Dr. Larry Nelson, “Doc,” passed away peacefully on Saturday, February 27, with the people who loved him most at his side

As I write these words, it is with sadness, but also with great pride. I am, and will always be proud to say that Dr. Larry Nelson, “Doc,” was my dad.

He passed away peacefully on Saturday, February 27, with the people who loved him most at his side.

Doc lived to the age of 100, which is remarkable in itself. What is perhaps more remarkable, however, are the lives he touched, and the zest for living which was so characteristic of Doc up until the end.

He was born on January 19, 1921, in Rockford, IL. His father, Arthur Nelson Sr., was a machinist and his mother, Elsie Storm Nelson was a homemaker. His older brother, “Artie,” sister Cora, cousins and aunts were part of a happy childhood that he often told me stories about. He was a “Swede” with a little German thrown in. His grandparents spoke Swedish and his mother cooked Kroppkaka, a potato and meat dumpling I’ve never been able to master.

Doc had a paper-route and delivered eggs and vegetables to neighbors, from his family’s garden to make money as a child. He was a lifeguard, a great swimmer and attended Beloit College on a diving scholarship, where he studied Chemistry and Biology. He thought he would perhaps be a dentist. 

He was drafted into the Army Air Corps, serving stateside during WWII. Courtesy of the G.I. Bill, the government offered to send him to medical school on the agreement he would serve in the Medical Corps upon attainment of his doctorate. He served his second tour during the Korean Conflict as an officer, gentleman and physician.

In 1953, a retiring doctor from Whitewater put his practice up for sale. My dad recognized a good opportunity and moved to Whitewater. He opened up his first office in what we now know as The Brass Rail. He was a G.P. who made house calls regularly, with his big black doctor bag in hand. I often rode along and sat in the car, awaiting our ride home together. My sister and I also got to tag along when he made his hospital rounds, where we read Highlights magazines and helped ourselves to a hard candy from the doctor’s lounge when we left. Like many country G.P.’s, he was sometimes paid with a chicken or eggs. He was a true healer, there to help every patient who walked through his office door. His waiting room sometimes overflowed. No one was ever turned away, whether they had an appointment, needed emergency stitches, or depended on Doc’s sympathetic ear.

Doc was a great sportsman; he loved fishing and hunting ducks and pheasants. He fished in Canada every summer with his buddies, Sam Soffa, Arl Watson and Gerry Olson. They golfed St. Andrews and had many adventures throughout their lives. Doc also visited exotic parts of the world with his companion, Donna Aumann.

On his 100th birthday, so many people from Whitewater told their personal stories about ways my dad helped them out over the course of his career. Because of you, I realized how many lives he touched and how many people loved him. I was thrilled to be able to read these wonderful stories to him. Thank you to everyone who made him smile on his birthday. Thank you for leaving me with the knowledge that my dad was “one of a kind,” a man I’ve been so, so proud of. He was strong, generous, humble — the most caring person I have ever known.

Doc’s survivors are his children, Lori Nelson-Schmidt, Whitewater, WI, Ryan Nelson, Bellingham, WA, and Lynn Miller, Fort Atkinson, WI. His grandchildren are Megan Schmidt Milgrim, Anthony “Ty” Schmidt, Kelli Miller, Annie Nelson and great-granddaughter Izabella.

He was lovingly cared for every day by his friend, Barry Pechous, who fulfilled my dad’s wish to pass peacefully in his own home.

We invite you to honor Doc with a military gravesite ceremony on Saturday, March 6 at 1:00 p.m. at Hillside Cemetery in Whitewater.

Whitewater Wrestling Closes Out Season with Award Presentations

Article and Photos by John Schimming
Whitewater High School Head Wrestling Coach
jschimming@wwusd.org

On Wednesday night, February 24, student-athletes and parents gathered in the Whitewater gymnasium to present the end of season awards in a different way; just like the entire season we had to do things differently.

Although the team saw many adjustments made to their season, from how practices were run, the number of competitions that they could have, protocols for competing and protocols as for who could be in the stands, the wrestlers proved that it was still wrestling and they went out and had a very successful season for themselves as a team and individuals. 

As a team the group saw great growth in each individual and had great practices throughout, even though some days adjustments were made on the fly. The team was only able to compete in seven dual meets this year and finished 5-2 in those duals. In a typical year, the team competes in seven tournaments over the course of the season; none of these were contested this year, and their first tournament action was at the Regional Tournament on January 30. Here the team took second place overall, which was a nice showing for them. In the Sectional Tournament, the team finished in 7th out of 25 teams, so that was a nice finish for them as well.

