This Week’s Garage Sale

Garage sale
Saturday, May 7: 8-5; Sunday, May 8: 8-? – No early sales!
Household goods, vintage collectibles, jewelry, wood futon, lots of miscellaneous.  (Sorry! No clothing.) Some clothing accessories. All priced to sell. Will negotiate if more than one item is purchased. $3.00 bag sale on Sunday after 12:00.
351 Indian Mound Parkway, Whitewater
Watch for signs.

A Banner Service – Garage Sale Ads

As a result of a reader’s comment that it’s hard to find garage sales in Whitewater now that we no longer have a weekly shopper, the Banner staff agreed to begin a “consolidated” garage sale posting that will be published by Thursday morning for the upcoming weekend’s sales. This announcement will only be for garage sales (a sale of miscellaneous household goods, often held in the garage or front yard of someone’s house) in the city and school district boundaries. We will not be accepting, for example, ads for cars or other items that are not part of a scheduled garage sale. There will be a limit of three times per year for a particular property. Although we may eventually make a small charge for this service, initially it will be complimentary.

Those wishing to place a notice must send the information to whitewaterbanner@gmail.com by Wednesday at 6 p.m. You may include a brief description of the items that are for sale, the hours and days of the sale, and of course your address.

Whitewater LEADS: Free Book/Month for Ages 0-5

Whitewater LEADS is proud to announce that we have reached over 345 registrants in the Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library! We are so thankful for the opportunity to provide reading materials to youth in the Whitewater community. With the Dolly Parton Imagination Library, children ages 0-5 are mailed one FREE book each and every month. To join this program, all you need to do is sign up! Simply visit: https://Whitewater-Leads.org/Register.

About Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library

Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library is a book gifting program that mails free, high-quality books to children from birth to age five, no matter their family’s income.

After launching in 1995, the program grew quickly. First books were only distributed to children living in Sevier County, Tennessee where Dolly grew up. It became such a success that in 2000 a national replication effort was underway. By 2003, Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library had mailed one million books. It would prove to be the first of many millions of books sent to children around the world.

Dolly’s home state of Tennessee pledged to pursue statewide coverage in 2004 and global expansion was on the horizon. After the United States, the program launched in Canada in 2006 followed by the United Kingdom in 2007, Australia in 2013 and the Republic of Ireland in 2019.

City Market “Goes on Rain or Shine;” Farmers Market Resumes on Saturday

By Lynn Binnie
Whitewater Banner volunteer staff
whitewaterbanner@gmail.com

Outdoor City Market Goes on Rain or Shine, Starting May 3

Today is the first day for the outdoor City Market, 4-7 p.m. at the Train Depot, 301 W. Whitewater St., and in response to a question about the impact of the rainy weather, Co-Manager Lisa Dawsey Smith stated, “Yes. It’s a rain or shine market. Unless there’s a thunderstorm the market happens. If it’s continually drizzling it will be scaled back some out of necessity (less furniture to potentially damage still fragile spring turf, musicians not out in the wet cold). Same procedures as always.” In the future, for timely updates, check the Whitewater City Market page on Facebook.

The following update for the season was posted on the Banner last week:
The Outdoor Season beginning this Tuesday runs weekly from May 3 through October 25th 4 to 7 p.m. at the Historic Train Depot. Highlights for the upcoming season include a place to get outside and linger with friends old and new, children’s activities, food trucks/prepared food vendors, live music and an average of 30 vendors weekly. We have a number of new additions to the market including two new area farmers: Terra Mana Gardens and Little Red Farms. 

Farmers Market Opens this Saturday

Karl Knuteson, who coordinates the Farmers Market, indicates that market will be open beginning this Saturday, May 7, from 8 a.m. to noon. That market is held in the municipal parking lot next to the Train Depot, 301 W. Whitewater St.

“Overseas Military Cemeteries of World War I and World War II” at Fort Library May 26

Editor’s Note: The following was provided by the Dwight Foster Public Library in Fort Atkinson.

The US Veterans Project Library and the Dwight Foster Public Library invite you to celebrate Memorial Day with this tour of the military cemeteries of Europe. This program will be presented by Wes Sisson on Thursday, May 26 at 6 p.m. both in-person and by Zoom.

Many fallen soldiers and military personnel from WWI and WWII remain buried in cemeteries in various countries around the world. Sisson will present images and history from these sacred places.

