Objectivist Academic Center Accepting Applications – Deadline April 26

FYI:

The Ayn Rand Institute’s Objectivist Academic Center (OAC) is now accepting applications to its undergraduate program for the fall. The April 26 deadline is quickly approaching. So, if you are interested in applying go to www.aynrand.org/academic and complete the online application form.

The OAC’s program is a systematic course of study designed to give aspiring intellectuals a thorough grounding in the essentials of Ayn Rand’s philosophy of Objectivism. It is meant to supplement a standard college education. OAC students are enrolled in only one or two courses per semester. Each course includes graded assignments and exams, and some include one-on-one tutorials with the professor. Classes are Web-based. Therefore, it is possible to attend from anywhere in the world.

For more information, visit the Web site www.aynrand.org/academic or send questions to: [email protected].

Cuba’s Forgotten Prisoners

The New York Sun:

The 41-year-old man sits in a filthy 18-by-24-foot cell that he shares with 10 other prisoners. He knows he is fortunate because up to 18 men are routinely squeezed in cells of that size…. The water is rationed and the little that is available is contaminated. His food rations are meager and substandard. He suffers from chronic gastrointestinal conditions, which have worsened since his imprisonment. He now suffers from parasites, high cholesterol, hypertension, and has lost 20 pounds.

Jorge Olivera Castillo is one of the 300 political prisoners inside Cuba’s jails, yet the world seems blind to their plight.

There is no international outcry about his living conditions.

No visits from the International Red Cross since 1989.

No congressional delegations or pop-ins from Greek Orthodox patriarchs or Robert Redford, Sean Penn,
Danny Glover, Oliver Stone, or Harry Belafonte.

Nor–even though he is black–any support from the NAACP, whose leader Kweise Mfume visited Cuba in 2002 on a “goodwill mission.”

There is no outcry from the National Writer’s Union, whose pet prisoner is Mumia Abul Jamal.

Mr. Olivera was arrested on March 18, 2003, during Cuba’s greatest crackdown on independent journalists and dissidents, when 75 persons were arrested. This occurred the day after the 59th Session of the United Nations Commission for Human Rights convened in Geneva….

Cuba denies that it holds any prisoners of conscience and says that all inmates described as political prisoners are merely common criminals.

(From Dollar$ and Crosses)

Body In Mind

Check out EGO for an interview with Body in Mind founder Dwayne Bell. Dwayne is the creator of the Bell Scale for measuring female beauty. I liked his article (not to mention the photos!) enough to post an add on my site.

Bell also runs SuperBeauty.org, “a group of independent websites united in a modern movement to change the world and improve the human condition through the creation, admiration, understanding, moral defence and political protection of female beauty and sexuality throughout the world.”

BellScale.gif

First License for Manned Rocket Flight

WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. Department of Transportation today announced it has issued the world’s first license for a sub-orbital manned rocket flight.

The license was issued April 1 by the Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation to Scaled Composites of Mojave, Calif., headed by aviation record-holder Burt Rutan, for a sequence of sub-orbital flights spanning a one-year period.

While the highest criteria to issue a license is public safety, applicants must undergo an extensive pre-application process, demonstrate adequate financial responsibility to cover any potential losses, and meet strict environmental requirements.

Does anyone else see something wrong with regulating private space travel to death before the first spaceship is even launched?

FireFly

I saw the first episode of the Firefly DVD series today, and it is absolutely fantastic. A brilliant combination of sci-fi and western, the series was produced by Joss Whedon, the creator the Buffy and Angel series, which I have also grown to like. Unfortunately, Fox canceled the series before the end of the season, so some of these episodes are only available on DVD. While I have only seen one episode, I’m already cursing Fox for killing this awesome series.

Anyway, the plot revolves around a retired sergeant named Mal who owns and captains Serenity, a Firefly-class spaceship. Mal is a businessman first and a gunslinger second who just trying to make a profit carrying quasi-legal cargo and passengers between the “moons” on the edge of civilized space, while staying clear of the authoritarian Alliance government.

(More show info at FireflyFans.net)

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'The Passion' a Hit Among Arabs

CAIRO, Egypt — Hanan Nsour, a veiled, 21-year-old Muslim in Jordan, came out of “The Passion of the Christ” in tears and pronounced her verdict: Mel Gibson’s crucifixion epic “unmasked the Jews’ lies and I hope that everybody, everywhere, turns against the Jews.”
The Quran, though, says Jesus’s crucifixion never happened.

Such are the contradictions that are welling up as the Arab world deals with “The Passion,” even as the film draws large audiences in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and other Arab countries that have approved it for screening.

In the Arab world, openly voiced anti-Semitism — and by extension the warm reception for “The Passion” — is bound up in the Arab conflict with Israel. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, after watching the film at his compound in the West Bank, was quoted by an aide as likening Jesus’ suffering to the Palestinians’.

While this highlights the obvious anti-Semitic potential of the movie, there is a bigger and much more important point: the story is a denunciation of humanity itself.

San Francisco U. Purge Reversed

In a victory for intellectual freedom, Tatiana Menaker’s expulsion from San Francisco State University has been reversed. She was expelled from school after protesting the same Marxist and Anti-Semitic attitude she escaped the USSR from in 1986. You can read her editorial about the anti-Americanism she encountered in academia, and an account of her story at the Students for Academic Freedom website.