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Sound tests
THE POINT of this situation is an acoustical test of a computer. Six-foot cones on walls and
ceiling minimize reflections of electronic signals, allowing engineers to detect whether a
computer is radiating any unwanted signals. Test cell is at Rochester, Minn., General
Systems Divison of IBM.
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Bicentennial awards announced
ATIzANTA (UPI) - Officials
have chosen the Columbus Area
Bicentennial Committee as a
Stay and See America in
Georgia winner for sponsoring
five events. The committee was
awarded first place in the
Celebration division, one of a
number of awards announced
bv Gordon Sawyer, chairman of
the travel council of the state
Chamber of Commerce.
Events sponsored by the
Columbus group, which also
took two other honors, included
an historical drama, the Ameri
can Freedom Train, the dedica
tion of the Chattahoochee
Promenade, ’76 Bells and the
Georgia Heritage Special.
Other winners in classifica
tions of the Celebration division
were Mclntosh Trail for its
outdoor drama, the Folkston-
Charlton County Chamber of
Commerce for the annual
Okefenokee Festival, and WSB
TV, Atlanta, for its annual July
4 parade.
In the Vision category, the
Columbus Area Bicentennial
Committee, the DeKalb Cham
ber of Commerce and the
Mclntosh trail Arts Council
were all award winners.
The Business-Advertising
Category award went to Nei
man-Marcus in Atlanta with
WMAZ-TV, Macon, placing
second.
The Broadcasters award wiH
go to WSB-TV with special
citations to WMAZ-TV, WLET
Radio in Toccoa and WNEG
Page 15
Radio in Toccoa.
The first place newspaper
award went to the Fitzgerald
Herald and Leader with second
place to the Daily Tribune
News and Herald Tribune in
Cartersville. Special newspaper
citations were made to the
Macon County Citizen and
Georgian, Toccoa Record and
This Week in Peachtree City.
A publication entitled Historic
Preservation in Columbus,
Georgia, put out by the
Columbus Area Bicentennial
Committee, was also singled
out for an award.
The awards will be given out
during the Stay & See Travel
and Bicentennial Conference
here Dec. 2.
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, November 17,1976
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Election
Republican Party facing
southern problems
ATLANTA (UPI) — Southern pride helped build Jimmy
Carter’s near-sweep of Dixie, but the foundation was laid
by an overwhelming turnout of blacks.
Political leaders of both parties now are analyzing the
heavy black vote to see if it means the Democrats — after
more than two decades of dismal failure — can once again
brag about the “Solid South.”
Since 90 per cent of the blacks who went to the polls
voted for Carter, this poses a critical problem for the
emerging GOP, threatening the steady gains Republicans
have made in the South since the first Eisenhower
triumph of 1952.
“Blacks may well hold the balance of power,” Ten
nessee GOP chairman Dortch Oldham said. “They voted
in record numbers this time. They made a difference in
Mississippi in the presidential race and here in the Senate
race.
“I think the Republican party simply has to establish a
beachhead in the black community. It is very unusual for
any segment of the population to vote almost 100 per cent
(for a particular candidate) the way they do.”
The Voter Education Project in Atlanta estimates 95 per
cent of blacks voting in the South chose Carter. The VEP
estimates President Ford won 55 per cent of the total
white vote in the South, but the black turnout for Carter
assured the native Georgian of a Dixie victory — and that
assured him of the presidency.
Significantly, the southern state Carter lost — Virginia
— has a lower percentage of blacks than most of the rest
of the region.
Because of the success of the black vote, the
Democratic Party in Florida will hire a black to work as a
full-time liaison with minority groups.
Bill Taylor, the Republican chairman in Florida, is wor
ried.
“In the past we conceded them (black voters) to the
Democrats,” Taylor said. “It will be a long-term
educational process ... to show the blacks that the
Republican Party is the party of Lincoln and under
Republican administrations blacks have assumed higher
and more positions in government.
“We are going to have to do something. It seems that as
soon as you say you’re a conservative to a black, it means
someone who is going to cut off his welfare check. We
have got to become more issue oriented.”
North Carolina GOP chairman Robert Shaw says blacks
can mean the difference between winning and losing in his
state.
“I know that in most areas of the state blacks did not
even support those Republican candidates who were
black,” Shaw said.
In South Carolina, Democratic Chairman Donald
Fowler said a southerner heading the ticket was an im
portant factor, but added that blacks are a strong and
vital force in the Democratic Party in Dixie.
Some black leaders feel that Carter being a native son
helped his popularity with blacks.
Benjamin Hooks of Memphis, chosen to head the
NAACP next year, said, “A southern white man who has
been a part of a segregated society and who has made the
change has a much broader base to deal from than some
white folks who never knew us at all.”
Republicans got about 10 per cent of the black vote in
Alabama, estimates GOP chairman Edgar Welden. His
party’s best hope of increasing its black strength is
“through the elected officials you already have. They can
be helpful in increasing inroads into the black com
munity.”
He concedes that the GOP will “never get 50 per cent of
the black vote, but it might get you 30 per cent. And that
could be significant.”
Georgia State Rep. Mike Egan, the Republican leader in
the House, said “a southerner running for President made
a heck of a difference. When we don’t have that regional
pride going against us the Republicans will get back on
the road of steady growth.
But Democrat Tom Murphy, the speaker of the House in
the Georgia legislature, disagrees.
“If the Republicans don’t do something, I think they’re
going to be replaced within 10 years by another con
servative party, and I think it would be an ultra
conservative party.”
Some southern Republicans still felt the vote in their
states was close enough to mean the GOP has not ceded
the Solid South back to the Democrats, particularly if
there is no native son to contend with.
“It is not any indication that the South will remain
Democratic,” said Wayne Adams, acting executive
director of the South Carolina Republican Party. “Many
of our voters are still independent.”
Florida’s Taylor said, “A lot of people voted their ac
cents, but it was too close in some states to say that the
South is basically Democratic.
“It wouldn’t have taken a big shift in some states to put
them in the Republican column ... when we have a can
didate who the people can identify with, they’ll vote
Republican. In two years, I think you’ll see a shift back to
the right.”
Archbishop
WASHINGTON-The National
Conference of Catholic Bishops
ended its fall meeting by
adopting a pastoral letter
reaffirming the church’s
traditional moral teachings on
such issues as birth control,
homosexuality and divorce.
Archbishop Joseph L. Ber
nardin, of Cincinnati, president
of the conference said “there is
nothing new or startling in the
document. It is a good com
pendium of moral values. (UPI)