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.”

City Continues Partnership with Whitewater Foundation for Community Projects

Editor’s note: The following information was provided by the City of Whitewater.

The City of Whitewater is proud to partner with the Whitewater Community
Foundation to give people an outlet to donate money to community projects.

Over the past several years, the Whitewater Community Foundation (WCF) has assisted in completing projects
including Treyton’s Field of Dreams, the adult playground/workout area in Starin Park, the Frawley Family
Amphitheater and most recently a storybook walk for children. The Foundation is able to assist in making these
projects come to light with donor management and marketing.

Recently, the WCF approved and setup a conduit account for additional funds to help the progress of the
Cravath and Trippe Lake Improvements.

“Allowing for residents and citizens to donate to an account specifically for the lakes improvement will help
enhance the overall project,” said Parks and Recreation Director, Eric Boettcher. “Funds from this account can
be used in the beautification of the lakes along with preserving wildlife. It is amazing to see the love and
admiration people have for the lakes wanting to help restore them to what they once were.”

In addition to assisting with donations, the WCF provides scholarships for students who attend Whitewater
High School and intend to further their educations. They also offer Community Action Grants for projects that
benefit various segments of the population. Also, the Whitewater Banner, a local online news source for
anything Whitewater, was gifted to the WCF to ensure the Banner would continue to serve the community once
the original owner stepped down.

“Without the support from the Whitewater Community Foundation and donors, we would not be able to make
these projects come to fruition,” said Cameron Clapper, Whitewater City Manager. “We are proud to work with
this great organization to continue improving our community.”
At this time, donations can be made to WCF for the following projects: Cravath and Trippe Lake Improvement
Fund, Starin park All-Inclusive Playground Equipment, City of Whitewater Bark Park, Whitewater Banner,
Scholarships, Arts Beautification and Culture, Quality of Life and Recreation, Education/WUSD, Human
Services, Undesignated Fund, Community Space Fund, and the Cravath Lakefront Frawley Family
Amphitheater.

To donate to a desired project, visit https://whitewatercommunityfoundation.org/donate/.

“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!

This Week’s City Meetings (Updated with WWUSD Policy Review Comm.)

City of Whitewater Equal Opportunities Commission Monday @ 5:00 p.m.
VIRTUAL MEETING AGENDA: Discussion on provision of city materials, signs, web sites and meetings in multiple
languages given the number of community members for whom English is a second
language. and Discussion of programs and strategies for education regarding social equity and how
to promote it in Whitewater.
MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 2021, 5:00 PM
Please join my meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/950177637
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (571) 317‐3112
Access Code: 950‐177‐637
New to GoToMeeting? Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts:
https://global.gotomeeting.com/install/950177637

Community Development Authority Board of Directors Special Meeting – Monday @ 5:30 p.m. SPECIAL MEETING
Agenda includes closed session (possibly followed by open session) regarding Deliberating Sale of a portion of Lot 1, Certified Survey Map No. 4442 located on East Main Court (Part of Tax Parcel No. /A444200001) .
This meeting will be held IN PERSON and VIRTUALLY.
Location: Municipal Building, Second Floor, Cravath Lakefront Room
312 W. Whitewater St.
Or join this meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/709915685
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (408) 650-3123
Access Code: 709-915-685

Irvin L. Young Memorial Library Board of Trustees – Monday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda includes library expansion project
This meeting will be both in-person and virtual
Irvin L. Young Memorial Library
Community Room
431 W. Center Street
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84018798489?pwd=UjBGZ1F6a2tTZ0JUR3Z6cjdQd0dYUT09
Meeting ID: 840 1879 8489
Passcode: qzeE2ziF
One tap mobile
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Dial by your location
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)


