PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2953 . - . _ _ .. _ -1 TUESDAY. APRIL 21. 1953 $ 4 BALANCE OF POWER: Mayor, Council Govern City Rep. Meader By ARLENE LISS Ann Arbor's city government is typical of the "weak mayor, strong council" type of government, ac- cording to political scientists, but Mayor William E. Brown Jr. dis- agrees with the experts' opinion. Describing Ann Arbor's system, Mayor Brown emphasized that the mayor and council are fairly well balanced in power with a slight advantage in the mayor's favor. THE VETO POWER is the may- or's trump card, a sit can only be overridden by 12 of the 15 council members. In Mayor Brown's eight years in office he has only had Local Courts Hear Varied Law Cases The problem of administering justice to residents of the com- munity rests with the Circuit, Pro- bate and Municipal Courts located in Ann Arbor. At the apex of the court struc- ture is the Circuit Court presided oved by Judge James R. Breakey, Jr., which has original jurisdic- tion in felonies and civil cases in- volving more than $100. In addition it is also the court of appeals from justices of the peace and municipal courts. * * * JUDGE BREAKEY is serving a six-year term which began in 1948. During the course of a year he handles more than 1,000 cases and presides over grand jury in- vestigations. The Circuit Court exercises supervisory control over all in- ferior courts in the circuit, and takes, responsibility for grand juries at the request of the Pros- ecuting Attorney. Fines collected by the court are used for the bar library in the judge's chambers and school li- braries in the country. A SECOND field of judicial op- eration is handled by the Probate Court headed locally by Judge Jay H. Payne. Settlement of estates of county residents and protection of the rights and interests of certain classes of people unable to defend these rights are among the duties of the court. Judge Payne has the respon- sibility of providing for the adoption of children, appoint- ing guardians to protect the in- terests of handicapped persons and minors, probating wills, hearing. petitions for the com- mitment of persons judged in- sane, changing names, perform- ing secret marriages and estab- lishing. birth .certificates .for non-registered persons. Coming under the supervision of Judge Payne is the County Agent Arch D. Wilson, who is ap- pointed by the governor. Also responsible to the Probate Judge is the Adult Probation Officer and the friend of the Court., Presided over by Judge Francis L. O'Brien, the Municipal Court handles a variety of cases, rang- ing from the payment of traffic fines to attempts by jewelry stores to collect from delinquent custom- ers. one minor veto overriden by the legislative branch. The council is composed of 14 councilors, two elected from each of the seven wards on a partisan basis, and a president, who is elected at large. Policy decisions are usually made by the council, with recommenda- tions coming from the mayor's office. The chief executive appoints the city attorney, clerk, treasurer and recorder. He also has the power to appoint the various city commissions. * * * ONE OF THE unique features of Ann Arbor's government is the system under which the commis- sions operate. There are actually 54 commissioners, all of whom are appointed by the mayor and are directly responsible to him. However, the main commis- sions are the fire, planning, po- lice and parks. The members on these boards range in number from three to seven. A system whereby the terms expire at dif- ferent times is used to insure that experienced men serve on the commissions. These boards appoint the chiefs of the various departments and are responsible for them. Acting as a liaison between the commis- sions and the council are several committees such as the planning or budget committees. * *. * MAYOR BROWN admitted that this system might seem compli- cated, but he said that it actually works like any large corporation. "It may be slow, but in deal- ing with other people's money, one should be slow," he said. The mayor pointed out that with this government, which has sometimes been called antiquated, Ann Arbor has accomplished a great deal. He called attention to the city's parking system which is a model throughout the state and said that Ann Arbor's latest bonds were issued with the lowest interest rate of any city in the state. Remarking that Ann Arbor's setup might not work in other places, Mayor Brown said that the University has contributed an un- usually high calibre of citizens. All the officials, many of them ex- perts in their fields, work without pay. The mayor who receives $635 a year is the only salaried officer. CONGRESSMAN from this dis- trict since 1950, Rep. George Meader has a long record of civic and governmental service. A graduate of the Class of 1927, he received a juris doctor degree from the Law School in 1931. Returned overwhelmingly by local voters last