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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCC 1989-07-27 AdvertisementEladia ArMema m TOt Matty Hirai City Clerk City of Miami P.O. Box 330708 Miami, FL 33233-0708 STATE OF FLORIDA j j COUNTY OF DADE j i=aut July 15, 19f South Florida's First Spanish Weekly C E R T I F I C A T E D P R O O F O F PUBLICATION I, the undersigned authority, hereby certify that the attached newspaper page, containing an advertisement of the City of Miami, Purchase Order No.61, is a true and exact original newspaper page belonging to PATRIA newspaper, pu- blished in Miami, Florida by PERIODICO PATRIA, INC., a Florida corporation, with mailing address: P.O. Box 2, Miami, Florida 33135. The advertisement in ques- tion was published in the g edition of said newspaper. WITNESS my hand and official seal, this day of ,A.D., 1989. ELADIO ARMESTO III Notary Public State of Florida t.77 Notary Public, State of Florida My Commission Expires March 2, 1992 bnded fhru Troy Fdn • Inlura a fau COMMISSION EXPIRATION DATE Post Office Box 2 ' Miami, FL 33135 (305) 63"787 ' 633-8989 NOTMCACION AL F'UBLICO DEL NOMBRAMIEN- TO DE MIEMBROS A LA JUNTA ASESORA DE PLA.NIRCACION DE IA CIUDAD DE MIAMI En cumplimicnto con las scc- cioncs 62A6, 62A7, 62A9, 62-54) y 62-51 del codigo mu- nicipal de la Ciudad dc Mia- mi, Florida, pot medio de la nrcacnte se le notifica a la rib iran clue los tt elrtra W d ias de la publicaci6n de ests no- tlfkacibn, va a considerar el nombramiento de un miem- bro a Is Junta Asesom de Pranlf icaci6n pot un t6 mino que expira el 31 de diciem- bre de 1989. Fl ptiblico y las organizacio- nes profesionales o ciudada- nas, dentro de esta arcs, que posean un intcrFs o tengan conocimiento de Como po- ner en pr3aica el proceso de planificacibn y plans, se les invita y alienta a que le en- vien a la Secretaria Munici- pal, con oficinas an el 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, por escrito, los nombtes, daecciones y cali- ficaciones de aquellas perso- nas que esten inscritas pan votar en la Ciudad de Miami pan que puedan stir consi- dcradas como el posible nombramiento a dicha Jun- ta. Pot to menos diez dial antes de hacerse dicho nombn- micnto por la Comisi6n de la Ciudad (aproximadamente el 27 ulio de 1989), los -Tiom res y Iii calificaciones Cie todas lu persona reco- mendadas a la Secretaria Municipal estarin disponi- bles pan la inspecci6n p(- blica en la ofic m de la Se- cretaria Municipar. Todas las solicitudes deben ser recibidm pan el viemes, 13 de julio de 1989 a las 4:50 de la tarde . las solicitudes de nominaci6n estarin dLs- ponibles en la oficina de la Secrctaria Municipal. Matty Hlral Secnetada Municipal 3500 Pan American ]hive Miami, Florida (6151) NTVi% FORK. Una gran mayoria de hispanos en D14ados t'nidos cretin en la imlx)rtancia del use del cintur6n de seguridad en los autos apoyan las ]eyes sobre el use del cintur6n, segun una redenle encu er-& ta ilacional de opin06n p6blica adspiciada por la orgarti7aci6n 'Trafiice Sa- fety Now". Cali el 95 por ciento de los hispanos entrevistados dijeron que el use del cin- tur6n de seguridad pudie- m&, e] 8 por tdento dijo que las ]eyes sobre el use del cintur6n de seguridad estAn salvando un numero considerable de vidas. El 83 por lento ace que esters leyes constituyen la mejor manera de alentar el use del cintur6n de segu- ridad. La encuesta es la pri- mera que se reali7a a nivel national para conoccr las attitudes de los hispanos sobre el use de cinturones de seguridad en los carros. "Sin duda alguna, los hispanos cretin en la im- portanda del use del cin- tur6n de seguridad y estan a favor de las leyes que obligan su use", dijo el doctor Gary LmkTenee, presidente del grupo que hizo la encuenta. 