9 SUNDAY, MAY 24, 190S . THE -MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAYMAY 2415 t DAILY MENTOR BOWS OUT: It's Thirty for City Editor Connable' By GAYLE GREENE (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is not an assigned story-ABC I1.) Down to two packages of cigar- ettes a day, shorn of the baggy tenchcoat, the green eyeshade and the 24-hour Job of Daily City Edi- tor, Alfred Barnes Connable, III, is enjoying a period of conva- lescence playing solitaire, dusting off an impressive pyramid of un- explored texts and meditating in a Yogi position. With his hollowed cheeks filled out and the snadows under his eyes fading to a light green, Con- nable, the man who originated the writing style of Daily personality interviews, yesterday submitted himself to one. *~N * * CONNABLE,- who changed his name from Al to Barnes to avoid being linked with the administra- tion (his father is a Regent) wrapped his feet around the legs of a swivel chair and tersely an- swered questions about "the Con." "I often sit Yogi and I used to work for Alger Hiss," he began. "I was a courier for the Carnegie )Endowment for. International Peace. I was the architect of our entire Far Easten policy," he said. Records may be lacking to prove this last assertion but the Daily files testify that the bedraggled, unkempt reporter in the wrinkled tweed jacket by-lined some of the top local news stories during the past three years. He covered the Pauline Camp- bell murder for the United Press (and admits with a chuckle that Associated Press stories were * * ,~' 4 * * 'U' Students To Publish SportsBpook Resulting from countless man- hours of work by several members of The Daily sports staff and Sig- ma Delta Chi, professional journ- alism fraternity, the first book containing an account of the most famous sports events in University history will go on sale to Alumni June 1 and to students next fall. Entitled "Memorable Moments in Michigan Sports," the book con- tains 71 sports events of the last half century. * * * FOOTBALL holds the spotlight with 26 entries. Excerpts from University baseball, track, basket- ball, hockey, swimming, golf, ten- nis, wrestling and gymnastics make up a smaller portion of the book. Student journalists searched record books, old newspapers and magazines and talked to people associated with sporting events until they compiled a list of 200 events. Seventy-one events chosen by a panel of six University sports ex- perts were reported by Dick Lewis, '53, Lester Sons, '53, Ivan Kaye, '54, Paul Greenberg, '54, Ed Smith, '54, Bob Fancett, Grad., George Flint, '55L. Final drafts are being drawn up by Ed Whipple, '53, Dick Wilcox, '53 and Jack Renire, '53. One of the most striking events included is the 1898 football vic- tory over the University of Chi- cago which inspired a University student, Louis Elbel, to write "The Victors." That game, played before the formation of the Big Ten Confer- ence, established University teams as mythical "Champions of the West." An unpublisized event recorded in the book was a jaunt which Coach Ray Fisher's Western Con- ference basketball team took through the Orient in the spring of 1929. The team returned home in the fall after winning 11 out of 13 games against Japanese college competition. Loan Prints A five cent tine per day will be. charged for all 'Art Print Loan Pictures returned after Friday. Pictures may be returned from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. daily until Friday at Rm. 518 Administration Bldg. Class of '53 Plans Reunion Plans for a combined Class of 1953 reunion represent a, signifi- cant change in the policy of the Alumni Association according to John It-Flynn, '53A. Previously the class treasury has been split at commencement and each college has received a share of it for their individual reunion. This year a joint treasury will be main- tained for a combined 1958 reun- ion. Film To End Run Student Legislature Cinema Guild's feature "How Green Was My Valley" will finish its run at 8 p.m. today in Architecture Audi- torium, presents summer ' formals with "STAIN SHY" -th mirnale in resistant fabric fminsh! 4.9a MATH, LANGUAGES: Varied Courses Offered In 'U' Summer Session v Three special programs will highlight the University summer, session. An institute for mathematics teachers will be held Aug. 3-14. Ten recipients of Carnegie grants will carry on projects begun last summer in the Latin Workshop. ELEVEN STUDENTS will take; part in a summer linguistic'xpro-, gram aimed at attracting Ameri- can scholars into language stud- ies. Students selected are special- izing or teaching languages and related subjects, but have not had the opportunity for formal lin- guistic study offered in the pro- gram. Featured in the summer clas-* sical studies program is a Latin workshop, directed by Prof. Wal- do E. Sweet of the Latin depart- ment at William Penn Charter School in Philadelphia. Teachers from nine states will work with Prof. Sweet in further development of his new method of Latin teaching. Utilizing recent discoveries about learning of for. eign languages, Prof. Sweet's method employs several audio- visual devices. In the tmathematics institute, particular emphasis will be placed on the use of mathematics in in. dustry. S -Daily-Jeff Pemberton THE WEE HOURS-Pale and gaunt, Daily City Editor Barnes Connable scans a fast-rolling copy of the paper for typographical errors. If his ice-cold right eye catches one, the night editor will be sternly dealt with on the morning critic sheet. * *'e * * * '4 * * * paleyd all over the nation.) He also wrote the story on last spring's panty raid. * , * * . RELIABLE informants insist it was Connable who incited the riot. "He incited until 10 p.m.," one source said, "then went back to write the story while we phoned in I bulletins." Connable denies the whole thing. Recently Connable placed the phone call to Malenkov which won international newspaper coverage. He was the only re- porter last spring at the cele- brated McPhaul dinner. Last summer he worked for the Italian bureau of the Associated Press and filled The Daily's col. umns with impressions of Europe. "I HAVE a dirty job," Connable says emphatically. It is. An old Maynard St. max- im holds that "the city editor is a rat by definition." His job in- volves bossing a 60-man news- gathering staff and over-all su- pervision of the news pages' pro- duction. Another Daily tradition is that the city editor is always right. Connable, swathed in a mantle of infallibility, couldn't miss be- cause he is a born bluff, accord- ing to his predecessor Private Bob Keith, '52. Keith described Connable's un- obstrusive arrival on the staf three years ago. "He walked in, said I'm Al Con- nable, and sat down at a typewrit- er," Keith related. "By the end of the week we knew he was one of the best newspapermen to ever hit this office." * * * OCCASIONAL hassles with th dean's office kept Connable in school, but his prime concern was The Daily and related student ac- tivities. At the end of his sophomore year, a group of beer-sodden men tapped him for Sphinx. He also joined Toastmasters and a year later was dubbed "Little Hollow Thunder" by the Michi- gamua tribe. "Some day I'm going to come back to go to school," Connabli promises. He expresses consider- able regret at his extensive class- e e cutting and speaks highly of his patient professors. "As for the administration, I would say it lacks only one thing -courage," Connable said. By failure to resist influential pres- sures, the University is falling short of its obligations to society, he believes. As the wielder of a mean ukelele (he comes from a musical family: "My father plays the funeral march, my mother was a concert pianist, my brother is a skier and my sister is in Mexico"), tyrant city editor, tower of infallibility and professional bluff, it follows that Connable should insist on get- ting sick in heroic proportions. A fellow senior editor said: "When Al is sick, we never bring The Daily to him in the morning. The most minor typographical er- 'ror might bring on a relapse." on on interesting careerin telephone work. We have many excellent positions about which we would like to tell you. Also we have.- NEW INCREASED STARTING WAGES for al of our positions. Stop in and let us show you what we have to offer. Michigan Bell Telephone COa 323 E. Washington XWILDSL stet. te . * h. 'cocas" m tearing your hair.. DON'T! UI N We havel 26th of t tion of< i would lik to you f A full ten off; to th - 4 who buyt - ~k a Twelve ti fered at1 F K. 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