mishesves Victory Proposed Levy Be Defeated— Both Democratic and Republican ns today after a brisk series of en-potent tax legislation. Democrats best by a narrow margin in the House raising personal exemptions may pay i new Congress next November. Re-eat of the Democratic move has put :k the income tax slash—which Presides—; ~ ' ’“Milan's LittleTaxCutsmptionsl : of S2r| :t down I straight!„!n omni-: lich the vc, and! te on it |income5 Whips Muncie's Good Big TeamMfLAN CRASHES THROUGH TO INDIANA CHAMPIONSHIP — Coach Marvin Wood's! : mighty Milan Indians, the People's Choice, crashed through to the 1954 Indiana high school! j basketball championship in a thrill-packed 32 to 30 tussie with Coach Jay McCreary's' jMuncie Bearcats last night in Butler Fieldhouse. Milan, boasting a population of 1,1 50] (and a high school enrollment of only 162 students, is the smallest high school team to win! the coveted Hoosier crown since the days of Thorntown in 1915 and Wingate way back in' INDIANAPOLIS W5)—Little! the early days of the.tournament. Appearing (left to right! are: back row—Ken Wendel-i t^rTthe Bobby Plump hit a jump shopman. Bill Jordan, Glen Butte, Roger Schroder, Rollin Cutter; kneeling in center are—Man-ind cm-lwitli two seconds to go andiagers Roger Schroder and Oliver Jones; front row—Ray Craft, Gene White, Ronnie Truitt, Milan’s great little team'Bob Plump, Bob Engel, and Coach Marvin Wood. fAP Photo! hat thc;whipped Muncie Central’s ~ancuver^00d biff team Saturday ni£ht iture in!for 44^* Indiana highdeficits, jschool championship, resented; The 5-foot 10-guard also won the' aiding Trester medal for mental attitudei ess. _ |in the first small-town victory in! say this^the Hoosier classic since Thorn-! jsc fight town ^00^ trophy in 1515, in the, Thetions:townFrench Warplanes Lash 'McCarthy Has Vietminh Ceaselessly 'Praise For Ikeof 1,100 and surrounding cessantly over rebel p 0 s i ti 0 n s;siegers into the open so they couJdipi„ni£. ? ?} i t?;farms, made poisonous use of the killstall to kill off Muncie's bid for reed theiits state chamPionsiup.ill stopsi Central’s Bcarcats came back toi^lead at 28-25 at the start of thei J final period after trailing Coach;Marvin Wood’s marvelous littlejl\“ t . _ _ T—I . J fh’ltiteam by as much as nine points. I l|fT2l1rp I f |muf]ohdthati M{Jan immGdiateIy went into i/mamc iiipiuued witharound Dien Bien Phu Saturday,,be mowed down, by fortress guns./batting average as president’is st1 Using all available aircraftjhigh “that iL Ike were running foi jcalled in from land and carrierjoffice today. i.'d feel compelled tc bases, the French began layingj campaign for him.” jdown firebomb barrages in bril-j' The senator referred' to his reliant moonlight Saturday morning; la tions with the President in a iand kept hammering the Commu-|speech to a state Republican din-^nist-led rebels throughout the dayjner, after renewing his advocacy Circling the oval-shaped plain in :of cutting off foreign aid funds toH-Bomb SafetyOut5asiiedfrozen ball set. Plump .held it for: tq£yo Snndav The United Northwest Indochina while French;U.S. allies which continue to trade* * A 1 fa a. ■* - _l_ _ . . A A n - 1_ f i T : Pt ft U A ^ ■ wm 0*. ’someMcCarthydroppeditwee^therrT aridthe**center of fu.:50°-pound incendiary bombs and But the junior senator from Wis-j —- mid-Pacific exDlosions jellied gasoline into the heart ofconsin said he thinks Eisenhower!Plump hit two free throws for r was informed Sat-:TebeI masses and their hideouts in “is doing the best job he can.”jMilan advantage. Gene J,apa,5. \as_„ °r_m„ jthe surrounding hilly jungles. ;He added: /T don't think he is a!j The Vietminh were particularly! idigging in east and south of theiumn -J) with 2:12 to go and the count was the distance ships must keep be* _28-28.rth1 2 30-28?i0W£!hrh ahriSani-ft^'bee^increLed in square miles by! The Vietminh were particuIariy;suPerinan*,who had been carrying most ot than 2Q :digging jn east and ^ Qf ^jMuncie s scoring iOdO. jammed in _ .. t ld t t center of the fortress. Thus far, jfcf rllOf IVIMda fielder with seconds left. | Japanese ships u^e tom to stav heaviest rebel infant™ ac H CMSt, ! Milan again controlled the balljout of an area with a radius of: ne nea lest rebel mlantrv as-last [for that one big shot and Plump 450 miles during future' tests in faults have been launched fromjfl SOUtll Bend CtU$\iLder- leaped and dumped it in from £.** Marshall Islands area SOUTH BEND, Ind. ®-An Airfeet. The Bcarcats tried, but theyiPrevious barred - off zone uas too*launching their big g Saturday incouldn’t get off another shoL iroughly 150 miles north-,outh ^assault Meek ago _ ;the ^ Qf ^ two.plac/jetFor a quarter in which only 10j200 east-west. _ nva7ald;that Jnnthlt3 u* “I103!1,?”5.trainer at the west edge of Southpoints were scored, it will go down! Foreign Mimster Katsuo Okazaki;that another attempt by the Viet- Eend_as one of the most nerve-shattering'told the Diet that the ^ overrun the fortress with A b]ic information officer atin the historv of the toumev. j^rged limit was set in a note masses of tens of thousands of It was sheer drama and a tre-;hand?d to the Japanese ambassa-^troops was building up.Washington.when:Iebrat-man-car,ame toa n d imendous tribute to the little manj^°iV ln } .asmng on. j*T ~do„T. i'vho taught a. it's ;'cat and Ttad S ates acted afteri.. F,re GutS WeStSltle 'mouse ' delayed game, its deadly Japanese nbiieimeiiv r .b^ a shower of JSS^iHow Early Saturday;CS a ifishermen insisted that their boat.jr* f U,|rt(Continued on Page 23, Column T.uekv Dracon. was outside thei1 11 c VUJiiUul nui Iek was he is rm toOffutt Air .Force Base, Omaha, Neb., identified the pilot as Lt. William P. Kenyon.1 Ralph Kenyon, 57, the father of j the 3i-year-old pilot, identified the [body, and said his son was on the jway to his home in Elkhart. The j elder Kenyon said they had plan-!«»»/^ 4 a /f a iVl rt. f A U'yfVk