Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Gray Cavender
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Jillian and Wes nodded but didnât speak so he continued, âI think some of the opposition was of an ideological nature.â He pronounced the word as if it were the dictionaryâs short âi,â not the usual long âi.â âI think the âcriticsâ (he used air quotes) in this camp were actually more angry about the Center for the Study of Economic Liberty than about Ayn Rand Studies because of the connections to the Koch Brothers. University professors are as divided as the public in general these days. Faculty fulminated at the Faculty Senate, there were letters to The State PressâŠthatâs the campus paper.â
âOne of our sources said that there was an article in The Chronicle of Higher Education about the topic?â
âYes, Iâm aware of THE ARTICLE,â he emphasized the words. âI think itâs taken on the air of some sort of a bogy-manâŠout there lurkingâŠI donât know.â He shook his head in, either in disgust or just dismissalâŠJillian couldnât tell which. âI have never actually seen the story because it hasnât been published, at least not to date. The putative author is a mystery, too.â
âProfessor Seay,â Wes asked, âIs the situation with Rand and the Koch BrothersâŠ.whatever it isâŠis this something that people were deeply angry about, angry enoughâŠâ he didnât complete the sentence, just opened his right hand.
âI would not have thought so. People have a right to their opinionsâŠI understand the oppositionâŠI doâŠalthough I think itâs been blown out of all proportion, as is so much these days. Do I think someone would be so fired-up as to attack Nelda, no, I cannot imagine any sane professor doing anything thatâŠthat hurtful.â
Jillian continued, âWhat about in your department or in the Business College generallyâŠdid she OR the Center for Ayn Rand Studies have any enemies, any particularly vocal opposition?â
âNot so much, no. The idea of being business-orientedâŠthatâs what we do. Itâs our raison dâetre. No, my sense was that most of the opposition came from elsewhere. Some in EnglishâŠI guess that was to be expected because Nelda held an appointment there. And to be honest, I suspect that there were just some sour grapes, you know, colleagues upset that Nelda had more resources than they didâŠhigher salary, lower teaching loadâŠthe usual issues.â He looked away briefly, then continued, âMaybe itâs human nature, but little things take on more meaning when you donât have much. I guess thereâs a tendency to be jealous of those who have more than you,â he shrugged made a âwho knowsâ face? âOf course, there was also opposition in other departments on campus. And again, that was of a more ideological natureâ (again, the unusual pronunciation) âalthough I think a lot of this wouldnât have been so intense had it just been Ayn Rand Studies. It was also the investment from the Kochs.â
Wes said, âWeâve run into that, too. So, whatâs the story there?â
âSame thing, only even more political, if thatâs possible. For someâboth in academe and outâtheyâre the purveyor of all thatâsâŠevil. Seems theyâre always in the newsâŠthe Koch brothersâŠfor funding some foundation, or for trying to end some government program, or for giving money to their favorite political candidate...and all this is, of course, always on the conservative side of thingsâŠwhich is their rightâŠitâs their money after all, and they can support whatever they believe in, whateverâs in their interest, be it their ideological interest or their economic interest. But, this just serves to rile-up the other side. Of course, for academics who think this, well now the barbarians are at the gate. The Koch brothers are threatening to breach their precious ivory tower.â
Seay thought for a second, then said, âI know thereâs been a lot of ongoing anger about thisâabout the Kochs and all the restâbut honestly, I thought it had blown over. And, I just donât think these larger issues could be related to Nelda. But then, what do I know?â
There were a couple of seconds of silence that were broken by buzzing, first Seayâs cell phone, which was on his desk, then Jillianâs. Seay and Jillian exchanged looks. He returned to his desk while she opened her bag.
âOh my,â Seay said, âTheyâre closing ASU for the rest of the day.â He looked to Jillian as he returned to his chair.
âYes,â she said, and showed her cell to Wes.
He said, âAs you predicted.â
She nodded, âWell, thatâs the protocol.â
Seay asked, âAnd, Iâm assuming that this is because of NeldaâsâŠmurder?â
âYes,â she answered.
âAny idea how long the closure will last?â
âNoâŠprobably not long. I mean, the alert says for today.â
âOh well, if it goes on tomorrow, a lot of faculty will be smiling. We had a faculty meeting scheduled for tomorrow morning. Itâll be like a âsnow dayâ for school kids in the southeast. My kids always love that when we lived in North CarolinaâŠI was getting my doctorate at Duke,â he added.
Wes said, âNobody likes meetings, in whatever job.â He smiled, then said, âProfessor Seay, itâs standard procedure in a situation like this to speak with people who were close to the deceased. Are there people, other professors or anyoneâŠwho you would suggest that we speak with? Knowing more about her will help us understandâŠthe situation.â
âCertainly.â He drummed his fingers on the arm of the chair as he thought, then said, âIâll suggest two colleagues. David Robertsâheâs actually in The Center for Economic Liberty as well as in our departmentâŠEntrepreneurship and Innovation. And Miriam Moser. Miriamâs out at SkySong. Are either of you familiar with SkySong?â
Wes asked, âThat the place on Scottsdale Road with the thing that looks like a giant sail?â
âYes, although itâs always referred to as the âiconic shade structure,â he corrected, and laughed his snorty laugh again. âItâs an ASU campusâŠa center for innovation. Miriam Moser is SkySongâs Executive Director. Nelda spent a good deal of time at
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