Seniors in the Park 40th Anniversary Events Start Sunday

Seniors in the Park is 40! Help us celebrate our ruby anniversary. Events include:

Community Picnic in Starin Park at the Concession Stand with classic cars, music and lawn games on Sunday August 22 from noon – 3 p.m. In the Community Building if it rains.

Concert in the Park featuring Tony Rocker aka “Elvis.” at the Cravath Lakefront Park on Tuesday, August 24 from 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. at the Frawley Family Amphitheater. The City Market runs from 4:00 – 7:00. Bring a chair and enjoy great music and sweet treats.

An Open House celebration at the Starin Park Community Building on Thursday August 26 from 1:00 – 3:00 p.m. Stop in and enjoy cake, beverages and check out old photo albums and a video montage of our journey through the years.  You can leave a message on our signature photo and we will also have the unveiling of the Anniversary Quilt our sewers have been working on.

2021 Waterways Cleanup at Cravath Park on Sept. 11: Register by Sat. For a Free T-shirt

Join the Protect Wisconsin Waterways 2021 Clean-Up

Saturday, September 11th, 2021

Sign up at https://protectwiwaterways.org/get-involved/events/2021cleanup/

In 2017, at the first Protect Wisconsin Waterways Clean-Up, we had three clean-up locations and 30 volunteers helping clean up the Rock River and connected waterways. Fast forward to 2019, the Clean-Up grew to include eight locations and 196 volunteers! After postponing our 2020 Clean-Ups due to COVID, we look forward to cleaning up the Rock River and other area waterways on September 11, 2021.

From picking up basic trash like aluminum cans and wrappers to more unique items – children’s bikes, plastic toys, shoes, a TV, bike and car tires, and a parks and recreation barrier – volunteers have fun while making a huge splash in the environment and community!

How can we make an even bigger impact in 2021?

With nine clean-up locations this year, Protect Wisconsin Waterways hopes to engage even more volunteers! Waterway clean-up locations are spread out across the Rock River Stormwater Group member communities, including the City of Beloit, Town of Beloit, Janesville, Milton, Whitewater, Fort Atkinson, Watertown, Beaver Dam, and Waupun.

Quality-of-Life Issues Dominate Whitewater Common Council Agenda at Recent Meeting

By Al Stanek
Whitewater Banner volunteer staff
whitewaterbanner@gmail.com

Whitewater Common Council members got updates on several major quality-of-life initiatives at their August 17 meeting including the proposed expansion of the Irvin L. Young Memorial Library as well as the drawdown and weed-control project for Trippe and Cravath Lakes. They also continued to wrestle with pandemic response options as reports of COVID-19 infections, hospitalizations and COVID-related deaths continued to rise.

City Parks and Recreation Director Eric Boettcher reported that Cravath Lake’s water level has been completely drawn down to the desired level and Trippe Lake’s drawdown has been completed to the minimum level needed. The deepest portion of Trippe Lake near the dam continues to be the only remaining lake-like feature of the two bodies. Dredging of 87,000 cubic yards of sediment from the two lakes is on schedule to begin later this year with refilling of the lakes to begin next year.

The lakes drawdown project was launched in July of 2019. Long-time Whitewater residents recall the two downtown area bodies of water being more lake than weeds in the past. A swimming beach near the dam on Trippe Lake was active at one time and city leaders reportedly view the total $1.4 million project as an initiative to make the city more attractive to new families, residents and businesses as well as to provide improved recreational options for existing residents.

The greater Whitewater area population (including Whitewater Lake and surrounding areas) has been stagnant over the past 30 years according to the ‘World Population Review’ (WPR). The WPR reports an actual annualized loss in population of one third of 1% although the most recently released US Census figures show a modest City of Whitewater population increase from 2020.

Representatives of the Whitewater Library Board also referenced the desire to attract more families to Whitewater as they presented a revised Library expansion plan that appeared to be warmly reviewed by Common Council members. The proposal was a significant reduction in scope from earlier proposals.

The Library Board’s lead project consultant, Rick McCarthy, presented an analysis of the ratio of square feet of library space to population that indicated Whitewater’s Library size is at roughly 25% below the average for similar sized communities. When pressed by Common Council member Jim Allen, McCarthy indicated that the UW-Whitewater student population was indeed subtracted from the city’s total to better represent the number of full-time residents, which as he recalled was estimated at between 6000-8000.

The proposed addition will have a greater focus on early learning and school age children along with the provision of small group meeting rooms that can be converted to a larger meeting room if needed. The proposal is to expand the Church Street facing portion of the existing library with a much larger welcoming area along with added designated youth and makerspace rooms along with the proposed meeting spaces.

