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Motorcycle training sponsors and locations Please contact the training site directly for scheduling questions. Technical colleges ABATE of Wisconsin 438 N. Water Street Black River Falls, WI 54615 Contact Person: Nancy Kirchman Phones: (800) 386-4442 or (715) 284-7415 Fax: (715) 284-7545 Blackhawk Technical College 6004 Prairie Road P.O. Box 5009 Janesville, WI 53547-5009 Contact Person: Joy Skogen Phone: (608) 757-7690 Fax: (608) 743-4527 Email: jskogen@blackhawk.edu Chippewa Valley Technical College620 W. Clairemont AvenueEau Claire, WI 54701Registration: (800) 547-2882Phone: (715) 833-6200Fax: (715) 833-6470 Email: www.cvtc.edu/continuing-education/motorcycle-safety.aspx Fox Valley Technical College 1825 N. Bluemound Drive P.O. Box 2277 Appleton, WI 54912-2277 Contact Person: Linda Schraa Phone: (920) 735-2442 Gateway Technical College3520 30th AvenueKenosha, WI 53144-7467Contact Person: Jodie CarstensPhone: (262) 564-3904Fax: (262) 564-3901Email: carstensj@gtc.edu Lakeshore Technical College 1290 North Avenue Cleveland, WI 53015 Contact Person: Shana Dennis Phone: (920) 693-1178 Fax: (920) 693-3564 Madison Area Technical College (Madison College) 2125 Commercial Avenue Madison, WI 53704

Contact Person: Jan West Phone: (608) 246-5257Email: motorcycle@madisoncollege.edu Mid-State Technical College 500 - 32nd Street North Wisconsin Rapids, WI 54494 Registration: (715) 422-5301 Fax: (715) 422-5538 Milwaukee Area Technical College 700 W. State Street Milwaukee, WI 53233-1443 Contact Person: Mary Jo Phillips Phone: (414) 297-6235 Fax: (414) 297-6711 Moraine Park Technical College 235 North National Avenue Fond du Lac, WI 54935 Contact Person: Sharon Lewis Phone: (920) 924-3447 Nicolet Area Technical College P.O. Box 518 Rhinelander, WI 54501 Contact Person: Sharon Wiese Phone: (800) 544-3039 X 4641 or (715) 365-4641 Fax: (715) 365-4668 North Central Technical College 1000 W. Campus DriveWausau, WI 54401Contact Person: Michelle ShepherdPhone: (715) 803-1632 or(888) 682-7144 X 1632Fax: (715) 803-1684 Northeast Wisconsin Technical College 2740 W. Mason Street P.O. Box 19042 Green Bay, WI 54307-9042 Contact Person: Nicole FonderPhone: (920) 498-5526 or(800) 422-6982 X 5526Fax

nicole.fonder@NWTC.edu Southwest Wisconsin Technical College 1800 Bronson Boulevard Fennimore, WI 53809 Registration: www.swtc.edu/CE Contact Person: Annette L Biggin Phone: (608) 822-2466Email: www.swtc.edu/public-safety/community-education/motorcycle-training Waukesha County Technical College 800 Main Street Pewaukee, WI 53072 Contact Person: Donna Laitsch Phone: (262) 691-5598 Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College 1900 College Drive Rice Lake, WI 54868 Contact Person/Rice Lake: Betty Shaffer Phone: (715) 234-7082 X 5223 (800) 243-9482 X 5223 Other schools Cruisin Safely Motorcycle Instruction LLC2211 Oregon St. Suite A3Oshkosh, WI 54901Contact Person: Jeff HoutsEnrollment Phone: (920) 379-0897Cell Phone: (920) 379-0897Email: Elkhart Lake Road America Motorcycle School N7390 Hwy 67 Elkhart Lake, WI 53020 Enrollment Phone: (800) 365-7223 Email: Harley-Davidson Motor Co. 3700 W. Juneau Avenue Milwaukee, WI 53208 Web: /content/h-d/en_US/home/learn-to-ride.html (The Rider's Edge Website Dealer Locator can help you find dealers in your area that offer training courses) KD Motorcycle Training, LLC.

