 |
| Latest News & Information
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
| Chaldeans Want to Know Where the Scholarships Are? |
|
As the cost of a college education rises, Chaldean students are finding ways to foot the bill. Chaldean Students have won scholarships to pay their way through school. What's their secret?
They know where to find scholarships, when to look for them and how to write for them. There's no guarantee you'll win a scholarship, but there are ways to skew the odds in your favor.
Where's the Money: Anywhere and Everywhere
|
| Filed in: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center By CE&CC |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| Chaldean Education and Career Center Invites Chaldean and non-Chaldean Teachers to Cultural Workshop for SEU Credits |
|
Michigan, USA – The Chaldean Education and Career Center (CE&CC) shares with the Chaldean community middle and high school teachers a wonderful opportunity. Wayne State University is once again, hosting a Teachers Cultural Awareness Summer Workshop which focuses on Middle Eastern Culture, Arabic Language, and the Intelligence Community.
This 6-week workshop begins on June 30, 2009 and ends on August 6, 2009. The class will meet every Tuesday and Thursday from 11:30 am to 2:30 pm.
Chaldean teachers wishing to participate will be able to do so free of charge and will earn 2.7 SB-CEU Credits. Non-Chaldean teachers are also invited and will have all associated fees waived upon acceptance of application.
|
| Filed in: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center By CE&CC |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| CoEd Dorm Rooms at University of Chicago Cause Stir |
|

Illinois, USA – The University of Chicago joins a handful of other colleges in their effort to create a cohabitation campus. The college will now allow a male student to sleep in the same room with an unrelated female student.
Amy Batuo says the school has essentially become a whore house and is considering transferring. “I am not going to pay them to help students hook-up. There is going to be so many reputations and lives ruined. They have gone way into left field on this one.”
This is not the first time the school has sent shock waves for its stance on sexual promiscuity and promotion. The campus Student Health and Wellness Fee, which all registered students pay, covers regular contraceptive items like condoms and lubricants. All are available at its Student Care Center including what the center calls "Emergency contraception.”
|
| Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Career & Education, Government & Society By CE&CC |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| University of Detroit Mercy teaches Aramaic (Chaldean) |
|

For thousands of years the language of Aramaic has existed, descended from Sumerian and Akkadian roots. The language is still spoken by the Chaldean Assyrian Syriac people today, and is one of the four recognized languages in the Iraqi constitution under Syriac (Eastern dialect of Aramaic).
The University of Detroit Mercy has recently established an Aramaic course teaching how to speak, read and write Aramaic, as well as studies pertaining to culture and history. The class starts January 17th and is taught by Mahir Awrahem, who is also a professor at Baker College.
The 15-week is an introductory course open to all college and high school students. Prof. Awrahem is excited for the start of the program, “When I lived in Iraq, there was no such thing as learning Aramaic in schools; I am excited to be teaching the language of Christ especially at the University level.
|
| Filed in: Career & Education, Community & Culture By John Thomas |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| Refugee Workshops Help Chaldean Families Learn About the U.S. |
|

Michigan, USA – St. Joseph Chaldean Catholic Church in Troy, Michigan continues to host an array of services for refugee assistance. Along with English classes, school tutoring for children, and family support services the church campus will now feature special workshops geared to refugee families.
“The love and help for us at St. Jospeh and all the churches, makes me thank God every second,” says Habiba Yousip through a translator. “If it was not for our Church we would all be dead.”
The workshops provide informative sessions to help refugee arrivals transition to life in the United States. Sessions include knowing your neighbor, taxes and financial planning, keeping your children safe, apartment living, senior housing, food safety, and disaster preparedness.
|
| Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Career & Education, Government & Society, Chaldean Churches By Sam Yousif |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| Family Workshop on Raising Boys |
|
Michigan, USA – The Chaldean Education and Career Center urges Chaldean parents with sons to take advantage of an upcoming family workshop featuring national best selling author and internationally recognized authority on boys and men, Dr. William S. Pollack, PhD.
The event will be held on November 3, 2008 from 7 pm - 9 pm at the Oakland Schools Building, located on 2111 Pontiac Lake Road in Waterford, Michigan, 48328.
