Friday, July 24, 2009

CASA Community Member of the Week

Name: Emily M.
Role: CASA AmeriCorps Associate

What interested you about the CASA program?

The opportunity to make a difference!

Tell us a little bit about your previous Work and/or Volunteer Experience and/or Education:

I am pleased and excited to be working in the non-profit sector for the first time.

Hobbies/Fun Fact(s) about Yourself:

I enjoy thrift stores, fixing and sprucing up run down old furniture, collaging, walking, photography and good company.

What is your favorite quote of all time?

"Throughout the ages man has but little heeded the advice of the wise men. He has been - fatefully, if not willfully - less virtuous, less constant, less rational, less peaceful than he knows how to be, than he is fully capable of being. He has been led astray from the ways of peace and brotherhood by his addiction to concepts and attitudes of narrow nationalism, racial and religious bigotry, greed and lust for power. Despite this, despite the almost continuous state of war to which bad human relations have condemned him, he has made steady progress. In his scientific genius, man has wrought material miracles and has transformed his world. He has harnessed nature and has developed great civilizations. But he has never learned very well how to live with himself. The values he has created have been predominantly materialistic; his spiritual values have lagged far behind. He has demonstrated little spiritual genius and has made little progress toward the realization of human brotherhood. In the contemporary atomic age, this could prove man's fatal weakness. Alfred Nobel, a half-century ago, foresaw with prophetic vision that if the complacent mankind of his day could, with equanimity, contemplate war, the day would soon inevitably come when man would be confronted with the fateful alternative of peace or reversion to the Dark Ages. Man may well ponder whether he has not now reached that stage. Man's inventive genius has so far outreached his reason - not his capacity to reason but his willingness to apply reason - that the peoples of the world find themselves precariously on the brink of total disaster."

--Ralph Bunche, Nobel Lecture, December 11, 1950

How did you hear about the CASA Program?

AmeriCorps.