The Newsstand Owner
Though Dagny is friendly with the Newsstand Owner, we never learn his name. She considers him a part of the Taggart Terminal and stops by periodically to speak with him. He's a seemingly lonely old man whose main hobby is collecting cigarettes. This hobby is also highly convenient in terms of the ongoing mysteries in the book. Dagny gives the Newsstand Owner the mysterious cigarette she gets from Hugh Akston, which bears a dollar sign on it. The Newsstand Owner investigates and comes up empty, which helps let us know that there is some sort of underground movement going on.
Ted Nielsen
Another member of the Colorado crowd, Ted Nielsen is distinctive for being the last holdout to join the strike. It isn't clear whether this had to do with Nielsen himself or with Galt's recruitment schedule (he tended to target more essential industries, and Nielsen's motors may not have come up first). He does have a very important conversation with Dagny, though, where the idea of the destroyer is introduced for the first time:
"Dagny, I've always thought that I'd rather die than stop working. But so did the men who're gone.... Those men were my friends....They would not have gone like that, without a word, leaving to us the added terror of the inexplicable – unless they had some reason of supreme importance..... Dagny, I can't tell what I'll do when I see it – whatever it was that they saw when they went."
It seemed to her that some destroyer was moving soundlessly through the country and the lights were dying at his touch. (2.2.1.5-6)
Nielsen also highlights an important fact here: the industrialists are all not just business partners, but also friends, so the strike is in many ways breaking apart and reforming a family.
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