City of Whitewater Common Council – Tuesday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda includes update on lakes drawdown project, library presentation on expansion project, discussion and possible action regarding masks at public meetings as well as meeting format in the future, and closed session (possibly followed by open session) regarding proposed development agreement with Midwest WI, LLC.
This will be an IN PERSON MEETING as well as a VIRTUAL MEETING
Citizens are welcome (and encouraged) to join us in person, or via computer, smart phone,
or telephone. Citizen participation is welcome during topic discussion periods.
You are invited to a Zoom webinar.
Please click the link below to join the webinar:
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88159011168?pwd=NG4zVTljeE82RnQxMmxXRndZeVpIdz09
Passcode: 631849
Or One tap mobile :
US: +13017158592,,88159011168#,,,,631849# or +13126266799,,88159011168#,,,,631849#
Or Telephone:
Dial 1 312 626 6799 or 1 833 548 0276 (Toll Free)
Webinar ID: 881 5901 1168
Passcode: 631849

City of Whitewater Parks & Recreation Board – Wednesday @ 5:30 p.m.
Agenda includes East Gate Scuplture Garden Area Landscape Plan and 2022 facility rental fees
                        Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.                
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/156466749
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (224) 501-3412

Whitewater Unified School District Policy Review Committee – Thursday @ 8:00 a.m.
AgendaClick on “meetings” in upper right hand corner.
Whitewater High School Library
534 South Elizabeth Street, Whitewater, Wisconsin




#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!​ 

Open call: AUDITIONS for “A Place with the Pigs,” the first play of the UW-W Theatre/Dance season Actors / Dancers / Musicians

A Place with the Pigs by Athol Fugard

Auditions will take place through video submission and face to face. You can try-out either way. A callback audition is also possible for this production and, if needed, you will be notified. Otherwise, casting will be announced by 9/6.
•       Video audition submissions will be accepted until Friday, September 3
•       Live auditions will take place from 7:30PM-9:30PM on September 3 in the Barnett Theatre on the UW Whitewater campus (Greenhill Center of the Arts)
If you will be submitting a video audition please record and submit video to the production director, Bruce Cohen (CohenBe@UWW.edu).

•       PERFORMANCE DATES October 12 – 15 @ 7:30 pm & October 16 @ 2:00 pm

•       REHEARSALS: Begin September 6. Monday – Friday from 7:00 – 10:00 pm (some Saturday and Sunday meetings will be scheduled as well. Weekend availability is necessary during the week prior to opening).

*This is a live, face-to-face theatrical production. If needed, we will shift to adhere to UW Whitewater public health mandates. This may change with short notice and changes could include masking, distancing and virtual technologies.

This is an open call and the entire campus and community are invited.
You do not have to be a Theatre/Dance major or UW Whitewater student to audition. Prior experience is not necessary. Additionally, this production will be cast exclusive of gender definition. Regardless of identity, you are invited to audition for any of the roles available.

Reminder for UW-Whitewater BFA & Pre-BFA Performance Students:
ALL admitted BFA-Performance students and ALL pre-BFA-Performance students are required to audition for all productions and accept any production assignment as given.
https://u22801716.ct.sendgrid.net/ls/click?upn=6eKk08n4xmq6mt3QLrEk7FVnvjs2M0EU-2Bx9q0w9Gdnu2GZQzNywDxIWv37rqWki8q3L2-2Bqw2n62UH4zqtQ-2FNHwewT-2FHa7TKf7mCAkyBmt5R3jvB1RzHtxnV-2F5mNmn3-2FEm5gwubgizzGtX2QWBv91CA-3D-3DDlo7_9ZUy4zKjEd2L4-2FGECHDqeTV0B9NlGoS4MDyKQBmo5qGzX5ilz7jCqlnOGjn-2BvTUdDKXUAmHZm4oYHE-2FvwPA4UenOlj-2BIW7vGywR2P2-2B-2BdnLOZ9zKySr5NDsuOWCWlKKjeWxPyIz8DOCdpJoe-2BaDCPMw6leygRFxmzExH1lhEK-2FO5nuqvsk4ZPfmq055ghiTNl90R5b77Co8Mtgkv7iOScRuS2r-2F47SkqQeys63Lvgc4qD2yNmjs4ACRqEGHMiwqnu4-2F8KFrYzNuAQIDcdLUQ6jv9ifWsfsi2CJBhdglKfx3vPQwvjL6ySAYCD-2BDm8nFl

Please read the play prior to accepting a role.
If you have any questions that have not been answered, please feel free to contact Bruce Cohen (CohenBe@uww.edu).

