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| Seminar Offered to Chaldean Parents and Professionals of Children with Special Needs |
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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.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center, Chaldean American Student Association, Chaldean American Professionals By CE&CC |
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| Chaldeans Bring Attention to March of Life 2008 |
Rena Oram considers herself a modern day abolitionist. “The stain on world history to enslave other humans is deplorable. It took abolitionist to convince the world that every human life has value. Today, we are called ‘aborlitionists.’ We are modern day abolitionists that work to convince the world that babies in the womb also have the right of life and freedom.” Oram helped organize a student group that traveled to Washing D.C. for the annual March for Life. The Chaldean activist was joined by hundreds of thousands of other young adults from across the country. The Annual March for Life draws attention to the millions killed due to the Supreme Court’s 1973 decision to legalize abortion in the case of Roe v. Wade. Although nearly half a million gathered to protest the effects of the Court’s decision on the rights of the unborn, the march receive little coverage in mainstream media. “The media won’t cover our march because they foolishly believe this is a privacy or woman’s choice issue. It is not. A baby is a natural consequence to a choice that has already been made. It drives me crazy that people just won’t accept personal responsibility for their behavior,” says Oram. Michigan has been a hot-bed in the ongoing struggle to end infanticide. Recently Students for Life of America secretly captured a speech by abortion provider Dr. Alberto Hodari on Wayne State University’s campus where the doctor claims doctors of have a license to lie to a patient to perform the necessary procedures.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Religion & Spirituality, Government & Society, Chaldean Justice League, ECRC By Huda Metti |
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| Chaldeans Concerned over Red Meat Link to Cancer |
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California, USA - Chaldeans who eat a lot of red meat and processed meats have a significantly higher risk of several types of cancer, including lung cancer and colorectal cancer, says Dr. Tarik Kajy, a Chaldean cancer specialist and surgeon. A recent study released by U.S. researchers concur with Dr. Kajy that high red meat consummation is a health risk.
The study is the first big study to show a link between meat and lung cancer. It also shows that people who eat a lot of meat have a higher risk of liver and esophageal cancer and that men raise their risk of pancreatic cancer by eating red meat.
A growing number of Chaldeans in America are being diagnosed with cancer. Dr. Kajy theorizes that high red meat consumption in the Chaldean diet might be to blame. “Chaldeans originating from the Middle East often ate a high vegetarian laden Mediterranean style diet balanced with low meat intake. However, Chaldeans in America have reversed the portions and are now eating more meat then the traditional vegetable driven meal.”
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness By Britney Hermiz |
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| 9 Terrific Indoor Activities for Chaldean Toddlers |
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Chaldean parents are curious on how to capture their little one's creative energy when the weather gets cold. Being cooped up in the house all day can make a toddler honery and troublesome. Chaldean parents can help channel that energy by trying at least one of our nine fun, brain-boosting projects.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Living & Lifestyle By Neda Ayar |
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| 7 Steps to a Stress-Free Chaldean Holiday Celebration |
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California, USA - Chaldeans are busily preparing for the holidays. The community is getting ready for big family dinners, the traditional extended family tours, and the hectic gift giving calculations. It arrives at the same time every year, and yet Chaldeans continue to get confused, stressed, and frustrated over the potential holiday madness. Chaldean holiday preparations can be less taxing for Chaldeans if these 7 simple steps are followed.
Step 1 - BE PREPARED Create a budget for your gift purchases, a list of who has been nice, and stick to it. Chaldeans have huge families and trying to buy a gift for every cousin, friend, neighbor, or employee will have you filing for bankruptcy. Chaldeans are generous and charitable, but a line has to be drawn. Create a gift list to fight the urge of seeing an item on clearance that you think would be perfect for someone not on your list. Write down a few ideas for presents, based on the preferences of those on the list and hints they have given you throughout the year.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Living & Lifestyle, Community & Culture By Sue Garmo |
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| Chaldean Scholar Publishes Study on Rape, Women and International Law |
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Michigan, USA - The increasing disgust and hyper-sexualization in the media has one Chaldean scholar seeking answers. Phyllis Easter Jeden is a first-generation Chaldean-American born and raised in metro-Detroit. The pre-law student at Central Michigan University is perusing studies in International, Minority, and Human Rights Law.
