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Michigan Chaldean Diocese Offers Workshop on Volunteer Safety

Michigan, USA - Protecting God's Children Workshop (PGC) is a professional development workshop organized by the Chaldean Diocese of Michigan.  The PGC workshop covers diocese wide policies and procedures for all church volunteers.  All church volunteers are required to attend the PGC professional development workshop. 

Mother of God Church will be offering the workshop on Friday, June 27, 2008.  The workshop begins at 6:30 PM and will end at 9:30 PM. 

To register for the event please CLICK HERE and complete the online form.  You must be a registered user of this website in order to complete the online form.  Once logged into the site, please click on the blue pencil (lower right) for the online form to appear. 

Filed in: Health & Fitness, Chaldean Churches By Mother of God Church
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Chaldean Summer Heat Precautions

Summer months are upon us and Chaldeans are feeling the heat.  The summer scorchers causing beach sun burns may be the summer trademark, but other heat related illnesses are just as dangerous. 

Although Chaldeans are inherently from hot areas, current migration has placed Chaldeans in different environments.    Some places are dry and hot and others humid and hot.  The heat can be our friend, but it can also be very dangerous. 

These helpful tips can make the difference in ruining the family's summer:

Filed in: Health & Fitness By Brenda Hermiz
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Chaldean Community Health O Rama Set for This Sunday, June 8

Michigan, USA - The Chaldean American Association of Health Professionals (CAAHP) will be sponsoring a Chaldean Community Health ‘O Rama on Sunday, June 8th, 2008 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the afternoon.  The health fair will be held in the Mother of God Church, Southfield community hall and is open to the entire community. 

The event will feature physicians, medical specialists, the American Red Cross, and other related health professionals offering free health consultation, screening, and testing services to the community. 

High school and college students interested in health careers in medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing, physical therapy, or health administration are invited to volunteer for the event.  “This is a wonderful opportunity for both high school and college students to network with health professionals and pharmaceutical companies,” says Robert Kakos, assistant coordinator of the event.  “To gain admission to medical or dental school, or a quality health program; students will need to demonstrate community involvement and secure recommendation letters.  Volunteering at this event will go far in helping students reach their dreams.”

Filed in: Health & Fitness, Community & Culture By Brenda Hermiz
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Nordstrom of Partridge Creek Contracts with Chaldean Entrepreneur to Extend Skin Care Products Line

Michigan,USA - The youth and beauty of a Chaldean is all too obvious.  The unique diet, good genes, olive toned skin, frequent cleanings, and skin care management secrets all contribute to the youthful beauty.  This unique trait is something the Nordstrom retailer took notice, and hopes to leverage, at the opening of their new store in the Mall at Partridge Creek. 

The store has contracted with Joanne Recchia-Kallabat’s company SkinOnyx, the U.S. distributor for Italy’s Kleraderm skin care products to make the product available in the cosmetics section of the new Nordstrom. 

"It feels like I brought Nordstrom with me," she said of her return.  The only other U.S. store that carries Kleraderm is the Nordstrom in Troy's Somerset Collection, where they've earned a strong following over the past three years.  "Nordstrom calls them 'Kleranets' because they only want Kleraderm products," Recchia-Kallabat said.  Kleraderm is an advanced skin care line developed by a doctor in Bologna, Italy.  "It really works," Recchia-Kallabat said. "It's been a beauty secret of the stars for years."

Filed in: Health & Fitness, Business & Finance By Brenda Hermiz
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El Cajon Invites Chaldeans to Join Concerts on the Green

California, USA - The El Cajon Community Development Corporation (then known as Downtown El Cajon, Inc.) has been looking for a novel way to build their downtown community.  Hoping to tap into the business creativity, entrepreneurship, and community family spirit of the Chaldean community, the organizers invite Chaldeans to join their concert series along with other residents of El Cajon.

The 13th Annual Concerts on the Green is a free weekly summer concert series featuring live music for all ages that beings Friday, May 23, 2008 from 6:00 to 8:00 pm on the Prescott Promenade in Downtown El Cajon. Opening night of the 2008 Concerts on the Green will feature the Rockabilly sounds of The Stilettos. The concerts are free to the public.  Concerts on the Green 2008 is offered every Friday evening through September 5.

