The Presidential Contest in Wisconsin

The Economist:

TAMMY WYNEN stands near the back of a crowd outside a paper mill in Kimberly, Wisconsin. At a bank of microphones, speakers rail against Adam Smith; one, from the United Steel Workers, literally blames “The Wealth of Nations” for the mill’s impending closure. Many also hint that the soon-to-be unemployed mill workers should vote for Barack Obama in November.
But Mrs Wynen, a 27-year veteran of the paper mill, is not so sure. She cannot remember the last time she saw Mr Obama recite the pledge of allegiance. And her family loves Sarah Palin, John McCain’s new running-mate. Her children have lines from Mrs Palin’s convention speech off pat. Still, Mrs Wynen says she doesn’t know who she will vote for. The candidates look poised to spend a lot of time and money in Wisconsin wooing her.

Ken Burns’ Latest: National Parks

Christopher Reynolds:

It’s too early for civilians. As dawn’s first light falls on the jagged peaks, creeps down the dwindling glaciers and glides across glass-faced Swiftcurrent Lake, most of the tourists in the Many Glacier Hotel are still snoozing.
But down at water’s edge, three early risers huddle around a camera. One of the guys, leaning on a tripod and waiting for the clouds to arrange themselves over the jagged peaks, has a Beatles haircut, the build of a shortstop and a face you’ve seen before somewhere.
Perhaps during pledge week.
“I want more of the color,” he says, peering through a viewfinder. “OK, I’m doing it.” And the film rolls.
Yes, it’s Ken Burns, solemn PBS documentarian of the Civil War, jazz, baseball, Frank Lloyd Wright, Mark Twain, Congress, the Brooklyn Bridge, and more than a few other American characters and institutions. Beside him stand cinematographer Buddy Squires and writer Dayton Duncan. Upstairs in the hotel, Burns’ wife and 3-year-old are sleeping.

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