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Election Night Razzle-Dazzle

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How a network programs its computer to pick the winners

When the last campaign speech has been made and the last voter warned about that other fellow, the candidates, like almost everybody else, will be sitting in front of television sets somewhere next Tuesday night waiting to find out who is in and who is not. That is when a truly ferocious contest begins: the three-way race among network news divisions to call 'em first and get 'em right. In that war, victory belongs to the best "software," or computer program, for picking winners.

Tracking races for 435 House seats, 34 senatorial slots and 13 governorships, as well as 51 separate presidential sprints in some 175,000 voting precincts, is an awesome task for any journalist. But things have changed quite a bit since the stone age days of 1960, when all through Election Night at NBC the latest figures were hauled up to the Huntley-Brinkley anchor booth in a wicker basket on a rope.

There are no wicker baskets around this year. Instead, TV viewers will be razzle-dazzled with more computer-generated graphics, more computerized data collection and less finger-in-the-wind speculation than ever before.

What goes into the computers remains a closely guarded secret at all three networks. What comes out of them will be visible starting at 7 p.m. E.S.T. Election Night. At CBS, which is typical of the networks in its election preparations, Walter Cronkite will have three computer screens in front of him on the anchor desk flashing the latest numbers on the pres1 idential race and various other contests. Tight races and those in which CBS has picked a winner will show up with brighter intensity on these screens. Each of the four regional correspondents with him —Dan Rather, Harry Reasoner, Lesley Stahl and Bob Schieffer—will have two computer readout screens and a small data-processing unit.

The correspondents will have election handbooks as thick as telephone directories briefing them on what to watch in each state, but they can also put questions to the computer, which has been programmed with a vast library of CBS research. Some have taken to the new futuristic consoles more readily than others: Dan Rather, reportedly, revels in them, spending idle hours punching up new information. Cronkite seems a bit wary, though he says, "It sure beats all that paper piling up all night long."

To help the reporters feel at home with the consoles, CBS Election Producer Russ Bensley has been conducting a series of tutorials for the past three weeks. He is also providing them with a 117-page book on how to read their computer screens, which will be teeming with abbreviations, codes and numbers. Candidates' names, for instance, are shortened to three or four letters in tiny type (CART, REAG, AND). Before CBS can call a winner, the computer must call it first; it flashes a C next to its choice. If Election and Survey Unit Director Warren Mitofsky concurs with the computer's judgment, a W will turn up next to the name. Then the choice will be announced, but not as a "winner." Cautions the handbook:


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