Filed in: Health & Fitness, Living & Lifestyle, Community & Culture By Sam Yousif
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Four Steps for Losing Weight Permanently

Chaldean lifestyle and eating habits have changed.  Living in the American culture and adopting American eating habits have led to an increase risk of obesity and chronic illness in the Chaldean community.  Chaldeans have lived through many health crises in the past but the latest threat, though largely preventable, has silently grown to potentially deadly proportions. Chaldeans as well as Americans are in the grips of an “obesity epidemic,” whereby 65 percent of the American population is overweight and a growing number of Chaldean toddlers and children are obese. 

Even those who may not consider themselves overweight may be carrying a large amount of deadly belly fat, known to increase the risk of heart disease in relatively slim people.   Most Chaldeans have a basic sense that being overweight is bad for their health, but few appreciate just how dangerous it is.

Controlling fat excess is really fairly simple: Eat for health, not for pleasure. This is not to say that a healthy diet has to taste bad. But it is critical to keep in mind that the goal is a diet that provides health. The loss of excess fat will always come when you follow a healthy diet.

Below are four steps for losing weight permanently.

Filed in: Health & Fitness, Living & Lifestyle By Brenda Hermiz
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Getting Kids to Eat Their Vegetables

Want your kids to eat their veggies? Start offering them when they're tiny babies, and don't take a grimace to mean "No."  Think Chaldean babies receive enough vegetables in their diet?  Think again. 

Mennella, an expert on food choices at the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia recently had 45 mothers spoon-feed their babies puréed green beans once daily. Half the group also offered puréed peaches afterward. At first, the babies who got peaches ate more peaches than beans; after eight days, both groups were eating green beans and had increased their consumption twofold. "They'll wrinkle their noses," Mennella says, "but they still continue to eat."

The babies who were breast-fed also ate more peaches than formula-fed babies, perhaps because their mothers ate more fruit than non-breastfeeding moms. This echoes Mennella's earlier research, in which babies born to women who drank carrot juice in the third trimester favored cereal made with carrot juice, as did babies whose mothers drank carrot juice while breast-feeding. "It's really a fundamental feature of all mammals," Mennella says. "It's the first way we learn about foods and flavors."

You have heard Chaldean grandmothers telling their daughters to eat some baklava to sweeten breast milk.  Mannella’s research seems to prove the wise words.

Filed in: Health & Fitness By Britney Hermiz
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Ear Infection Warning Signs and Solutions

It is of no surprise that all are susceptible to colds.   While some Chaldeans are accustomed to constant change of weather, there are plenty who are vulnerable.

Think of waking up to the traditional tea and toast one morning, and before you know it, you realize your nose is stuffy, your throat is scratchy and a sneeze is slowly sneaking up on you.  You try to reach for a tissue to catch it in time, and all the while feel the aches in your body, and the light-headed feeling that comes right before the big “Ah-Chu!” And it’s here: that nasty cold that’s been going around; the one your friend(s)/family has complained about all week.

Those that should really be watched over carefully are the younger Chaldean children. They are still building their immune system and other infections could easily develop alongside the cold, like ear infections.

Filed in: Health & Fitness By Ghazawan Kashat
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10 Chaldean to-do's after the "I do"

Ghasoon Majed and Dawood Summa, met at a Communion celebration party.  “We were both friends of the family.  The parents of the boy that received Communion had a barbeque and invited friends and family to their home.  I was a friend of the boy’s older brothers and Ghasoon was a friend of boy’s aunt,” Dawood fondly remembers. “I was around 24 and she was 20.  I kept bringing her tea so we could talk.  We must have finished two pots by ourselves.  The worst part was that we both had to use the bathroom after drinking so much tea.  The best part was that neither of us wanted to go because we enjoyed talking to one another so much.”

After several hours of conversation—and several pots of tea—Ghasoon and Dawood knew they wanted to be together. Some 20 years have passed, living in four different countries since that tea-filled talk, but when Ghasoon phones her husband to say she's on her way home, Dawood ready reply is, "I'll put the teapot on." For Ghasoon, that simple phrase, loaded with memories and meaning, tells her she is still loved by the man she fell in love with.

In America and Europe more than 40 percent of first-time marriages fail.  Chaldean couples continue to need both an understanding about what it takes to make their marriages last in Western society.  Latifa Seeba examines the latest research and studies on Marriage and shares some of the “Do’s” that Chaldean couples can use to make the journey together easier and more rewarding.