Jeden, like most Chaldeans and Americans has grown increasingly concerned over television advertising portraying women as nothing more than sex objects. “I am appalled by some of the things that the media culture tries to mainstream and celebrate. This has hurt America and has undermined our ability to speak to the world about values. Just look at the amount of cleavage you see worn by younger and younger women (and girls) in the supermarket, on the bus, in church?”
Rather than sit idly by and adopt a hopeless attitude Jeden decide to act. In her recently published study Jeden tackles the impact of sexualization of women in media and how such efforts harm women. The study Rape, Women and International Law began as a response to such everyday irritants. However, the study quickly began revealing much more about the insidious sexualization of women in media and other mainstream venues in societies across the world.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Career & Education, Government & Society By Rita Abro |
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| The Art of the 'Thank You' – Celebrating Goodness |
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California, USA - Wise and thoughtful Chaldean parents continue to harp on their children to honor other people's kindness and generosity. Most children despise having to write thank you notes. Sadly, parents who fail to teach their children how to recognize and acknowledge the good they see in others will eventually have to contend with the consequences of a self-centered, ungrateful, and spoiled child.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Living & Lifestyle, Religion & Spirituality By Rita Abro |
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| Chaldean Aquaman Readies to Paddle the Great Lakes for Cancer Awareness |
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Michigan, USA - Joe Bidawid, professional board rider, uses his paddle in the fight to finding a cure for cancer. The middle child from a family of five children has his eyes set on breaking a world record as he trains to stand-up paddle surf across Lake Michigan from St. Joseph, Michigan to Chicago, Illinois.
The Farmington Hills, Michigan Chaldean native is perhaps one of the more versatile athletes in professional boarding. Skiing, snowboarding, windsurfing, kiteboarding, and surfing, Joe Bidawid has mastered them all at a world class level. Capturing the imagination of world boarders the Chaldean Aquaman has been featured in top sports boarding magazines and local Michigan papers.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Career & Education, Sports, Art, and Entertainment By Huda Metti |
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| Chaldean Church Sports League (CCSL) Prepares for Playoff Game |
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Michgian, USA - The southeast Michigan Chaldean Church Sports League prepares for their playoff games this Saturday, July 21, 2007. The Chaldean Eparchy (Diocese) of Eastern United States has narrowed the four top performing church teams in the 18 and under category of girl’s volleyball and boy’s flag football.
In the heart of Southeastern Michigan at the Southfield Municipal Civic and Sports Center hundreds and hundreds of Chaldeans gather to play, pray, and show their support. The Chaldean church teams have been competing weekly for nearly two months. Based on their win-loss record and total game point earnings the top four church teams qualified for the League playoff games.
The CCSL is attracting a high level of talent and producing great competition. The league features some of the best athletes in the Chaldean community as all-American high school athletes lead their respective church to victory on the field and on the sand court.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness, Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Community & Culture, Chaldean Church Sports League By Sam Yousif |
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| Beware of Burns This Summer Says Dr. Samir Nammy |
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Michigan, USA – Chaldeans need to beware the hot summer. With the excitement of heading to the beach, chaldean family barbeques with plenty of food and running children, or the excitement of July fireworks, Chaldeans need to be aware. Chaldeans in Michigan need to be especially vigilant as the hibernation of a cold winter and wet spring can lead to careless behavior over the excitement of a hot summer.
In the emergency room at the University of Michigan Hospital doctors and nurses know what that means: any minute now, another burned patient will come through the door needing immediate treatment.
