Movie Makers (Jan-Dec 1945)

Record Details:

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Making news into history" is an everyday job of Record a k System Your standard size newspaper compressed to postage stamp size . . . on enduring microfilm instead of newsprint that yellows and crumbles with the years . . . Newspapers all over the country are having it done every day. Because news is the stuff that history is made of. These newspapers, as they are published, are sent to the Recordak Laboratories. By means of the ingenious Newspaper Recordak incorporating the superb Kodak Micro-File Ektar lens, they are automatically photographed down on Recordak Micro-File 35-mm. film— page by page, in a matter of seconds. The master negative film goes to Kodak's air conditioned film vault— today's "time capsule." The individual newspaper orders positive films for its own files and for other subscribers. Thousands go to public and university libraries . . . with a saving in space of 98%. To look up a story, the film covering the correct week or month is inserted in the Recordak Film Reader. Pages are flipped through at the touch of a finger . . . There, brilliantly projected on the screen— 40% larger than the original paper— is the date, the page, your story —easier to read than the day it came off the press. "Making news into history" is only one of hundreds of services which Recordak is performing for banking, business, industry, Government, education, science, and the arts ... in the end, each a service for you. EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY ROCHESTER 4, N. Y. Serving human progress through photography