garofalo, Anna Hinton, Kari Nixon, and Jessie Reeder Harking back to an era of “peak English” betrays marginalized scholars. PREMIUM Commencement [They Came, They Saw, They Translated: Here’s How Diplomas Get Their Latin]( By Emma Pettit Every year, universities that confer degrees in Latin rely on scholars to ensure their translations aren’t a train wreck. It’s a taller order that you might think. PREMIUM Students [Colleges Have Anti-Drinking Rules on the Books, but Which Ones Actually Work?]( By Alexander C. Kafka A new study aimed to find out. Tailgating bans? Yeah. Keg registration? Not so much. Paid for and Created by New Jersey Institute of Technology [New Faculty]( Faculty members across disciplines such as machine learning, data analytics, and biometrics are new additions in the STEM fields. Subscribe Today Get insight into critical issues and the actionable analysis you need with a subscription to The Chronicle of Higher Education. Get instant access to in-depth articles, faculty and staff salaries, and much more. [Subscribe Today]( What’s Popular on The Chronicle’s Website [Why Are SAT Takers Getting an ‘Adversity Score’? Here’s Some Context.]( By Eric Hoover Dozens of colleges are using a new tool that measures students’ socioeconomic disadvantages. It’s an attempt to quantify the challenges many applicants encounter. PREMIUM [Academe’s Extinction Event: Failure, Whiskey, and Professional Collapse at the MLA]( By Andrew Kay Taking stock of a vanishing world. PREMIUM [Why It’s OK to Submit Flawed Work]( By Rebecca Schuman It’s time to wrest that article or manuscript from your neurotic mitts. [Why One Scholar Sees Little Evidence on Campus of a Free-Speech ‘Crisis’ — but Plenty of Panic]( By Katherine Mangan Jeffrey A. Sachs, a lecturer in politics at Canada’s Acadia University, believes that an overblown fear is gripping administrators and commentators. PREMIUM Latest Jobs Visit [ChronicleVitae.com]( to view the latest jobs in higher education. [The Chronicle of Higher Education]( [Stop receiving]( this email. [Sign up]( for other newsletters. [View]( our privacy policy. © 2019 [The Chronicle of Higher Education]( 1255 23rd Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037

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