As individuals, it was difficult for the Junior Varsity teams to get as many matches as normal, but when they did, they showed growth all year. Sebastian Cuellar finished the year 7-0 and brought home the Most Valuable JV Wrestler Award. Payton Lyon, another freshman who finished the year 6-2 on JV, brought home the Outstanding Freshman Award.

For the Varsity team, voted as Team Leaders were Trenten Zahn, Brian Porcaro, and David Cushman. The Most Valuable Wrestler was shared with Carter Friend and David Cushman, both being integral parts of the program wrestling together for the last three seasons. 

The seniors were also presented with their Accomplishment Board, which is made by Dena Schimming, as well as their senior poster that was presented to them officially on Parents’ Night. 

The coaching staff would like to thank the parents for their trust in the program during these difficult times and are fortunate to have had the opportunity to compete this season. The staff would also like to thank the WUSD administration for also trusting the program to keep the student-athletes safe during these unprecedented times. 

Scholar Athletes with Cumulative GPA of 3.0 or Higher:
Rye Fader, CJ Tomomitsu, Dylan DuClos, Cooper Hammond, Carter Friend, David Cushman, Marcus DePorter, Mason DePorter, Hector Arnodo, Trenten Zahn, Sebastian Cuellar, Denver Isbell, David Cushman, Mackenzie Schimming, Skylar Staebler, Ella Liberto, and Amanda Tovar

Junior Varsity Awards
Most Takedowns: Sebastian Cuellar
Most Pins: Sebastian Cuellar
Most Nearfalls: Mason Nobs and Victor Hernandez
Most Valuable JV: Sebastian Cuellar
Outstanding Freshman: Payton Lyon
Most Improved: Jason Villegas

Varsity Awards
Most Takedowns: David Cushman
Most Pins: David Cushman
Most Improved: Brian Porcaro
Most Dedicated: David Cushman
Team Leaders: Trenten Zahn, Brian Porcaro, and David Cushman
1st Team All-Conference: David Cushman
2nd team All-Conference: Brian Porcaro and Carter Friend
Honorable Mention All-Conference: Aaron Porras and Marcus DePorter
Most Valuable Wrestlers: Carter Friend and David Cushman

Most Valuable Wrestlers
David Cushman and Carter Friend

Seniors
David Cushman, Denver Isbell, Rye Fader, Brian Porcaro, Trenten Zahn, and Dylan DuClos

Candidate Forums Scheduled for Common Council & WUSD School Board Candidates

Candidate Forums Scheduled for City of Whitewater Common Council and WUSD School Board Candidates

(LWV-Whitewater Area press release) The League of Women Voters-Whitewater Area will be hosting two virtual candidate forums on Saturday, March 13, 2021 in advance of the April 6 Spring Election. The first forum, for City of Whitewater Common Council candidates, will be held in the morning, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m. The second forum, for WUSD School Board candidates, will be held in the afternoon, 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m.

All candidates for Common Council, Carol McCormick (District 1), Brienne Diebolt-Brown (District 3), Greg Majkrzak (District 5), Neil Hicks (District 5), Lisa Dawsey Smith (At-Large Seat), and Daniel Machalik (At-Large Seat) and all candidates for the WUSD Board, Tom Ganser, Larry Kachel, Andrea M. Svec, and Maryann Zimmerman have confirmed their participation in the live, online forums.

Because the forums will be virtual, out of concern for the health and safety of all involved, we are soliciting candidate questions from voters in advance. If you have questions for the candidates, please submit them electronically via the following Google Forms by Wednesday, March 10. You can also mail your questions to LWV Whitewater Area, 417 N Fremont St, Whitewater, WI 53190.

Submit questions for Common Council candidates at bit.ly/lwv-commoncouncil

Submit questions for School Board candidates at bit.ly/lwv-schoolboard

Candidate questions prepared by the LWV-Whitewater Area board will be used if there are not enough questions provided by the public. The League does not accept questions targeted to specific candidates. 

To attend the Common Council virtual forum live, please join the webinar by using the URL: bit.ly/lwv-commoncouncilforum. Or join us by telephone: dial (312) 626-6799. Webinar ID: 921 9872 0090, Passcode: 971638.

