Monday, September 29, 2014

Col. Allen West and Our Chance Meeting! Bourland's Travelogue!

Stratfor discusses the Caliphate's future and suggests competition will weaken them in time.  (See 1 below.)
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Sent by a friend and fellow memo reader.  Do not read this as an indictment against illegal immigration but simply as a need to change our laws and make them rational.  It documents what I have written time and again - i f you want more of something fund it.

Illegal immigration expenditures run about $334 billion annually.

There must be a more humane and  cost effective way.  (See 2 below.)
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I have been reading articles about the enormous sums being spent by Democrats to save their political skins and retain control of the Senate and it is working.

What is also working is the effect of Obama's IRS on conservative group funding because their members feel intimidated.  This is political thuggery unlike anything ever mounted in this country and Republicans are taking it as always - silently!

A more important reason Republicans may lose another opportunity to unseat opponents is their failure to co-ordinate a clear  message and plan that resonates with voters about what they would attempt to do were they elected. They have gone silent  on the unemployment problem, the growing deficit, the various Obama Administration's scandals, the renewed war which has not been voted on by Congress, the crying need for tax reform, senseless strangulation of American ingenuity, the a\ballooning cost of student loans which has become another Democrat vote buying tactic and the list is endless.

Republicans have a better cadre of candidates and my chance meeting with Col. Allen West in Milwaukee convinced me he understands.

Allen was having breakfast at The Pfister Hotel and I invited him to join our table and he did. Later that morning he was speaking at Marquette University's Student Republican Club and the next day he was off to Dallas for another speaking engagement.

Allen is a soldier's soldier, bright, focused, gutsy and very articulate.  Wish Republicans could Xerox him.
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We were accompanied on our trip around Wisconsin by our dear traveling friends, Charlie and Susana Bourland. Charlie does a superior job of writing travelogues and has permitted me to post his review which I edited. I regret I was unable to get the picture copied - damn! (I will try and send and identify them in a separate memo .)

Lynn and I first visited our daughters and their husbands in Louisville and Chicago and, after our trip around Wisconsin, our daughter and her husband in Birmingham, Michigan. We returned to Savannah by way of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, N and S Carolina.

While in Louisville  our daughter took us to a wonderful art gallery where we found and purchased a wonderful Nigerian brass head of a native.

We love to stay off Expressways, where possible, and visit college and university campuses, art museums and other points of interest as well as antique shops. We also try to seek out where natives eat. but Lynn is now  able to locate interesting off beat places using her I Pad. We had a memorable experience in Newport , Tenn. at  "Grill 73."  The proprietors were previously Russian Circus Acrobat Performers and when they retired, having seen the entire world, they settled in Newport, built this beautiful restaurant across from the river and serve Russian and American food.  The waitress' husband is the cook and wow!  He also fishes in the river across from the restaurant and built , not only the restaurant but their home, with his own hands.

Their only daughter and her husband live in Moscow, have a lovely home and good jobs and a young daughter who was born in America so she has dual citizenship. Lynn and I have Russian grandparents so we were familiar with the fare and had borscht, perushkis and blinis for desert. All excellent.

I commented in a previous memo that Wisconsin is one of the cleanest states I have ever visited. The 'Cheeseheads' are uncommonly friendly and they adhere to the speed limits, even when the posting is as low as 25 MPH.  Milwaukee is a gem of a city, the Pfister Hotel an historic jewel, excellent staff and amenities and Madison has one of the most dramatic capital buildings I have ever seen.  The University of Wisconsin is enormous and new buildings abound. Most of the campus borders water.

If you have the chance I readily endorse a visit to Door County and Wisconsin!  (See 3 below.)
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Dick
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1) As Caliphates Compete, Radical Islam Will Eventually Weaken

Summary

The rise of the Islamic State will inspire other jihadist groups to claim their own caliphates and emirates. In the long run, the extremism of these contrived dominions and the competition among them will undermine the jihadist movement. However, before that happens, the world will witness much upheaval.

