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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>NOTES TO PAGES 194–199327Press, 2009); Kevin Mattson, Rebels All! A Short History of the Conservative Mind inPostwar America (Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2008).14. Rand found the weekly column time-consuming, and syndicated sales were poor.Rex Barley to AR, December 14, 1962, ARP 045–11A. Rand’s articles are collected andpublished under different titles in Ayn Rand, The Ayn Rand Column, ed. Peter Schwartz(Oceanside, CA: Second Renaissance Books, 1991).15. Ayn Rand, “Check Your Premises,” The Objectivist Newsletter 1, no. 1 (1962): 1.16. Edith Efron, “The Feminine Mystique,” The Objectivist Newsletter 2, no. 7(1963): 26.17. Al Ramus, Oral History, ARP. Edith Efron later became a conservative journalistwho focused on media bias. Efron, The News Twisters (Los Angeles: Nash, 1971). Shewas also a ghostwriter for Treasury Secretary William Simon, A Time for Truth (NewYork: Reader’s Digest Press, 1978). Rand’s interviews for the Columbia radio programare reproduced in Ayn Rand, Objectively Speaking: Ayn Rand Interviewed, ed. MarlenePodritske and Peter Schwartz (New York: Lexington Books, 2009). AR to Hugh Hefner,March 14, 1964, ARP 060–14A.18. Mike Wallace, Oral History, ARP; Frederick Feingersh, Oral History, ARP.19. Ed Barthelmes to Bob Parker, Time, Inc., mimeographed stringer report, February18, 1960, Box 6, Isabel Paterson Papers, Hoover Presidential Library, West Branch, IA.20. Some examples of Rand’s influence on college syllabi: Rand’s essay “Faith andForce” was reprinted in William M. Jones, Stages of Composition: A College Reader(Boston: D. C. Heath, 1964); see Eleanor Morris to AR, May 15, 1964, ARP 001–04A.Atlas Shrugged was assigned as a term paper topic in Rhetoric 102 at the Universityof Illinois at Navy Pier, spring 1960, syllabus, Rhetoric 102, ARP 006–02E. Her workwas assigned in social and political philosophy classes at the University of Coloradoin 1964; see John Nelson to AR, April 2, 1964, ARP 100–13B. In 1965 Leonard Peikoffconducted a graduate seminar at the University of Denver, “The Objectivist Theoryof Knowledge.”21. Karen Reedstrom, “Interview with Murray Franck,” Full Context, June 1992, 3;Whit Hancock to AR, April 9, 1966, ARP 040–07C; Karen Reedstrom, “Interview withWalter Donway,” Full Context, May 1992, 3.22. See Hilary Putnam, “A Half Century of Philosophy,” and Alexander Nehamas,“Trends in Recent American Philosophy,” in American Academic Culture inTransformation: Fifty Years, Four Disciplines, ed. Thomas Bender and Carl E. Schorske(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1997). Rand’s willingness to address a generalaudience and popularize her concerns marked a return to an earlier ideal of the discipline,what Bruce Kucklick calls “American public philosophy.” Kucklick, The Rise ofAmerican Philosophy (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1977), xxiii.23. Karen Minto and David Oyerly, “Interview with Tom Bethell,” Full Context,January/February 1999, 1.24. Michael McElwee to AR, August 24, 1965, ARP 039–07A.25. Ayn Rand, “The Girl Hunters,” The Objectivist Newsletter 1, no. 10 (1962), 42. Thisarticle also ran as a column in the Los Angeles Times.

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