To attend the WUSD School Board virtual forum live, please join the webinar by using the URL: bit.ly/lwv-schoolboardforum. Or join us by telephone: dial (312) 626-6799. Webinar ID: 943 7797 6465, Passcode: 804422.  

Both forums will be live streamed on the League’s Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/lwvwhitewater.org, and a recording will be made available on our website, https://my.lwv.org/wisconsin/whitewater-area, during the weeks leading up to the April 6 Spring Election. 

The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan political organization that encourages informed and active participation in government, works to increase understanding of major public policy issues and influences public policy through education and advocacy. Visit our website at lwvwhitewater.org and like us on Facebook!

Historical But Not Old – The Department of Theatre/Dance Presents Antigone

(UW-Whitewater, College of Arts and Communication, Department of Theatre/Dance submission) The University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Department of Theatre/Dance continues with offering virtual events this Spring with the first production of “Antigone” by Sophocles. The virtual production will be released on March 8 at 7:30 p.m. Although tickets must be purchased by the 8th, the content will be available for viewing through March 14, 2021. Ticket prices are $13 for a single viewer ticket and $26 for a family viewing ticket for two or more. Tickets are on sale and can be purchased online at tickets.uww.edu or by calling (262) 472-2222. 

In the final chronological installment of the tale of Oedipus and his offspring, Antigone is torn between the laws of gods and men when she is forbidden from giving her fallen brother a proper burial. Featuring the world premiere of new compositions by student composer, Jace Banasik, this play may be historical, but it is anything but old.

Directed by alumna Sara J. Griffin, this production brings back memories of her time as a student at UW-Whitewater. “I remember learning about Greek Choruses in our Movement for the Actor course. Learning to speak and move in perfect synchronization with a large group of people was not something that came naturally to me. But it’s incredible and humbling when you and your group become an ensemble, and discover how powerful that type of storying telling can be. It’s not unlike watching a perfectly executed kick line at the end of “A Chorus Line” or a marching band turn their lines into Harry Potter flying on a broomstick. Ancient Greek plays aren’t something that I have had the opportunity to be a part of in my professional acting work, and I am happy to return to it. I am continually amazed that ideas debated and written about almost 2500 hundred years ago are still the headlines of our news today.”

Adding a bit of flair to this historical Greek drama will be newly composed music developed by Banasik and the chorus members themselves, in collaboration with Music Director, Robert Gehrenbeck. “The chorus parts in Greek tragedies were definitely sung originally, but there are only fragments of actual Greek music that survive from this time period. Jace, the chorus members, and I have used these fragments as inspiration for creating new music in the style of the original melodies and rhythms. This process of discovery and invention has been thrilling for all involved, and the singers and I look forward to sharing this enthralling music as part of this unique production.”

A senior majoring in Music, Banasik is serving as the Composer and Sound Designer for the production. He first collaborated with the Department of Theatre/Dance on the production of “Vanity Fair” in the Fall 2020 semester. Banasik says, “The most difficult and exciting part about this process was writing the music for the chorus to sing. I wanted to make it reflective of what we know about the music from that time period, while almost putting a modern and artistic twist on it. We don’t know much about the music the Ancient Greeks had written, but we know just enough for us to use. I’m very excited for everyone to see the show, and to appreciate the amount of time and effort that was put in by the cast and crew.”

This production is a senior project for three different Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) students: Costume Designer, Carlee Wuchterl; Lighting Designer, Nicolas Sole; and Stage Manager, Alden Swanson. Chair of the Department of Theatre/Dance, Marshall Anderson states “Senior projects are an integral part of the educational process for our students before they leave UW-Whitewater. These projects allow them to experience firsthand what they will be doing once they are working professionally in their respective fields.” Lighting Designer, Sole says, “The senior project is an important capstone where I am able to use all the skills that I learned over the past four years. With Antigone,  I can use those skills whilst adding new skills in the process with our new digital format. “This project gives me the opportunity to not only learn deeper design, research, and collaboration skills, but also various technical skills such as dyeing fabrics, metal and jewelry making, and draping techniques. Not only has it taught me various new things, but I also get to work amongst peers, professors, and guest designers to create a new way of telling a story” says Wuchterl. “I am excited to finish this chapter of my life on a high note” says Swanson. Following graduation, Wuchterl hopes to attend graduate school for an MFA in Costume Design and Technology and eventually teach at the university level, Sole plans to attend graduate school and Swanson has a goal of pursuing work in theater to apply the skills he has learned at UW-Whitewater.

