Some other things going on while Rome burns.
Teo1000



USA TODAY-WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1999

Historical Miami find may fall to condo plan
By Deborah Sharp  -  USA TODAY

MIAMI - Slated to be paved over for a condo garage, the fate of a Native
American mystery from centuries past barely mustered a shrug in this city of
transplants, where history is measured in minutes.

Until Tuesday, the future seemed foregone for the so-called Miami Circle, a
huge stone carving that could be a celestial calendar or a buried village
from long-extinct Tequesta Indians.

Then came moves by dueling elected officials, a candlelight citizens' vigil
and an offer by the condo developer to excavate and move the circle from the
path of bulldozers scheduled to roar on Feb. 26.

"Miami in general has a very sorry record in dealing with its historic
properties," University of Miami history professor Greg Bush says.  "People
who come from other places obviously don't have the same sense of history
about Florida.  They look at the state as a hotel: They're moving in;
they're moving out"

Interest is scant in recent Florida history, let alone ages-old tales of the
Tequesta Indians.

Up to a million strong, the Tequesta roamed Florida when Ponce de Leon
landed in 1513, searching for his Fountain of Youth.  The Indians didn't
last long after the Europeans arrived.  Disease and war brought extinction.

On Tuesday, The Miami Herald chided the historically disinterested
in an editorial: "For goodness's sake, people, the Miami Circle is about to
give its life for a condo parking garage!  This is a horror on the level of
a
church desecration - made worse because the community may sit idly by while
it occurs:"

Locals mainly have greeted the Miami Circle with a massive yawn. Over mild
opposition, the city of Miami cleared the way last week for the
$100 million condo project It issued building permits for Brickell Pointe
to rise on 2.2 waterfront acres.

But across downtown at County Hall on Tuesday morning, MiamiDade County
commissioners trumped their city brethren by appointing a task force to save
the circle.

Not to be outdone, Miami Mayor Joe Carollo called a news conference later in
the day to say the circle would be excavated and moved to a public site; the
developer would pay the expenses.

Preservationists, however, remain unswayed.  At a hastily called candlelight
vigil Tuesday night, they said moving the circle from its original site
would be akin to moving England's famed Stonehenge.

A news conference featuring concerned Native Americans is being planned for
Thursday.

Condo developer Michael Baumann, a Miami native who ha,,, allowed
archaeologists six months to comb the site and has even helped out at the
dig, resents being painted as a history-destroying villain.

Says his lawyer, Michael Kreitzer: "From the very beginning, he's given
every cooperation.  And what does he get for his trouble?  Maligned and
vilified."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1999    -  USA TODAY

MIAMI RUINS.- Removal of a centuries-old stone circle from a high-rise
construction site in downtown Miami was delayed when a stonemason backed out
of a deal to move the ruins.  Protesters chanted, burned candles and
appealed to state Officials to preserve the 38-foot wide circle, discovered
in September during excavation for the $100 million project.  Archaeologists
have dated pottery chips back 2,000 years.  They say the ruins were left by
Tequesta Indians, who were wiped out by war and disease in the 16th century.
Developers say they just want to move the ruins.




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