Mom’s Gone Missing: When a Parent’s Changing Life Upends Yours – Thurs., Feb. 24

Susan Marshall

(Fort Atkinson Library press release) Author Susan Marshall will discuss her book “Mom’s Gone Missing: when a parent’s changing life upends yours” on Thursday, February 24. There will be a morning presentation at 10:30 a.m. and an evening program at 6:30 p.m. These presentations will take place on Zoom and broadcast to the library’s Facebook page. To register for either of the Zoom presentations go to fortlibrary.org/missing. To watch on Facebook simply login to Facebook and go to the Library’s page at the start time for either presentation.

Three years ago Susan learned her mom, who had Alzheimer’s, went missing when she drove into the Arizona desert and no one could locate her. Susan didn’t know the type of car she had, where her auto insurance was kept or other pertinent details. The police sent out a ‘Silver Alert’ and eventually found her, but there were many lessons learned on this journey.

Susan will share her own experiences about this important topic. She shares many tips for when you find yourself a caregiver of a loved one and how each of us can organize our lives so we have good files of important documents.

This story is insightful, often humorous and important as readers may need to traverse a multitude of bumps in the road as a personal caregiver to their parents, as Susan did–and what to look out for when they do.

This Week’s City & School Board Meetings (Updated: Amended Council Agenda and WUSD Calendar Committee)

WUSD Legislative Breakfast – Monday @ 7:30 a.m.
For agenda, click on “meetings” in upper right corner and select this meeting.
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86811931015?pwd=dzdTNFRMYVIxQWhxb3dSZ2g3QXRqUT09
Passcode: 862148
Dial-in: 1-312-626-6799
Webinar ID: 868 1193 1015
Passcode: 862148

City of Whitewater Irvin L. Young Memorial Library Board of Trustees – Monday @ 6:00 p.m.
Agenda includes report from StudioGC on conceptual plan for library expansion
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/996845301
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (408) 650-3123
Access Code: 996-845-301
New to GoToMeeting? Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts:
https://global.gotomeeting.com/install/996845301

City of Whitewater Parks & Recreation BoardWednesday @ 5:30 p.m.
Agenda includes goose management planning and WAFC open swim guidelines
Please join my meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/936709453
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (408) 650-3123
Access Code: 936-709-453
New to GoToMeeting? Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts:
https://global.gotomeeting.com/install/936709453

WHITEWATER FIRE DEPARTMENT, INC. – BUSINESS MEETINGWednesday @ 6:00 p.m.
Agenda: Closed session to review a decision to place a member on probation
Please join the meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://meet.google.com/bfi-ktay-wnp
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 540-669-0026
Access Code:
139 633 518
New to Google Meets? Get the app now and be ready when your first meeting starts:
https://meet.google.com/bfi-ktay-wnp

Whitewater Unified School District Calendar Committee – Thursday @ 3:45 p.m.
Click here for agenda, then click on “meetings” in upper right corner
via Zoom Online
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89281262219?pwd=ekJxOW8zWHlUV0FNdjNadWlGaFVyZz09
– Passcode: 494012
Dial-in: 1-312-626-6799
Webinar ID: 892 8126 2219
– Passcode: 494012

City of Whitewater Common Council – Thursday @ 6:30 p.m.
Agenda includes update on lakes drawdown project, presentation regarding possible extension of Tax Increment Financing District 4, and (new item) Prohibiting Smoking and Vaping within 20 feet of
Playground Equipment or Skate Park Equipment in Public Parks.
You are invited to a Zoom webinar.
Please click the link below to join the webinar:
https://zoom.us/j/96064141555?pwd=WGRyK0ZXOUJ2UnNVNmNJempwQlcxUT09
Passcode: 907305
Or Telephone:
Dial (for higher quality, dial a number based on your current location):
US: +1 929 205 6099
Webinar ID: 960 6414 1555
Passcode: 907305


League of Women Voters – Whitewater Area to Host Program on Diversity & the Women’s Suffrage Movement

The League of Women Voters-Whitewater Area invites the public to attend a virtual presentation, “Diversity Influences in the Women’s Suffrage Movement,” on Thursday, February 18, 2021 at 6:30 p.m. Join Dr. Dwight C. Watson, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Chancellor, as we explore women’s suffrage, with a focus on the experience of African American women. The struggle for the vote looks very different through the diversity lens. Dr. Watson will also address the suffragist movement in Wisconsin, and he looks forward to a lively Q&A session afterwards, in which he can also address the current state of affairs.