'Los resultados de la encuesta indicann d ardmente que esta c5 una cuesti6n en la cual su opini6n eta fiane", agreg6. Public hearings -rUVVsTdns to the Copies of the prom County Manager's t prior to the start of E Major issues: =l- n All meetings are schet_ on Metro -Dade Televi= *Blanche Morton Nei. 300 E. First Avenue, H West Dade Regional 9445 Coral Way Miami Beach Library 2100 Collins Avenue Coral Gables Library 3443 Segovia Street *Miami -Dade Commu South Canipus (Room 11011 S.W. 104 Street Homestead City Hal 790 Homestead Boulev Metro -Dade Commiss 111 N.W. First Street, "A person who decides to appeal any decit sidered at its meeting or hearing, will need record of the proceedings is made, includit "Plesas not* that thew sltos w*rs char: Ot MAW ma b. mat A Knight-Ridder Newspaper 1 Sefbre the undersigned authority personally appeared Lesli Masur who on oath says she is the Area Sales Manager of The Miami Herald and The Miami News, daily newspaper (s) +. q published at tliami in Dade County, Florida. — = 4 She further says that the advertisement for7'11.G hmjc/1tf was Published inthe issu oi- issues afTI�G /y►tMmi I' La I�0/te for the above publication (s). as per the attached •ic `- Affiant further states that the said THE MIAMI HERALD/NEWS are newspapers published at Miami, in the said Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspapers have here -to --fore been contin6usly published in the said Dade County, Florida, each day, and have been entered as second class mail matter at the Rost Office in Miami, in the said Dade COLAnty, Florida, for a period of one year next precedirig the first publication of the advertisement. 01 A, Lesli Masur Sworn to and Subscribed to bef re me this day of , A. D. 19 `JNo-tary F-ub 1 is (Srnl) t A p IC STATE OF FLORMA NOTy� CT24 EXP.O.•1492 ; 4� Kt.0riSsimi BMW -am W014 INS. LW. 1 W i i Cn One Herald Plaza, Miami, Florida 33132-1693 (305.) 350-2111 0 Discoveries by Titanic find: ' QA"" ABRAMS Los Angeles Times Service LOS ANGELES -- Robert Bal- lard headed up the discovery of two fabled sunken ships, the Titanic in 1985 and, just last month, the World War II German battleship Bismarck. In both cases, poignant reminders of human frailty persist on the dark, cold ocean floor, he says, lingeri testaments to the dead, dragged farng beyond air and light by plummeting hulks of steel and iron. Shoes. Pairs and pairs of shoes resting on the sea floor as if their owners had just stepped out of them. "People say, 'What was it like to Igo to the Titanic, particularly out in the debris area, the stern section where everyone died?' " Ballard re- calls of the ocean liner that sank to a depth of 12,000 feet in the North Atlantic in 1912, killing 1,500 of the I 2,200 passengers and crew. "There are pairs of shoes all over there where people actually came to rest on the bottom of the ocean. Their shoes are still there. Shoes all over the Bismarck, boots all over the place. Animals won't eat processed leather. They eat the body and the clothes but they won't eat the leath- er." Oceanographer Ballard is sorne- where in the middle of a long expla- nation about why he pursues the sunken past with such avidity. "I think the thrill of exploration is to see something, to be the first to set eyes on something that has nev- er been seen before," he says. "The first time I saw the Titanic, wowl There it was, this monstrous ship just came out of the gloom and there it was." For Ballard, the moment of dis- covery is intellectually kinetic -- an instant when he connects palpably with history. Unknown territory, scientific and historic, has been Ballard's country for more than two decades, perhaps even as far back as his childhood in Southern California, when he was smitten by accounts of African ex- ploration and became captivated by the Pacific Ocean. Now, four years after the discovery of the Titanic catapulted him from mere well- known scientist to global fame, the 47-year-old seems to be in the Woes of another transformation. This time around, he apparently is eager to shape both the future and the past with the technology that he developed in more than a decade of