Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Gray Cavender
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âDr. Siemens, I saw a picture of Milton Friedman in one of your daughterâs officesâŠwas he her mentor in the MBA program at The University of Chicago?â
âNot exactlyâŠFriedman had moved on to Stanford by the time Nelda was studying at ChicagoâŠalthough they did meetâŠthough the Philadelphia Society. Thatâs an organization, Detective Sergeant Warne, that fosters conservative and libertarian intellectual ideas. Nelda became a member early-on in her MBA studies. Anyway, thatâs where she and Friedman met. Later, she did have an intercession course with himâthis was an intensive two-week seminar, as I recallâactually it was at Stanford. And based on her performance in that seminar, Friedman agreed to be a guest member of her MBA committeeâŠNeldaâs always been a good networker. I had the sense that Friedman was intrigued that Nelda was working on an MBA while also getting her PhD in English. Plus, I think it was the Rand connection and their libertarian ideasâŠRandâs and Neldaâs.â
Jillian seemed to be on a roll with Dr. Siemens so Wes motioned that she should continue to ask the questions. âWe been speaking to her friends and colleagues, and theyâve said that Professor Siemens was single. Is this correct?â
âThatâs correct, yes. Now, when she was a grad student, Nelda was engaged to a young man who was in her MBA program...he was working on his JD/MBA. Sylvie was thinking that Nelda would marry a lawyerâŠmaybe theyâd move back to LA. We liked him: he was a nice guy and seemed to love NeldaâŠand he shared our politics. We thought they were serious.â
Jillian asked, âSo what happened?â
âA career thing. Grant had an offer from a solid Chicago firm, I mean a very good offerâŠone he couldnât pass-up. And, while there would have been some university jobs in Chicago for Nelda, they just werenât of her caliber. So, when the Mount Holyoke offer came through, she broke it offâŠher callâŠand never looked back. We totally understood.â
âAnd his name was Grant?â
âThatâs right, Grant Everett. Far as I know, heâs still at the same Chicago firm.â
âDr. Siemens, itâs Wes Webb again. If I may, Iâll like to change topics a little.â
âOK.â
Jillian noticed that Wes was again looking at the photo of Dr. Siemens that she printed. It was almost as if he was speaking to the photo.
âAgain, Detective Sergeant Warne and I have been talking with your daughterâs friends and colleagues. Incidentally, your daughter had good friends, and colleagues who respected her. Nevertheless, they did share with us certain controversiesâŠranging from creating the Ayn Rand Center in the first place, to run-ins with students more recently. Can you talk us through this?â
âSure. Obviously, I donât know what office politics are like in your profession, Detective Sergeant Webb, but in universitiesâand this is both in general, and in departments in particularâsometimes itâs like internecine warfare. Universities can be an especially hostile environment for principled libertarians. I experienced it throughout my own career, from my grad student days up and until the day I retired. And sad to say, Nelda has had her share of run-ins, too. And what was her great sinâŠit was that she wouldnât tolerate any of the politically correct discourseâdiscourse AND policiesâthatâs endemic to universities these days. I knowâŠthere were a couple of complaints from disgruntled studentsâŠclaiming all manner of alleged horrors that sheâd unleashed upon themâŠincluding, of course, playing the race card. Be let me assure you, both of youâŠNelda absolutely was NOT a racist.â
As he spokeâhis anger seemed to have revived him a bitâJillian recalled reading the actual grievance that the English undergrads had filed. She also recalled Graceâs comments about Professor Siemens. But, she didnât give voice to these recollections. Wes was quiet, too, content with letting him talk.
Dr. Siemens continued, âThe problem as I see it is that university students today canât appreciate the rather significant difference between being a racist and being opposed to affirmative action programs. Theyâve somehow conflated the two. And that put Nelda on a collision course with them. She is rigorousâwe demanded that of her in her thinkingâand always looking for the best students. Her view wasâŠif you canât compete in a gender-neutral or a race-neutral class, take some elseâŠtake some feely touchy class. Neldaâs classes never pretend to any kumbaya moments. Again, detectives, that how Sylvie and I raised herâŠthat who Nelda isâŠat her very core.â
Wes said, âOK, I seeâŠthank you for that. So, mentioned that sheâd been a professor at Mount Holyoke. Could you tell me about her move to ASU?â
âYou bet. Just as I described her move to Mount Holyoke as career move, so was her move to ASU. She was doing well at Mount Holyokeâsheâd made Associate Professor with no difficultyâand was, I think happy there. Then, ASU recruited her to head the Rand Center. At first, I think she was only mildly intrigued with the possibilityâtruth be told, she was mainly using ASUâs interest to get a salary bumpâbut after she interviewedâŠI could tell that her attitude changed, markedly. ASU really wanted her, so much so that Nelda could essentially write her own ticketâŠa significant increase in salary, an expedited promotion to full professor, and in terms of the day-in-day-out of her university life, basically it was âwhatever you want.â She was especially pleased that she had a joint appointment in Business AND an office there, too. I think her negotiations on this was brilliantâŠthatâs what comes from being the daughter of a successful attorney AND a successful academic. She knew what she wantedâŠshe knew how to get it.â
As he spoke, Jillian recalled how several of the people theyâd interviewed mentioned that all these âperksâ that the Professor had negotiated were a source of resentment to her colleagues. She wonderedâŠ
Wes continued, âI expect that her successful salary arrangement helped Professor Siemens afford such a nice condo.â
âYes, it did. AlthoughâŠNelda was always smart about money. Sylvie and I put her through
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