Due to COVID-19, this event will be virtual.
To attend live, please join the webinar by using the URL: http://bit.ly/lwv-ww_diversity. Passcode: 140443.
Or, join us by telephone: Dial (312) 626-6799, Webinar ID: 966 4800 4858, Passcode: 140443.
The event will also be livestreamed on the LWV-WW Facebook page (facebook.com/lwvwhitewater.org), as well as recorded and made available to the public afterwards.

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!

Happy #FlashbackFriday and an early Valentine’s Day from the Whitewater Historical Society! Shown: Two Whitewater Valentines of the past

Pictured here are two Whitewater Valentines of the past: Harlan P. and Ada M. (Daring) Goodman.
Harlan (1843-1937) and Ada (1858-1949) were married in July 1901 in Whitewater’s Methodist Church. Both had moved to the area with their families at a young age from New York State. They resided until their deaths just down the block from the church on Prairie Street. A Civil War veteran, Harlan was especially proud of having been present for Abraham Lincoln’s second inaugural address. Locally, Harlan owned a photography studio, operating out of both Whitewater and Palmyra for over 30 years. Many of the Society’s photographs from the early twentieth century feature his studio’s stamp.

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

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!​

Local Students on UW-Oshkosh Dean’s List, Honor Roll



OSHKOSH, Wis. (February 12, 2021) – University of Wisconsin Oshkosh officials have announced students who qualified for the Dean’s List and Honor Roll in fall 2020 across all three campuses (Oshkosh, Fond du Lac and Fox Cities). To qualify, a student must have been enrolled in a minimum of 12 credits (excluding pass/fail courses). The term GPA requirement for University Honor Roll is 3.3; the term GPA requirement for Dean’s List is 3.75 out of a possible 4.0.

Whitewater, WI

 Hannah Allen, Sophomore, Dean’s List
 James DuVal, Sophomore, Honor Roll
 Michael Fernandez, Junior, Honor Roll

UW-Whitewater web resource enriches Hmong education across the U.S.

The work of many hands and minds has made possible a virtual well of ideas related to Hmong language and culture open to anyone who wishes to drink from it.

With help from the Heritage Language Education project at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, teaching professionals from across the U.S. came together to develop the Hmong Language Resource Hub website, which launched in November of 2020. 

Teachers from eight public school districts, six public charter schools and four public colleges and universities from Wisconsin, Minnesota and California helped develop the website, which offers free, downloadable lessons that can be used by teachers to improve student-centered learning, particularly through Hmong language arts and culture. The site’s literacy, language, history, customs, arts and music lessons are also available to families, with the goal of supporting Hmong families whose children’s schools do not offer Hmong education for their children and of creating a new generation of bilingual speakers. In 2015 the Pew Research Center counted almost 300,000 Hmong Americans living in the country. 

Hmong, like Spanish, is considered a “heritage language” in the U.S. — a language that is used at home and in the community. Heritage speakers grow up with a range of abilities in languages other than English and have the potential for acquiring strength in those languages. But because heritage speakers do not generally have access to bilingual education in school, students and their families struggle to keep from losing their languages, which become steadily replaced by English. 

UW-Whitewater was an early leader in teacher training by expanding its existing professional programs to include Spanish heritage language education, led by Assistant Professor of Curriculum and Instruction Jenna Cushing-Leubner. 