underwater exploration. Furthermore, he plans to use his new tools as the new host of Nation. zig (now Gdynia) on May 18,1141. to attack Allied convoys, the Bis- marck soon had much of the British Royal Navy looking for it. At the time England faced a victorious Germany alone and was dependent on convoys from America for most of its food and war material. Discov- ered by two British heavy cruisers May 23, the Bismarck was engaged the next day by two other British warships. From a distance of 25,000 yards, the Bismarck's huge shells hit the Hood, starting a fire in an ammunition locker. Within minutes the Hood exploded, killing all but three of the ship's 1,400 crew mem- bers. Of the Bismarck, "the British were lucky to get it to the bottom," Ballard claims. In the climactic bat- tle, a "freak hit" by a torpedo launched from a vintage World War I biplane knocked out the Bis- marck's steering, forcing the crip- pled battleship to "wait for the Brit- ish to come and get it." Since the discovery of the Bis- marck, Ballard says there has been curiosity about what actually caused the ship to sink — British firepower or scuttling by her own crew. But Ballard believes the evidence makes the point moot. The British war- ships had orders to sink the Bis- marck, not capture it, and the Ger- mans were under orders not to let the pride of their fleet be taken as a u war prize. he says. u At 10 a.m. May 27, the captain of ft the Bismarck ordered his crew to e open the sescocks on his disabled g ship, thus flooding the hull, Ballard s' recounts. About 10:30 a.m., the Bis- marck was hit by three torpedoes tl from the British cruiser Dorsetshire and sank three minutes later. "So it was on its way down and the torpedoes helped — but it was on its way down; Ballard says. "If they hadn't opened the aeacocks, I'm convinced the British would have sat there and plunked torpe- does into it until it sank. So it's sort of academic who sank it." Only about 100 of the Bismarck's crew survived. Nearly 2,300 perished, in- cluding several hundred who were swimming in the water after their ship disappeared. It is that moment that seems to galvanize Ballard. "When the Bismarck sank, ap- proximately 800 living souls went into the water and were alive after the ship went under," he says, lean- ing forward in his chair. "And the Dorsetshire came in and began pick- ing up survivors and then someone thought they saw ape ' and they took off and they =7 peo. pie in the water alive.... Can you unagine the awfulness, the hope- lessness, the despair of the faailor CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC A public hearing wftf be hold by the City Commfsalon of the City of Miami. Florida, on ut JJ%$ at 9:Oo am. in the City Commission Chambers at City Hag, 35M Pan Am wtya Miaml, Florida, for the purpose of oonsidertng adoption of propoved resolutions approving the final tortn of Charter Amendments as drafted by the City Attomey and calving for an election upon the amendments to be held November 7.1989, said ameaWments substarWally providing as foi- lows. Charter amler dmertt for the pKovtdir►g City Commiasfon to set by ordinance the dollar arruwrd at which the requirement of obtaining sealed competitiys bids for City public works or Improvemordk goods, supplies and commodities beoomea applicable. Charter amendment(s) In regard to changing the structure of the City Commission, thereby increasing the number of commissioners from five to nitre, five of whom are to be elected from single member districts, the remaining four commissioners to be elected at large, one of whom is to serve as mayor. setting forth the boundaries of the five single member districts and providing for future realignment of said boundaries; establishing the satarfes of commissioners and the mayor and providing a basis for changing said salaries; and estabiishirp a method of imptementing the new strucoxg of Cie City Commission. All Interested parties are Invited