Sisson, originally from Milton, WI taught high school history mostly in overseas military schools. He spent 31 years living in Heidelberg, Germany. While living in Europe he was able to spend time visiting the cemeteries there and was able to locate Milton residents who were buried in them.

This program will be presented in-person at the Dwight Foster Public Library, 209 Merchants Avenue in Fort Atkinson. A remote option will also be available on Zoom. Go to https://www.fortlibrary.org/usvets/ to access the link to join on Zoom. For additional information contact the library at (920) 563-7790.

Obituary: Judith Ann Sweat, 81

Judith Ann Sweat, 81, found her peace with the Lord on Saturday, April 30, 2022.  Judy was born December 2, 1940 in Elgin, Illinois at St. Joseph Hospital.  Her parents were Clayton Wood and Martha Colberg Rohr.  Her growing up years were in Elgin and after she married Richard Sweat, they lived in Canada for several years.  She moved back to the states with her four children and settled again in Elgin.  She worked several years for the Methodist Board of Pensions in Evanston, Illinois before moving to Whitewater 20 years ago. She brought her granddaughter, Angela Garcia, with her at this time.  Judy enjoyed reading, puzzles and having coffee with a friend. 

              She left behind four children; Rebecca Garcia, Chicago, IL, Deborah Aceves, Whitewater, Susan Butler, Fort Atkinson, and David Sweat; beloved granddaughter, Angela Garcia, New Jersey, Sister, Nancy (John) Hoffmann, Whitewater, and special friend, Sharon Martin and her family of Whitewater.  There are many grandchildren and great-grandchildren scattered throughout Illinois.  She is preceded in death by her parents and two sisters: Carol Wood, Elgin, IL and Sally Sodt, Richey, MT.

              Following Judy’s wishes there will be no services.  Those wishing to provide a memorial may do so by choosing your favorite charity.  Inurnment will be in the Bluff City Cemetery, Elgin, Illinois.  Online condolences may be made at www.nitardyfuneralhome.com

               Nitardy Funeral Home, Whitewater is assisting the family.

Wendall Bean, Longtime WHS Coach, Entering National Wrestling Hall of Fame – WI Chapter

Wendall Bean, 23-year head WHS wrestling coach, will be inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame – WI Chapter at an Honors Banquet in Wisconsin Dells on May 15. Information regarding details of the Honor Weekend, induction banquet tickets and National Hall of Fame donation information (donations in inductees name) may be found online here.

Source: https://wiwrestling.com/wendall-bean-to-enter-state-chapter-of-national-hall-of-fame/

Special to the Banner from Boston: You never would’ve known they were the defending NBA champs

By David Ostrowsky
Boston based sports writer
Special to the Banner

You never would’ve known they were the defending NBA champs.

Heading into yesterday’s Eastern Conference Semifinals Game 1, the Milwaukee Bucks, with their second-best player, swingman Khris Middleton, possibly shelved for the entirety of the series with a Grade 2 MCL sprain, were significant underdogs to the white-hot Boston Celtics. Pundits nationwide were predicting the Celtics would breeze past a presumably one-dimensional Bucks team. At best, the Bucks would stretch the series to a Game 6 before bowing out. From coast to coast, there were more than a few talking heads predicting Boston in four while in Beantown, there was already talk about who would be an easier Eastern Conference Finals opponent — the Miami Heat or Philadelphia 76ers. 

And yet it was the Bucks, behind their gritty defense and a solid, though not spectacular, performance from two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo (24 points, 13 boards, 12 assists), who dusted off the front-running Celtics, 101-89, in front of a booming TD Garden in Boston yesterday afternoon. 

“The activity everywhere was good,” Bucks head coach Mike Budenholzer remarked about his team’s sterling defensive effort during his postgame presser. “Giannis, Brook [Lopez], Bobby [Portis], those guys really have to do both — they’ve got to play the paint, they’ve got to play the three-point line.

“Our guards gotta do the same thing, our guards gotta limit penetration, limit opportunities. I think defensively the edge, the focus, was appropriate.” 

A shell-shocked Celtics team, one that has been the flavor of the month in the NBA this spring, had no answers for Milwaukee’s dominance on both ends of the floor. 

“There’s a reason they were the champs last year — that level defensively that they have,” acknowledged Celtics veteran forward Al Horford. “You’ve got to give them credit. They definitely were the better team tonight.” 

