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Inside the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner 9 лет назад


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Inside the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner

Scenes of the newspaper publishing process at the Fairbanks Daily News Miner circa 1977. The following identifications and descriptions were made in 2015 by people who appear in the film. Sequence opens with views of the news department darkroom and Chief Photographer Marc Olson removing a finished print from a tray containing fixer, the last step before washing and drying a photographic print. Dermot Cole is seen at his desk typing on an IBM Selectric typewriter and talking on the phone. Dan Raley, in white sweater, examines the newspaper pages. Pages were pasted up on the main floor of the newsroom by hand. The red cutouts on the pages are where photos would later be inserted. Pasting up the page next to Dan Raley is Kathy Carter. Eric Muehling, in red, is seen operating the large camera that shot full-sized negatives of the newspaper page paste-ups. These negatives were then used to make the printing plates. Dan Raley and Kathy Carter are seen continuing to work on laying out and pasting up newspaper pages as Eric Muehling continues to create full-sized negatives of the pages. The Daily News-Miner building at 200 North Cushman Street in Fairbanks is seen from the exterior as Marc Olson walks into the building with a camera bag and then into the photo lab darkroom. Following an overview of the newsroom, Dan Raley is seen re-sizing the photo that Marc Olson was finishing at beginning of film. Dan Raley is seen typing and then inserting a typed page into an Optical Character Reader machine that was used to turn typed pages into text on computer screens. Seated at computer terminals and editing are Marvin Aronson on the left and Scott Anderson on the right. Dan Raley then checks the type he just entered into the computer. According to Marc Olson, the Daily News-Miner was a leader in adopting new technology. Stories were typed on IBM Selectric typewriters that had interchangeable balls for different fonts; special fonts were readable by a scanner or Optical Character Reader and then the words could be edited on computer terminals. The News-Miner was one of the first papers anywhere to use this new technology and to edit on computers. (Color/Silent/16mm film). This sequence is AAF-11897 from the Jimmy B. Bedford Papers collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska and Polar Regions Collections & Archives Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks. For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives. The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.

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