|    Register
   
Thursday, January 08, 2009
Latest News & Information

Current Articles | Categories | Search | Syndication

After Attacking Armenians with Stereotypes, NBC Goes After Chaldeans and Jews

California, USA – “They think they can bring back their ratings by fanning stereotypes and prejudices.  They are purposely picking on Chaldeans and Jews hoping to get better ratings.  NBC is using a strategy that is harmful and sick,” says Jenna Bittis of California. 

The Chaldean woman is upset over NBC’s new pseudo-reality show.  “They deliberately place outspoken and flamboyant mothers against insecure bimboes craving attention in their latest whorish hook-up show,” says Bittis.  “NBC is dead and desperately reaching at anything to try and make a come-back.”

Momma's Boys, the NBC dating-show-with-a-twist from Ryan Seacrest seems to have both Jewish and Chaldean viewers upset.  The show attempts to make a statement about prejudice using two middle aged overprotective mothers of implied Jewish and Chaldean descent unintelligently defending their wishes.  Obviously the shows producers are orchestrating outbursts for ratings in a Jerry Springer like fashion simply for ratings.  

"The sparks soon fly!" as the ad promotes when Khalood Bojanowski, a Michigan Iraqi Catholic mom says she needs her son to end up with a white Catholic girl: no black, Asian, Muslim or Jewish bachelorettes need apply. Another bachelor's mom, Esther, is a stereotypical smothering-Jewish mom, right down to the Yiddishisms, the kvelling over her "mensch" son and the Coffee Talk accent.  This rubs many of the girls the wrong way and with contestants encouraged to put on a good show for the reality cameras – the Jerry Springer like attacks begin. 

The aftermath is a viewer conditioned to believe the over-the-top Chaldean and Jewish stereotypes.

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Government & Society By Rita Abro
Read More...
Victors of War Go the Spoils Angers Chaldeans

New York, USA – Chaldeans and Assyrians in American are appalled at Christie’s Auction House of New York.  “They are war profiteers moving the spoils of war,” says Chaldean art collector Enas Namoo from his downtown Chicago office.  The Chaldean art collector, well known for his Mediterranean art collection, was furious for what he saw in the catalog of the ancient art and antiquities auction at Christie's next week.  Among the collection was a pair of neo-Assyrian earrings established as artifacts of Mesopotamia.  “This belongs in the museum, not on an auction block,” said a angered Namoo. 

Along with Namoo, Iraqi authorities have also appealed to have the pair of neo-Assyrian earrings returned.  The 9,000–10,000-year-old earrings are expected to bring in up to $65,000, but Iraqi officials say they are part of the treasures of Nimrud and thus rightfully the property of Iraq.

Chaldean archeologist, art curator, antiquity expert, and former director of the Iraq Museum Donny George says, “I am 100 percent sure they are from the same tombs from Nimrud. I witnessed the excavation."

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Law & Order, Business & Finance, Government & Society By Rita Abro
Read More...
Author Releases New Fictional Book on the Plight of A Chaldean Family

Michigan, USA – Publisher, author, and journalist Donna Gundle-Krieg releases “From Desert to Detroit.”  The book is an award winning educational story about a young Detroit Chaldean named Nadia Sefro and her family leaving a country in turmoil to a country of dreams.  However, the Sefro family find themselves facing a new set of challenges in Detroit. 

This story takes place during the time of the 911 disaster from the point of view of the child Nadia.  The book is filled with interesting characters of all ages.  The book is recommended for ages 8 to adult, with particular appeal for those in 3rd through 6th grade, and contains valuable social studies lessons.

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment By Sam Yousif
Read More...
Chaldean Soccer Superstar Justin Meram Storms To Nationals

Arizona, USA – Justin Meram, the greatest offensive player in the history of the ACCAC takes his team to victory once more.  Chaldeans are known for their incredible soccer skills and the hot dry desert air must have made Justin Meram’s DNA tingle.  

The Yavapai College sophomore star dominated the conference and helped advance the undefeated Roughriders to another Soccer Nationals. 

Meram, a 6-foot-1 attacker who arrived in Prescott by way of Eisenhower High School in Shelby Township, Mich., mesmerized the team his soccer ability.

The soccer sensation sets a record of 49 goals in a career. This year alone he has 28 goals and 17 assists, tied for the single-season program record.  Meram led the conference in assists and tied for the lead in goals in conference play with teammate Francis Khamis with 21. The unstoppable Meram received the ACCAC and Region 1 Player of the Year awards. He's one of only five players in the nation with over 28 goals in 2008, and his 20 assists are the most among the top five scorers.

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment By Tommy Hanna
Read More...
Can A Difference Be Made By Chaldeans Calling for Action?

 California, USA – An unlikely duo seem to breaking through the information blackout of Iraq’s desperate situation.  Contrary to news coverage that Iraq is healing, few if any major media outlets are covering Iraq’s minority persecution. 

Chaldean Catholic Cardinal Emmanuel-Karim Delly of Baghdad, Iraq, expressed sadness over what he viewed as a chronic lack of concern and concrete action to stop the violence and protect all of Iraq's citizens.  Greater attention and pressure are needed so that the Iraqi government can "be just and fulfill its duty toward its citizens," he said.

Echoing the Cardinal’s call urging everyone to help call attention to the injustice, Chaldean star rapper Timz, winner of the Hollywood Film Festival's "Video of the Year" and nominee for the MTV Video Music Awards' "Video of the Year," releases another hip-hop masterpiece titled “Do Something.”  A powerful call to action that begins with a hypnotic beat mixed with middle eastern flair beginning with a message from Timz himself to “Change the world, not the channel.”

