What is a First Edition of Atlas Shrugged Worth?

About $6,500, apparently. This from the Chicago Tribune:

A box of old books donated to the Batavia Public Library contained a gem–a rare, first-edition copy of Ayn Rand’s 1957 novel “Atlas Shrugged.”
The Friends of the Batavia Public Library must now decide how to spend the $6,500 that the autographed copy brought at an online auction.
Bidding started at $3,500 and was over in about 45 seconds, said Jo Ann Smith, a volunteer with the library group who watched the Web auction Thursday. PBA Galleries, a San Francisco auction house, handled the sale and will keep 15 percent of the sale price.
The group will take a few months to decide how to spend the proceeds, Smith said.
“We don’t have any immediate plans, but we would like to take this nice, big chunk of money and buy one big thing,” she said.
Two years ago, the group began setting aside donated books that looked valuable. One member came across the book by Rand, a Russian-born author, in an anonymous box of donations.

Spring 2005 Journal of Ayn Rand Studies

Volume 6, Number 2 of THE JOURNAL OF AYN RAND STUDIES has just been published. This Spring 2005 issue is the second of two symposia celebrating the Ayn Rand Centenary. It is entitled “Ayn Rand Among the Austrians,” and it features the articles and contributors listed below. This landmark anthology surveys Rand’s relationship to key thinkers in the Austrian school of economics, including Ludwig von Mises, Murray N. Rothbard, and F. A. Hayek.
Spring 2005 Table of Contents
======================
Centenary Symposium, Part II — Ayn Rand Among the Austrians
Introduction: Ayn Rand Among the Austrians
Chris Matthew Sciabarra and Larry J. Sechrest
Ayn Rand and Ludwig von Mises
George Reisman
Ayn Rand and Austrian Economics: Two Peas in a Pod
Walter Block
Alan Greenspan: Rand, Republicans, and Austrian Critics
Larry J. Sechrest
Praxeology: Who Needs It
Roderick T. Long
Subjectivism, Intrinsicism, and Apriorism: Rand Among the Austrians?
Richard C. B. Johnsson
Menger, Mises, Rand, and Beyond
Edward W. Younkins
Two Worlds at Once: Rand, Hayek, and the Ethics of the Micro- and Macro-cosmos
Steven Horwitz
Our Unethical Constitution
Candice E. Jackson
Teaching Economics Through Ayn Rand: How the Economy is Like a Novel and How the Novel Can Teach Us About Economics
Peter J. Boettke
Reply to William Thomas: An Economist Responds
Leland B. Yeager
Rejoinder to Leland B. Yeager: Clarity and the Standard of Ethics
William Thomas
Visit the JARS web site for article abstracts, contributor biographies, and subscription information.

Eminent Domain Before the US Supreme Court

Larry Salzman and Alex Epstein have published their analysis of an important new Supreme Court case, including an impassioned defense of property rights.
From the article in the Naples Daily News:

The case of Kelo v. New London now before the U.S. Supreme Court could determine the future of property rights in America. The central question: Should the government be able to use its power of eminent domain to seize property from one private party and transfer it to another?
The seven property owners on the side of Kelo are the last remaining of more than 70 families whose homes and businesses were targeted for demolition several years ago by the city of New London, Conn., to make room for a 90-acre private development. The story of one of the owners, Susette Kelo, is representative.
Kelo, a nurse, bought and painstakingly restored a home that initially was so rundown she needed to cut her way to the front door with a hatchet. After she had achieved her dream home, she was informed, in November 2000, by the local government that her home was condemned, and ordered to vacate it within 90 days. She and other owners in the neighborhood remain in their homes only by the grace of a court order, which prevents eviction and demolition until their appeals are exhausted.
What justifies this treatment of Kelo and the other owners, who simply want to be free to live on their own property? The seizures and transfers, the government says, are in “the public interest,” because they will lead to more jobs for New London residents and more tax dollars for the government.
This type of justification was given more than 10,000 times between 1998 and 2002, and across 41 states, to use eminent domain (or its threat) to seize private property. The attitude behind these seizures was epitomized by a Lancaster, Calif., city attorney explaining why a 99 Cents Only store should be condemned to make way for a Costco: “99 Cents produces less than $40,000 (a year) in sales taxes, and Costco was producing more than $400,000. You tell me, which was more important?”
To such government officials, the fact that an individual earns a piece of property, and wants to use and enjoy it, is of no importance ? all that matters is “the public.” But as philosopher Ayn Rand observed, “there is no such entity as ‘the public,’ since the public is merely a number of individuals … (T)he idea that ‘the public interest’ supersedes private interests and rights can have but one meaning: that the interests and rights of some individuals take precedence over the interests and rights of others.”