Jamie Love as Antigone (Photo by Nic Sole; Note: All photos were taken using COVID-19 safety protocol)
Robert Chelius as Haemon (Photo by Nic Sole)
Ivy Teege as Tiresias (Photo by Nic Sole)

The cast includes lead actress Jamie Love in the role of Antigone; Bryce Giammo as Creon; Robbie Chelius as Haemon; Megan Wroblewski as Ismene; Ivy Steege as Tiresias; Michael Garcia as Watchman; Katie Aldred as Eurydice and a chorus member; and Erin McKee, Natalie Meikle, Molly Wanless, and Anna Tolle as chorus members.

The creative  team includes Director Sara J. Griffin; Music Director Robert Gehrenbeck; Technical Director Ruth Conrad-Proulx; Stage Manager Alden Swanson; Assistant Stage Manager Samantha Ness; Scenic Designer Steve Barnes; Costume Designer Carlee Wuchterl; Hair and Makeup Designer Lydia Oestreich; Lighting Designer Nicolas Sole; Sound Designer Banasik; Props Master Abby Smith-Lezama; and mentors Eric Appleton (Lighting), Ruth Conrad-Proulx (Sound) and Tracey Lyons (Costumes). 

The virtual production of “Antigone” will be released on March 8 at 7:30 pm. Although tickets must be purchased by the 8th, the content will be available for viewing through March 14, 2021. Ticket prices are $13 for a single viewer ticket and $26 for a family viewing ticket for two or more. Tickets are on sale and can be purchased online at tickets.uww.edu or by calling (262) 472-2222. 

ICKETS: Once you purchase tickets, you will receive an email confirming your purchase. On March 8th, you will receive an email with a link for the digital production content. This content will be available through March 14, 2021 for viewing. I

4-H Science Series Open to Grades 6-8

(UW Extension 4-H Walworth County press release) Youth, grades 6-8, can explore four fascinating science fields through a new virtual 4-H science series called 4-H Science Explorers:  Into the Lab.  As series participants, youth will dive into the fields of animal science, engineering, biotechnology, and forensics as they interact with real world scientists, tour science “labs,” learn about careers, and engage in relevant hands-on activities.  

Presenters will include Dr. Christine Fortin, Center Hill Veterinary Clinic; Tom Zinnen and Liz Jesse, Outreach Specialists at UW-Madison Biotechnology Center; Professor Jason Kawasaki, Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at UW-Madison; Matthew Stilwell, Associate Director of Education and Outreach for the UW-Madison Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (UW-MRSEC) and Instructor Timothy Juedes, UW-Platteville Department of Forensics Science.     

Into the Lab will be hosted virtually via Zoom every Thursday night from March 25 through April 22 starting at 6:30 p.m. Participants will complete each night’s activity using a combination of provided materials and common household items.  During the series, participants will try suturing (using a practice kit), build a triboelectric generator, extract DNA from wheat, and analyze mock forensic evidence.  At the end of the session, they’ll visit a virtual escape room as a wrap-up challenge and celebration of learning.  4-H MEMBERSHIP IS NOT REQUIRED TO PARTICIPATE.  Interested, but unable to attend all of the scheduled sessions?  No worries!  Each session will be recorded, so youth who are unable to attend live can still get the complete series experience simply by requesting the recording.

Cost is $20 per participant.  This helps cover the supplies included in the Into the Lab Kit which participating families will be responsible for picking up during specified dates and times at the Walworth County Government Center, 100 W Walworth Street, Elkhorn.  You choose the pick-up time during registration.  Need-based partial scholarships are available upon request; contact your county 4-H educator. For more information and to register, visit the Walworth County Extension website at:  walworth.extension.wisc.edu or call 262-741-4959.  You can also access the registration form directly at: https://go.wisc.edu/604a6k .  Registration deadline is March 14, 2021.   The series is limited to the first 60 participants who sign up. 

4-H Science Explorers programming is a collaborative effort by UW-Madison Extension 4-H educators in Crawford, Lafayette, and Walworth Counties and the UW-Madison BioTrek staff.   A special thank you to the Wisconsin 4-H Foundation and BioForward Wisconsin for their financial support of this series.  4-H is the statewide Positive Youth Development program of University of Wisconsin-Madison Division of Extension.  If you need reasonable accommodations to participate in this or any 4-H program, contact the Walworth County Extension Office.  