Maybe it’ll be a Chaldean woman who burned her bare feet walking over the buried coals of a beach bonfire, or a Chaldean child who got too much sun and developed skin blisters. Maybe it’ll be a Chaldean teenager who came too close to the hot exhaust of a lawnmower, or a Chaldean father who didn’t heed the warning on a package of fireworks. Or maybe it’ll be a Chaldean toddler who strayed too close to a fire pit, or a backyard chef who got impatient with a charcoal fire and tried to jump-start it with a squirt of lighter fluid.
Whatever kind of burn comes through that emergency room door, says emergency physician Samir Namy, M.D., it almost surely didn’t need to happen.
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| Filed in: Health & Fitness By Amer Hedow |
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Delays in Attorney Retirement Could Contribute to Firm Overcrowding
An estimated 250,000 baby boomer attorneys have begun entering retirement age. But with the recent plunge in values of 401(k) plans and other nest-egg assets, more attorneys may choose, or need, to keep working. While the upside for law firms is less brain drain, the downside is an excess of lawyers combined with a diminishing workload. And associate attrition has become almost nil, says consultant and blogger Bruce MacEwen, so both ends of the firm pipeline are clogged -- which means things may get ugly.
Early Moves Can Ease Path to Power in Executive Branch
For Washington, D.C., associates on the rise, there might be an even more desirable prize than making partner -- a power spot in the executive branch. But unlike the partnership track, the path to becoming the next public sector legal star isn't clear-cut. Career development experts and attorneys say achieving such a career goal takes planning and the ability to recognize the best opportunities, network with the politically well-connected, and find private practice work that highlights exceptional talent.
Morgan Lewis Switches to Merit-Based Bonuses
Morgan Lewis & Bockius announced it has adopted a merit-based bonus system for associates in the 2009 fiscal year. The firm said it is doing away with its requirement that associates log 2,000 billable hours in order to receive a bonus -- as well as any promises that reaching that mark will ensure a bonus. Consultant Steven Kruza said that Morgan Lewis seems to have "weathered the [recession] storm pretty well" and that moving away from the lockstep structure appears to be more of a precautionary measure.
Government Contract Lawyers Could Thrive During Obama Administration
By doubling the use of private contractors and shrinking the civil servant class, President George W. Bush ushered in a sea change that ensured a stream of income for government contract lawyers at Am Law 200 firms. President-elect Barack Obama has said he'll reduce the number of contractors, but attempts to make cuts are likely to cause conflicts -- and, in turn, create legal work. Plus, Obama's pledge of a massive infrastructure investment program could be a bonanza for government contract lawyers.
First Private Criminal Defender Program in Texas to Commence
A first-of-its-kind program in Texas is scheduled to open Jan. 15 in Lubbock, providing specially trained private practitioners to represent indigent criminal defendants who are mentally ill or retarded. Private attorneys will be appointed by the director of the Lubbock Special Needs Defenders' Office, a nonprofit corporation created in October. A peer review committee will determine which attorney applicants qualify for appointments, says attorney Philip Wischkaemper, who helped develop the program.
Help May Be on the Way for Calif. High Court Arguments
Arguing before the California Supreme Court can be daunting, especially for first-timers who don't realize they'll likely face a buzz saw of questions after uttering, "May it please the court." But help may be on the way. UC-Berkeley School of Law is developing a moot court program that would let lawyers test their skills in advance on a panel likely composed of professors, experienced appellate practitioners and retired justices. The program would be run by the school and has the high court's blessing.
Bad Economy Makes It a Good Time to Go It Alone
Is now the perfect time to start a solo practice? Yes, according to consultant Susan Cartier Liebel. With times so tough, starting a new business may seem the height of insanity, but Liebel says it is during these times that lawyers should realize that the "opportunity cost" of taking a risk, like starting a solo practice, is much lower. And for those attorneys who are able to shake off their paralysis, bad economic times may present some special opportunities for solo practitioners, Liebel says.
Ex-Holland & Knight Partner Files Suit in Benefits Dispute
A former partner in Holland & Knight's Miami office is suing the firm after efforts to arbitrate a dispute over his 2002 termination broke down. R. Thomas Farrar was one of 60 attorneys and 170 other employees cut by the firm in April 2002. Farrar, who had worked for the firm since 1981, alleges Holland & Knight violated his partnership agreement by terminating him and wrongfully depriving him of his right to retirement benefits.
