Farmers Market Activism

Nancy suggested that I summarize some of the activists present at this morning’s Dane County Farmer’s Market. The observation of those leafletting the Market’s four corners provides an interesting glimpse into the City’s political thinking. Today’s leaflets included:

  • Uncompromising Courage, an exhibit of Falun Gong Art at the State Capitol Rotunda through 10/9/2005. The backside included a link to the Epoch Times and a wish that the Chinese Communist Party might collapse soon.
  • The Madison Rep was actively promoting their New Play Festival which runs from 9.17 to 9.25.
  • A Pro Madison Bar Smoking Ban Group was active across from L’etoile

The Changing Value of Shakespeare

Tyler Cowen takes a quick look at William St. Clair’s new book: The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period. This book, so interesting on many levels looks at:

During the four centuries when printed paper was the only means by which texts could be carried across time and distance, everyone engaged in politics, education, religion, and literature believed that reading helped to shape the minds, opinions, attitudes, and ultimately the actions, of readers. William St Clair investigates how the national culture can be understood through a quantitative study of the books that were actually read. Centred on the romantic period in the English-speaking world, but ranging across the whole print era, it reaches startling conclusions about the forces that determined how ideas were carried, through print, into wider society. St Clair provides an in-depth investigation of information, made available here for the first time, on prices, print runs, intellectual property, and readerships gathered from over fifty publishing and printing archives. He offers a picture of the past very different from those presented by traditional approaches. Indispensable to students, English literature, book history, and the history of ideas, the study’s conclusions and explanatory models are highly relevant to the issues we face in the age of the internet.

  • The first study of actual reading using quantification and economic analysis
  • Sheds new light on aspects of reading and its effect on the nation
  • An indispensable resource for scholars working on literature, reading, and the history of publishing and printing

Ansel Adams’ Autumn Moon Arrives


Ben Margot:

As the moon rose in the evening sky, a crowd gathered at Glacier Point to relive an iconic scene captured by photographer Ansel Adams more than 50 years ago.

About 300 amateur photographers, astronomers and other spectators came Thursday to watch conditions align to repeat the scene in the famous Adams image “Autumn Moon.”

Astronomers nailed down the exact time and date that Adams snapped the photograph in Yosemite National Park in 1948 — and determined that the sun and moon would return to the same positions Thursday.

LAB: Wisconsin Voter Registration Evaluation

Wisconsin Legislative Audit Bureau [PDF]:

We found that statutory requirements are not consistently followed. Among our survey respondents:

  • only 85.3 percent of municipalities removed the names of inactive voters from their voter registration lists;
  • only 71.4 percent sometimes or always notified registered voters before removing their names; and
  • only 54.0 percent reported removing the names of ineligible felons.

Because of such inconsistencies, registration lists contain duplicate records and the names of ineligible individuals. For example, when
we reviewed more than 348,000 electronic voter registration records from eight municipalities, we identified 3,116 records that appear to show individuals who are registered more than once in the same municipality.

Greg Borowski and Stacy Forster have more:

Among the 348,000 electronic voter registration records checked were 105 potentially improper or fraudulent votes including:

  • Ballots cast by 98 ineligible felons, including 57 in Madison.
  • Two people who appear to have voted twice.
  • Four cases of voters whose absentee ballots were included in official election results even though they died in the two weeks before the election.
  • One instance of a 17-year-old in Madison who apparently voted.