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
āNo, we donāt run in the same circles. I have been to a couple of events where he spoke. Sometimes, he seemed pretty intimidatingā¦sometimes, more accessible. But, no, I donāt know him.ā
āOK, so I wonāt drop your name.ā
Jillian shook her head and chuckled.
Jillian was in her office sending ASU webpages to the printer: photos of Ian Naremore, David Roberts, the Business prof, Lucas Seay, the other Business prof, Billy Gilroy, and Susan Moser. She added photos of Professor Spann and Anthony Bradley. She even included a photo of Grace Wilson. Grace seemed to have a not-so-good view of Professor Siemens, too. She would make copies and distribute them to Officer Voss and his group to show the other condo residents, especially those on the Professorās floor.
Wes came over a little later and said, āSo, weāre onā¦tomorrow at 1. And it is in the Foundation Building. What do you figureā¦a five-minute walk?
āShouldnāt be more than that.ā
āThe assistant said that President Davidos was looking forward to meeting with both of us.ā
āHow do you think he knew that there were two of usā?
āDonāt knowā¦maybe your fame precedes you.ā
āRight,ā she said, dismissively.
āOr, maybe the Chief told him that there were two of us working the case.ā He glanced at his watch again. āIāll text the Chief and give her the scoop on our meeting with Davidos tomorrowā¦ā He paused, looked down and then back to Jillian and said, āI think I should call Professor Siemensā dad and get his take on all thisā¦and if you donāt mind, Iād like you to be on the lineā¦in about five?ā
Jillian nodded.
After Wes left, she decided to use the five minutes wisely. She went to her notes from their interview with Professor David Roberts, found the info that she wantedāProfessor Siemensā dadās nameā¦Howell Siemens. She googled him, first, on his University of Southern California (USC) webpageāhe was listed as an Emeritus Professor in the Philosophy Departmentāand then on his Wiki entry.
His USC faculty photo looked a little younger than the one she remembered from the solo photo in Professor Siemensā home office. He received his PhD in Philosophy from the University of Minnesota. Jillian saw that heād written four books and about thirty articles in law reviews, philosophy journals, and in edited volumesā¦this from his USC webpage. His Wiki entry described him as being conservative or libertarian in his philosophic perspective, and he was linked to several well-known philosophers who shared this perspective.
The Personal Life section of the Wiki entry said heād been married to Sylvia Siemens, a corporate lawyer in LA, and that they were both known for their affiliations with conservative causes. Apparently, his wife had worked for a āRepublican-friendlyā law firm. The Wiki entry said sheād died of breast cancer seven years agoāwhat Professor Roberts had saidāand he hadnāt remarried.
Jillian printed a photo of Professor Howell Siemens before she headed to Wesā office. She dreaded phone calls (or in person interviews) like this.
Professor Siemens answered on the fourth ringā¦āDr. Howell Siemens...ā
āHello, Dr. Siemens, Iām Detective Sergeant Wes Webb, Tempe Police Department, Homicide Division, and with me on the line is Detective Sergeant Jillian Warne of the Arizona State University Police Department. Is this a good time for us to speak with you?ā
āAs good as any, I suppose. Your colleague who called with the newsā¦yesterdayā¦said a detective would be callingā¦about the police investigationā¦she mentioned you by name. She was very thoughtful, by the way.ā
āI know Melissa, and she is a nice person. And yes, Detective Sergeant Warne and I are heading the investigation into your daughterās death. But let me say, first, that we are very sorry for your loss. Also, Dr. Siemens, I apologize if some of our questions sound intrusive, but I promise that they will help us find who did this. So, if itās OK, we will beginā¦and I have you on speaker phone so we both can speak and hear.ā
āVery well.ā
Jillian had placed the photo sheād printed from his USC webpage on the desk so she and Wes could see itā¦Wes had been looking at the photo when he made the introductions.
Wes began, āDr. Siemens, I know your family is from the LA areaā¦ā
āThatās right, Orange County. Perhaps a quick history would be in order, Detective Sergeant Webb. I met SylviaāNeldaās momāat the University of Minnesota. I was working toward my doctorate in Philosophy and she was a law studentā¦we met when I took Jurisprudence course in the law school, a course that she was in. Thingsā¦letās just sayā¦they progressed. Then, after graduation, we moved back to LA. I say āback to LAā although Sylvie was the one who was from hereā¦Iām originally from Minnesota. Anyway, we moved to LA because things were nicely set-up for her here. Her dad was a partner in an established law firmāsheād clerked with them in the summersāand she barely had time to ditch her cap and gown before theyād hired her. Another partner at the firm had been a Philosophy major as an undergrad at USC, and went to law school there, tooā¦so that smoothed the way for me.ā
Jillian said, āThank you, that helps. Did Professor Siemens have brothers or sisters?ā
āNo siblings, no. Sylvie wanted to make partner first, so Nelda didnāt come along till later: I was 37ā¦she was 34. So, Nelda was a āone-off.ā We were busy with our careers, and Sylvie wanted no part of the āmommy trackā business.ā
Jillian continued, āI know that Professor Siemens went to Wellesley College, then The University of Chicago.ā
āThatās correct. Sylvie had gone to Wellesley and wanted Nelda to go there, as well. From the very beginning, Nelda was always top of her classā¦no surprise given that her parents were a prof and a successful attorney.ā He laughed. āWe were perhaps surprised that she majored in English, but, wellā¦thatās worked-outā¦ā
He tapered-off, and Jillian assumed that the reality of the situation had returned. For some reason, his voice was at a higher pitch than
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