Analysis

In a 52-minute video that surfaced in late August, Abubakar Shekau, the head of Nigerian jihadist group Boko Haram, spoke of an Islamic State in northeastern Nigeria. The statement came two months after Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the chief of the transnational jihadist movement in Syria and Iraq, declared the re-establishment of the caliphate, renaming the group the Islamic State. Though likely inspired by the Islamic State, Boko Haram is not simply mimicking its more powerful Syrian-Iraqi counterpart; it is taking its cue from the Nigeria-based Sokoto Caliphate, which was established in the early 1800s and existed for almost a century until Britain gained control of the region. 

The Caliphate's Role in History

According to classical Muslim political theorists, there can be only one caliphate for the entire Muslim global community, or ummah. In practice, though, there have been rival claimants to authority and even competing caliphates throughout the history of Islam. In our July 1 analysis on the subject, Stratfor explained not only how multiple emirates and sultanates emerged independently of the caliphate but also that there were rival caliphates — for example, the Abbasid in Baghdad (749-1258), Umayyad in the Iberian Peninsula (929-1031) and Fatimid in Cairo (909-1171).
These medieval-era caliphates were not just the byproduct of geographical constraints facing the original caliphate but also heavily shaped by political and religious rivalries and political evolution. These dynastic empires were the building blocks of the Muslim world, not unlike the wider international system of the time. For this reason, they endured for centuries until Europe's geopolitical push into the Muslim world in the 18th century.

In the past two centuries, the medieval caliphates, emirates and sultanates have been replaced by nation-states. Though artificially created and weak, these modern Muslim polities are unlikely to be swept away by radical Islamists seeking to re-establish caliphates and emirates. Although nationalism was initially a European import into the Arab/Muslim world and continues to face competition from religious and tribal identities, it is well established in the public psyche.

This can be seen in the organization of most Islamists along national lines. Most Islamists, who are aligned with the Muslim Brotherhood or some variant of it, embrace the nation-state and should not be conflated with the minority of radical Islamists and jihadists who seek to eliminate national boundaries and return to a romanticized notion of the past. Still, caliphates and emirates have emerged because of the failures of the modern Muslim nation-states to create democratic systems and, more broadly, to provide a viable political economy for their citizens — a failure that radical Islamist forces have deftly exploited.

Deficiencies in Modern Caliphates

Radical Islamists are able to capture the imagination of the economically disadvantaged youth who understand neither politics nor Islam. The most successful jihadist entity in terms of capturing territory, the Islamic State, rose in part because of rare circumstances related to the regional geopolitical struggle between the Shiite and Sunni camps in the Middle East. However, as is evident from the international alignment of forces against the Islamic State, the transnational jihadist movement faces severe challenges moving forward.

In addition, its ultra-extremist policies and behavior are further alienating the Islamic State from the Muslim world. Al Qaeda's denunciation of the Islamic State as a deviant force underscores the competition it faces from within the jihadist movement. Furthermore, there is an entire constellation of radical Islamists beyond al Qaeda that does not accept the Islamic State's claim to a caliphate. These Islamists will seek to form their own caliphates or emirates in the same battle spaces. Meanwhile, other groups operating in different parts of the Muslim world seek to form their own caliphates.

An important concept in this context is that of the leader of the faithful, or emir al-momineen, which was the title given to the second caliph of Islam, Omar bin al-Khattab (579-644). Since then, this title has become synonymous with that of the caliph. In the contemporary age, Afghan Taliban founder Mullah Mohammad Omar assumed the title in the 1990s, when the movement ruled most of Afghanistan. Decades earlier, Morocco's constitution conferred this title upon the country's monarch.
Morocco's king only claims leadership of the country's Muslim majority. Likewise, the Afghan Taliban's status as a nationalist jihadist force meant that Mullah Omar only claimed leadership of the Muslims of Afghanistan. Al-Baghdadi's move to declare himself caliph of all the Muslims of the world therefore challenges the authority of the emirates and dynastical or republican regimes in the Islamic world.

The Fate of Jihadists and Caliphates

In the distant future, radical Islamism will likely lose its appeal because of two broad factors. First, the attempt to create caliphates and the associated difficulties of governance will force many radical Islamists to opt for pragmatism and become relatively moderate. Second, opposition from fellow Muslims also learning about politics and governance will give them less room to operate.