Former Common Council member Jim Winship, who leads the library expansion project and a related fund-raising drive, indicated that the total project cost would be an estimated $5 million with $3 million of that hopefully being a commitment from the city. Winship indicated that the Library Board currently owns three adjacent properties that had been acquired for an expansion to the east that could be sold reducing the fund-raising goal to less than $1.5 million. It was pointed out that the existing library was built roughly 30 years ago at a cost nearly identical to the proposed $5 million for the estimated 7,000 square foot addition to the existing 14,146 square foot facility.

Fundraising is expected to take six months followed by an estimated 12 to 18 months for design and construction. Information on the project is available beginning on page six of the following Library Board agenda: https://whitewater-wi.gov/AgendaCenter/ViewFile/Agenda/_07192021-1352?packet=true

Council members took no new action on the issue of required masks or online only city meetings. They referenced the recent action taken by Walworth County that asks that all employees and members of the general public to wear face masks in County facilities regardless of vaccination status. The Whitewater Unified School District (WWUSD) Board recently extended its policy of making masks optional but cautioned that COVID-related case increases may require an alternative approach. City Council members appeared to be in agreement that a “wait-and-see” approach is the best option.

Warhawks head to Tokyo to compete in Paralympic Games

Editor’s note: The following information was provided by UW-Whitewater.

More chariot than chair, propelled by calloused hands, steered by torso muscle, careening, crashing, then pirouetting on a wheel, Warhawk wheelchair basketball athletes will go for gold at the summer Paralympics, Aug. 24 to Sept. 5, in Tokyo, Japan. University of Wisconsin-Whitewater players and coaches, women and men, past and present, have grown this sport. Some will participate on the court. Others will be there in spirit and influence.

Friends and rivals

Former Warhawks Mariska Beijer (playing for the Netherlands) and Lindsey Zurbrugg (United States), will face one another in the first game for both countries on Aug. 24.

When they met at UW-Whitewater, Zurbrugg was a freshman from Oregon and Beijer, a senior, was starting her final semester. They quickly hit it off, joking around, watching Disney movies and making apple pie in the kitchen of the campus residence hall where they lived. Zurbrugg, always competitive, thrived on Beijer’s basketball intensity, finding a kindred spirit and mentor.

“Her (Beijer’s) personality, her work ethic are unparalleled,” said Zurbrugg. “She took me under her wing. I learned the way she did it. A lot of my work ethic and the intensity that I play with comes from her. I saw her being successful and I wanted to be successful.”

“It will be intense,” said Zurbrugg of the Paralympics. “When you look at the higher levels of wheelchair basketball and the ball movement and the defense, it’s just poetry in motion. It becomes more like a chess game and a mind game than just a skill game. Everybody’s at that high skill level now, and so it’s about outthinking your opponent.”

On women’s Team USA, the Warhawk connection doesn’t stop with Zurbrugg. With her is Ixhelt Gonzalez, 17, a high school junior from Chicago who attended summer Warhawk wheelchair basketball camps. In addition to Beijer, recent Warhawks who will play for their home countries’ teams include Sammy White, Australia, and Andre Bienek and Mareike Miller, of the German men’s and women’s teams respectively.

Five of the 12 players on the U.S. men’s national team are former Warhawks: Jake Williams, Matt Scott, Matt Lesperance, Nate Hinze and John Boie. Head men’s Team USA coach Ron Lykins coached the Warhawks in the late 1980s and early ‘90s and contributed to their dominance. Lykins recently hired Warhawk head women’s basketball coach Christina Schwab as an assistant coach.

The men’s team opens their Paralympics play on Aug. 25 against the German team and Bienek. The U.S. and Australia are in the same bracket, so the Warhawks on Team USA could face White and the Australians as well.

Overcoming a challenging year

In 2019, Boie was on the U.S. men’s national team which won the gold medal at the Parapan Games in Peru. The win gave Team USA an automatic berth at the 2020 Paralympics in Tokyo. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit and the Olympics and Paralympics were delayed until 2021, Boie said the news was “devastating” to the athletes.

“You’re trying to peak as an athlete at a certain time so you can perform at your best,” said Boie. “It was a struggle mentally to stick with it and physically, because access to equipment and gyms just wasn’t the same.”

After playing in a national tournament in March 2020, a year would pass before Boie faced another opponent on a basketball court. He decided to deal with a nagging shoulder injury and have surgery. In April of this year, Boie moved into a residence hall at the Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where his daily routine included online office hours for his job as an academic advisor at UW-Whitewater, physical therapy for his shoulder, weightlifting, practicing his basketball skills and strengthening his mind and body.

“It’s a dream that we’re training for,” said Boie. “It’s a dream that provides no promises whatsoever. But if you don’t train, if you don’t try to push yourself, you’re a hundred percent not going to win.”