#FlashbackFriday with the Whitewater Historical Society – The 1881 Snowstorm

It’s time again for another #FlashbackFriday with the Whitewater Historical Society! Today marks the 140th anniversary of the beginning of the 1881 snowstorm, which came in two waves between February 26 and March 4. A heavy rainstorm, followed closely by over four feet of snow, pounded the city that week. Record books in Madison indicate that approximately 114 inches of snow fell in total that winter. J.P. Whipple’s stereoscope image shows some children hanging out among the access tunnels carved into the snow mounds on the northwest side of Whitewater Street.

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

(1570ST, 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!​ 

Our Readers Share – Everett Long: An Unfortunate Squirrel Reminds us to Always Be Mindful of ‘de-tails’

Everett Long writes, “This unfortunate squirrel in our neighborhood arrives now and then to pick up seed from under the birdfeeder.  I have no idea how the tail was lost. Perhaps the squirrel’s experience should remind us to:  Always be mindful of ‘de-tails’.”

Our thanks to Everett Long for submitting this cute photo.

— Our Readers Share: We hope that you might have something that you’d be willing to share.  Anything that’s been created by someone else should, of course, be credited, and you should ask their permission if you’re able. We cannot post copyrighted material without permission. We can’t guarantee that we’ll have space for all submissions, and contributions will be subject to editorial board approval. The one definite exclusion is anything politically oriented. We will assume that you’re willing for us to include your name as the submitter unless you indicate that you prefer to remain anonymous. Send to whitewaterbanner@gmail.com or click on “submit a story” near the top right of our homepage.  Thanks for thinking about this!

This Week’s City Meetings (UPDATED with Landmarks Commission)

City of Whitewater Community Involvement & Cable TV Commission Monday @ 4:00 p.m.
Agenda
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/814168533
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (408) 650-3123
Access Code: 814-168-533
New to GoToMeeting? Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts:
https://global.gotomeeting.com/install/814168533

City of Whitewater Common Council – Tuesday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda includes extension of City Manager Declaration of Emergency and face coverings requirement to June 30, 2021; prohibition of smoking/vaping within 20 feet of playgrounds; amendment to City Manager Employment Contract.
You are invited to a Zoom webinar.
Please click the link below to join the webinar:
https://zoom.us/j/92733417507?pwd=bU1teGIrbStDZ3hLVGNHTGFLeW85UT09
Passcode: 628082
Or Telephone:
Dial (for higher quality, dial a number based on your current location):
US: +1 301 715 8592
Webinar ID: 927 3341 7507
Passcode: 628082
International numbers available: https://zoom.us/u/aeGYn6TwLb

City of Whitewater Landmarks CommissionThursday @ 3:30 p.m.
Agenda includes Effigy Mounds Preserve – Wisconsin State Historic Preservation Commission Grant results and
future plans for preserve
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/804418477
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (872) 240‐3212
Access Code: 804‐418‐477
New to GoToMeeting? Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts:
https://global.gotomeeting.com/install/804418477

Whitewater Fire Department, Inc Business Meeting – Thursday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda includes establishing EMS Staffing Committee; Hiring of AEMT’s; Pay structure for current WFD membership
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
meet.google.com/vqo-tsdh-xna
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 971-232-0004
Access Code: 935 601 576
New to Google Meets? Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts:
meet.google.com/vqo-tsdh-xna



Mary Weinlein and Monsignor James Bartylla Receive Awards From Warhawk Catholic

(UW-Whitewater’s Warhawk Catholic submission) Warhawk Catholic, the campus ministry for Catholic students at the University of Wisconsin – Whitewater, is pleased to announce the winners of its Award for Service, Mary Weinlein of Pewaukee, and its Distinguished Alumni Award, Monsignor James Bartylla of the Diocese of Madison. Both individuals are being recognized as part of an extended celebration of the 50th anniversary of Warhawk Catholic.

“We are thrilled to publicly recognize two influential Catholics who have played important roles in developing the faith of our campus and region,” said Brian Zanin, Warhawk Catholic campus minister.

