BLUE TIP NEWS

John Haprian John Haprian

Wadsworth High Senior College Scholarship Award

The Blue Tip Committee is working very diligently to ensure that this year's Festival is better than ever, and as you know, we give out thousands of dollars to organizations in need around the Wadsworth community each year.

This year, we are very excited to add another facet to our giving, as we have introduced the first Annual Blue Tip Scholarship – to be awarded to a deserving Wadsworth Senior at the Scholarship Night held on May 16th, 2024.

Your financial support in our efforts makes an enormous difference in the lives of these students, and we appreciate all you do to give back in every way, so your tax-deductible donations for this undertaking are greatly appreciated.  Please consider any financial contribution towards this effort, and no amount is considered too small.  

Checks may be made out to the Wadsworth Blue Tip Festival, with “Scholarship” noted on the Memo line, and mailed to the following address:  Wadsworth Blue Tip Festival, 291 Crestwood, Wadsworth, OH 44281, or go to https://www.bluetipfestival.com/sponsoring and click on the “Wadsworth High Senior Scholarship” option.

The Committee is grateful to live in this amazing city, and we look forward to many years of service to you and our graduating seniors here in Wadsworth.  Thank you for your generosity!

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John Haprian John Haprian

2022 Wadsworth Blue Tip Blood Drive

Every two seconds, someone in the U.S. needs blood. Blood is essential to help patients survive surgeries, cancer treatment, chronic illnesses, and traumatic injuries. This lifesaving care starts with one person making a generous donation. The need for blood is constant. But only about 3% of age-eligible people donate blood yearly. You can help make sure that supply meets demand.

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John Haprian John Haprian

Blue Tip Festival COVID-19 Update

For 47 years, the Blue Tip Festival has been a tradition in the City of Wadsworth. A huge part of the celebration is the Blue Tip Parade. Every year the street is lined with citizens, shoulder to shoulder, waiting to see the bands, the floats, and what treats end up in their goody bags. The parade is a celebration of Wadsworth. It is an opportunity for local businesses to give back to the community that supports them, for politicians to see the constituency, and a chance for neighbors to come together for a common celebration of community. It is a beloved and important event and I take its stewardship very seriously.

As we pass the first of May, we are usually at the beginning of the end of the parade preparation. Typically we will have almost 100 entries to the parade waiting to be put in the lineup order, however today we have only 38. We normally have our sponsors, and volunteers for the parade locked down, but now we have most taking the same “wait and see” approach which we have been taking with all our life decisions in these strange times. I do not blame anyone for not committing. The uncertainty of what the landscape will look like in one month makes it difficult if not impossible to know what position we will find ourselves.

We have been waiting for answers to reveal themselves, but we have to come to the realization that they may not. The best historical lesson I could find was the story of the Liberty Loan Parade of 1918. The City of Philadelphia held a parade in September of 1918 to celebrate the return of our troops from their fighting in the First World War. Earlier in the spring, the Spanish Flu had found its way to the United States from Europe with our returning soldiers. In part because of the low number of cases in Philadelphia, the Liberty Loan Parade went forward as scheduled. Within a week of the parade, there were over six hundred new cases of the deadly virus. Within six months, 16,000 Philadelphians died of the flu.

The hard truth is that having a low number of cases is not a sound reason to allow mass gatherings like the Blue Tip Parade to proceed. In fact, it is quite the opposite. When you have low numbers of people infected with a virus as communicable as Covid-19, not having mass gatherings is most important. That is the time when numbers can be controlled and the spread contained. As Philadelphia found out 100 years ago, once you have exceeded a critical number of infected, the bell cannot be unrung.

For those reasons, there will not be a Blue Tip Parade in 2020. But I would remind everyone that the reasons we have the parade are still here. We still have a vibrant community that takes care of each other and who are proud of what we stand for. This year we will continue to celebrate us coming together as a community. This year however, we do it by staying at home.

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