TIRE MICHIGAN DAILY THU] TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY THU To Break Babe's Record ,'MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Cincinnati Continues To Drive for Flag liever Dick Hall got Maris to hit a towering fly to deep right center that chased right fielder Earl: Robinson back before he camped! under it for the out, 20 feet short of the wall. In his final appearance, Maris faced knuck eballingreliever Hoyt Wilhelm. Manis fouled one back, then started to check his swing on the second pitch. But he couldn't hold back and topped a soft roller along the first base line. Wilhelm picked it up, jogged over to first and made the tag on Maris him- self. Maris threw his batting helmet away in disgust while the crowd gave him a standing ovation. That ended Maris' chances to tie or surpass Ruth's record under the official 154-decision limit imposed Sports Writers! Come all ye Sports Writers! The Michigan Daily Sports Staff is the place for you to practice writing about your favorite sports. Simply come over to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., at 7:15 tonight and sign up for the training program, or contact Cliff Marks, NO 2-3241. by Baseball Commissioner Ford Fik aiw olndt ih Frick. M ans, who lined to right in the first inning before stirring the crowd with his 59th homer, has eight games left on the Ameri- can League's expanded schedule in which to surpass Ruth's total. The Cincinnati Reds continued their drive for their first pennant since 1940 by edging the Pitts- burgh Pirates 3-2 for their eighth win in the last nine games. The second-place Los Angeles Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB x-New York 104 50 .675 - Detroit 93 59 .612 10 Baltimore 89 65 .582 15 Chicago 84 70 .545 20 Cleveland 74 79 .484 29f2 Boston 73 8i .474 31 Minnesota 67 83 .447 35 Los Angeles 66 86 .434 37 Kansas City 57, 95, .375 46 Washington 56 95 .371 46Y2 x-Clinched pennant. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 4, Baltimore 2 Chicago 3, Boston 1 Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2 Detroit 6, Los Angeles 3, Minnesota at Washington, rain TODAY'S GAMES New York at Baltimore Minnesota at Washington Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE i W L Pct. GB Cincinnati 90 57 .612 - a-Los Angeles 83 61 .576 512 San Francisco 80 65 .552 9 St. Louis 77 69 .527 12Y2 Milwaukee 77 69 .527 12% Pittsburgh 69 75 .479 1912 a-Chicago 61 85 .418 281/ Philadelphia 45 101 .308 44% a-Opponents in night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 7, San Francisco 4 Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 2 SPhiladelphia 6, St. Louis 1 TODAY'S GAMES No games scheduled Dodgers, still in contention al- though far back, trailed Chicago 2-1 after 31/2 innings. Wally Post's eighth inning hom- er won it for the Reds and Joey Jay (21-8) and was Cincinnati's 34th win by one run. They've lost 14 by a single tally. Post's big blow that sailed into a parking lot across the street from the ball park came off re- liever Elroy Face. The payoff wallop came after Face, now 6-1, had walked Vada Pinson to start the inning. Face went into the game in the eighth to relieve starter Joe Gibbon. The homer, 20th of the season Say Wismer 'Doctored' Game Fims BUFFALO, N.Y. OP) - Harry Wismer, owner of the New York Titans, has accused the Buffalo Bills of "doctoring up" the films of Sunday's' New York-Buffalo game to omit a sideline fight. The incident involved was a sideline melee in which Wismer claimed Buffalo Coach Buster Ramsey slugged Al Dorow, the Ti- tans' quarterback. Buffalo won the American Football League game 41-31. Wismer protested and Commissioner Joe Foss' ruling ap- parently still is enroute to Ram- sey by mail from League Head- quarters in Dallas. for Post, was his third hit of the I night. Leo Cardenas had four hits for the Reds. The Reds had a chance to break the game wide open when they scored their first run in the second. With one out, Post, Car-. denas and pick Gernert singled in