“Teachers use their summers to do deep dives into their professional development,” said Cushing-Leubner. “Professional development is lifelong learning. Teachers do their undergraduate and master’s degree programs to become teachers. But they don’t stop there. What we know about learning and teaching changes and we continue to learn more about how to teach in more effective ways.”

The development of the Hmong Language Resource Hub was sparked by Pang Yang, a Hmong Heritage Language Teacher and former English as a Second Language teacher in Osseo Area Schools north of Minneapolis. Yang heard from students in her classes and their parents that they wanted to have the same opportunities for learning their home language that was available to their Spanish-speaking friends in school. She urged the families to organize themselves and ask the school district for more resources.

The parents brought together school board members, school department heads and other important stakeholders. The school district received a grant to start a heritage language course in the high school, taught by Yang. One of Yang’s colleagues knew about Cushing-Leubner’s work on a heritage language curriculum for students who spoke Spanish at home.

“Pang is an incredible educator, a visionary and, really, a powerhouse,” said Cushing-Leubner. “She had been traveling and connecting with Hmong teachers in California at the time to reach out and get sources for ideas and curriculum for this class. That’s how difficult it is to find materials.”

Cushing-Leubner said Hmong teachers and communities are dispersed across the country, with the largest concentrations in California, Minnesota and Wisconsin. In schools where Hmong programming has been taught, the school districts often control the individual property rights to the lessons. The Hmong language is taught less frequently.

“All of these factors make it very difficult to get materials,” said Cushing-Leubner. “The teachers knew the language and loved working with young people. They needed curriculum and they needed units.”

Yang visited UW-Whitewater and began a collaboration with Cushing-Leubner in the Heritage Language Education project. The effort assembled Hmong K-12 teachers, higher education instructors from four different universities, community-based language teachers, publishers, artists, cultural councils, linguists and others. A grant from the Corporation for National and Community Service funded the work, along with mini-grants from UW-Whitewater’s College of Education and Professional Studies.

The effort resulted in the Hmong Language Resource Hub website. Lessons on the resource hub explore Hmong dialects and the tradition of oral storytelling. In the history section, a lesson uses interviewing, guest speakers, and reflections to teach about the Hmong New Year. Music lessons explore Hmong instruments and vocal music. The site also has teaching and learning standards for Hmong language, language arts, literacy, and culture that have been created by teams of Hmong educators and community experts and can be used by current teachers or by schools to begin to offer Hmong courses and lessons, according to Cushing-Leubner.

“The website is the hub for all of those things,” said Cushing-Leubner. “It’s living and continuing to expand and grow. In the three years this has grown, I have just been blown away by the creativity and the power of these educators once there was just a little bit of opportunity to connect with each other.”

Cushing-Leubner said the Heritage Language Education program at UW-Whitewater offers five professional development courses in the College of Education and professional Studies and is now offering professional development for teachers to participate in courses in the race and ethnic studies minor in the College of Letters and Sciences, with support from Dean Frank Goza and Professor of Languages and Literatures Pilar Melero.

“We have had cohorts of teachers who have gone through our programming, becoming leaders in the field as practitioners and moving into social media with other heritage language teachers to create their own communities,” said Cushing-Leubner. 

More importantly, they are practicing heritage language education where it matters most — in the classroom.

“Anybody who works with multilingual students knows it’s connected to the community where kids are being loved most dearly,” said Cushing-Leubner.  “It’s community-based and community-driven. It’s real-world learning.”

For more information on the Heritage Language Education program at UW-Whitewater, contact Assistant Professor of Curriculum and Instruction Jenna Cushing-Leubner at cushingj@uww.edu or 262-472-2198.