Yet, while this modern phenomenon of competing caliphates, emirates or Islamic states will only further weaken jihadist groups, the idea of the caliphate remains an unresolved matter. Muslims have long accepted that the notion does not connote a single state for the ummah; instead it symbolizes pan-Muslim cooperation in the form of a supra-national regime such as the European Union. This remains a desirable goal, as is evident from the Organization of Islamic Conference which, though anemic, remains intact.

Still, these developments will be the outcome of a multigenerational struggle. Until then, the social, political and economic problems of the Arab/Muslim world, along with sectarian strife, geopolitical rivalries and the interests of outside powers (especially the United States and the West), will sustain the conditions in which violent extremists thrive. Thus, radical Islamism will remain a threat globally — and especially for Muslims themselves — for decades.
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2)Seniors are losing more and more benefits and are getting blamed for the country going broke.

 

It's easy to dismiss individual programs that benefit non-citizens until they're put together and this picture emerges. 

Often these programs are buried within other programs making them difficult to find.

A Real
M Eye Opener 
We have been hammered with the propaganda the Iraq war and the war on terror is bankrupting us.

The following14 reasons includethe URL's verification of the following facts.
 
1. 
 $11 Billion to $22 billion is spent on welfare
To illegal aliens each year by state governments. 
Verify   At:
 2. 
 $22 Billion dollars a year is spent on Food Assistance programs such as food stamps, WIC, and free school lunches for illegal aliens. 
Verify  At:
 3. 
 $2.5 Billion dollars a year is spent on Medicaid for illegal aliens.
4. 
 $12 Billion dollars a year is spent on 
Primary and secondary school education for children here illegally and they cannot speak a word of English! 

Verify  At:
5. 
 $17 Billion dollars a year is spent for 
Education for the American-born 

Children of illegal aliens, known as a
nchor babies.
 $3 Million Dollars a DAY is spent to incarcerate 
illegal aliens. 

Verify at:   TRANscriptS/0604/01/ldt.01.HTML" href="http://transcripts.cnn.com/%20TRANscriptS/0604/01/ldt.01.HTML" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"http://transcripts.cnn.com/%20TRANscriptS/0604/01/ldt.01.HTML <
TRANscriptS/0604/01/ldt.01.HTML" href="http://transcripts.cnn.com/%20TRANscriptS/0604/01/ldt.01.HTML" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"http://transcripts.cnn.com/%20TRANscriptS/0604/01/ldt.01.HTML>
7.
 30% percent of all Federal Prison 
Inmates are illegal aliens.
 $90 Billion Dollars a year is spent on 
Illegal aliens for Welfare & social 

Services by the American taxpayers.
Verify  At:
9. 
 $200 Billion dollars a year in suppressed American wagesare alledgedly caused by illegal Aliens.
Verify At:
 13. 
 In 2006, illegal aliens sent home $45 BILLION in remittances to their Countries of origin.
Verify At:.
<http://www/ <http://www/> /..rense..com/general75/niht.htm <http://rense.com/general75/niht.htm>

 14.
 The Dark Side of Illegal Immigration:
Nearly One million sex crimes committed b
y Illegal Immigrants In The United States .
Verify  At: 


 The total cost is a whopping 
 $ 338.3 BILLION DOLLARS A YEAR.
----------------------------------------
3)
Sunday, September 14

We fly from Savannah to Milwaukee with no particular expectations for this city. I was 
there in about 1963 when IBM selected my client Arrow Hart and Hegeman (AHH) to be 

studied as a followup to a study called AHH ʻ57. 



The study used the electrical 

manufacturing industry and Milwaukee was the home of Square D, Allen Bradley and 
others now forgotten. This study significantly led to the computer items of disk storage, 
terminals and on-line systems and some
software offerings and techniques.

We are met at the airport by the Berkowitzes and proceed to Racine, WI. 

While there we 
have a quick lunch at Georgie Porgie Restaurant. 



A tour of the Racine Art Museum 

finds many craft arts and proves a disappointment.

However, the S.C. Johnson campus provides a Frank Lloyd Wright designed
headquarters which is a tall structure built on the cantilever principle. All 15 floors are 
supported by the central core, much like a tree supports its branches. In addition on the
campus is the Golden Rondelle theater built for and transferred from the New York 
Worldʼs Fair of 1964.

We drive quickly by another Wright house, but it is closed.