Indeed, the Bucks put forth a textbook team-wide effort, particularly on the defensive end of the floor, to clamp down on the heavily-favored Celtics, who had reeled off 26 wins over the final 32 games of the regular season before sweeping the star-studded Brooklyn Nets in the Eastern Conference quarterfinals. In addition to Antetokounmpo’s triple-double, the Bucks were bolstered by veterans Jrue Holiday (25 points) and Bobby Portis (15 points, 11 rebound) as they stole home-court advantage away from Boston. 

But it was the Bucks’ suffocating defense that proved to be the difference-maker. With Antetokounmpo, arguably the best player on the planet, and fellow frontcourt mate Brook Lopez contesting Celtics’ shots, the hosts went a paltry 1-15 from the floor. For the first time since December 29, the Celtics didn’t eclipse 90 points as they shot just 33 percent while converting merely 10 2-point field goals. Boston’s two offensive kingpins, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum, the latter of whom is in the conversation to be Antetokounmpo’s successor as league MVP, were largely silenced as they combined for just 33 points. 

“To have 89 points and lack of penetration and paint points is obviously alarming,” acknowledged a dejected Celtics’ head coach Ime Udoka in his postgame remarks. “We know who they are defensively, and I think their physicality more so than anything caught us off guard.” 

Of course, this was only the first of what very well may be a seven-game series. The Bucks and Celtics split four regular season games and there are significant questions as to whether Middleton can return over the course of the next week. Surely, Boston’s dynamic duo of Brown and Tatum will look to bounce back from a dismal series-opening performance. And not to be forgotten, it was just three years ago that the Bucks got tripped up by the visiting Celtics in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals only to storm back to take the series in five. 

“This is going to be a competitive series,” said Budenholzer, whose squad outclassed the Chicago Bulls in five games during the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals in what turned out to be a very noncompetitive series. “This is going to be a tough series. And today was very much like that. That’s what we expect from this series. A lot of respect for them.”

Portis echoed his coach’s sentiment by saying, “both teams are physical. Both teams play hard. Both teams play defense. Both teams are long and tall.”

The Bucks’ pursuit of a second consecutive NBA Finals trophy resumes Tuesday night in Boston for what should be an electrifying Game 2. 

David Ostrowsky is a former sports writer for the Metrowest Daily News and current contributing sports writer to the Atlanta Jewish Times.  He is also the author of Pro Sports in 1993 (McFarland & Company). His next book, Roberto Alomar: The Complicated Life and Legacy of a Baseball Hall of Famer, will be published by Rowman & Littlefield in 2024. 

Pair Honored at NCWIT Aspirations in Computing Awards

Congratulations to senior Guin Yeager and junior Brooke Bazeley who were honored as Wisconsin Honorable Mentions for the NCWIT Aspirations in Computing Award at a ceremony at the Milwaukee School of Engineering on Sunday, May 1. The ceremony celebrated 138 students from high schools across the state of Wisconsin.

Both girls have completed an array of computer science courses at Whitewater High School and have been key members of the programming teams that have competed at MSOE and Marquette University. In addition, Guin served as the team captain for the Aerospace Jam Drone Team this year, and Brooke is a member of the programming team for Ferradermis, Whitewater High School’s FIRST Robotics Team #6574.

The awards ceremony featured guest speakers from the world of information technology, a question and answer period with people working in the field, and an opportunity for award recipients to network.

For more information on the Aspirations in Computing Awards program, visit https://ncwit.org/k-12/.

Article Submitted by Laura Masbruch
Whitewater High School Computer Science Teacher and Banner Volunteer
lmasbruch@wwusd.org

This Week’s City Meetings (Updated with Landmarks Commission & Whitewater Fire Dept. Inc.)

