Chapter 17 - The Face of Scandal
Just minutes after Eveline's very stressful encounter with Jenny in the locker-room, Lance passed by to pick her up and take her to Coach Strickland's place. Eveline's stressful day got even more stressful when he showed her the following article about the auction from Mega-News:
Section E - Arts & Culture
TSU Out-Foxed!
- The Niger Heart-Pot sold to African leader at auction
- Tri-State Admin claims antiquity was not on auction list
- Sale for a fraction of real value, but completely legal
Today Comandante Foxtrot, Supreme President of the West African Confederation, issued a press release announcing he had purchased the priceless Niger Heart-Pot from Tri-State University for $ 9.2 million dollars at auction.
"This is a great day for both the Confederation and for Tri-State University," according to the Supreme President. "An important part of our heritage is returning home, to where it belongs, and the university is receiving a generous endowment of 9.2 million dollars. It's a win-win for everyone, and I am so proud to have made it happen. It shows what a man-of-action like myself can do for the people he serves."
Comandante Foxtrot added that representatives from his nation's Ministry of Culture had already prepared the Niger Heart-Pot for shipment, and that it was en route on a special flight to the Confederation's National Museum, where it will be placed on permanent display.
Archeologists around America expressed dismay that the priceless antiquity was sold at auction.
"It was supposed to go into the Smithsonian," according to Dr. Freddy Gauss, a noted expert in the archeology of the Niger River Valley. "Who let that crazy dictator walk off with it?"
The Niger Heart-Pot dates back more than 3,500 years and has been mentioned in many historical texts. Its origin is a mystery, but it was a prized possession of Egyptian and later Babylonian kings over hundreds of years. The legend surrounding the Heart-Pot is that, with the appropriate sacrifices, it has the magical ability to grant unlimited charisma to the ruler who owns it. The Heart-Pot became known as the Niger Heart-Pot in 1153 AD when it mysteriously showed up in the local king's palace. The Niger Heart-Pot was hidden in a tomb in 1883, to prevent French soldiers from capturing it. It was unearthed in 1936 by archeologists from Tri-State University and smuggled out of French West Africa. The Niger Heart-Pot has been kept at Tri-State University since early 1937.
Prior to yesterday's sale, Tri-State University had been under pressure to send the Niger Heart-Pot to the Smithsonian for safe-keeping. As Dr. Gauss noted: "a university museum is no place to keep something like that. It's a wonder it wasn't stolen years ago."
Next page - Scandal! TSU museum curator and Art Department Chairman missing
And, accompanying the text was the soon-to-be infamous trophy-shot with the caption: