I agree with John Gettis . . .
Rocky Mountain is about the only place to handle it properly.
 Hopefully it's an "amateur" E-4 film.  The year you gave is right on the 
cusp of when Kodak began marketing amateur E-4 Ektachromes (1966-1977) 
while the pro films remained E-2 and E-3.  E-4 is actually more stable 
compared to E-2 and E-3 emulsions!
 [All Ektachromes changed to E-6 in 1977 except Kodak's infrared EIR which 
is AR-5 process if technical color accuracy is required, but can be 
processed E-6 if that's unimportant.]
-- John
At 18:06 3/14/02, John Gettis wrote:
 
Try this Page but be warned it is not cheap.
http://www.rockymountainfilm.com/
John Gettis
Subject: [OM] [OT] -- Does anyone know...
Does anyone know a developer doing E-2 or E-4?  A customer sent me a Pen
camera last used in Vietnam, circa '65 (!) with a half-finished roll of
Ektachrome-X still in it (!!).  The film tore, but I removed it in a
dark-bag and rolled it into an empty cassette.
 
 
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