Sunday, September 8, 1963 Season Hinges On Injuries , ‘Breaks’ Football Practice: Key Word Is No Longer ‘Baby’ Players Are Physically Sanforized It is still early, so everything looks good. Everything always does look good early in the season: the team is fresh and unbeaten, muscles are summer job-limber, nobody has classroomjpallor or girl troubles. There is nothing to be depressed about, and the whole UNC foot ball team is determined not to do anything during the next twelve weeks to make anybody depressed. Kenan Stadium cannot be used for scrimmages this fall because of the construction crews building the new tiers of seats. The team is practicing on one of the in tramural fields, scrimmaging there too. This is not quite as happy an arrangement for the scrimmage-watchers, that small band of die-hards keep as keen an eye on the football players as some'other men keep on their stocks and bonds. Because of the danger to children of stray punts and runaway players, and the possible dis tracting influence of pretty girls at close range, Coach Jim Hickey has given strict orders that nobody gets out on the field unless directly connected with the team. Watchers sit on low bleachers around the edge of the field. For a hot-blooded football fan, watching a scrim mage at ground level from the edge of an intramural field must be like watching the Folies Bergeres from the top of the Effel Tower. On the other hand, says UNC Sports publicist Bob Quincy, “show me a football player who won’t stop and look at a pretty girl, and I’ll show you a man on the third team.” There is a blue-shirted manager who criss-crosses the practice area steadily bird-dogging errant watchers. At one end of the huge practice area, Coach George Barclay bellows his chant to his freshman players: “No pussyfootin’ now, you can’t pussyfoot on a football field, get in there and fight for the ball, fight for it, get rough, no pussyfootin’.” Coach Barclay’s voice sounds like a Force Ten gale coming up out of the southwest. When asked during a rest break how his voice was holding up, the Coach said it was fine, that he had stopped smok \ iV: V V a, M ■ ■ I iPPP .y 4 MliWy ■ Sr V Yu| h 9 ' K ** /si i mMm ■a 9 W ■ \ l fpl ■ m. \ ihL-.v if v ill PH mi lllwi Joe Mark , Gentlest Scolder Os All MKrH™l Ka i r k]3 rl\iMl va "? "'’"■ '' ;v; |Kpv ' BP^t^■* > \ v**) . m fr* . " IBir mmw & f /*j SPjB >4fci jr wT ' ■-•Hn ibi _ -~ %|p» *jjj [2. SBP BOttOB Mr. nmi JVr I W *IL W - v - ttj wa*9B - . 4A. - - \ ' . ffg&ggalfk SMHHffiPI w*agßgfe>» * „ N , i>staßpas3». w v»'~Mafo W . UPS , '*•© « ■-.-i-^. l | ll a’ ; X<=•‘•-•■'^"j \ l , A . jHH JHBI L hp st L m W* ’ *9 ISP * ('• . jBkjKL. Wr wp Contact Started Earlier This Year «T M ■!... S Sh • ' m m, - $. ■ 4 *?§l|i|||f , . - -** t l l W'ork On Fundamentals Photos: Bill Sparrow Text: J. A. C. Dunn | L . , - ... ~ ..,„