Whitewater Lions: “The Show Must Go On” Regardless of the Weather – 45th Fish-A-Ree, Pancake Breakfast & Online Auction this Sunday, Feb. 14

Whitewater Lions are holding their 45th Fish-A-Ree this Sunday, February 14. A comment on their Facebook page asked, “With the weather, will this still be going on?” In response, the Lions said, “The show must go on.” Things will be a little different this year. The Valentine Breakfast will a Drive-Thru Breakfast. There will be a best-of-day fish prizes, and the Bucket Raffles will be replaced by an Online Auction. See below for info on the breakfast, the Fish-A-Ree, and the Online Auction that runs from Feb. 14-21. Check the Whitewater Lions Club Facebook page for frequent updates.

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Local Students Graduate from UW-Madison

MADISON, Wis. (February 11, 2021) – Nearly 3,000 students received degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison during a virtual commencement ceremony on Dec. 13, 2020.

The ceremony, forced online because of the Coronavirus pandemic, was for doctoral, bachelor’s, master’s and law graduates.

Soccer star Rose Lavelle shared several life lessons as keynote speaker, at one point calling her alma mater “the greatest university to ever grace this planet.”

“Sometimes we’re prepared for these moments, and other times they smack us in the face and hit us out of nowhere,” Lavelle said.

John Felder, Sunday’s alumni speaker, recounted how he and many of his fellow students advocated for change on campus five decades ago during the 1969 Black Student Strike. The strike led to the creation of the Afro-American Studies Department, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary on campus this academic year.

“It has fostered deeper understanding of our intertwined cultures,” Felder said of the department. “It continues to speak of our rich diversity. We are very proud of the role we played in this achievement.”

In her commencement remarks, Chancellor Rebecca Blank praised the nearly 3,000 winter graduates for overcoming great challenges to get to this moment. The pandemic will shape this generation, she said, just as wars and terrorist attacks shaped prior ones.

“And no matter what direction your work takes you, I hope you will carry with you a commitment to what we call the Wisconsin Idea – a commitment to use our knowledge, skills, and innovative ideas in ways that will improve people’s lives,” she said.

An estimated 2,932 degrees were conferred (2,117 undergraduate, 526 master’s and 289 doctoral).

For more information about UW-Madison, visit http://www.wisc.edu. View the ceremony at https://www.wisc.edu/commencement/

Here are the degree recipients from your area:

Whitewater, WI

 Brenda Froemming, College of Letters and Science, Doctor of Philosophy, Spanish, ,
 Jan Maroske, College of Engineering, Bachelor of Science-Mechanical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, ,
 Huong Vo, College of Letters and Science, Bachelor of Science, Communication Sciences and Disorders, ,

Two WHS Grads are on the UW-W Women’s Swimming & Diving Roster

UW-Whitewater Women’s Swimming and Diving Announces 2021 Roster

WHITEWATER, WI (02/04/2021)– The University of Wisconsin-Whitewater men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams will start an unconventional 2021 season this Friday (2/5) at UW-Eau Claire for the program’s first of four duals against Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference teams over the next five weeks.

The following student-athletes from WHS will compete for the 2021 UW-Whitewater women’s swimming and diving team: Anna Yeazel of Whitewater (Whitewater High School), a senior majoring in physical education, and Brianna Zimdars of Whitewater (Whitewater High School), a freshman majoring in general business.

The Warhawk men and women each placed third at the 2020 WIAC Championships, the most recent competition for both teams. Renata Schlomann (New Berlin, Wis./Divine Savior Holy Angels) of the women’s team qualified for the 2020 NCAA Championship, which was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In 2019-20, UW-W swimmers combined for 22 top-three conference finishes, 28 new entries on the UW-Whitewater All-Time Top 10 lists and four new school records.

Elise Knoche returns for her third season as head coach of both the men’s and women’s programs. She helped the Warhawks capture 14 WIAC individual championships during her first two seasons.

The 2021 season includes four WIAC duals, including home meets on Feb. 20 against UW-Oshkosh and March 6 against UW-La Crosse. Both meets will be live streamed, with links becoming available soon on the swimming and diving schedule pages. The 2021 WIAC Championship has been canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Seniors Skyler Budny (Wheaton, Ill./Glenbard South), Olivia Theobald (Peoria, Ill./Dunlap) and Anna Yeazel (Whitewater, Wis./Whitewater) lead the Warhawk women into the 2021 season.

