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More oxford <strong>books</strong> @ www.OxfordeBook.<strong>com</strong><strong>Fore</strong> <strong>more</strong> <strong>urdu</strong> <strong>books</strong> <strong>visit</strong> <strong>www.4Urdu</strong>.<strong>com</strong>276LEGACIESD.C., shortly after its founding and became an influential think-tank asthe capitol tended rightward. By the mid-1980s Cato had replaced theLibertarian Party as the institution of choice for libertarians who hopedto create meaningful social change. 72Rand was left largely isolated in New York. One by one she drove awaythe last remnants of the Collective. She stopped speaking to the Hessensafter their Palo Alto Book Service offered for sale a novel by Kay NolteSmith, whom Rand had exiled years before. 73 The Blumenthals, who hadnursed her so tenderly through her cancer surgery, broke with Randafter she harangued them endlessly about their artistic tastes. Next togo were the Kalbermans, unable to tolerate Rand’s diatribes against thenow despised Blumenthals. Mary Ann and Charles Sures, who lived inMaryland, were occasional <strong>visit</strong>ors. But only Frank and Leonard Peikoff,loyal to the last day, remained by her side.Orthodox Objectivism continued to draw a small audience, and a coregroup of serious students clustered around Leonard Peikoff. Rand wastoo faded to hold the famed all-night sessions of yore, but Peikoff helpedform another cadre eager to carry her ideas forward. Rand approved twonew magazines, The Objectivist Forum and The Intellectual Activist, runby her last philosophy students. In the late 1970s she was captivated bythe idea of Atlas Shrugged as a television mini-series. Numerous proposalsto dramatize the work had landed on her desk, but this was the firsttime producers were willing to give her full script control. She beganworking on the adaptation, which was to be broadcast on NBC, andhad <strong>com</strong>pleted most of the script when the project was canceled. In herspare time she collected stamps avidly and began taking algebra lessonswith a private tutor. 74The hardest blow came in 1979, when Frank died. The two had beenmarried for fifty years. As difficult as their union had been, Frank hadnever betrayed Rand, never broken her trust or abandoned her in a timeof need. He had been a silent and at times sullen paramour, but he wasunfailingly consistent—and consistency was something Rand valuedabove almost anything else. She was disconsolate after his loss, weepingin her apartment and pestering his niece, her last remaining family contact,for reminiscences about him as a young man. Making a final televisionappearance on Phil Donahue’s show, Rand was sanguine about theprospect of her own end. She did not believe in life after death, she told

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