Filed in: Health & Fitness, Community & Culture By Latifa Seeba
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Seminar Offered to Chaldean Parents and Professionals of Children with Special Needs

Michigan, USA - The Chaldean Education and Career Center, Chaldean American Student Association of Michigan, and Chaldean American Professionals share with the community four very important instructional family based seminars on children with special needs.  The events are free and will be held throughout Oakland and Wayne County.

Chaldean parents and health professionals which include teachers, counselors, social workers, nurses, psychologist, ministers, and community family aid providers as well as Chaldean college students studying in these fields are strongly encouraged to register and attend.  The events offers state accredited certificates and an opportunity to network with other professionals in your field. 

The seminars will be held in English by industry experts.  The dates for the events are February 16, March 5, and March 18. The seminar will cover state aid and educational services for families with children of special needs. 

Afterwards CE&CC, CASA-MI, and CAP will be organizing special culturally focused sessions for families with children of special needs.  A brief summary including the seminar syllabus, location, and registration requirements follows.

Filed in: Health & Fitness, Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center, Chaldean American Student Association, Chaldean American Professionals By CE&CC
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How Junior Lawyers Can Deal With a Difficult Boss
The legal profession often imposes stress, especially on junior lawyers. Many aspects of the work, such as deadlines, changing client needs and unreasonable adversaries, can contribute to that stress. But what if your boss, instead of helping you, makes your life more difficult? Jones Day partner Steven C. Bennett informs us of the essential steps for coping with a difficult boss. For instance, learn to "gripe for the good" and you can help change your boss's misbehavior.

Will Billing Rate Freezes Become a Trend?
Levenfeld Pearlstein, a 75-lawyer Chicago firm that targets middle-market clients, won't raise its billing rates for services next year after learning that 2009 corporate legal budgets will be under pressure. And Pepe & Hazard, a Connecticut-based firm with about 60 lawyers, has announced a rate freeze for existing clients as a way of shouldering some of the burden that the current economic environment has put on clients.

Law Firms Consider Overhaul of Associate Bonus Structures
A shift may be coming in the way associate bonuses are structured, as firms use the economic downturn as a reason to overhaul associate compensation packages. Leaders at several firms say that while bonus structures aren't changing this year, models for next year may be more closely examined. Meanwhile, in the short term some firms are predicting reductions. K&L Gates managing partner Peter Kalis said he wouldn't be surprised if, across the country, bonuses were "more subdued" than they have been.

Getting Young People Into the Law School Pipeline
"Discover all the places the world DOES need another lawyer," teases a Web site aimed at college students who may have never considered law as a profession. It's one of the ambitious projects undertaken by the University of Connecticut School of Law's Ellen K. Rutt for the Law School Admissions Council. Rutt notes that LSAC's "pipeline initiatives" to expand access to legal education "are meant to be driven by what interaction gets [young people] going, not what we as stodgy law school types think will work."

Reed Smith Lays Off 115 Staff in U.S.
Reed Smith announced significant staff cuts Wednesday, letting go 115 staff positions in several departments across its U.S. offices. The firm also said 11 associates may be let go in its U.K. offices along with seven staff members after the firm does a "redundancy consultation exercise" in the country.

Networking Success for the Single Attorney
Previously, the American Dream meant getting married and having kids and a suburban life, but now many people are savoring their unmarried lifestyles. For single attorneys, being unattached doesn't have to negatively impact networking. They can leverage the freedom of being single to creatively develop their business networks. With the benefits of being single, though, come some drawbacks, such as having to deal more with drawing the line between professional and personal contacts.

Brown Rudnick Cuts 10 Percent of Work Force
Brown Rudnick has become the latest firm to make job cuts in the wake of the credit crisis, with the announcement that it is to lay off almost 10 percent of its global work force. The losses affect 20 lawyers, three paralegals and 20 support staff across the firm's Boston, Hartford, New York and Providence offices, and three associates and one member of the firm's support staff in London. The cuts are intended to help the firm "be successful in this more challenging economic environment," said CEO Joseph Ryan.

