The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 March 1968 — Page 10

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Hollywood News

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By VERNON SCOTT UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Rod Steiger, an odds-on favorite to win the best acting award this year, is about to slip his moorings for a new movie which requires full days Just for him to be made up. In “The Illustrated Man”— which co-stars his wife, Claire Bloom—Steiger portrays a man tattooed from neck to toes. Much as he loves his art, the

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

actor naturally eschewed the opportunity to be tattooed all over his body—even at no

charge.

Instead the makeup folk at Warner Bros. 7 Arts have made silk screen stencils, outlining the tattoo marks. Thereafter they hand paint the designs on Steiger. A ticklish business to be sure. Also tedious. For those scenes in which he is seen clothless Steiger takes a tranquilizar and spends three

days being painted before he goes on camera. Mercifully, these scenes are rare. In most of the picture he is seen fully clothed except for his gloveless hands. Still, it requires three hours of makeup just to “tattoo” his hands every day. “It’s a real project,” Steiger sighed. "When they do the full job I try to convince myself I’m a saint. I can’t r e a d or watch television because there are two men working on each arm, two on each side of my body and

men working on my chest and back. "The painting lasts only two days with a touch up. After that my skin absorbs the paint and on the third day it wears off. “I turn the radio on to soothing FM music while the men do their painting. It has to match up perfectly every time because the tattooes play an important part of the story.” The picture is something of a fantasy, covering the years from 1918 to 4000 A.D. and the end of the world. "The story is about fate and how it cannot be avoided.”

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Bad news for British By JOSEPH W. GRIGG LONDON (UPI)—The Labor government presented the nation today with a bad news budget that called for great sacrifices to restore prosperity to Britain. Chancellor of the Exchequer Roy Jenkins told a tense and hushed Parliament of the new measures designed to deal with "the massive consequences of devaluation” which cut the value of the pound from $2.80 to $2.40 last year. "The budget this year is dominated not only by the decision to devalue last December but also by events in the last few weeks and the weekend conference in Washington and strains on the world monetary systems which reached a climax last week,” Jenkins said. He referred to the tremendous gold rush that led to setting up a dual price system for gold at the Washington meeting last weekend. "I believe the British people understand this analysis and are ready to make the necessary sacrifices . . . which will enable us to achieve a securely based prosperity,” he said. “The purpose of this budget is to present the facts, impose the sacrifices and provide the opportunities.”

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man but could not find him. However, the abandoned car was expected to give clues in narrowing the search.

Cong give raid tipoffs By THOMAS CHEATHAM SAIGON (UPI)— A former Viet Cong officer said today that a Communist intelligence network tips off guerrillas in Vietnam 24 hours ahead of raids by American B52 bombers, giving the approximate time and place. A U.S. military spokesman said the defector’s statement was “unlikely to be true.” The former Communist intelligence officer said the information was collected by agents operating outside Vietnam then distributed by battlefield units by the central intelligence office in Hanoi. The statement was made at a Vietnamese news briefing by Capt. Nguyen Cong Tan, one of six Communist officers who recently defected to the Saigon government. Vuy Nhu Y, a former North Vietnamese captain who commanded the 9th Battalion, said his troops usually got warning of impending B52 strikes a day; in advance. He said he would order his troops either to take refuge in deep trenches or move them to a safer area. “We did not know of the precise timing and location of the strike zones,” Y said. “But the information was accurate enough for us to avoid great damages and losses.” He said the alerted area often included several provinces. The B52s are based both in Sattahip, Thailand, and at Anderson Air Force Base on Guam. They often fly 12 missions a day, almost always in South Vietnam, rarely in the North. Questioned, Tan said; “The intelligence service comes from Asians abroad . . I cannot specify exactly where.” Soviet trawler spy ships began operating off Guam shortly after the B52s opened their campaign from the Pacific base in 1964. In Manila, a U.S. source said the trawlers could hardly radio Hanoi the destination of the big bombers winging overhead.

Wednesday, March 20, 1968

Salary survey of interest

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The salaries of Indiana’s public school superintendents range from $10,020 to $28,000 a year— or $193 to $538 a week—according to a survey by Richard D. Wells, state superintendent of instruction. Wells said the survey covered the current school year for 276 superintendents on 12-month contracts. It showed an average or median of $14,290 a year or $275 a week.

Wells said the salaries "in some cases appear to have no relation to the size of the local school corporation.” In the school corporations with the smallest number of pupils—under 500—the five superintendents were paid between $10,020 and $13,500 for a median of $12,500. For corporations with enrollments of 20,000 and above, seven superintendents were paid between $19,700

and $28,000 for a median of $25,000. Superintendents in the 2,500 bracket were paid an average of $500 more per year than those in the 3,000 bracket, and those in the 3,500 bracket were paid an average of $1,675 more than those in the 4,000 bracket. Those in the 9,000 enrollment group were paid less on the average than those in either the 6,000 or 7,000 bracket.

MARTINSVILLE, Ind. (UPI) — An Indiana State Police troop, er and a motorist traded shots Monday night when the police, man stopped him for investigation of violating a traffic law. But Trooper Gerald D. Conner of Martinsville, working out of the Bloomington post, was not hit and apparently neither was the motorist, who ran away and still had not been found this

morning.

Conner stopped a car along Indiana 67 near Mooresville to question the driver about running a stop light. He said the man told him his driver’s license had been suspended. Then, Conner said, the man

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