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cover story that called him "a former right-wing anarchist who chopped his way out of dark ideology toward a combination of principle and humane concern." The magazine highlighted an organization that
Cornuelle had created in 1958, the United Student Aid Funds. Competing against the federal
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Cornuelle was born in Elwood, Indiana and died in New York City. His first marriage, to Sydney Walton, ended in divorce but produced three children: Suzanne
Schutte, Jenny Krusoe, and Peter Cornuelle. Richard Cornuelle remarried on February 22, 1991 to Elizabeth K. Fonseca.
169:, Cornuelle argued that the collapse of communism had also brought about the irrelevance of libertarians' most important argument: the claim that prosperity and communism were incompatible. This essay was later expanded into an article in the scholarly journal
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government's nascent student loan program, Cornuelle's group reinsured bank loans to pay the college tuition of impoverished students. By the fall of 1964, 48,000 students were attending 674 colleges with loans reinsured by the organization. In 1968,
163:(1983) criticized Keynesian macroeconomic policy and social spending as unsustainable over the long term, calling again for a revival of voluntary efforts to solve social problems. In a 1991 essay in the
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After his break with the libertarians, Cornuelle worked as vice president and editorial director of the
Princeton Panel, a center for the study of American capitalism, and as executive director of the
96:, the émigré Austrian economist. Mises's students would soon create the modern libertarian movement. Cornuelle was also a member of the intimate circle around the émigré Russian novelist
151:, argued that associations of volunteers could effectively solve social problems without recourse to heavy-handed bureaucracy. Pollster George Gallup later said that this book sparked
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100:. At one point, Rand demanded that Cornuelle take sides in an ideological dispute between herself and von Mises. Cornuelle refused, and Rand never spoke to him again.
107:, which searched for libertarian scholars in need of support. He eventually parted ways with libertarians over what he saw as their dogmatism and lack of compassion.
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72:(April 10, 1927 – April 26, 2011) was a political activist, charity worker, author, and one of the first modern American libertarians.
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119:. He also founded several nonprofit efforts aimed at helping the impoverished. Cornuelle was featured in a December 1964
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Radicals for
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254:"Close-Up: Richard Cornuelle Stirs the Private Sector: Poverty's Free Enterpriser."
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Cornuelle, Richard. 1992. "The Power and
Poverty of Libertarian Thought."
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Fox, Margalit. 2011. "Richard
Cornuelle, Libertarian Author, Dies at 84."
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Cornuelle, Richard. "New Work for
Invisible Hands." TLS, April 5, 1991.
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155:. Cornuelle refined his ideas in two later books.
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80:Cornuelle received a bachelor's degree from
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232:. New York: Public Affairs. p. 295
219:. New York: Doubleday. pp. 249–50.
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319:. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund.
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315:Mises, Ludwig von. 1981.
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284:. New York: Vintage Books.
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271:. New York: Random House.
258:June 28, 1968. pp. 35–50.
166:Times Literary Supplement
70:Richard Charles Cornuelle
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111:Independent sector work
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384:American libertarians
297:. New York: Putnam.
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317:Socialism
137:Job Corps
349:obituary
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98:Ayn Rand
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178:Family
256:Life
243:Look
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