Then drive on to Milwaukee, a city of 600,000 and a metropolitan population of 2
million. It is rather immediately observed - and continues as we go deeper into that 
Wisconsin is a German/Scandinavian developed state as there are few 

disheveled homes, the grass is mowed in all locations, there are many green parks and 
areas and all looks orderly.

We check into the Pfister Hotel, built in 1893, and is a superb establishment. The staff 
is beautifully trained and welcoming. The lobby is turn-of-the -century and pleasant  and the pianist superb




Rooms are reasonably spacious and comfortable.
They offer and we accept a Concierge Floor which provides quiet comfort, cocktails and 
dessert at night and breakfast in the morning. It allows one to save time searching for
breakfast locations etc. 
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 1

We dine in the hotel lobby as we are not especially hungry and listen to a devotée of 
George Shearing named Dr.Jeffrey Hollander who is internationally known and a 

wonderful, relaxing pianist.

Monday, September 15
We breakfast on the 23 floor and find it more than sufficient. A familiar face on Fox 
News appears and I ask if he is Colonel Alllen West and he affirms. We spend a
pleasant meal with him and Dick talks of his coming to speak for The Skidaway Island Republican Club.

We begin a walk to the Milwaukee Public Natural History Museum and pass by Marquette University.

The museum is fascinating with considerable anthropology, botanical, zoology 
and history. The department which prepares the exhibits is truly outstanding as many of
the people and animals appear real, caught in a time warp.

A live butterfly room caught our attention, as did a rainforest exhibition, Both 
fascinating and well documented and professionally presented.
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 2

Remembering Milwaukee is the beer town (although St, Louis and Budweiser might
object), we visit the Pabst family home - 
a bit officious as they do not allow cameras and are strict with their rules.

The home was well done for the times and the tour is interesting. In the above
picture, the addition on the right was from the 1893 Chicago Worldʼs Fair where Pabst 
outshone Bud and won the Blue Ribbon, hence Pabst Blue Ribbon.

At night we dine in the Mason Street Grill which is part of the Pfister. The carpaccio is 
excellent, the ravioli so so. Nonetheless, the service by Lisa and the maitreʼd was 

outstanding and the Grill is clearly a popular place.

Tuesday, September 16

We take a guided tour of the city. First stop is the acclaimed City Hall which has a 380 
odd feet spectacular atrium. The building was created in 1895 and was the 

largest inhabitable building in the nation. It is now undergoing refurbishment. Its design
was in the Flemish Renaissance Revival style
Our tour continues 
past the Pabst 

Theater and then
along the Milwaukee
River Walk, 
and finally a
remembrance of 
“Happy Days” and stature of The
Fonz.  Milwaukee was the TV show's location.
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 3

The tour travels a good part of the long Lake Michigan shoreline which, in 
the summer, is filled with many activities. Alongside is a well-kept 

park, with much green grass (all mowed) and a path for runners, walkers and man's best friend. 



There is 

even a golf course and a lighthouse.

Next 
we visit 

microbrewery called Lakefront Brewery. The owners and workers were all young and 
the guide loquacious and amusing. He drank after each paragraph. It was 
observed he was especially amusing by the end off the day.

Afterwards we stopped at a four year old cheese
factory.

Our last stop, the Milwaukee Art Museum 
designed by Santiago Calatrava. It was
a spectacular building and reminded one of the Light Rail Train Bridge in Jerusalem.

The Bradley's superb collection of 400 superb paintings form the basis of the Museum's collection. 

Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 4

That  evening we dined at Coquette, a French bistro with a truly spectacular menu, 
but some Sauce Chef failed with both a hanger steak and more especially coq au vin.

We would return with special instructions. Our server, Linsey, was excellent.

Wednesday, September 17
we are off to the Kohler Company factory and show case in the eponymous town. 

The 
showcase is wonderful, causing wishes to rebuild oneʼs home, but unlikely.
Unfortunately we arrived to late to tour the factory. I would expect heavy use of robots and other 
modern day techniques as this company is well advanced. We have lunch 

at the Black Run Golf Club, since Kohler is also in the hospitality industry with several
such clubs.
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 5
After lunch we drive through the PGA Whistling Straits
for our first view of a Links course. 

