Educational screen & audio-visual guide (c1956-1971])

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The new North Park Elementary School, Roy, Utah, selected by A.A.S.A. for its exhibit of outstanding school designs. "This motion-picture projector operates more than 400 hours a year. . . and takes it' Says Mr. John Larsen, Director of AudioVisual Education and Television for the Weber County, Utah, School System, shown here with Principal Wheatley J. Taylor and Instructor Don Clarke. "Our new 500-pupil school has an extensive audio-visual program — and our single Kodak Pageant Sound Projector is moved from classroom to classroom around the court, to bring motion pictures to our students. "As a result, our Pageant Projector is busy three to four hours a day, three to four days a week during school hours. It even works after school, since we frequently lend it to civic groups. "Evidently this projector was built to work hard, because we've had no problems with it. It's also one machine our teachers feel they can operate easily." If you're responsible for an audiovisual program, don't you want a projector which can take hard treatment by inexperienced operators? A projector which they can operate without embarrassment? The Kodak Pageant 16mm Sound Projector was built to answer such problems. It shows a brilliant picture even in hard-to-darken rooms, and its sound system is suited either to small room or auditorium presentation. Call your Kodak audio-visual dealer for a demonstration arranged at your convenience. Or write for Bulletin V3-65. No obligation, of course. Kodak Rigeant Projector ) EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY, Dept. 8-V, Rochester 4, N. Y. Educational Screen and Audiovisual Guide — July, 1962 355