Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Gray Cavender
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âBrother,â was all she could manage, her first words since Sarah had begun these comments. She gave another, longer sigh. Then, âOK, I think youâd better tell me more about the grievance process in this caseâŠwere you handling the grievance?â
âNo, one of my colleagues, Kathleen Jermyn, caught this oneâŠshe handles the lionâs share of the grievances that come to us. She mentioned it to me, but only in passingâŠyou know, âhereâs an interesting oneââŠsomething like that. Then, when the news came down about Professor Siemens beingâŠwell, murderedâŠthis is still hard to wrap my head aroundâŠanyway, Kathleen thought this incident might be important. She knew that you and I are friends, so she and I talkedâŠand we also discussed the situation with our supervisor, and everyone agreed that I needed to get this information to youâŠASAP. So, here it is,â she said, and pushed the pages across the table.
Even as she tried to clear her mind, Jillian flashed on the scheduled interview tomorrow with Professor Naremore. She didnât mention this, though. Instead, after mentally shaking her head clear, she said, âTwo things jump out at me, Sarah. You said Professor Siemens wasnât on the committeeâs agenda that dayâŠshe was there specifically to oppose Professor Naremoreâs certificate. And, second, you said she appeared to have read his proposal in advance. How are those things possible?â
Sarah thought for a few second, then said, âWell, as for point one, the committeeâs agenda isnât secret, itâs public information because itâs a public meeting. The second point is harderâŠgetting Professor Naremoreâs proposal in advanceâŠI donât know how she managed thatâŠitâs just that she seems to have read it. But as for howâŠI donât know.â
Jillian nodded. âSo, who chairs the University Curriculum Committee?â
Sarah reached across for the pages, turned them sideways, and said, âOK, the committee Chair is Steve SylvesterâŠhe a professor inâŠAccounting. But, my sense about these university-level committees is that staff people play a major role in managing the agenda and most of the actual business. In this case that would beâŠLouisa Disis.
Sarah punched several buttons on her cell phone, and in less than 30 seconds, texted Jillian ASU phone numbers for Professor Sylvester and Ms. Disis. After her cell swooshed that the texts had been sent, she said, âSo, Kathleen had started her work-up on the grievance.â
âThatâs great. What was she finding?â
âSheâd contacted Professor Sylvester, who said that the other professor, the one who convinced Professor Naremore to leave the meeting, was a music professor namedâŠâ Sarah again looked at one of the sideways pages sheâd given Jillian. âJeff LeJohns. He was at the meeting advocating for his own graduate certificateâŠsomething in music, of course,â she smiled.
âProfessor Sylvester told Kathleen that he thought that LeJohns and Naremore knew one another, which helped in getting Professor Naremore to leave the meeting. Kathleen then contacted Professor LeJohns, and he confirmed that, yes, the incident did happen. This was only a preliminary call, and she hasnât followed-up with him. And, she hadnât contacted Ms. Disis, yetâŠthe staff person. We stopped everything till we could get all this information to you.â She scrolled on her cell phone and texted Jillian Professor LeJohnsâ ASU phone number.
âWe did the right thing, didnât we, getting this information to you?â
âAbsolutely, SarahâŠthank you.â
Sarah asked, âI mean, it seems relevant, right?â
âOh yes. At the risk of saying too much, it goes to motive. It was in Professor Naremoreâs interest that Professor Siemens not complete the formal grievance, soâŠâ She sighed again.
âI guess this job can wear on youâŠtoo many victims, huh?â
Jillian nodded and said, âThatâs for sureâŠand definitely too many criminalsâŠbad people doing bad things. And worse, good people doing bad things. Sometimes I wonder if this was a good career choice. You know?â
Their teas came, the server said their food would be âupâ soon, and left.
Sarah said, âDo you remember during your job interview when I asked you a question about being a police detective? You said, and this is either a quote or close to itâŠyou said that what you wanted was to âdo the right thingâ and take problematic people off the street. You didnât say âthe bad guysâ like TV detectivesâŠyou said âproblematic people.â And that impressed me.â
Before Jillian could respond, Sarah continued, âYou also said that you worried about what happened to people after you arrested them. Problematic people off the street, yes, but you worried about our prison system. Which you described as âbroken,â especially with people of color.â
âGood memory, but did I actually say all that?â
âYes, you did, and it really impressed me. You seemed determined to do the right thing, and you were thoughtful about it. After you got the job, I decided that Iâd like a friend who thought like you think. Iâve never had a friend whoâs a detectiveâŠwell, actually I have a cousin who is a police officer.â
âAnd?â
âOh, heâs a jerk. So OK, not a good example.â
They laughed, and Sarah continued, âBut his being a jerk is unrelated to being a cop. He was a jerk when we were kids. And heâs a jerk now that heâs a cop. Heâd be a jerk if he was a lawyer. Actually, heâd probably be an even bigger jerk.â
They laughed again, and it lightened the mood at the table.
Their food arrived, they used some extra plates to share bites, and both asked for tea refills.
Jillian said, âI guess in some ways maybe being a lawyer also generates reflections. Did you leave private practice because you had to defend clients who you didnât like?â
So, I didnât handle any criminal defense work. Actually, Bentley and Waffardâmy former firmâdoes virtually no criminal defense work. But you are right about one thingâŠa lawyer, especially one whoâs just starting out, doesnât get to choose her clients. I worked for clients in business-related cases where, to be honest, the only reason that I cared about winning was that they were my clientâŠand it was my job.
She thought as
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