Since 1916, Catholic students at UW-Whitewater have gathered as a community. These student organizations included the Catholic Girls’ Society, the Mercier Club and the Mercier-Newman Club. UW-Whitewater students now have a vibrant Catholic student organization, Warhawk Catholic, which was chartered in 1969 as the Catholic Student Coalition, that works with the campus ministry office of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. In addition to this arrangement, St. Patricks Parish of Whitewater has played a key role in the development of today’s student group.

Priests, professionals, and volunteers have played critical roles in shaping the organization and ministry over the years. One of these volunteers is Mary Weinlein, who is the 2021 recipient of the Warhawk Catholic Award for Service. In 1987 Weinlein was asked to be the faculty advisor for what was then the Catholic Student Coalition when she worked as a senior lecturer in the Department of Special Education at UW-Whitewater. She agreed, and, as the years went by it was clear that not only was Weinlein the advisor to the student organization, she was a part of it.

Mary and Conrad Weinlein

“It became, for me, a very important experience because I saw students taking care of each other and their beliefs,” she said. “The students were more than yearning for the life of Jesus. They were sharing it.”

She attended the students’ regular Wednesday night meetings, she’d host supper at her home for the students, and she’d help out at the students’ fundraising events. So close to her heart were the students that she invited all of them to her 1993 wedding, at St. Patrick’s in Whitewater, where she and her late husband, Conrad, received an acapella serenade from the students at their wedding reception.

“It was sweet,” Weinlein remembers. “I was just very touched by this wonderful group of young people.”

Many UW-Whitewater graduates are Catholic, one notable alum being Monsignor James Bartylla ‘83, the vicar general of the Diocese of Madison, who is the recipient of the 2021 Warhawk Catholic Distinguished Alumni Award.

Monsignor Bartylla graduated from UW-Whitewater with a bachelor’s in accounting, and then pursued a master’s in finance from UW-Milwaukee, followed by a law degree from UW-Madison. Shortly after graduating from UW-Whitewater he began a near-decade-long career in real estate development and valuation. He was quite successful, having work that took him all over the world.

Monsignor James Bartylla

Then one night, he says he was about age 30 or so, Monsignor Bartylla was on a plane between Singapore and Frankfurt, Germany. He had been sleeping, and when he woke up he found himself asking, “Where does this all go?” Sometime after, he made a confession at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York, and then returned to Wisconsin where he discerned a path to the priesthood. Once he completed his law degree he entered Mundelein Seminary for the Diocese of Madison, also studied in Rome, Italy, and was ordained in May 2001.

He spent a few years working in various parishes – including Verona, Kieler, Bloomington, and Pine Bluff – and was concurrently working half-time in the Madison Chancery as the priest secretary to the bishop, who at that time was Bishop William Bullock. When Bishop Robert Morlino was assigned to Madison he asked Monsignor Bartylla to be the diocesan vocations director, and during his almost six years in that position (2004 to 2009), Monsignor Bartylla also visited the UW-Whitewater campus to speak at Warhawk Catholic to talk about his vocation to the priesthood.

Shortly thereafter, Bishop Morlino appointed Monsignor Bartylla to the position of vicar general for the Diocese of Madison, a position he held until November 2018, when Bishop Morlino died and the diocesan College of Consultors voted Monsignor Bartylla to be the diocesan administrator for the Diocese of Madison until a new bishop was installed. He held that role for seven months until current Madison Bishop Donald Hying named him vicar general, again.

Monsignor Bartylla says he’s learned a lot about managing a diocese in the time he’s been in the Madison Chancery. The position he holds is like that of a chief operating officer under a CEO. He has some powers of diocesan leadership, but cannot do everything a bishop can do. He says he is grateful for the grace of his call to the priesthood, and he’s grateful that he’s been able to apply his education and the work ethic he developed in the world prior to becoming a priest, for the Catholic Church.

“It was God’s work, not mine,” he said, recalling a party he attended in Manhattan after he made his confession at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Everyone was talking and someone at the party asked him, ‘Have you ever thought about the priesthood?’

“Instantly all the secular stuff was gone,” Monsignor Bartylla said. “Wow. Everything changed in like, 30 seconds. Now, only God can do that.”

As COVID-19 conditions allow, Warhawk Catholic will recognize Mary Weinlein and Monsignor Bartylla at an alumni dinner, tentatively planned for 2022.

“We thank both Mary and Monsignor Bartylla for their leadership as Catholics,” Zanin said. “It gives our students something to aspire to as they move into their professional adult lives.”

For more information about Warhawk Catholic, please visit http://warhawkcatholic.org.