Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) š
- Author: Gray Cavender
Book online Ā«Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) šĀ». Author Gray Cavender
The C/V listed publications. The one heād mentioned that stirred-up the controversy with Professor Siemens was entitled, āFollow the Money: A Critical Review of Inside Job.ā He had published papers in several law reviews and had another, longer batch of publications in criminology journalsā¦she remembered citing articles from some of these journals in her own term papers.
Professor Naremoreās Wiki page was more interesting. The āEarly Lifeā section recounted that he was a poor kid for whom The University of Californiaās only relevance was traffic congestion on football Saturdays. Later, heād go to Cal on a tennis scholarship. The entry said that Professor Naremore had been a nationally ranked college tennis player. It even included a quote from a former coach who said that what made him such a good tennis player was that he was a fierce competitor, and that during volleys, āIan would not stop until he had won the point.ā There also was a comment from Professor Naremore who said that a life-changing event came when he heard the film director, Spike Lee, speak on the Berkeley campus. Lee had talked about the importance of an education. He had warned young black athletes not to be distracted by high school or college sportsāmost of them would never be good enough to go proāso Spike said they should study hard and get something out of their education, something that could generate a career. That motivated a young Ian Naremore to do just that.
According to the entry, Robert Tipton, a law professor at Cal, had been an important mentor for Naremore during his graduate studies. Tipton was an internationally regarded criminologist in the area of regulation and crime. Jillian had heard of him, and not only in Professor Naremoreās classes. Tipton had written the āForwardā to Professor Naremoreās Enron bookā¦Jillian knew that āForwardsā were a big deal in academic books.
Next, she did turn to Professor Siemensā¦ASU material first. Her English Department faculty profile photo was a head shot. In it, she wore a green jacket, a cream-colored blouse, and a necklace of dark, coral stones. The photo was much more of a close-up than the one in the Professorās condo so Jillian could see more detail: the jacket fabric looked to be silk. The Professor had a creamy complexion, and again, her make-up and hair were perfect. Here, her hair was longer than Jillian remembered from her lying on the floor in her officeā¦more like the condo photo of her receiving an award.
Professor Siemensā English Department webpage was organized like the others sheād just accessed. Jillian had already seen her degrees reflected in the framed diplomas on her office walls. The two books on Ayn Rand that Professor Gilroy had mentioned were listed, as was an edited volume of articles, journal articles, and chapters in other peopleās edited volumes. The Professor had been productive, although not as much so as had Professor Naremore. Jillian couldnāt tell from the titles which book chapter was the one wherein Professor Siemens had attacked Professor Naremore.
Professor Siemensā Wiki entry was considerably longer. It listed a smattering of the corporate boards she was on, and also noted her affiliation with several think tanks. Jillian knew them to be of a conservative bent because sheād heard them mentioned (and so labeled) on NPR. With some organizations, she was listed as āA Fellow,ā and with others as āAn Affiliate.ā Professor Siemens had been at Mount Holyoke before ASUā¦one of the Seven Sister Universities that Professor Gilroy had mentioned.
Her Wiki entry did note that she was a controversial figure. Perhaps it didnāt say it exactly in these words, but sheād obviously been in several dust-ups with other professors, and not just with Professor Naremore. There also had been fireworks when sheād spoken at The University of New Hampshire. A conservative campus organization had invited her to speak, but another group had opposed her. She did speak, but there had been a boycott. According to the entry, her comments had been provocative.
These disputes constituted only a portion of her Wiki entry, but still they were enough to have their own section labeled Controversies. The part of the entry about her position at ASU was, for the most part, what Jillian had already gleaned elsewhere.
Jillian looked away for the screen and thought about Professor Siemens, her career, and the controversies that had surrounded her professional life. She also thought about her lying dead in her office, and wondered if any of those controversies had any bearing on her murder. She thought, too, about Professor Naremoreās harsh comments about her.
Her short reverie ended, and it was back to the task at hand. Jillian Googled Ayn Rand, and her immediate response was āWhoa.ā There were a ton of entries, including several Wiki entriesā¦so many entries that at the bottom of the page there was a series of numbers indicating more pages...a lot of them. She was thinking that maybe she should do this later, when there was a knock at the door of the interrogation room. Sheād been so engrossed in her work that she was startled, and actually jumped a little in the chair.
It was Wesā¦she motioned him in.
āWhat are you doing, Jilly?ā
āIām doing some Google homework on all the players. Iāve read entries for Professors Gilroy, Siemens, and Naremore. I was about to get into Ayn Rand, but there were so manyā¦I was blown away.ā
āJilly Warne, Google detective. But why donāt you just use Eduardoās office?ā
āOh, I just wanted to be able to focus, and this room was just quieterā¦fewer distractions.ā
Wes
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