|    Register
   
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Latest News & Information

Current Articles | Archives | Search

Iraqi Footballer Sports Hero Laid to Rest
By Ray Yono :: 2100 Views
:: Article Rating :: Sports, Art, and Entertainment

Baghdad, IRAQ – Christan and Muslim Iraqis mourn the passing of one of their countryman’s sports heroes.  Emmanuel Baba Dawud, better known as Ammo Baba (Uncle Father).  He was known as the Arab world’s Pele, the “Sheikh of Iraqi coaches”, and a winged angel.  He scored the first ever international goal for Iraq against Morocco at the second Pan-Arab Games in Beirut in 1957 and coached the Iraqi national football team to various victories. 

Ammo Baba led Iraq to three titles in the Arabian Gulf football tournaments and the gold medal in the 1982 Asian Games in India. He was revered as a hero in his homeland.

Ammo Baba was born in Hinaidi, Baghdad during a time when Muslim and Christian relations were civil.  Dawud was a reluctant pupil at the base’s school. “I used to run out of school,” he recalled. “I was very lazy in my lessons, but I was very good at sports.”

So good that, for a time, he held the record as one of Iraq’s fastest 400-metre runners.

Hours spent watching British and Iraqi soldiers playing matches around the base and practicing with his “football”, a sock stuffed with strips of fabric, paid off.

Selected by Iraqi coach Ismail Mohammed, Dawud made his debut with the Iraqi schoolboys in the second Pan-Arab School Championship in Cairo in 1951. For the rest of the decade, he played for the Iraqi Air Force football team, consolidating a reputation as the best forward in the country.

During the ambitious pan-Arab movement, masterminded by Egypt’s Gamal Abdel-Nasser, he was one of two players selected from Iraq to take part in the Arab national team, which proved to be a short-lived exercise.

With regime change in Iraq in 1958, Dawud’s career became less certain, especially after his refusal to join the Baath party in 1964. He moved from club to club, and never quite recovered from a serious injury in 1965. In 1979, he was appointed coach of the Iraqi national team. It was a challenging position that necessitated dealings with the mercurial Uday Hussein, the president’s son and minister of sport, and Dawud was imprisoned on several occasions on spurious charges.

His later years were plagued by diabetes: two toes were amputated and he suffered increasingly from poor vision. Earlier this year, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer.

His wife and son had lived in exile for many years though Dawud himself seldom left Iraq. Latterly, he had devoted his time to developing a football school for underprivileged children in Baghdad.

Emmanuel Baba Dawud was born on Nov 27, 1934. He died on May 27.

 
Syndicate  

How to Know if You're a Big Law Cog
The Snark takes some time to clarify the term "Cog." Notably, it doesn't just refer to Big Law associates. Here's a quiz that lets you know if you're a Cog, "The Man" (even if you're a woman), or a Consuming Oxygen Guzzler -- a Cog who just sucks in the good air and wastes space.

Los Angeles Court System Lays Off 329 Workers, Closes Courtrooms
The Los Angeles County Superior Court will lay off 329 employees and close 17 courtrooms due to budget cuts effective April 1, administrators have announced. But the state Judicial Council said it considered the layoffs "excessive" and unnecessary" based on preliminary information.

Chadbourne Rescinds Job Offers to 11 Deferred Associates
Chadbourne & Parke confirmed on Wednesday that it had rescinded job offers to 11 incoming associates it had previously deferred past January 2010. Chadbourne said it has paid each of the 11 deferred associates the balance of a $73,000 stipend promised after the firm delayed their start dates. The firm said the decision has no effect on the other lawyers in the class or its 2010 incoming associates and summer class.

Criminal Defense Attorneys Build War Chest, Gain Support in New York City
New York City's 18-B lawyers, private attorneys who represent indigent criminal defendants when a conflict exists, have raised nearly $100,000 to battle the plan to give much of their work to institutional providers. Five county bar associations issued a supportive joint resolution.

N.Y. City Bar Retracts Survey's 'Not Satisfied' Finding on Deferred Associates
The New York City Bar on Wednesday retracted a finding from a survey suggesting that deferred associates were not satisfied with the lawyers with whom they worked at public interest groups. Saying it had misinterpreted data, the bar association also issued a revised report, which claims that deferred associates "were largely happy with their placements," a stark difference from the previous report, which suggested a "culture gap" existed between the law firm-bound lawyers and their public interest colleagues.

At Ruden McClosky, the Exodus Continues
Ruden McClosky, the Florida firm that has lost about 50 partners and two offices over the past year, saw five more lawyers wave goodbye this week for Fox Rothschild. The mass departures to various firms have spurred rumors that Ruden is on the verge of dissolving, an idea that the firm has denied. One of the lawyers who switched to Fox Rothschild says she thinks the Ruden firm will survive, partly because the January loss of eight critical lawyers to Adams and Reese served as something of a wake-up call.

Anapol Schwartz Partner Dispute Aired in Court Documents
Arguments are due to be heard this week involving suits by and against Anapol Schwartz, which claims that former shareholder Howard J. Levin violated the shareholders agreement by not agreeing to share fees or repay advanced costs related to 22 cases he took with him after being voted out of the law firm as of Dec. 31, 2009. The firm seeks to consolidate that lawsuit with its suit over an alleged "conspiracy" between Levin and an associate. Levin's suit claims improprieties in the setting of his salary and bonuses.

Life in the Doldrums Continues for Civil Litigators
Anyone who hoped commercial litigation would help law firms weather the recession was surely disappointed last year. That's judging by recoveries that National Law Journal affiliate VerdictSearch counted among its Top 100 Verdicts of 2009. Commercial verdicts, including breach-of-contract recoveries, fell from $1.4 billion in 2008 to just $421 million last year. One reason for the drop: Corporate clients worked to control costs by waiting to file suits -- a trend apt to continue for the first half of this year.

Interview Strategies: Handling a Callback
A callback interview is not the time to coast on the success of earlier interviews, say consultants Valerie Fontaine and Roberta Kass. It's a good idea to brainstorm and come up with some fresh information to discuss, and be prepared to be "on" for many hours with more than one interviewer.

Trainee Retention Rates Drop Below 80 Percent at Top U.K. Firms
Trainee retention rates across the U.K.'s top 30 law firms have been hit by the economic downturn, with most firms with March 2010 intakes retaining under 80 percent of newly qualified lawyers. The average retention rate has dropped nearly 10 percent from March of last year.

Advice for the Lawlorn
Recruiters are contacting employees at my company. Is this legal? Is there an effective way to deal with these people? Ann answers, and discusses how a law firm's "no recruiters" stance cost them the candidate they wanted.
News Feed Is Not Available At This Time. Error message:The remote server returned an error: (404) Not Found.

www.CHALDEAN.org Copyright 2004 - 2008, All Rights Reserved.     |    Privacy Statement    |    Terms Of Use