Budny is a four-time WIAC medalist, including three in the 1,650-yard freestyle and one in the 400-yard IM. She ranks among the program’s all-time Top 10 in the 1,000- and 1,650-yard freestyle events.

Theobald has reached the WIAC podium 21 times during her decorated career, including six times as a conference relay champion and three times as a conference runner-up. She finished among the top five in seven events in 2020, including four relays and three individual events. Theobald holds four Top 10 individual times or splits in program history.

Yeazel broke through to the WIAC podium in two events last season, placing sixth in the 400-yard IM and seventh in the 200-yard breaststroke. Her 400 IM time of 4:48.74 is the 10th-best personal record in program history. She was named to the WIAC All-Sportsmanship Team in 2020.

Junior Jaclyn Fohlmeister (Lakemoor, Ill./Wauconda) also returns for the Warhawks after tallying career-best times last winter in the 50-yard freestyle, 100-yard freestyle and 100-yard butterfly. Classmate Abby Thompson (De Pere, Wis./De Pere), a three-time conference medalist, placed fourth in the 200-yard butterfly and seventh in the 400-yard IM at last year’s conference meet.

Makenna Clark (Joliet, Ill./Joliet West), Morgan Nabors (Spring Green, Wis./River Valley) and Leanne Stigler (Beloit, Wis./Muskego) enter their second seasons with the program.

Stigler earned second team All-WIAC accolades in the 200-yard individual medley and 400-yard medley relay and collected five WIAC top-five finishes. She ranks among the top 10 in program history in the 100-yard breaststroke, 200-yard breaststroke and 200-yard IM.

Clark and Nabors each competed in the 50- and 100-yard freestyle events at the WIAC Championship as freshmen in 2020.

Newcomers to UW-Whitewater include Kayleigh Denruiter (Brantwood, Wis./Phillips), Amanda Harper (Appleton, Wis./Kimberly), Ciara Hynes (Eureka, Mo./Eureka), Gabby Sponseller (Goshen, Ind./Concord), Meadow Warren (Lake Geneva, Wis./Badger) and Brianna Zimdars (Whitewater, Wis./Whitewater).

For more than 150 years, UW-Whitewater has provided students with the education and training to begin their careers with a solid foundation behind them. The UW-Whitewater is committed to the development of the individual, the growth of personal and professional integrity and respect for diversity and global perspectives. These are met by providing academic and co-curricular programs that emphasize the pursuit of knowledge and understanding and a commitment to service within a safe and secure environment.

Extension Walworth County Presents Gardening Webinar on February 25: “Confessions of a Black Thumb: Plants That I Have Killed (or at Least Seriously Maimed)”

(UW-Extension submission) Join us as we welcome Dr. Brian Hudelson, Director of the UW-Madison Plant Disease Diagnostic Clinic, for his presentation, “Confessions of a Black Thumb: Plants That I Have Killed (or at Least Seriously Maimed).” Learn about Brian’s (aka Dr. Death’s) epic failures in attempting to grow plants in his home garden, either through his encouragement of plant diseases, his insistence on practicing “Darwinian gardening” or through his sheer gardening stupidity. Use these cautionary tales to improve your own gardening skills!

February 25th – 6:00-7:30 p.m.

This will be a virtual webinar via Zoom. It is a free event, but registration is required.

Use the following web address to register: https://go.wisc.edu/fs4qi5

Once registered, you will be sent the webinar connection information the day before the event.

If you have questions about this event, please contact Julie Hill, Horticulture Outreach

Specialist, julie.hill@wisc.edu

To find additional upcoming local and statewide events from Extension, see our calendar: https://extension.wisc.edu/events/ or visit our Extension Walworth County website: https://walworth.extension.wisc.edu/