"Release? No release was necessary," Henry looked puzzled
and frowned with annoyance.
"Mr. Chairman, you have made note several times that
this termination hearing is justified by a certain paragraph
in the faculty handbook," Diana replied firmly. "In that
same handbook, there is a paragraph stating that no material shall
be removed from a faculty person's file without the permission of
that person. If you have a handbook here, I will find the exact
wording and read it to you."
"Oh, I know what you are referring to and that does not
apply in this case," Henry ruled quickly and then turned
to the panel and said, "We must get on with it. Are these
your handwriting?"
"I don't know. These are copies. Copies are suspicious."
Anuse interjected demanding to know why.
Diana explained to him that she had done a great deal of research,
since she had first been charged, into document examination.
Accomplished document examiners insist on original, authentic standards.
Except for a couple, all of these so-called standards are copies.
In addition, as you will recall from her answer to the questions
I asked her, the examiner you engaged admitted that she did not know
of her own knowledge that I had written the standards she used.
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