fall, Rep. Meader has stood behind foreign aid. and a private enterprise Point Four plan. He has opposed compulsory federal FEPC and state ownership of tidelands oil. BROWN LOOKS TO FUTURE: Business Touch Put to City Problems Supervisors Run County Government By JOEL BERGER Operating through more than 35 committees, the County Board of Supervisors during its 10 meet- ings a year enacts legislation gov- erning the 134,606 residents of Washtenaw County. One of the board's main func- tions is raising money for county use. It has the power of levying taxes, fees, assessments and li- censes and may borrow money for county use. UNDER the state constitution, the group may also make laws for thecounty which do not inter- fere with township, city and vil- lage statutes. Annexation petitions are ex- amined by the comnittee on standing legislation, which pre- sents recommendations to the board for legislative action. The board authorizes budgets for more than' 15 offices, includ- ing offices of the County Clerk, Treasurer, Sheriff, Prosecuting At- torney, Probate and Circuit Court judges, Board of Auditors and the Planning Commission. Partial budgets are approved by the board for the county health department, a State eDpartment of Social Welfare consultant and the office staffs of the County Agent and Superintendent of Schools. The latter two offi~ials are paid by the state. SOME PROJECTS, such as the Huron Clinton Parkway, Council of Veteran Affairs and county parks receive appropriations from the state. Money from the coun- ty's General Fund may be trans- ferred by the boards to offices and departments that overspend their original budgets. Many appointments to county positions are made by the board. It chooses heads of departments and chairmen and members of various boards, commissions and committees. Among the board's varied du- ties are inspecting roads and drains, taking action on numerous communications, publishing rec- ords of its proceedings and keep- ing all county buildings in proper condition. There are 36 members serving on the board, none of whom can be re-elected. Ann Arbor elects seven supervisors to the board, one from each of the city's sev- en wards. Each of the county's 20 town- ships also elects a supervisor, while East Ann Arbor sends two mem- bers to the board. Ypsilanti's City Council appoints five members, and the mayor of Saline sends two representatives for the city. 1 e LURKING in the midst of Ann Arbor's American educational and industrial atmosphere is a bit of the spirit of Paris. The "left bank" of the city centers around E. William and Maynard Sts. and radiates north- ward to Liberty St., east to .State St. and westward to the skyline. * * * THE BEST way to get this Pari- sienne perspective of Ann Arbor is from the northwest end of the fourth floor of Betsy Barbour house. Here, -the "artist's studio" (with food on the window sills) looks down on Betsy Barbour eaves troughs and across red, green, grey, tile, slate and tar- papered roofs. Also typical of a bird's eye view of Paris is the collection of schools, church steeples, neon signs, theater marquees and small shops and restaurants that you can see from these fourth floor windows. The left bank of Paris is famous for its students, intellectual in- habitants and artistic souls, or people who thin kthey are. Ann Arbor's left bank has the same sort of people - music school students and 'Ensian, Gargoyle, Generation and Daily workers. At any hour of the day or night you can see one of these students crossing E. William St. He may be starting off to do something world-shaking, but like the aver- age Paris student, he is probably just going after a cu pof coffee. Despite this Paris influence, you can never quite escape American Ann Arbor. Most of the rooftops that make up the Parisienne scene have tele- vision aerials on them. D Partstenne Ann Arbor I * * .* By GENE HARTWIG Mayor of the city of Ann Arbor since 1945, William E. Brown, Jr., is thoroughly a businessman. It was as a businessman that Brown entered and won every mayoralty race since 1945 con- vinced that business instincts could best solve the problems that had arisen in the city during the war years. * * * SIGNIFICANTLY one of the first proposals of the new ad- ministrator, then a political ama- teur, was for a two-million dollar civic center envisaged as occupy- ing the area bounded by Main St., Ann St.,tHuron St. and North Division St. First tangible results of the civic center idea came this fall when the voters okayed a bond issue to build the new county building situated at the west end of the proposed center. An administrator with a tele- phone in each hand, Brown draws a salary of $600 a year from the city, and has spent more time than any other mayor in the city's, history hopping around. the coun- try studying municipal problems in other communities. BORN IN Lapeer, Michigan, the 57-year-old mayor followed a fam- ily tradition of several generations