Friday, Nov. 03, 1961

Scoreboard

> While mighty Michigan State rolled on to victory, elsewhere last week upsets were the order of the day. Unbeaten Iowa, its swift running attack mired in ankle-deep mud, was beaten by hard-nosed Purdue (9-0). Resurgent Notre Dame, which had lost only to Michigan State, fell to Northwestern's pinpoint passing attack (12-10). Navy, rated the East's best team with four straight victories, lost 28-14 to underdog Pitt. Army was upset by West Virginia (7-3), and Maryland was surprised by South Carolina 20-10. But other powerhouses continued to roll. Second-ranked Mississippi overwhelmed Vanderbilt 47-0. Ohio State ground out a 30-2! win over scrappy Wisconsin to remain unbeaten and move into a three-way deadlock for Big Ten leadership with Michigan State and Minnesota, which last week came from behind to edge out Michigan 23-20.

> Ancient (47) Archie Moore was apologetic. "I'm sorry," he said. "It should have been a more classic performance. But this man is a very awkward fighter--it's hard to hit him cleanly." The awkward fighter was hapless Pete Rademacher, 33, who lost to Moore on a T.K.O. after being decked once in the fourth round, five times in the fifth and twice in the sixth. Rademacher, who was K.O.'d by Heavyweight Champion Floyd Patterson in his first pro bout, had insisted on waiving a rule that requires a bout to be stopped if a fighter is floored three times in one round. "I appreciated that," said Light Heavyweight Champion Moore. "It gave me a chance to knock him down some more."

> Driving a Lotus, its brakes virtually useless for the last 15 laps, Britain's Stirling Moss averaged 91.3 m.p.h., fast enough to win the 203-mile Pacific Grand Prix at Monterey, Calif.

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