Staying in town we visit the John Michael Kohler Art Center, which, while small, is 
nonetheless interesting.

On to Sheboygan where we spend the night and dine at the Mucky Duck 
Shanty. Indeed it is but Jennifer is a great waitress and the food ok. Spent the night in
a Holiday Inn Express, which provided free drinks at night and breakfast in the
morning.
Thursday, September 18

In the morning we drive to Manitowoc where we visit the Maritime Museum. It turns 
out to be an extensive museum and manages well the tale of the significant history of 

the Great Lakes ship building industry which produced many submarines for 
WWII and floated them down to New Orleans for the Navy.
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 6
The Berkowitzes and Susana toured the docked sub docked , which they found interesting.

Rahr-West Art Museum in Manitowac, used the same architect as the Pabst
house. This museum was minor but the home attached was well done.

We pass an abandoned Budweiser plant, in this state of many famous beers.
Continue by car through Two Rivers, where we decide on lunch at the Kurtz Pub and 
Deli. Great choice. Our waitress, Karen, suggests bratwurst and braunschweiger. This
wonderful German restaurant has been open since 1904 and has surely learned to 
make a great sandwich.

As we continue further along the lake in the direction of Door County
we see no old, rusted
cars in yards, fields,
of corn and other crops,
a well maintained environment and lovely homes. 

In general, farmers in Wisconsin seem far wealthier than those in Georgia.

The negative would be pretty bad roads, but
given the winter conditions, this is 
understandable.

After a day on the road we check into the 
Landmark Resort in Egg Harbor. This resort 

is owned by those who chose to buy a room
or two and furnished in accord 
with a broad standard. The on-line description 

starts with the words “Resort or sanctuary?”



Both I and  Trump would say
“sanctuary”, and then ask “from what”. The
answer would be from comfort, from full-time
amenities and perhaps from a 
misunderstanding of the definition of resort.
The sign-in regimen was insulting.

We dine at the resort's restaurant, the Carrington Pub and Grill, vowing never to return. 

It was late and 
empty and almost certainly from its reputation. The waitstaff is untrained and itʼs the
end of the season.

Back in the room, which reminds one of a state park in West Virginia, not a resort like 
the White, we find only a queen bed with a bad mattress and a small queen at that. We 

resort to splitting up and using the sofa bed in addition. We find a small room stuffed 
with oversized furniture, an oversized TV which requires help in starting, electrical 

connections which are inoperable, incredibly thin toilet paper and paper towels. But thatʼs
enough compliments for now. We will only be here for three days.

Diary 2014 - WIsconsin

Page 7
Friday, September 19

The next morning we forsake the Carrington and go to the town of Fish Creek where 
we locate the White Gull Inn for what all describe as the best breakfast in America. In 

this instance the advertisers are mostly correct.

Fish Creek's Main Street is interesting in similar fashion to most seasonal ocean/lake
towns.
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 8
Having heard of it, we visit the Edgewood Orchard Garden Art Gallery.
The garden is more interesting than the art , but a worthwhile stop nonetheless.

Pressing on we come to Sister Bay and the Door County Ice Cream Factory. 
This unlikely shop turns into the find of the trip - the best ice cream any of the 

four of us have ever tasted (even topping Savannah's Leopolds!) . Demands to return were unfortunately 
rejected, so cost-be-damned, I ordered it shipped to Savannah.
We continue to Ellison Bay, learning that Larry of Oracle fame retired as well
as finding the Linden Gallery. This oriental furniture and art gallery is truly incredible.
Were I to restart the decoration of a home, I would surely find my way back to this incredulous gallery.

After over ten years in Asia, Brian and Jeanee Linden opened the The Linden Gallery in 
1995 to highlight Asia's diverse material culture. Whether it is contemporary paintings
from Vietnam, 2,000 year old ceramics from China, textiles from Japan and Laos, or 
Burmese and Cambodia Buddhist sculptures, the Lindens personally select their pieces 

during their extended yearly sojourns throughout Asia.
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 9

Since 2004, the Linden family have pursued their dream of facilitating a deeper cultural 
immersion into the rich traditions of China's mountainous southwest. In Yunnan
Province, the Lindens became the first private foreign couple to take over a Chinese 
National Relic- the famed walled courtyards of the Yang Family.