standing when he enrolled in the University in 1914. By 1917 Brown, together with most of his male classmates of that year, enlisted in the army but by the time he had finished training the war had ended. In March 1918 he returned to the University and was graduated in the class of 1919. One more year of law school completed the future mayor's University educa- tion. The twenties and thirties saw Brown engaged in a series of business ventures chiefly con- local selective service board as well as being mayor of Ann Arbor.. A REPUBLICAN in a county traditionally more Republican than Maine, Brown points out that most issues facing the com- munity are not solved along po- litical lines and therefore do not lead to a stronger party system. Deploring the idea of a "town and gown" community, Brown favors a closer city-University relationship and early in his administration appointed the University Relations Committee to bring this about. Recognized as an expert on city parking problems, Brown has traveled to most of the larger cities in the country studying their parking problems and explaining the Ann Arbor system. The mayor has been particular- ly insistant in urging the City Council to acquire the eight park- ing lots now owned by the city, and to build the present down- town parking structure and the new Maynard St. parking garage. While the mayor is just now commencing his fifth term in of- fice, having been elected in the spring city elections by the high- est majority of his career, local political observers hinted he might be a candidate for the governor- ship in 1954. 14,000 CALLS PER DAY: 'U' Ranks as Huge Telephone Customer 4 a - t With a telephone system large' enough to serve a town the size of Milan, the University is one of Michigan Bell Telephone Com- pany's best customers. / v 1 tions began on New Year's Day 1881. Sending out an average of more than 14,000 calls per day over 1,400 lines through a network of cables 10 miles long, the Univer- sity has a rapidly expanding switchboard. * * * - STARTING BACK in 1907, the school ran along on a manual private branch exchange board until a switch was made to dial operation in the 'twenties. In 1945 is graduated into a two-position switchboard sys- tem, and by 1947 had acquired another board. Sixty-four of the lines connect University callers directly to the Ann Arbor ex- change. The city itself has experienced a igigantic growth in telephone communication since first opera- At that time Ann Arbor became the thirteenth Michigan city to have local exchange service, and the third floor of an old S. Main St. building was leased to house the central office. * * * TODAY with $4,500,000 invest- ed in facilities ($189 per tele- phone) the modern exchange serves 27,000 phones in Ann Ar- bor and another 12,000 in out- laying areas which may be ,call- ed without toll change. But the early days were not without their struggles, for the infant invention was regarded with great skepticism, and was later threatened by other firms entering the field. A rival exchange, set up in 1897 by franchise of the city coun- cil, was bought up within five years by the original organization. Five years later another local company gained a franchise, but by 1913 it too was a part of the Michigan State Co., which was later to become Michigan Bell. Consolidation brought an end to 16 years experience under dual telephone service and elim- inated the costs necessitated by setting up two rival communi- cations systems. Dial service was first initiated by the company in 1925 when it erected its own building on Wash- ington St. An adjoining structure was later erected on Huron St. Employment figures over the years have undergone a great change. Near the turn of the century, only four employes man- ned the whole project, but in 1952, Michigan Bell was meeting a pay- roll of $1,700,000 for 500 local em- ployes. The telephone company is another case- of a firm growing up as Ann Arbor advanced, with the University contributing an im- portant part to this development. WILLIAM E. BROWN, JR. * * * cerned with the sale of securi- ties and the holding of numer- ous banking and business prop- erties. At present Brown is the head of two automobile agencies, three investment firms, one insurance company, and is chairman of thel -_ ---- Comnplimeunts of i: BURT FOREST PRODUCTS CO. Distributors of Plywood and Doors WHOLESALE ONLY 227 Felch Street t A SAFE 11 DURING 1952, we welcomed 1,075 ne which now includes more than 71( Together, these people have more t now at work, mostly financing he ernment securities. Earnings-whic six months, on June 30th and Dec ments totaled $299,968. , irE__________________________________________________ - ___________________ II NVE OCA w people to 00 individu han 15 mil omes in the h are bett ember 31st ETMENT IL SAVERS 0 our growing family of savers, als, families, and business firms. lion dollars here. 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