Palm Beach FL Gore v. Bush Voting Machine
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Museum exhibit looks at voting (Palm Beach County poll machine that used "butterfly ballots" featured) BY CARL HARTMAN The Associated Press July 17, 2004 WASHINGTON ● T, behind the glass, is one of the most famous characters to emerge from the 2000 presidential election. The Votomatic machine from Palm Beach County , which introduced America to "butterfly ballots" and various kinds of "chads" - from pregnant to dimpled to hanging, is part of an exhibit on voting that opened Friday at the National Museum of American History. The machine is behind glass for safety reasons. Curators aren't afraid it could break loose and wreak havoc with another election; it's kept t to make sure no one is injured by the accompanying stylus used by voters to punch out chads, the bits of cardboard next to candidates' names on the much-disputed butterfly ballot. The exhibit begins with a vast floor map of the United States with color-coded data, county by county, showing the way voting is conducted in each area. The Florida machine, one of the newest in the exhibit, stands in a case at one corner of the map. While visitors can try out other voting machines on display, they can only look at the Votomatic and read the five-step instructions and a warning in larger red capital letters: "Legal time for voting booth is five minutes." One of the first
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