succession to load the bases. Darrell Johnson's sacrifice fly scored' Post and Gibbon then walked Jay to load the bases again before getting Elio Chacon on a fly to Bill Virdon. Jay allowed only three hits and was in trouble only once before the Pirates got to him for the pair of runs in the eighth that gave them the temporary lead. Singles by Bill Mazeroski, Vir- don and Dick Groat produced one run and the other came in " on Dick Stuart's single. In the fourth the Pirates filled the bases with two out on singles by Stuart and Roberto Clemente and a walk to Smoky Burgess. Don Hoak, an evening-long target of lusty boos from the crowd of 14,822, ended that threat by fly- ing to Frank Robinson. * * * In other National League, games, Hank Aaron's bases-loaded single in the seventh snapped a 3-3 tie and sent the Milwaukee Braves to a 7-4 victory over San Francisco, and Don Ferrares tossed a seven- hitter as the Philadelphia PIils beat St. Louis 6-1, -* * * . . In the American League, Chico Fernandez' double with tle bases loaded featured a four-run upris- ing in the seventh that sent De- troit to a 6-3 triumph over Los Angeles. Ron Kline sold to Detroit five Head of AAU Denies Charge Of Collapse 3 weeks ago by the Angels, limited for former teammates to seven hits. The righthander squared his record at 8-8, half his victories coming since he joined the Tigers. Fernandez' double into the rightfield corner chased in two runs and broke a 2-2 tie. The Tigers went ahead 2-0 on Norm Cash's 38th home run with Rocky Colavito on base in the fourth. The Angels tied it on George Thomas' two-run homer in the sixth. * * * Bobby Del Greco's two-run ninth inning homer gave Kansas City a 4-2 victory over Cleveland. Ray Herbert's seven-hitter for the Chicago White Sox gave them a 3-1 win over Boston. Minnesota at Washington was rained out: '61Hockey Schedule A nnounced Try our collegiate styles-they are: 0 SUAVE " SMART 0 SMOOTH 10 Haircutters The Dascola Barbers near the Michigan Theatre Coach Al Renfrew yesterday disclosed the hockey schedule for the 1961-62 season. Two major changes from last year's schedule will highlight the season. The first is a December 8 meeting with Toronto at Detroit's brand-new Cobo Hall. It will be the first such meeting i the arena. Renfrew said that Cobo Hall had agreed to charge the same one dollar admission nor- mally charged students at the Cbliseum. The other addition is that Mich- igan will this year participate in the Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti- tute Tournament during Christ- mas vacation at Rensselaer, N.Y. "They've been trying to get us out there for three years now,"' Renfrnew said. "It's good for the, boys to play some different teams," he added. The other. teams in the tour- nament will be McGill, Princetoe and RPIL There is lso a possibility that Michigan will play the Czechoslo- vakiarn team on February 28. The only hitch is that the WCHA play- offs will be held on March 1, 2, and 3. This would really cramp the schedule if Michigan makes the playoffs. The game would be played in Ann Arbor. I LOUISVILLE, Ky., (R) - Nick J. Barack, president of the Ama- teur Athletic Union, said yester- day that a story in a national sports magazine that the AAU was about to collapse was untrue. "We are alive and plan to be around a long time," Barack told Earl Ruby, Sports Editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal, in a telephone interview. Barack is from Columbus, Ohio. .Y .' S{Yi YJy:J..'.:GJ'.:. .: tfMf . ...'.M"!t1'A'{.".. ri.:. v.1..Y..Y. :J: S:i"^"V "4 " "f r?:C'"a".t:$jXi:"ibrrrSrr::'v. :i 4i'i '.:. ":"kff{$+'r$ixY :'e'e}:? ."$sxe.4s: X5?rfii g ti 'r-0 , r '{:< ' ;t {+,% y+ii :ti r } ::'f. ?; SENIORS and i GRAD STU Sign up for your SENIOR PICTURES DENTS *{ 1t For those who didn't like horses there was another way to travel. If you made 100 miles in one day, you were known as a Century Scorcher, got a gold medal and your name in the paper. ORGANIZATIONAL MEETINGS On the Diag Monday thru Thursday 1 till 5 p.m. ..