Three golds and counting

Christina Schwab, head coach of the Warhawk women’s wheelchair basketball team was picked by Lykins to be an assistant coach on the U.S. men’s national team in the Tokyo Paralympics. It will be Schwab’s sixth Paralympics since 2000. She has reported for duty as a basketball player, track athlete and now, a coach. The three gold medals Schwab owns all come from playing wheelchair basketball on U.S. women’s national teams at the games in Rio de Janeiro, Athens and Beijing.

“The first time you get your USA jersey and the ‘USA’ is across your chest when you put it on, there is no greater sense of pride,” said Schwab. “You’ve worked this hard. Your coaches believe in you. Your teammates believe in you. You get to represent your country.”

“If I have any athletes who come to this program (at Whitewater) and want to be at that level, I will strive to do my best to help them get there,” she said.

At only 15 years old in 1996, Schwab was picked as a Team USA alternate for the Atlanta Paralympics. Four years later at Sydney, she played on an up-and-coming but evolving Team USA that failed to win a medal.

A breakthrough came in 2004 at the Athens Paralympics when a scrappy American team faltered early, then fought through the field to beat powerhouse Canada in the semi and win gold in the final. At Beijing in 2008, Team USA defended its title and Schwab earned a second gold medal. An all-around athlete, Schwab competed in distance races, including a marathon, in 2012 in London. She returned to wheelchair basketball in 2016 at Rio where both men’s and women’s U.S. teams won gold. Schwab came home with a third gold medal.

Schwab was 12 years old when she first saw Lykins at a Warhawk wheelchair sports camp in 1993. He was head coach of Warhawk wheelchair basketball but soon would leave to work with men’s and women’s international wheelchair basketball teams. When Schwab began competing at that level, Lykins was already there coaching Paralympians. Now a new chapter is opening for them.

“It’s an awesome opportunity to have a veteran squad,” she said of the men’s national team. “They’ve been playing together, the majority of them for about nine years. They feed off of each other. They know each other’s tendencies. Right now, it’s about refining, perfecting and fine tuning.”

All of the athletes come to the Paralympics with their own life stories. Schwab lives with the spina bifida she has had from birth. She’s an athlete, college coach, wife, and mother of two young children. As a child, Boie survived a farm accident. Now he’s representing the U.S. as a Paralympian.

When an undetected spinal defect caused her paralysis, Zurbrugg was active in sports and loved to compete. She found a new way to run.

“A basketball chair, as soon as I hop into that, it’s a whole new world where I can go fast again,” said Zurbrugg. “I could feel a breeze on my face. I could be athletic again. I wanted to be competitive. I wanted to be athletic.”

Brantmeier Advances to Finals of USTA Billie Jean King Jr. Nationals; Earns Shot at the U.S. Open in Tennis

If you have heard of Chris Evert, Tracy Austin, Lindsay Davenport, all had played in the iconic USTA Junior National Championship finals. There were over 275 tennis players that participated in San Diego, California, at the USTA Billie Jean King Girls 18s National Championships from August 8-15, 2021. All players in the 18s division had the opportunity to earn a wild card berth in the main draw of this year’s U.S. Open.

Reese Brantmeier won the 16s national title two years ago and now had to play some of the top players in the country to get to the finals. Ms. Brantmeier was seeking to become the first player to claim both age titles since 2011.

Reese advanced to the semi-finals in the singles competition and had to take on Robin Montgomery of Washington D.C., the #1 seed heading into the tournament. However, Reese won a tough match against Montgomery 6-0,6-7(3),6-3 to advance to the finals.

The packed Barnes Tennis Center was excited to see the USTA finals match between Reese and Ashlynn Krueger of Lewisville, Texas. It was a hard-fought match that lasted two hours and eight minutes. The second set was intense. There were no service breaks in the second set. One newspaper reported several of the serves were over 100 mph. Unfortunately, Kreuger defeated Brantmeier 6-2,7-6 (3).

Despite the loss in the USTA finals, Reese earned a qualifying bid to participate in the U.S. Open. Quite an honor for the 16-year-old from Whitewater, Wisconsin.

Reese also had a successful tournament in doubles. She teamed up with Kimberly Hance of Torrance, California, to advance the tournament’s semi-finals before losing to the eventual champion. The doubles team of Brantmeier and Hance took home third place to end the successful two weeks of competition.

Reese would also receive the USTA Sportsmanship award for 2021. The last tennis player to advance to the USTA National Finals in singles from Wisconsin was Tami Whitlinger from Neenah, Wisconsin, in 1986.

Reese is the daughter of Scott and Becky Brantmeier of Whitewater.