Dr. Pollack's presentation will address the crisis of boyhood in America, specialized techniques for reconnecting with boys, new approaches to "Mothering" and "Fathering", and new models of understanding "What makes boys tick"
The event is free to those who RSVP by e-mailing info@chaldean.org.
|
| Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center By CE&CC |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| Chaldean Scholar Awarded Catholic Woman of the Year |
|
London, UK – Chaldean scholar, author, entrepreneur, and philanthropist Dr. Suha Rassam was named as one of the four Catholic Women of the Year at a reception in London this past week. The founder of the charity Iraqi Christians in Need (ICIN) was honored among an assembly of some of the world’s most notable leaders and in the presence of the Papal Nuncio Archbishop Faustino Munoz.
Dr Rassam is originally from Mosul in northern Iraq. She is a medical doctor and professor of Medicine in the University of Baghdad. Arriving to England in 1990 she worked in London hospitals until her retirement when she took an MA in Eastern Christianity at the school of Oriental and African Studies in the University of London.
Dr. Rassam, author of the book 'Christianity in Iraq' set up ICIN last year with a group of fellow Iraqis, to provide financial and spiritual support to Iraqi Christians both in Iraq and in countries such as Syria and Jordan, where many are now refugees.
Earlier this year, she visited Iraqi refugee families in Syria to assess how best ICIN could help them. In Aleppo, she met with Bishop Antoine Audo of Aleppo of the Chaldean Catholic Church and Bishop Yuhanna Ibrahim of the Syrian Orthodox Church. Since then her impact in helping Iraqi refugee families has been remarkable.
|
| Filed in: Career & Education, Community & Culture, World News & Odds 'N' Ends, Chaldean Churches By Rita Abro |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| 9 Work Secrets to Keep |
|
Chaldeans are known for their congeniality and good-nature. What would seem on the surface to be a wonderful trait, can become a huge risk in a corporate setting. Chaldean professionals making their way through the corporate maze are forewarned that it’s easy to let imprudent information slip out.
There are at least nine things Chaldeans or any professional minded go-getter should always keep to themselves at work. While some of these points are obvious, anyone who’s spent any time at all in an office can vouch for the fact that this advice bears repeating, and that heeding it could avoid a whole lot of unproductive drama.
|
| Filed in: Career & Education, Business & Finance By David Najor |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| Chaldean Volunteers Sought for Refugee Assistance |
|

Michigan, USA - Sister Beth Murphy, the Volunteer and Community Outreach Coordinator of the Refugee Services Office in the Archdiocese of Detroit is looking for two dedicated volunteers who can assist their staff with the important task of helping Iraqi refugees adjust to life in the United States.
Chaldeans are invited to this uplifting and rewarding opportunity of sharing their gift time and talent for the benefit of the hundreds of refugees who are arriving in the Detroit Metro Area. The Office of Refugee Services has already resettled more than 700 refugees this year, improving the quality of life for many Chaldeans. The office anticipates another 200 refugees by the end of this year.
The Archdiocese of Detroit is looking for fluent speakers in English and an office assistant to help with clerical work. Both positions require less than a few hours a week.
|
| Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Career & Education, Community & Culture, Chaldean Justice League By Huda Metti |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
| Catholic Answers Invites Chaldeans for Job Opportunity |
|
California, USA - Catholic Answers Live invites Chaldeans to a number of possible job opportunities with Catholic Answers, the largest Catholic apologetics and evangelization organization in North America. Catholic Answers has reached out to www.CHALDEAN.org asking for assistance in promoting a number of fantastic positions within their organization.
One position invites Chaldeans to consider being a radio host. Based out of El Cajon, California Catholic Answers is seeking a radio host for their Catholic Answers Live daily radio program.
Catholic Answers is also offering Chaldeans around the world five other job opportunities in IT and customer service.
|
| Filed in: Career & Education, Business & Finance, Chaldean Education & Career Center By Neda Ayar |
| Read More... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Lawyer Stationed in Iraq Gets Sworn In Via Video Conference
In a what may be a first-of-its-kind swearing-in ceremony for a lawyer, a soldier in Iraq became an attorney last week via a live video conference, taking his oath before a Michigan judge who was over 6,300 miles away. The long-distance ceremony for Army Major Miles Gengler was a promise made good by an associate dean at Thomas M. Cooley Law School, John Nussbaumer. "I promised Miles that if he passed the bar exam, I would find a way to get him sworn in even though he would still be in Iraq," said Nussbaumer.
Aspiring Lawyer Can't Join N.Y. Bar due to $400,000 Debt
Aspiring lawyer Robert Bowman took the New York bar exam four times before finally passing last year, but now his debt is preventing him from joining the Bar. The New York state appellate division recently decided that the size of Bowman's student loans, about $400,000, along with his failure to repay them, show that he lacks "the character and general fitness requisite for an attorney." Bowman graduated from the University of California Hastings College of Law and also has a masters of law degree.