to appem and may be heard MncarnMtg such proposed resolutions. The hearing Wit be held at the time and pts" specified above, should any person desire to appeal any decision of the City C.onpnisslon with to any matter considered at this hearing. that person shaft ensure that a verbatim reoord of the pproc,o iding is made, it wduding an testimony and evidence upon which limy appppl may bs MIAMI REVI Published Daily except Saturday, 94 Legal Holidays Miami, Dade County. Florida. STATE OF FLORIDA COUNTY OF DADE: Before the undersigned authority personally appeared Oetelms V. Ferbeyrs, who on oath says that she Is the Supervisor of Legal Advertising of the Miami Review, a dally Miami (except Saturday, Sunday and Legal Holidays) newspaper, published at Miami In Dade County, Florida; that the attached copy of advertisement, being a Legal Advertisement of Notice In the matter of CITY OF MIAMI NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC JULY 27, 1989 In the ...... X..?4..X.......................... Court, was published in sold newspaper In the Issues of July 21, 1989 ANlonl further says that the said Miami Review Is a newspaper published at Miami In said Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspaper has heretofore been continuously tublished In sold Dade County, Florida, each day (except Saturday, Sunday end Legal Holidays) and has been entered as second class moil matter at the post office In Miami In sold Dade County, Florida, for a period of one year next preceding the first publlcstlon of the ttach opy of adverilsemont; and offient further say,. that sheanett er paid nor promised any person firm or corporatlo disc unt, rebate, commission or to nd for the purpos o aseurl g this advertisement for pu c n In 1 Bali kk tapir. = r rh • � worn to /su perlbi¢I before me this 21 = w� ly = 89 e r A. D. 18...... . • .. ydner S imche 0•Notary Publlot.Steolk'af a at Large MEW (SEAL) ir F • • My Commission ezEi)i` � RYf�I�?^1SVg1. g4»I MR 137 CND ICl T ::IDA 14` A public hearing will f>te!� i�y tBawuyr�measlon of the City of Miami, Ftorida, on I' si I M. ,s.m. in the City Commissbn Chambers at City i{rd7cain Drive, Miami, Florida, for the Ou a of q► bslid resWutionb approvingthe final form of Charter Amendments as &Sfted by the City Attor- ney and calling for an election upon the amendments to be held November 7,19M, sold amendments substamflafty providing as follows. Charter amendment providing for the City Commission to bet by ordinance the dollar mount at which the requirement of obtaining sealed competitive bids for City public works or Improvements, goods, supplies and commodities becomes applicable. *M ter amendment(a) In regard to changing the structure of the City Commission thereby Increasing the number of commisaio ti s from five to nine, five of whom are to be elected from single member districts, the remaining four commissioners to be elected at large, one of whom Is to serve as mayor, setting forth the boundaries of the five single member districts and providing for future re-sllgnmeM of said boundaries; establishing the salaries of commissioners &W the mayor and providing a basis for changing said saliores; and ei tablightno a method of Impiementing the new structure of the Cify Commialmon. All Interested parties are invited to appear and may be heard concerning such proposed resolutions. The hearing will be held at the time and place specified above. Should any person desire to appeal any declsion of the City Commission with respect to any matter considered at this hearing, that person shall ensure that a verbatim record of the proceeding is made, including all testimony and evidence upon which any appeal may be based. Matty Hirai City Clerk (6162j Miami, Florida 7121 894072171M__ w A Knight-Ridder Newspaper 't Rif LOJoa $9 SEP -S '�!!9 g: ,a n Before the undersigned authority personally appeared Lesli Masur who on oath says she is the Area Sales Manager of The Miami Herald, daily