Article Submitted by Greg Stewart
Photo Credit: J. Fred Sidhu

Obituary: Linda Ann Zimmer, 60

Linda Ann Zimmer, age 60, passed away on Monday August 9, 2021, at Mercy Hospital in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. She was born in Milwaukee on April 28, 1961, the daughter of the late Jerome Zimmer and Gloria (Berken). She graduated in 1979 from Appleton High School. She earned her Bachelor of Science in 1987 from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. After graduation she spent her life residing in Whitewater, Delavan, and surrounding areas. She spent much of her career in social work.

Survivors include her daughter: Jennifer (Shaun) Zimmer, Ohio; 3 grandchildren: her siblings: Jean (Chuck) Mills, Whitewater, Daniel Zimmer, Colorado, and Michael (Tina) Zimmer, New Jersey; her aunt: Charmaine Zlensky, Muskego; and multiple nieces, nephews, other relatives, and friends. She was preceded in death by her brother Thomas in 1964.

A private Memorial Service was held for Linda on August 13, 2021.

Nitardy Funeral Home is assisting the family with arrangements. Online condolences can be made at www.nitardyfuneralhome.com

Obituary: Karen Lorraine Topel, 68, of Fort Atkinson

Karen Lorraine Topel, 68, of Fort Atkinson passed away on August 5th, 2021 at her home.

Karen was born on June 3rd, 1953 in Fort Atkinson to Kenneth and Lorraine (Damuth) Topel. She spent her early life in Fort, graduating from Fort Atkinson High School in 1971. She evidently enjoyed the city, as she became a lifelong resident.

She liked to browse garage sales and thrift stores, but what she loved more was spending time with her grandchildren and her dear son, Brandon. She also had a fondness for her beloved dog, Chico. Karen was a passionate and caring person whose love for life and others will be remembered.

Karen is survived by her grandsons, Jadin Moldenhauer and Aaron Topel; her siblings, Nancy (John) Burton of Eagle, Michael (Kathy) Topel of Fort Atkinson, and Daniel Roberts of Hebron as well as many aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins, and other relatives and friends.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Kenneth and Lorraine; her grandparents; her son, Brandon Topel in 2017, and her infant sister, Linda Ann Topel.

A private family burial will take place at Lakeview cemetery. A celebration of life will be held at a later date.

Her family would like to extend special thanks to all her dear friends at Riverview Manor with whom she developed wonderful friendships.

She will be dearly missed.

Rest in Peace.

-Karen

“Life Events” Includes More than Obituaries; News of Other Events is Welcome (Updated with Comments from E. Greg Kent WHS ‘61)

E. Greg Kent recently wrote to the Banner to inquire as to why our “Life Events” column doesn’t include anything other than obituaries. A WHS ’61 grad, Mr. Kent says he’ll be back in town next month for his 60th reunion.

He wrote, “I remember well the days of the ‘Whitewater Register’ and all of the life event articles in it …Birthdays, anniversaries, graduations, relocations, births, deaths, who went where on vacation, etc. etc. etc. All was gossip type stuff of local interest only and believe me everyone read that weekly paper cover to cover …..”

Greg concluded, “Whitewater was a great town to grow up in !! You are Lucky to live there! I still miss it !!”

Banner response: Although we’ve occasionally been able to share an anniversary celebration, rarely has anything other than an obituary been submitted in terms of life events. When we changed the category title from Obituaries to Life Events in July, 2020, we said this: “The Banner staff wishes to extend the services of our publication by welcoming announcements from readers of what might be called “life events,” such as births/adoptions, engagements, weddings, special birthdays/anniversaries including quinceaneras, retirements, achieving citizenship, and the like. Consequently we will be merging obituaries into a new category on our homepage called “life events.” Please consider sharing your or your family’s special events with the community in this way. Photos will, of course, be welcome.”

Please keep the Banner in mind when you or your family are celebrating (or have celebrated) something special. We didn’t think to include vacations in our list, but in keeping with the old Register tradition, we’d be happy to receive some great trip photos!

#FlashbackFriday with the Historical Society: Early 1900’s Downtown

It’s time again for #FlashbackFriday with the Whitewater Historical Society!

Here is another shot from downtown looking eastwards on Main Street. It was probably taken in the early 1900s. This was a period of transition for Whitewater, especially in terms of transportation and technological advancement. Notice that while the road is still dirt and has a line of horse-drawn buggies, there is also an early automobile pictured, as well as electrical poles lining the street.​

Join us next week for more from the Whitewater Historical Society collections!

(3074PC, Whitewater Historical Society)

The Whitewater Historical Society collects, preserves, and interprets the history of Whitewater and the surrounding area. Be sure to join us next week for more from the Society’s collections. Please “like” us on Facebook, and check out our website at whitewaterhistoricalsociety.org!​