Blank Rome to Cut Associate Compensation by $15,000
Blank Rome has become the latest law firm to put the squeeze on associate salaries, with much of the focus on more junior associates. Effective July 17, first-year associates face a $15,000 pay cut. Other associate classes will see a 2 percent to 10 percent pay reduction, the firm said in a statement, adding that the cuts are a market adjustment. One recruiter predicts that first-year associate salaries will ultimately fall to a "natural level" of between $110,000 and $120,000.
Ruden McClosky Slashes Pay, Lays Off 8 Lawyers
Florida-based Ruden McClosky has laid off eight attorneys as part of a cost-reduction effort that includes 18 percent pay cuts for most of its lawyers, according to sources. The laid-off attorneys worked in the firm's litigation, corporate and land-use practice areas. The latest layoffs follow three rounds of dismissals conducted since late last year. An attorney at the firm who asked not to be named said morale has declined because of the cuts in jobs and pay and that many of the firm's lawyers are seeking other jobs.
Young Attorney Victorious in First Supreme Court Case
Jason Murtagh says that the most nerve-wracking moment during his work on Haywood v. Drown was when the U.S. Supreme Court granted writ of certiorari in June 2008. That's because he was the one set to argue the case. But it turned out well for the 34-year-old attorney and his client in the prisoner rights case -- the Court ruled in their favor in May. Murtagh took the pro bono case while an associate at Dechert, but he's moved on to 40-attorney Rubin Fortunato to pursue a greater amount of casework.
Howrey, Day Casebeer Make It Official
Howrey and Day Casebeer Madrid & Batchelder made their union official Wednesday, capping at least six months of serious talks. All but one of the Silicon Valley intellectual property boutique's 26 attorneys joined Howrey's Palo Alto, Calif., office, effective July 1. The move includes nine partners and 16 associates. Managing partner Lloyd "Rusty" Day said 725-lawyer Howrey's vision is a good fit for his firm, which couldn't add resources quickly on its own.
Maintain a Web Presence to Help Your Job Search
Lawyers seeking employment must have a Web presence, said speakers at a recent seminar for unemployed lawyers hosted by the State Bar of Georgia -- but their ideas varied on which avenues to take. Lawyer and social media enthusiast David A. Barrett advocated spreading one's name far and wide on the World Wide Web through "open networking," while other speakers discussed blogging or maintaining a professional Web site. The speakers also had several ideas for self-promotion that didn't involve the Web.
Orrick Breaks Lockstep in Response to Clients' Cost Concerns
Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe dumped lockstep associate promotion on Wednesday and began assigning associates to one of three tiers within its partner track: associate, managing associate or senior associate. Orrick will also create a nonpartner-track option for associates, and boost the number of staff attorneys doing more routine work like document review. Orrick Chairman Ralph Baxter Jr. said the moves are meant to create a system in which clients aren't paying for unnecessary costs.
Hiring Partners: What's So Bad About Spring Recruitment?
Should on-campus recruiting at law schools be delayed until the spring? That question was a major topic of discussion during a recent roundtable on the future of legal hiring that brought together law firm leaders, law school officials and general counsel in Washington, D.C. Many of the participants agreed that it would make more sense to recruit in the spring rather than in the traditional late summer or early fall. But several law school representatives worried the move would create logistical problems.
Alston & Bird Cuts Associate Pay
Alston & Bird is cutting associate pay by $5,000 across the board for the remainder of the year -- a reduction equal to about 7 percent of annual starting pay. The cuts, effective July 15, follow other cost-saving measures undertaken by the firm since the end of last year, including staff and associate layoffs, early retirement packages for senior staff, a reduction in its summer program and a deferred start date for its new first-year class.
Has Pro Bono Become Recession-Proof?
A year ago, Lehman Brothers appeared solvent, Bernard Madoff was a trusted name and the global economic crisis was still called a downturn. Even then, pro bono advocates worried that altruism would be a casualty of hard times at the country's top law firms. Judging by firms' performance last year, those fears may have been unfounded. As a group, the nation's 200 highest-grossing firms devoted more hours to pro bono than ever.
Advice for the Lawlorn
I'm in good standing at a firm that has announced possible layoffs. If they happen, I'd like to take a six-month, unpaid sabbatical. Would I be more likely to be terminated, or would the firm welcome this?
 |
News Feed Is Not Available At This Time. Error message:The remote server returned an error: (404) Not Found. |
|