After three years of gaining approvals and restoration, the Linden Centre opened to the 
public in 2008. It has since garnered international accolades such as Tripadvisor.com's
China Hotel of the Year in 2011, China's Sustainable Tourism Award, Travel and
Leisure's Global Vision Award, and CNNGo's Top Heritage Hotel in China. 

The Lindens' 
story has appeared in international media such as New York Times, Wall Street Journal,
The Atlantic, Time, Financial Times, Conde Nast and Food and Wine.

The Lindens continue to split their time between China and the U.S. 

Their dream of 
being cultural ambassadors continues to drive and inform their life together.

The drive northward ends with the ferry stop to Washington Island.
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 10

We dine back in Egg Harbor at the Trio Restaurant, Country French and Italian Bistro.

It is our best meal of the trip.

Later we go to the Peninsula Playhouse, which would be the envy of every other
playhouse in the U. S. The show is "Always ….Patsy Kline." The two
actresses were excellent.  The lead's voice sounding just like the real Patsy.
Saturday, September 20

Departing the Landmark We traveled south, stopping in Sturgeon Bay where we
visited the Miller Art Museum. Within the museum is an award winning photo of the
Malpaso Danse Company which we visited in Havana earlier this year.

Afterward we lunched at the Cedar Crossing Inn, which was in the middle of a town-wide 
festival with street food, music and shops. 



After lunch a chocolate
crepe is consumed by yours truly.

On to Green Bay and a visit to Lambeau Field. This proved  a special treat as my first cousin,
 Reverend Roger Bourland, administered to
this city and was known as the “Pastor to 
the Packers.”  Many team members attended his 

church. Roger delivered the eulogy of Vince 
Lombardi. An attempt was made to locate a
person with institutional knowledge who may
have known Roger, but proved  futile.

The stadium was mind blowing. The biggest in
the country, The retail store was like Samʼs -
huge. Jerseys for $125. And even though the 

weekʼs game was in Detroit, the atrium was 
extremely busy.



The stadium is said to be the only one permitting a scoring player to jump into the 

stands for acclaim. This is called the “Lombardi Leap”. Below, the latest attempt:

Diary 2014 - WIsconsin

Page 11

Returning to the Landmark Whatever, we ate at the Log Den in Egg Harbor. This is a
remote and large log edifice. The food is considered fair.
Sunday, September 21

Depart the Landmark and drive past Green Bay to Appleton, where we visit
Lawrence University. With an enrollment of 1,500, it is ranked the 59th best liberal arts 
college. Tuition runs about $47,000. 
Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 12
We lunch at Victoriaʼs, a large an elaborately gaudy italian restaurant.  Our
server is Ciara, and she attended Lawrence as  a performing arts student.

We then drive on to Ripon College in the eponymous city, whith 900 students.


We  talk with a Ripon art professor who suggested we visit an



 exhibition on campus We did and it turned out rather unimpressive. Ripon
 ranks 
113.

The drive to Madison continues through
Kingston where there appears to be a 
considerable Amish population.
We stay at the Concourse Hotel, again opting for the concierge floor. Before checking in we drive around the city focusing on The University of Wisconsin Campus which is enormous.





The best restaurants were closed so we ate in the hotel pub bar.

 The only observation is our Asian waitress, who wishes to become an 
intellectual property assistant. In my old work days, I would have hired her in a minute.
Monday, September 22

Begin the day after breakfast in the concierge room with a tour of the Capital, 
built in 1917. Interestingly they do not permit electronic devices in the chambers 

and we wonder in which ways and manners do they break this rule.

On the steps of the Capital is a gun violence group with
a display of 467 shoes representing those killed last 
year in the state.
At night we 
dine at Lʼetoile,
a 4 star beautiful but expensive 
restaurant.
Excellent service.





Diary 2014 - WIsconsin
Page 13
Tuesday, September 23

Driving on our last day to Milwaukee and a plane home, we run across St Johnʼs 
Northwestern Military Academy, a boys only prep school with some 400 students and 

a lovely campus located in Delafield, WI.

Noted graduates include former Sec of State Kennan, actor Spencer Tracy, the former governor of Panama and other notables. 

We spend the night at the  Billy Mitchell Milwaukee Airport and home the next day.
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