P.O. Box 12341Green Bay, WI 54307 Contact person: Kenny Delebreau Phone: (920) 619-2803 Email: Learning Curves Motorcycle Safety Inc. 9330 W. Lincoln Ave. #21 West Allis, WI 53227 Contact Person: Rick Breuer Phone: (414) 476-7433 Fax: (414) 476-7433 Email: Ride Alive Motorcycle Academy, LLC 1911 S. Allis St. Milwaukee, WI 53207 Contact Person: Gregory White Phone: (414) 486-7744 Fax: (414) 486-7755 Email:
motorbike shop oldham road www.ridealive.net Ride Rite, LLC 2396 Rainbow Drive Mosinee, WI 54455 Contact Person: Betty Nikolai Phone: (715) 241-0001 Email:
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Keith and Nanc Ulicki welcome you to their beautiful Uke's Harley-Davidson dealership in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Uke's Harley-Davidson was established on April 1,1930 in Kenosha. It was named after Frank (Uke) Ulicki. Uke was an avid motorcycle fan all his life. He never owned a car in all of his 92 years. Uke has passed along to every descendent, including son Keith, an immense knowledge and love for Harley-Davidson® motorcycles.
motorcycle shops in anniston alabamaKeith has been on a Harley® bike since he was born.
motorcycle dealers in astoriaHe was brought home from the hospital on a Harley-Davidson motorcycle.
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This lead him to a 12-year professional motorcycle racing career and a complete Harley-Davidson sponsorship. Like their father, Keith, Brenda and Karen grew up on Harley-Davidson motorcycles. They traveled the racing curcuit with their dad taking along a cut down 90cc Harley and made their first solo ride at age 7. They have been riding ever since. If there's anything you need to know about Harley-Davidson motorcycles or the Motor Company, you can ask either Brenda or Karen. Every member of the Uke's team is a Harley-Davidson expert. Walk through the doors of Uke's and see how quickly you notice a loyalty to our customers. It's not unusual to find someone in Keith's office sharing a Harley experience or standing next to a technician watching the expert work. Every technician in Uke's service department is fully trained and H-D certified. Each tech has earned a PHD certification from the Harley-Davidson Motor Company. When you purchase a bike, you will begin your new life as a part of the Uke's family--or renew--your Harley experience.

We, on the Uke's team, have the best job in the world because we share a bond with our customers that goes way beyond business. It's truly a privilege to serve you. Stop by and visit us anytime and share your H-D experiences. Keith’s dad Frank Ulicki bought the dealership at the age of 21 on April 1, 1930 for $250 during the Depression. Everyone called Frank “Uke”. Noting how everyone had nicknames in the ‘20s and ‘30s, Keith explains that people would change the Ulicki to ukulele, and that was shortened to Uke. Prior to being a Harley dealer, Uke was a farm boy, working for Simmons Bed Company. He loved Harley, hung around a Harley dealership, and one day the dealer offered to sell it to him. Uke noted he was only 21, so they visited Mr. Davidson to see if it was possible. The answer, of course, was yes, he could buy it. Keith notes how his dad gave up his good job, taking in only four cents the first day. While the dealership existed before 1930, there are no records.

Two items – a shipping crate and postcard – are at the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee indicating a Kenosha dealership existed in the teens. The first location was at 22nd Avenue and 56th Street, while the second location was nearby (and had a fire). The dealership then moved to 52nd Street, where the building had two additions. It became landlocked there, so for more land – and visibility – Uke’s moved to the frontage road, where it is now. Uke never owned a car in all of his 92 years. He also wouldn’t marry until he bought a house. He and Marie were the oldest siblings of many, and the last to marry, Keith says. They eloped on a motorcycle to Dubuque, Iowa one Friday night. Marie ran the dealership when Uke was in the war in the 1940’s. A motorcycle with a side car was referred to as the “delivery van”, as that’s how the family got around. It’s how Keith was born and raised, and how he even came home from the hospital. There was never a family car until Keith’s older brother got his driver’s license.

The Ulicki family has had a true love affair with Harleys. Uke’s brother ran a Waukegan, IL dealership. A different brother worked at the Kenosha dealership until Harley-Davidson wooed him away to the company’s R & D department. Keith’s brother worked at Harley-Davidson for 33 years, while a cousin worked for Buell, and a niece is at Harley. Keith, Nanc, their daughter Brenda Ulicki, and their grandson Kyle Lobacz work at Uke’s. Keith says it’s always been a family joke that there have been more Ulickis working for Harley than Davidsons. Since 1930, all the males in the family have worked at Harley or the family dealership. Luckily Keith and his dad didn’t throw anything away, so the family history has been preserved in a museum on the mezzanine overlooking the showroom. Showcased is the history of Uke’s from 1930 on. Included are photos, about 30 bikes (including a 1930 one), photos of all the locations, gas tanks, and memorabilia from Keith’s 12-year professional motorcycle racing career.