The new American Bankers Association president took the  spotlight Monday with a plea to bankers to back the trade group's image   campaign.   
William T. McConnell used his first official appearance as top banker to  ask his colleagues to help rid the industry of its increasingly unpopular   image.   
  
"This is going to cost some real money," said Mr. McConnell, chairman  and chief executive officer of Park National Corp., Newark, Ohio. "But it's   the best money you'll ever spend."   
Walter A. Dods Jr., the outgoing president, launched the media campaign  this year. It features two commercials, which ran for several weeks on CNN,   touting banks as high-tech, innovative institutions that help people invest   their money.     
  
Mr. Dods urged his colleagues to contribute $500 per $100 million of  assets for the ads, which the trade group plans to test market in two   cities this year.   
"Who loves banks these days? A new ABA study shows it is older, less-  educated, low-income people," Mr. Dods said. "We must have a customer base   much broader than that."   
Mr. Dods' campaign got a big boost at the convention from KeyCorp  chairman Robert Gillespie, who urged his colleagues to pony up for more   television ads.   
  
"If we really had our heads together, wouldn't we spend $20 million ...  to get people to think differently about bank-based financial services?"   Mr. Gillespie asked.   
Mr. McConnell shared the stage Monday with his fellow newly elected  officers, a group of bankers who will quietly wait in the wings for their   turn at the top spot. He and his three colleagues all hail from community   banks.     
R. Scott Jones, president-elect, is chairman and chief executive officer  of Goodhue County National Bank, Red Wing, Minn. Hjalma E. Johnson, first   vice president, is chairman and CEO of East Coast Bank Corp., Dade City,   Fla.; chairman of Bank at Ormond By-the-Sea, Ormond Beach, Fla.; managing   director of Synagen Capital Partners Inc., Orlando; and president of   Investment Advisors Inc., Dade City. Harley D. Bergmeyer, the new   treasurer, is president, chairman and CEO of Saline State Bank, Wilber,   Neb.             
Mr. Dods ended his tenure as ABA president the way he began it-in a  Hawaiian shirt. 
  
After Mr. McConnell formally took over, Mr. Dods began undressing on  stage. Off came his suit jacket and tie. Then came his dress shirt, which   revealed the colorful, flower-patterned shirt beneath.   
"How intelligent is it to start the day tying a noose around your neck?"  he asked the crowd as he removed his tie. "Now, by God, I don't have to do   that anymore."   
The end of Mr. Dods' term is bad news for the airline industry. The  president of Honolulu-based First Hawaiian Bank flew 277,000 miles in the   past 12 months and visited half the states.   
Golf was the predominant theme in the exhibit hall at this year's ABA  convention. At least seven vendors offered bankers the chance to swing a   club. MCI Communications Corp. offered the most high-tech version, using   point-to-point teleconferencing to allow a golf pro in Washington to   analyze the swings of bankers here.       
ABA's mini-golf course also got rave reviews. Bankers got a free sleeve  of golf balls for each putt they sank. Of course, the green was full of   bumps and humps that made the shots nearly impossible. ABA general counsel   John J. Gill missed three straight putts, although his wife went three for   four.       
Then there was Omega Performance, a consulting firm on banker training.  It simply offered bankers the chance to putt into a metal cup over the   convention floor's carpet. "At least we are giving away the putter,"   Omega's Peggi E. Smith said. "Everyone else is taking their equipment home   with them."       
Paddleballs provided by Executive Risk, a liability insurance company,  also were a hit. "I've got a granddaughter, and I'll give that to her,"   said Joseph M. Henry of Exchange Bank in Louisiana. "It is a good gimmick."   
GE Capital had the most mouth-watering exhibit-a large chocolate cake  with white frosting-while National Commerce Bank Services - which creates   supermarket branches-offered bottled water and pens in the shape of   vegetables and fruits to represent the shopping experience.     
Edward Jones, the investment firm, wasn't looking to sell anything.  "We're here to recruit bankers," said Robert F. Fairbanks Jr., an   investment representative in the company's Fitchburg, Mass., office. The   company declined to discuss whether it had any success.     
The 2,200 bankers at the convention turned downright gleeful when the  ABA replayed a recent "20/20" segment slamming Senate Banking Committee   Chairman Alfonse M. D'Amato's plan to limit ATM surcharges.   
ABC reporter John Stossel told Sen. D'Amato: "You make it sound like  ATMs are like heroin. People are addicted to them." To which the New York   Republican responded: "That's right."   
Less effective was a report via telephone from the Supreme Court steps  by ABA deputy general counsel Michael F. Crotty. He was updating the   convention on the just-argued case over credit union membership practices.   The ABA leadership apparently hoped the live report would build grass-roots   support among bankers, which will be critical when Congress begins looking   for a legislative solution to the credit union industry's legal troubles.         
The ABA ended its annual confab on a high note. For $70,000, it booked a  special performance by the Boston Pops and conductor Keith Lockhart. "The   reason we can afford it is because so many of the other events were paid   for by sponsors," an ABA spokesman said.