10 Resolutions for Job-Seeking Success
We often start off the New Year with a host of well-intentioned resolutions that hardly outlast the winter snows. This year, however, glum economic news has given both job-seekers and the nervous employed added incentive. Here are 10 New Year's resolutions to follow, whether you are in the market or just want to be prepared, provided by William A. Chamberlain, assistant dean at Northwestern University School of Law. With some persistence, you could soon have more to celebrate than just the New Year.
Four Essential Elements of a Strong Law Firm Culture
Two once-great San Francisco Bay Area firms -- Heller Ehrman and Thelen -- are in the throes of dissolution, and consultant Peter D. Zeughauser says there's a lesson to be learned from their demise. Firms need a strong firm culture that breeds partners who are in it for each other, not just themselves. Noting that even the best lawyers practicing together can find themselves circling the drain without such a culture, Zeughauser details four key elements that can help firms avoid entering the whirlpool.
Newest Fla. Supreme Court Justice to Spend Just One Day as State District Court Judge
Veteran Palm Beach Circuit Judge Jorge Labarga was appointed to the Florida Supreme Court on Friday by Gov. Charlie Crist, just three weeks after Crist had named Labarga to the state 4th District Court of Appeal in West Palm Beach. Crist chose Labarga for the high court from a new list of candidates after rejecting the first list due to its lack of diversity. Labarga jokes that even though he will be a 4th District Court judge for only one day, he still wants his photo included on the court library's wall.
Advice for the Lawlorn
I am a second-year, female litigation associate at a BigLaw. During the last couple of months two partners, one male and one female, have said that I am too nice. How can I convince them I'm tough enough?
SEC Role Under Scrutiny in Madoff Scandal
Red flags about the business dealings of Bernard Madoff were raised to the Securities and Exchange Commission over a decade but weren't pursued, and Republican and Democratic House members said that reflected deep, systemic problems at the market watchdog agency.
Supreme Court Review Sought in Public Accounting Board Case
The federal appeals court opinion that upheld the constitutionality of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board was a disastrous decision that undermines the president's ability to supervise federal officers, say Jones Day lawyers who want the Supreme Court to review the case.
Smartphones Pose Risks for All Executives
Like many executives, Barack Obama is an admitted BlackBerry addict. But advisers insist that on Inauguration Day he should give up the device, which, in the words of one senior aide, "never stopped crackling with e-mails" during the campaign. As president, Obama will be subject to a strict records-retention law called the Presidential Records Act, and wireless devices also pose security risks deemed too high for the commander in chief. The question for in-house counsel: If a BlackBerry poses dangers for the nation's chief executive, should your chief executive officer be using one?
Firms Get Ready for Wave of Bankruptcy Filings
A steady rise in corporate bankruptcy filings throughout 2008 is expected to crescendo in 2009 and 2010, with collapses spreading from the retail, auto-related, real estate and financial industries to almost any area affected by the downturn in consumer spending, lawyers say. In response, law firms are reviewing the size of their bankruptcy teams to make sure they've lined up the attorneys needed to attract and manage cases.
SEC Pursues Ponzi Scheme Targeting Haitian-Americans
While there's been much focus on the rich victims of an alleged $50 billion scam wrought by Wall Street fund manager Bernard Madoff, federal securities investigators have quietly moved on another suspected Ponzi scheme, much smaller in scope but similarly devastating. Attorneys for investors claim that the network branched out across several states, targeting people with little investment experience and few assets. Attorney Jared Levy estimates the losses could exceed $100 million.
Class Status Denied in Suit Against DuPont Over Chemical-Tainted Water
The use of medical monitoring as a remedy for mass exposure to toxic chemicals has suffered a setback in New Jersey. A federal judge in Camden has denied class certification sought in behalf of 15,000 people whose drinking water may have been contaminated by a chemical spilled from DuPont's Chambers Works in Salem County.
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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