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Government & Society, World News & Odds 'N' Ends By Mary Esho
Read More...
A Catholic Woman Returns to the Church

Archbishop Charles Chaput of Denver Colorado recently addressed a group gathered in a in Sydney, Australia. The topic was, “Mission Possible: This Double Life Will Self-Destruct.” In a chillingly honest fashion, Archbishop Chaput shares his thoughts on our lives today, as Catholics, and how we ought to realize our need to live wholly and completely for Christ.

We can't live a half-way Christianity. The organizers of tonight's event were right [those who named it ‘Mission Possible: This Double Life Will Self-Destruct’]. Every double life will inevitably self-destruct. The question then becomes: How are we going to live in this world? How can we lead a Christian life in a secular age? We can't really answer that question until we get some things straight about what it means to be a Christian. And that means first getting some things straight about Jesus Christ.

This is another one of the by-products of our secular age: we don't really quite know what to think about Jesus anymore. A few years before he became Pope Benedict XVI, then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger wrote something that is unfortunately very true. He wrote: "Today in broad circles, even among believers, an image has prevailed of a Jesus who demands nothing, never scolds, who accepts everyone and everything, who no longer does anything but affirm us. . . . The figure is transformed from the 'Lord' (a word that is avoided) into a man who is nothing more than the advocate of all men." 

We all know people -- friends or family members or both -- who think about Jesus in these terms. It's hard to avoid. Our culture has given Jesus a make-over. We've remade him in the image and likeness of secular compassion. Today He's not the Lord, the Son of God, but more like an enlightened humanist nice guy.

This is, very much, the message in Catholic radio host, author, and speaker Teresa Tomeo’s new book, “Newsflash! My Surprising Journey from Secular Anchor to Media Evangelist.” Teresa did her best to live a half-way Christianity and found the great many ways in which such a life will self-destruct.

Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Religion & Spirituality By Cheryl Dickow
Read More...
Internationally Famous Singer Invited to Encore Chaldean Concert Performance

Michigan, USA – “The man is an inspiration to the whole world.  The Pope climbed down the stage to kiss him,” says Gabby Kajy.  “I didn’t know much about him until I saw him at the ECRC festival at St. Thomas.  I bought all his CD’s which he signed with his feet.  He was incredible and I have been a fan ever since.” 

Kajy is talking about the famous Tony Melendez.  It was on September 15, 1987, he played his guitar for Pope John Paul II in Los Angeles. Born without arms, he performed a touching song entitled Never Be The Same. When the Pope approached him from the stage to kiss him in appreciation, it seemed to reflect the sentiments of the entire country.

Never Be the Same was an appropriate song Melendez sang for the Holy Father, for those few moments changed Tony Melendez' life and brought his unrestrained abilities as a guitarist into national attention. It seems to be a fitting place for a man who has spent his life putting personal confidence above his handicap.   The international marvel has been featured on Life On A Rock, The 700 Club, Good Morning America, The Today Show, CBS This Morning, NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw, Home Life Television, and Entertainment Tonight to name just a few of his countless television appearances. 

Melendez is being called back to an encore presentation for the ECRC festival to be held at St. Joseph Chaldean Church campus in Troy this Friday, September 26.   The concert is open to the public and tickets are being subsidized to the bargain of only $10 for a two-day concert pass. 

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, ECRC, Chaldean Churches By Sam Yousif
Read More...
Chaldean Church Sports Leage Basketball 2009 Season Announced

Michigan, USA – January of 2009 begins the battles as returning basketball champions prepare to defend their titles.  The Chaldean Church Sports League (CCSL) has shocked the Chaldean community by bringing together the community’s best and most talented basketball athletes together under one roof.   

Defending champions Mar Addai Healers of Oak Park in the boys middle school division, St. Thomas Twin Tigers of West Bloomfield in the girls high school division, and Mother of God Guardian Angels in the high school boys division claim they will once again repeat their championship win.  

For more information click on the READ MORE button below.

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Chaldean Church Sports League, Chaldean Churches By Tommy Hanna
Read More...
Chaldean Church Sports League (CCSL) Fall 2008 Games

Michigan, USA – “The Chaldean Backgammon Open brings out the best players in Michigan,” says Joe Yasso.  “If anyone thinks they are good in backgammon they can prove it once and for all.” 

The Chaldean Church Sports League announces their 2008 Fall Game seasons with a rematch of the community’s best players in three Chaldean dominant games.  Chaldeans will compete for both individual and team points in table tennis, chess, and backgammon.   

To learn more about the competition and how to register click the READ MORE button below.

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Chaldean Church Sports League, Chaldean Churches By Tommy Hanna
Read More...
Mar Addai Healers and St. Joseph Protectors Face-Off in the 2008 CCSL High School Soccer Championships

 

Michigan, USA - Chaldean Church Sports League concludes the summer soccer season with Mar Addai Healers facing St. Joseph Protectors.  The two teams have faced one another in the regular season with intense competition.  On Saturday, August 23, 2008 the two teams prepared for soccer battle at the Southfield Michigan Municipal Sports Complex. 

CCSL sports commentators were refusing to share with fans which team was the clear favorite.  Although Mar Addai showed a slight edge as a favorite, commentators were concerned over their lack of discipline.   “The team is intense.  They take soccer very seriously.  However, their passion spillith over and gets them into trouble,” says CCSL fan Jason Gabara.  “If they can keep their play under control they would be picked as the clear favorite.”

On the other side of the field, wearing blood red, St. Joseph Protectors have sports fans concerned as well.  Gabara says, “St. Joseph has a handful of incredible players.  The leagues best, however, they can not carry the team alone.  The team is a bit unbalanced, but if the younger players step-up, St. Joseph is unstoppable.” 

Filed in: Sports, Art, and Entertainment, Chaldean Church Sports League, Chaldean Churches By Tommy Hanna
Read More...
Previous Page | Next Page
Syndicate  

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