City of Whitewater Equal Opportunities Commission – Monday @ 5:00 p.m.
VIRTUAL MEETING AGENDA
MONDAY MAY 2, 2022 5:00 PM
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://meet.goto.com/709902797
You can also dial in using your phone.
1 (408) 650-3123
Access Code: 709-902-797
Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts: https://meet.goto.com/install

City of Whitewater Common Council – Tuesday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda includes update on lakes dredging project, Update on work being done in Walton Oaks Park and Effigy Mounds, and Possible action on Release and Employment Disposition Agreement between City of Whitewater and City of Whitewater Police Chief.
This will be an IN PERSON and a VIRTUAL MEETING.
Citizens are welcome (and encouraged) to join us via computer, smart phone, or telephone.
Citizen participation is welcome during topic discussion periods.
Join from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone or Android device:
Please click this URL to join.
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88002144924?pwd=RlMzakVSRFZXRHduMTRDUWJ6R2hFdz09
Passcode: 716452
Or join by phone:
Dial 1 301 715 8592
Webinar ID: 880 0214 4924
Passcode: 716452

Whitewater Unified School District School Board – Special Meeting – Tuesday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda (Click on “meetings” in upper right corner.)
Whitewater High School Library
534 South Elizabeth Street
———————————————–
6:30 p.m. via Zoom Online
– URL: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83000977917?pwd=ZHlsTVFFZDZJWWdCc1ZPWE5EaW1FUT09
– Passcode: 493080
———————————————-
– Dial-in: 1-312-626-6799
– Webinar ID: 830 0097 7917
– Passcode: 493080

City of Whitewater Landmarks Commission – Thursday @ 6:00 p.m.
Agenda
Cravath Lakefront Room
312 Whitewater Street
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://meet.goto.com/457331381
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (408) 650-3123
Access Code: 457-331-381

City of Whitewater Police and Fire Commission Meeting – Thursday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda

City of Whitewater Municipal Building
Community Room- First Floor
312 W. Whitewater St.
This will be an IN PERSON MEETING as well as a VIRTUAL MEETING
Please join my meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://meet.goto.com/295250101
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (872) 240-3212
Access Code: 295-250-101

Annual Board of Directors Meeting
Whitewater Fire Department, Inc Business Meeting
Thursday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda
Location: WFD Meeting Room
This meeting will have a virtual viewing only option.
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone :
meet.google.com/dqs-zuof-afs
You can also dial in using your phone
United States:
Meeting ID: +1 478-419-3191
Passcode: 171 330 516#

The Chapter Story – Chapter 4: “The Shellback Chiropractor” – Clifford Witte

The Chapter Story — Chapter 4: “The Shellback Chiropractor” — Clifford Witte

By Sherrie Benes
Whitewater Banner volunteer staff
whitewaterbanner@gmail.com

Acknowledgement: “I would dedicate my story to my wife Beulah (Billy) and my children.”

Introduction: When commenting on this man’s beautiful family he had on display behind his chair, he chuckled and said, “I think they’re very nice.” Then, with some emotion in his voice, he said, “I really appreciate hearing that.” 

I knew before interviewing this kind man, it was going to be a beautiful, interesting story, retold from his 100 year old book….enjoy!

“Did I milk cows? Of course! Everyone milked cows in Mt. Horeb. It was all dairy farming out there, you know,” he answered when asked. “We milked 30 or 40 cows by hand. It took a time, yes it did …” 

Clifford Witte was the youngest of three siblings, who was born on September 13, 1921, in Mount Horeb, Wisconsin on a 160-acre farm that his grandparents owned. When recalling his childhood, he commented, “Mother ran the outfit and was very precise! We always sat around the table for meals, with a table prayer, that we had to take part of. Father, he just made sure we were there to work!”

His childhood did consist of some fun memories besides work, that he shared!

“We had a creek behind our farm that we would dam up with stones and rocks to make a swimming hole! Our cousins would come from the next farm over to join us. We had a lot of fun in that old swimming hole!” 

(This memory must be the reason he loves living on the lake now!)

When it came to his schooling, he recalled how he would have to walk three miles to get to his one room schoolhouse, which held eight grades. “We had a strict teacher, who was an old maid,” he said with a chuckle. I asked if he behaved in school, (after he had disclosed that this strict teacher also had a yardstick’!) “Of course not!” he said laughing. 

“So, what did you do, to find yourself in trouble?”

“I’d prefer not to say!” he answered with another chuckle!

(It is worth noting that Cliff was the champion speller of the Spelling Bee competition, held against three other country schools!) 

After his graduation, and with the start of WWII, many of these young men found themselves being drafted. When Cliff went to the recruitment center, he was asked if he would mind serving in the Navy. At this time, his older brothers were already enlisted, one in the Marine Corps and the other in the Army, so he agreed with the recruitment officer, and joined the Navy.

