Yesterday in La Crosse

Bad week for Harborview, 42 years ago

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 At Christmas-time of 1976, the head of La Crosse’s redevelopment authority, Charles Parrott, resigned to take a similar job in Colorado.  Parrott had been hired by La Crosse in 1965, at a salary of $11,000.  After eleven years, his salary had tripled…but critics said Parrott didn’t have much to show for his recent work, specifically, trying to develop Harborview.  The vacant patch of land along Front Street had been described as a “lighted racetrack for gophers.”  All seven members of the Redevelopment Authority Board also resigned, and Mayor Pat Zielke was being blamed for the lack of activity at Harborview.  The mayor was accused of trying to end efforts to make Harborview a downtown shopping mall, rather than developing Valley View Mall. 

The city council set the speed limit on Losey Boulevard at 25 miles an hour.  Council members had voted down a plan to let drivers go 35 on Losey. 

The Entebbe airport hijacking drama in Uganda, which ended on the 4th of July of ’76, had already been turned into a three-hour made for TV movie in time for Christmas.  “Victory at Entebbe” featured Kirk Douglas and Elizabeth Taylor as airplane passengers, along with Anthony Hopkins as Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin.  Forty-two years ago, 1976, yesterday in La Crosse.    

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