PLAY AND CAST BREAKDOWN

A Place with the Pigs by Athol Fugard
The plot of A Place with the Pigs is based on an absurd but true story, this poignant and sometimes hilarious tale is about a Russian soldier who deserted during World War II and spent ten years hiding in his pigsty. As the play begins, Pavel Ivanovitch Navrotsky is preparing to rejoin the world and throw himself on the mercy of his countrymen, but his wife has used his old uniform for rags and he refuses to wear the suit she has pressed. Instead, she goes alone to the ceremony to unveil a monument to the war dead and returns reporting that the townspeople wept at the mention of him and his martyr’s death fighting fascism. Also, a local bigwig proposed to her now that she is officially a widow. What should she do? Will Pavel Ivanovitch ever be able to leave the pigsty, or is it his only safe haven?

CAST
•       Pavel: Pavel is a Red Army deserter. At the beginning of the play Pavel is a decade into self-imprisonment in the sty. Age: 28-38. Pavel owned a pig farm before conscription. Pavel may sing and dance.
•       Praskovya: Praskovya is Pavel’s spouse and enables the self-imprisonment. Praskovya has been running the farm and concealing Pavel from the citizens of the town. Age: 25-
35. Praskovya will sing and dance
•       The Pigs: The Pigs are both fantastical and tangible. Because of this, the production intends to include a dance corps of 2 to 6 that will portray these elements.
If you are auditioning for Pavel, Praskovya or the Pigs/Dance Corps, please prepare the following (this applies regardless of video or live):   
•       A two-minute monologue from a contemporary play or a two-minute cutting from A Place with the Pigs.
•       16-32 bars of an a Capella folk song 
•       A detail of your movement/dance training and experience (if you are able, please include a brief segment of dance/movement on your video submission; or a link to an example of your work).

Musicians: Music and sound will be an important part of this production. We would like to include live instrumentation on stage. Musicians will be considered part of the performance ensemble. 
•       If you are auditioning for live instrumentation, please submit your performance resume and sample of your work. We are especially looking for players comfortable with improvisation and familiar with interwar jazz and Eastern European/Slavic folk styles.

Dr. Brian L. Frey Receives Distinguished Alumni Citation from Ripon College

Ripon College honors significant alumni achievements

RIPON — Ripon College honored outstanding alumni during its recent Alumni Weekend. Because of the canceled ceremony in the summer of 2020, honorees from both 2020 and 2021 were recognized.

Brian L. Frey, Class of 1991, received the Distinguished Alumni Citation. His hometown is Whitewater, Wisconsin. He is a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an inventor with six U.S. patents. He has 50 publications which have been cited more than 2,000 times. He frequently works with Ripon College chemistry faculty and students and also with fourth- and fifth-graders to “instill in them some excitement and knowledge of science.”

At Ripon College, he graduated summa cum laude with a major in chemistry and a minor in mathematics and was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa. He was an intramural doubles badminton champion. Brian won outstanding chemistry student awards in each of his four years, including the Leone Oyster Chemistry Award in his junior year and the Guy and Maude Russell Chemistry Scholarship Award in his senior year. He also was awarded a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. He received a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Organizing Your Life with School Age Children & Teaching Them to Organize Theirs – In-person & Virtual from the Library

Organizing Your Life with School Age Children and Teaching Them to Organize Theirs

Wednesday, August 18th at 6:00 p.m.
Attend this program in-person at the Irvin L. Young Memorial Library.
Or register at whitewaterlibrary.org to attend virtually.

This presentation is a perfect mix of some basic oganizational tips for people to apply at home and important information to share with kids so that they can more easily organize the information received at school. We look at what it means for a child to be responsible. Then we explore specific organizational tools that can be applied at home by the adults and serve as a powerful example to the kids. Next, discussion turns to practical examples of what the kids can do to learn to be responsible and organized. Finally, we look at how to maintain the new habits or organization.