out to various alumni groups around the country and speakers to
these groups were alerted and advised. The trashing of Diana blossomed
into an intellectual lynching of the lowest order. Much later on, as
people came to understand that the university had not complied with the
findings of the court and Attorney General, there was a general loss of
respect for Belmont which contributed to a decrease in enrollment.
The official Belmont University response was delivered by the public
relations spokesperson who dismissed the LOD as, "inconsequential. I
don't know what all the fuss is about," he said. "When you cut through
the fancy title at the top it's just a lawyer's opinion." No one else
at Belmont was available for comment.
The Pope did know what all the fuss was about and was stung by the
words of condemnation contained in the LOD. He immediately called his
contact at the Washington DC office of the EEOC. He complained
fiercely that the LOD never gave the university's side of the question.
"No one here was interviewed by the investigator from the Attorney
General's Office," he protested peevishly.
He got that right!
His contact got his protest an immediate hearing by the EEOC chairman,
who directed the regional office to quash the Attorney General's LOD.
No one in the head office bothered to read the LOD and learn that the
reason there were no interviews of university personnel because they
refused to cooperate with the investigation. Friends in high places,
indeed.
In addition, The Pope called a meeting to discuss their court strategy.
"Now," The Pope said forcefully, "It's time we did something to end the
legal hassle. That damned judge! And, this A.G. letter on top of it.
We are getting too much bad publicity. The letters and phone calls are
driving everyone crazy around here. It's gone on long enough--too
long!" Sitting around the conference table in the west wing of his
office with him was Murrain, Henry Tarbuck and Jimbo.
Murrain spoke confidently. "The court business is nearly finished. I
have already petitioned the judge for permission to start discovery.
Unless the plaintiff is sitting on a gold mine, that will finish off
her bank account right there."
"How's that?" asked Jimbo.
"During discovery, we take depositions. Al Garret will have to depose
a lot more witness than we do in order to even come close to presenting
his case. Conservatively speaking, he's looking at nearly a
|