“I had a lovely time in boot camp,” he said. Since I’ve never heard of anyone referring to boot camp as lovely, the look on my face must have told him to explain! “Well, it was a nice time,” he said. “I was put in the Choir Company, and we went around to different high schools to sing. We would also perform on the radio, and of course we would have to open and close ceremonies.” 

“Oh!” I exclaimed, “you’re a singer?” He laughed and said “well, that’s using the word loosely!”

After boot camp, Cliff soon found himself boarding the USS Osage while stationed in California. “We went west to east, through the Panama Canal. Then we had to do a shakedown of the ship in the Mediterranean, meaning, we had to try the ship out, to see if everything worked! We’d fire the cannons, then take the ship to do quick turns, just to see if the ship was seaworthy!”  he recalled. “Do a dry run, you know!”

During the war, they found themselves sailing all over the Pacific Ocean. He recalled the Philippines, China, Japan, New Caledonia, but without many ports of call he said, since they were always on the move. 

“Our ship was all the way from Shanghai, China, to the Philippines to Okinawa, and to Luzon in the Philippines. We even got close to Australia,” he recalled, which brought him to an amusing story!

Laughing, he said, “That’s when I became a ‘Shellback’!” 

I, not knowing what he was referencing, had to question what caused him such amusement! “Well, before you cross the equator, you’re a ‘Pollywog.’ When you go across the equator you get initiated and then you become a ‘Shellback!’ You never heard of that?” he asked me. “That’s an old Navy tradition!” he said with a chuckle! 

“No, I never heard of that!” I replied. “Does everyone on the ship get initiated then?” 

Apparently amused with my lack of Navy knowledge, he smiled before continuing. “No, there were some men on the ship that were ‘Old Salts!’ They were the ones who held the initiation. They built a big tube of canvas that you would have to crawl through, and of course you were on your knees and hands with your butt up in the air! And those ‘Old Salts’ would give you a whap on the butt till you moved along, you know! Well, I made it through!” he said with a chuckle! 

While listening to more of his travels during the war, I found myself wondering about his two brothers he had mentioned, who were also enlisted.

“Did you ever wonder where your brothers were during this time?” I asked. “Well, I corresponded with my parents, and I knew that all three of us were in the Pacific. Then I found out that my oldest brother, who was in the Marines, was stationed in Guam, after it was taken away from the Japanese. Our ship happened to stop in Guam during this time, so I got off hoping to see if I could find him,” he said with a smile. “I inquired around, as to where my brother might be, and a guy said, ‘he’s down at the supply depot right now, but his desk is right here in this building.’ So, I stood at his desk and waited for him.” 

As he started to chuckle, he finished the story, “when he came up from what he was doing down at the hangars, he was taken by surprise to see a sailor standing at his desk, on a Marine base!  But after he recognized me, he said, ‘What the hell is a sailor doing at my desk!’ He said he couldn’t believe it!” 

After his service in the Navy, Cliff went on to college at the Palmer College of Chiropractic in Iowa, where he would eventually be introduced to his wife. “How did you meet Billy?”

Chuckling he said, “well, that’s another story! We met on a blind date! She was a secretary in the city, and I thought when I first saw her, now that’s a pretty nice lady!” 

On November 9, 1946, Cliff and his ‘pretty nice lady’ Beulah Ohburg, became husband and wife. He completed his studies, a year after their marriage, and they decided to purchase a home in Platteville, Wisconsin. This would soon serve as both their home, and his chiropractic business. 

Cliff continued his practice in Platteville, while they raised their family, until his semi-retirement when they moved to Whitewater. 

After purchasing their retirement home on Whitewater Lake in 1976, he decided to set up a chiropractic office in town, at 222 W. North Street, (which he addressed precisely without thought!) where he served the Whitewater community for another 10 years.

After the loss of his beloved wife Billy, Cliff still manages to spread joy and love to those who surround him, even to a stranger like me …

Before leaving that day, I asked if he had any advice on how to live to be over 100. 

(It was rather a simple answer, coming from a wise Old Salt!)

“Just breathe,” he said, as his laughter once again, filled the air …

A special thank you to Cliff Witte, for sharing his story for our feature “Chapter Story!”

If you know of anyone who would like to share their story, or your own, please contact me at: sherbenes@gmail.com. Subject Line: Chapter Story

I would love to meet you! ~Sherrie

Our thanks, also, to the sponsors of this Chapter Story!

Dr. Luke Smith
1139 W. Main Street
262-753-0017