Boutique Firms Well-Positioned in Current Economy
While some boutique firms have suffered serious blows from the economy, many are seeing distinct advantages over larger competitors when it comes to weathering the storm, say boutique leaders and law firm observers. Boutiques generally have much lower overhead costs, little to no major debt, and more flexibility when it comes to costs and billing rates. One boutique chairman likens the difference between big firms and boutiques to the difference between driving a Lincoln Town Car and a Ferrari.

Fired Public Defender's Case Goes to Calif. Supreme Court
This week the California Supreme Court heard arguments in a case involving a former public defender who was fired after invoking his right to remain silent in response to an internal investigation. "You've got a landmark decision in the works," says Thomas Spielbauer, now a solo attorney with a mostly civil practice, about the case which has gained widespread interest. A lower court had partly vindicated Spielbauer by ruling that the PD's office violated his Fifth Amendment rights.

Bleak Outlook for Bonuses at Some N.Y. Firms
Early indications point to a bleak outlook for bonuses this year. Three New York firms -- Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom; and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett -- have confirmed that bonuses for 2008 will be down. Skadden announced it will pay the same base bonus as last year, but has done away with supplemental special bonuses. Meanwhile, at Cravath and Simpson, 2008 bonuses will be about half of what was paid last year.

Calif. Firm Trims About Half Dozen Attorneys, 15 Staff Members
Stradling Yocca Carlson & Rauth, a California law firm with a sizable corporate and securities practice, has cut five to seven attorneys and up to 15 staff members in recent weeks, according to sources familiar with the situation. Several sources say that the firm recently conducted two rounds of job cuts. Most of those affected were let go in November.

Advice for the Lawlorn
In the list of job-hunting-tips [from your last column], I think number 20, advising applicants to use fake names and misrepresent themselves as recruiters, would constitute an ethical violation in the states where I've worked as an attorney.

Renewable Energy Fuels Finance Boom
Firms that have built expertise financing renewable-energy projects for equity investors are enjoying solid business, despite the credit crisis. They are completing a stream of deals to build power lines in Asia, trade "carbon credits" in Europe and nurture an array of new technologies expected to find markets in a world where power comes increasingly from wind and sun.

Pay Proves GCs Are Part of Elite Club
A review of the compensation of Southeastern chief legal officers who are listed among the top five highest-paid executives in their public companies' most recent Securities and Exchange Commission filings reveals an average total package in the neighborhood of a million dollars -- about $965,000. Their average base salaries were just a bit over $300,000, with bonuses and stock awards adding most of the value. And the top 62 had packages valued at more than $1 million. The highest exceeded $7 million.

Award to Halliburton Worker Upheld
A federal judge has refused to overturn an arbitrator's award in favor of a former Halliburton worker who claimed he was fired from a job in Iraq because of a sexual harassment complaint that the company never investigated. In Edward Harris v. Kellogg Brown & Root Technical Services Inc., U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Savage found that the Halliburton Dispute Resolution Plan gives broad powers to the arbitrator to interpret the company's rules and to determine the scope of the arbitrator's powers.

Bayer to Pay $97.5 Million to Settle Kickback Probe
German medical conglomerate Bayer will pay $97.5 million to settle U.S. government allegations that it paid kickbacks to medical suppliers to boost sales of its diabetes products. The Justice Department said on Nov. 25 that the settlement resolves an investigation into whether Bayer bribed 11 diabetic suppliers into switching patients to its products from competitors' offerings.

Federal Judge Penalizes Broker Over 'Egregious' Conduct


null: In re Ballard
Federal law did not preclude auto manufacturer from filing unsecured deficiency claim based on state law where Chapter 13 consumer debtor proposed to surrender "910 vehicle" whose value was less than balance remaining on auto loan (applying "hanging paragraph" to cases involving surrender of 910 vehicle).

null: Siepel v. Bank of America, N.A.
Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act preempted state-law claims that trustee breached fiduciary duty by failing to disclose conflicts of interest in selection of nationally-traded investment securities.

Expanding the Scope of the Consumer Fraud Act in Real Estate Transactions
In Matera v. M.G.C.C. Group, Inc ., the Law Division has recently held that a cause of action can be alleged under the Consumer Fraud Act absent any contact between the parties, as long as there is a causal nexus between the alleged violation of the CFA and the alleged ascertainable loss. This holding marks a dramatic expansion of the CFA, threatening a new unforeseen and unwarranted breed of liability for real estate developers, lending institutions, and any entity which falls under the ambit of the CFA.
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