See the full article for further details.

Notable Ayn Rand Fan: Eva Mendes

Eva Mendes, the beautiful co-star of the new movie “Hitch” as well as several other popular films, is a Rand fan — or, at least, she likes her men to be.
In an interview with The Philippine Star, Miss Mendes was asked, “What kind of guys do you find attractive?” and her answer was: “Those who have self-confidence, ambitious and lovable. If he reads Ayn Rand, so much the better.”
Hopefully, Miss Mendes will sign up for the Atlasphere’s Ayn Rand dating service.
Read the full interview

Los Angeles: Andrew Bernstein on Religion vs. Morality

From Atlasphere member Jason Hoskin:

Religion vs. Morality

by Dr. Andrew Bernstein
Conventionally, most people believe that morality can only be based in religious faith ­ that in a world without God no principles of right and wrong could exist. Related to this, philosophers have long held that no objective, fact-based, rational code of values is possible.
Regarding both points, this talk shows that the exact opposite is true. The purpose of morality is to guide human life on earth ­ and religion is utterly incapable of it. Flourishing life requires a code of secularism, rationality, egoism and freedom. Religious faith clashes with every principle of a proper moral code, and, as such, has led, and can only lead to, hell on earth.
Sponsored by The USC Objectivist Club
Wednesday, March 2 at 8PM
SGM-123 (Seely G. Mudd)
University of Southern California
3667 Mc Clintock
Los Angeles CA 90089

Columns Notification Tops 1,000 Members

Today the Atlasphere’s columns notification feature topped 1,000 members. This is the number of members who have asked to be notified by e-mail each time a new column is published.
Congratulations to Atlasphere Editor Jennifer Iannolo and her predecessor, Andrew Schwartz, on their fine work with the Atlasphere columns!
If you are a member of the Atlasphere and would like to receive columns notifications, you can turn this feature on by going to your member preferences page.
If you are not an Atlasphere member, you can sign up for columns notification by entering your e-mail address in the notification box at the bottom of any column.

Front Page Mag: Who's Afraid of Ayn Rand?

Writing for Front Page Magazine, Alec Mouhibian has published a rousing defense of Ayn Rand’s legacy titled “Who’s Afraid of Ayn Rand?” It begins:

If you?ve heard of Ayn Rand, whose centennial birthday was Wednesday, it is probably because you?ve read her novels The Fountainhead or Atlas Shrugged. But back when the greatest female thinker in history was alive, the above question was quite revealing. It still is.
Rand, a novelist and philosopher, came to America all alone in her early twenties after escaping Soviet Russia and before being castigated by everyone from Granville Hicks to Whittaker Chambers. Her first novel, We The Living, a semi-autobiographical depiction of life under communism, was panned by leftist critics for ?failing to understand the Soviet experiment.? The rigorous philosophy she later developed?which she called Objectivism and which can be summarized by the axis of reason-individualism-capitalism?unnerved intellectual nippleweights from both left and right. And mutual hatred with Women?s Lib was established from the get-go, because she liked men.
Mike Wallace reflected that Rand?s most vehement critics tended not to actually read her. So challenged were their basic assumptions by the ideas of this little big-eyed immigrant that they were too afraid to deal with them. Their fear of being challenged was a harbinger of an intellectual culture today in which monocle-dropping offense comes much easier than rational thought.
And so, since her death, Ayn Rand has merely been dismissed and ignored by her elite adversaries. When I asked the chairs of the Women?s Studies and Political Science departments at my school what they thought of her, they both gave the kind of bashful, blushing smile that I normally give when reminded of my childhood crush on Oscar the Grouch. Read her in high school, grew up, moved on, haven?t thought of her since. Great sex scenes though. May we talk Hegel?

…And it only gets better. See the full article for further reading.

Ayn Rand's Legacy on Talk Radio 580 in Ottawa

The Atlasphere just got a call from Anchor/Reporter Kris Sims, from Talk Radio 580 CFRA News in Ottawa.
She recently read Atlas Shrugged (loved it) and will be producing a segment on the Ayn Rand centennial for the afternoon drive show with Rob Snow this Thursday. Check it out if you’re one of our members in Ottawa or surrounding areas.
Incidentally, according to the CFRA web site, Kris herself can be heard reading the news on Talk Radio 580 CFRA on weekend and weekday evenings.
UPDATE: The segment is scheduled to run from 4:30 to 5pm, Thursday, February 10th.