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Albin R. Olson the First Village ManagerVT .L.:L A!Ire 11A1.V L; RS Avillage manager was hired, Albin Olson, and a chief of the Department of Public Safety, Albert Dudden. Olson came from Port Everglades, where he was assis- tant manager. Previously he had worked in the office of the city manager of Pensacola and was assistant to the city manager of Daytona Beach. He has a master's degree from the school of Public Administration at Florida State University. Olson had spent 36 months with the Marine Corps in World War II and also served in Korea with the rank of major. Formally, a very sensitive gap exists between the ownership of a developer and the sale to the public, but this one ran very smoothly. This was largely due to the honorable performance of the Ross group and their ability to pick excellent men for key jobs. While they controlled the Council, in the absence of resi- dents, their actions were invariably right and in the best interests of the future home owners. As the months passed, Jack Schwencke, handling sales to builders and individuals, saw to it that agreements were kept and relationships were -harmonious. A great deal of responsibility on the shoulders of Al Olson, the Village Manager. Ire the beginning, he wore several hats: Village Clerk, Village Tax Assessor, and Village Tax Collector. Until the Village Hall was completed, he had a desk in a small .room upstairs in the Winter Club. One of the first things he had to do was set up a tax roll. This was fairly pimple on the surface, as there were only two taxpayers- Forth Palm Beach Properties (the Ross operating entity) and John MacArthur. There was one other, however, that turned up in the person of a French Duke who owned Little Munyon Island. It seems that he had in =�erited the island and had never seen it. When Olson sent him a tax bill, a very polite letter came back from Southern. France with a check for the taxes due $23.00. :, 00