We should all donate blood

Twice a year, the Webutuck school district holds a blood drive. Thanks to the tireless efforts of organizers Sue Campbell and Rudy Eschbach, the blood drives are consistently very successful.

Both organizers deserve to be recognized and praised for their hard work and their determination, which lead to such productive drives. It was because of Campbell and Eschbach that Webutuck High School first started doing the blood drives back in October 2002.

The pair wanted to do something special for Make a Difference Day, and they came up with the idea to hold a blood drive. They did so well, and collected so many pints of blood that shortly thereafter they were in the running for a $2,000 scholarship from the Red Cross (which the school ultimately won). The caveat? The school had to hold two blood drives a year to qualify. That’s when the organizers decided to have spring and fall blood drives. And for the past two years, Webutuck High School has collected the most pints of usable blood in the area among other high schools of its size. That’s no small feat.

This year again the school is hoping to win that scholarship. To do so it will depend not only on support from the school district, but also on support from the community. That’s why the many people who have rolled up their sleeves to donate blood should be thanked for both their generosity and good will. Let’s hope their actions serve as an example to others around them who have yet to donate blood.

The school also hopes to break the 1,000 mark of usable pints collected since its first drive during the next week’s blood drive. It’s only 65 units away from that goal. Meeting that goal is just one more reason why the community should come out in droves to donate blood, for it would be quite an accomplishment.

The act of donating blood does so much more than supply a much-needed life source to those in need (and there is almost always a blood shortage at hospitals these days). It also forces people to recognize that there are others in the world who need our assistance. It reinforces the important lesson that we, as a society, must think outside of ourselves and help our fellow man. So please, if you can, donate blood this April 19. It will help many people on many fronts, and most of all, it could potentially help save a life � and that’s a gift that we should all want to give.

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