newspaper published at Miami in Dade County, Florida. She further says that the advertisement forlUL4_ S1 q was published in the iRsue or issues of or the cation as per t e a Affiant further states that the said THE MIAMI HERALD is a newspaper published at Miami, in the said Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspaper have here -to -fore been continously published in the said Dade County, Florida, each day, and has been entered as second class mail matter at the Post Office in Miami, in the said Dade County, Florida, for -a period of one year next preceding the -first publication of the advertisement. esli Masur Sworn to and Subscribed to before me this&/ da of A.D. 19W yNotary Publ c (Seal) 4 WOTRRY PtMIC STATE 0f FLORIDA MY COf WI EXP-OCT20992 One Herald Plaza, Miami, Florida 33132-1693 (305) 350-2111 Z Jc "_!. x3 ,Y �.., :, . ra �. _... : ,�-:_. � -• - ,... :;,k' ''�:� f_ _'. _ .._ :-: r .,. _&x-i:�ei."�.. ..,, ...._ is^a .... _ .�. , �r ..., The best thing onTV is The Heralds TV book. Sundays. NOTICE To THE PUBU-0 �REANr�NOTICEOMS w1AbRhWbY�VJna a, 2sY 1W. a, s�o pm.. In ft Crj Gornrr>Ww ChW M■M "M POn 29M, 1« a,■ oro■■ d CWOMWN p- M" M"W"M" of „dOW a MOAftft MOW&* * 1 v■ aV *d k*y 1" * CRY 01 MAtnl p■ ONNI and M" 1' 1n ft vj*ft of V* Metro Dada dug&* gwoog id195i N.W. 12 8tr■■1 and a,■ CW 00ft aIM �MAIM* GOOD THINGS COME TO THO SE WHO WAIT BUT NOT TO THOSE 'WHO WAIT TOO I„A,TE'* One of the "good things" about living in Miami ethe gh quality, low cost education available at Miami-Dad Commu- nity College. BUT .Classes for the fall term are filling'up rapidly at Miami -Dade Community College. So don't wait too late to register, or you could miss out on the classes and location of your choice. .So If you're planning to enroll in fall term 1989 classes at Miami- pade, MAKE YOUR MOVE NOW to have a better choice of classes and location. Registration deadlines for the fall term at Miami -Dade are Aug. 2' for night classes and Aug. 24 for day classes - but i don't wait until then. For more registration information, call` the registration office at the campus of your choice. North Campus: 347-1111 South Campus: 347-2222; 'Wolfson Campus: 347-333 h ri t Medical Center` Campus: 347-ICAN Ha �_ dp +sus' ", x k ' , ; ➢ �: JTVV i C � t >s'_ 77 l ■ Before the undersigned authority personally appeared MOHAMED HAMALUDIN, who on oath says tip he is the Managing Editor of THE MIAMI TIMES, weekly newspaper published at Miami, Dade Cou W, 'mot Florida; that the attached copy of advertisement was published in said newspaper in the issues of: N tv August 17, 1989 Affiant further states that THE MIAMI TIMES is a newspaper published in Miami, Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspaper has heretofore been continuously published in said Dade County, Florida each. week and has been entered as second class mail matter at the U.S. Post Office in Miami, Dade County, Florida for a period of more than one year next preceding date of publication of the attached copy of adver- tisement; further afflant says that he has neither paid nor promised any firm, person or corporation any dis- count, rebate, commission or refund for the purpose of securing this advertisement for publication in this newspaper• n e - Managing Editor Sworn to and subscribed before me on this, the 18 day at Auctu st A.D. Iy 8 9 NOTARY PUBLIC STATEAF FLORIDA AT LARGE. NY coanmiss VOTARY PUBLIC: RTATF Of St OR A -LAW41 `AY COMMISSION 11PIRES EEC. 04, 1999 90NDED THRU HUCKLEBERRY L ASSOCIA'+ct s t' t. rt t y' � t� -R v Y:• : t �,`N..: ,k�,, x M � ;n,?t � �s, • _, � . _ s ,. +,�t.V�, t°4�fi�5. �.q� a^'x t t�� � �'t � ��p "' � ¢ � ihY 4 x t $�`kyf y �,1 t �v^-» � }� t-'x �sF�T7,�F 'tx�+Ew�?7 x �t .�. �` .::, x�3 ;.; i � h-- X•Y � ��, (4<±�ai'..�Lt?�dr't�i'r�_,���<� r,���Sw:a�"i:3�Y�'F'-ti,�. ���.�,�7.�2s�'�•��.tk�'S*e/Y..+t. Y :i'` .,� ,� � r.�`a. �*d3' ��-.,.x _r9:�_h . , . .... � �:... .. s°��� �' e_ ,.,.i'.r` •5�,..'��' _ ., -