Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar by Gray Cavender (classic literature list txt) đ
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- Author: Gray Cavender
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âHow do you know that? The great Google detective?â
âNo, I actually had to read a novel by Ayn Rand in freshman EnglishâAtlas Shruggedâand I still have the book. Her photoâs on the back coverâŠI checked it out last night.â
âReally, so whatâs it aboutâŠthis novel?â
She grimaced and said, âIt was a long time ago that I read it. But, as best I can remember, it was about a time in the future when businesses are complaining about being overly regulated, and business leaders form kind of secret organization. But, Wes, like I said, this was freshman English.
âThat bit about over-regulationâŠyou can see why the business types would love her.â
âWell, thatâs what Professor Gilroy saidâŠthat her novels are read these days more for their economic perspective than for their literary merit.â She had to remember to ask her dad about Professor Gilroyâs comment. Then, âWhat else did Angel have?â
âLetâs seeâŠOK, she puts the tentative time of death at between 11:30pm and 1:30am. Obviously, the coroner will narrow-down the time frame. And as far as we can tell, there was no one else working on her floor at that time.â
âMakes sense, and itâs why no one heard anything, why no one knew anything till yesterday morning when the Professor didnât show for the appointment with her student.â
âRight, Carla Nagel. By the way, letâs call her in a few minutes. Iâd like you to be on the lineârecent student, closer in age, and all that. Iâm thinking that weâre probably not going to learn a whole bunch from her, but weâll call just to be sure.â
âOK. And, Wes, if you want, I can call her on my ownâŠwhatever you think.â
âYou know, I think Iâll take you up on that. And while you call Ms. Nagel, Iâll follow-up on that other profâRobertsâand also on the Director out at SkySong. Iâll try to arrange meetings with them today.â
âSounds good.â Wes gave her the studentâs phone number, and Jillian walked over to her desk (Linâs desk) to make the call.
âHello?â
âMs. Nagel?â
âYah?â
âMs. Nagel, Iâm Jillian Warne, and Iâm a Detective Sergeant with ASU Campus Police Department. â
âOh. Hi.â
âMs. Nagel, Iâm following-up on Professor Siemensâ death. Could we talk a bit?â
âYah. Iâve been expecting that someone would call. Iâm afraid I donât know much, Detective...but Iâll tell you what I can?â She ended the sentence as if it was a question. From just these few words, Jillian thought that she sounded a little out of it, maybe depressed, which was totally understandable.
âThanks, Ms. Nagel. OK, so you were working with the Professor on your honors thesis. Is that right?â
âYah, Iâm in the Honors College. And, Professor Siemens was my thesis advisor?â
âIf I may, can I ask a couple of personal questions?â
âSure, I guess?â
âThese wonât be anything extreme, I promise. So, first of all, what year are you?â Jillian started with basic questions, thinking it would be a good idea to ease-into the interview.
âIâm just starting my senior year; Iâm an English major?â A question again.
âSo, howâs your honors thesis coming?â
âItâs going OKâŠat least it wasâŠbeforeâŠyou know? The honors advisors always tell us to pick our thesis director during our junior year, have a topic, and start working on it during the summer between your junior and senior years. And I did all that.â
âWhatâs your topic?â As she asked, Jillian remembered her own process. She recalled that the advisors try to prepare you, but itâs a very different experience than writing the usual term paperâŠlots of revisions.
âWell, Professor Siemens, sheâs is an Ayn Rand scholar, and wonât really work with anyone who isnât writing a paper on her? Iâd come-up with a couple of topics that I thought of when I took one of her classes last fall. I thought they were, like OK topicsâŠI even wrote an abstract for both of them to show her, you know, like the advisors tell us? But, she didnât like my topics so much, and she suggested something else. She, like wanted me to do an analysis of references to Randâs novels in other places, like book reviews for other authorsâŠstuff like that?â
âHow do you do that?â
âItâs all, like web-based, you know, on the netâŠwhatever. As it turns out, itâs an OK topic. Thereâs a lot of references to her novels. I think the reason Professor Siemens wanted me to study this is because she wants to present the results at a conference sheâs putting together during Spring Semester. She has a couple of other students also doing projects that she thought of, too? âCourse, nowâŠI donât know. About the conference, or about my thesis. Itâs too late to start something new, so Iâm a little freaked-out?â
âWell, as it happens, I graduated from ASU also with an honors certificate.â
âReally?â
âYes, several years ago. And I remember this one student whose thesis director left for a job at another university, right before her senior year. She was really sweating it.â
âWhat happened?â Jillian could hear that Ms. Nagel had perked-up.
âOK, so the student was a Poly Sci major. And what happened is that the person who initially was her second reader agreed to direct it. And either another professorâŠor maybe it was someone in the Honors CollegeâŠcame on as the new second reader. Anyway, it worked out OK.â
âThatâs great.â
âMain thing, Iâd make an appointment and talk to your advisor in the Honors College. Let them know whatâs going on, and Iâm sure theyâll help.â
âOK, I will.
âMs. Nagel, can you tell me anything about how it was to work with Professor Siemens?â
âYah, well, sheâs OK. Maybe not the friendliest professor Iâve ever hadâŠsheâs not someone youâd, like describe as pro-student, but, sheâs OK.â
âMay I askâŠwhyâd you decide to work with her, then? Are you a big Ayn Rand fan?â
âNot really. Honestly, Iâd never heard of Ayn Rand. It was my dad, actually.â
âYour dad?â
âYah, like, heâs a businessmanâŠOK, Iâm from Kansas, and my dad owns a chain of groceriesâŠtheyâre mostly in Kansas. Heâs also in the Kansas state legislature. And heâs the one who likes
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