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2008 CCSL TRI-SPORT STATS


CCSL 2008 Basketball Team Stats  

Chaldean Church Sports League

Chaldean Church Sports League announces the opening of the 2009 CCSL Basketball season.  CCSL basketball season will include four divisions. 

  • Middle School Boys ages 10-13
  • High School Boys Ages 14 - 18
  • Middle School Girls ages 10-13 
  • High School Boys Girls 14 - 18

Official game play begins January 25 and runs consecutive weeks every Sunday.  All games will be played on at the Boys and Girls Club of South Oakland County Gymnasiam. 

TO REGISTER CLICK ON THE CCSL Basketball 2009 "Faith on Fire" logo.

All church coordinators, coaches, coaching staff, booster members, parents, and players are asked to review the documents and adopted game rules located to the right prior to contracting with a team.

Any comments or questions can be e-mailed to CCSL@Chaldean.org. Mother of God Church is serving as the hosting administrative church for the league during the 2008-2010 season.

The elected CCSL director for the 2008-2010 term is Dr. Natham Karumi.

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Jane Slaughter of Detroit Metro Times Critics New Sahara

Michigan, USA - Often food of the ethnic variety is a cultured taste where so much is tied to familial memories and good times.  A whiff of a favorite dish can transcend you back to a fond experience.  Add to the memories a combination of authentic spices and learned taste buds and you have a native’s perspective of their own cuisine. 

However, to someone less adjusted to the culture, culinary experience, or learned taste buds you might find a completely different perspectives.  Jane Slaughter, food critic of Detroit Metro Times recently shared her insight of New Sahara located in Farmington Hills, Michigan.  This is what she had to say…

I run across many immigrants in my line of work, and I always ask them to recommend restaurants that serve their country's food. Sure, the results can be tainted by "the owner is my cousin's godfather" or, more likely, by the tendency to choose what's most familiar rather than what's best. But it's worth asking, if only to get a handle on what's most authentic, even if you decide later on that you don't like authentic (more on that below).

I asked some recently arrived Iraqis, Chaldeans fleeing the violence, and they pointed to New Sahara, which has been around since 1982 and now has three locations in the northern suburbs.

How is a Chaldean restaurant different from the more familiar Lebanese? Many dishes are the same, but owners Saad and Zeana Attisha add, for example, pickled cabbage, purshee, that's served to everyone as a starter, plus some tomato-based stews. And their daily specials are Iraqi favorites: burgul (bulgur wheat) on Tuesdays; biryani on Wednesdays (like Indian biryani but less spicy, with rice, chicken, beef and potatoes); and pacha on weekends.

Pacha is where you're talking authentic. I didn't get to try it, as I'd gone to the only one of the three locations that doesn't serve pacha. It's a traditional holiday dish that takes days to prepare: cleaning and soaking beef tripe and intestines in lemon-water, stuffing them with ground beef and rice and spices; boiling them for hours; adding the lamb and the lamb tongue and the chickpeas. If you're not Iraqi, you probably have to be pretty hard-core to choose pacha; Zeana says many people split open the tripe and just eat the insides.

No matter — there are dozens of other options. As in many Middle Eastern restaurants, portions are large. Counting leftovers the next day, the dinner for two we ordered served a total of five. A small hummus starter is more than enough to derail three people's dinners.

New Sahara does better on the traditional side dishes than on the meat and poultry entrées I tried. Soups are admirable: a nutty lentil and a very lemony chicken lemon rice, thick and neon yellow. Falafel are a pretty pale green inside and properly crunchy without.

I was particularly fond of the baba ghanoush and hummus, because each is served with a lovely golden pool of olive oil in the center, a clever addition and perfect for dipping with the hot, puffed-up pitas. The baba is especially smoky and rich.

Unfortunately, two advertised items were not available: arayis and mjadara, both of which are good indexes of a restaurant's quality: Is the lamb in the arayis moist? Are the pine nuts generous? Can you taste the three separate flavors (lentils, cracked wheat, sautéed onions) in the mjadara, and is the crisp element as prominent as the silky onions? But Attisha says there's been little demand for these items, which she added a few months ago. Perhaps they're not authentic enough for the regulars.

Grape leaves, fattoush, kibbeh and tabbouleh are available — as well as cheese sticks, fried mushrooms and wings.

In comparison to the many side dishes, the beef and chicken kafta are not outstanding — they're rather dry. Chicken shawarma is fine when dipped in the usual pungent garlic sauce, which could cover a multitude of sins if necessary. Lamb chops — four of them — are tender and juicy, though not terribly spicy. All are served with two different tomato sauces to spoon over rice, one with potatoes and one with an interesting spice, perhaps allspice.

My curry fish was pretty OK, but not much whitefish taste made it through the smothering of onions and the spices. Catfish and masgoof, whitefish with a "special sauce" for $28.99, are also possible.

There's one more item on the menu that's unfamiliar to the Lebanese-trained public, a recurring theme that Zeana says is uniquely Chaldean: beef cream chop, lemon chicken cream chop and potato cream chop. No cream and no chops are apparent; in each case the meat has been breaded and deep-fried. So a beef cream chop is more or less a chicken-fried steak, cut in strips. It's relatively tough and not appetizing — at least, unless your mama served you this in your cradle. A potato cream chop compounds the error: beef in a deep-fried mashed potato shell.


Filed in Business & Finance, Opinion and Editorials :: By Mary Esho on Monday, September 01, 2008 :: 1236 Views
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CCSL Documents and Notes

Chaldean Church
Sports League (CCSL)
MISSION

The Chaldean Church Sports League is a diocese wide effort to help inspire the faithful through the spirit of sports and games.  In a safe and competitive sport environment the CCSL helps guide athletes along on their quest to victory through Christ.   The CCSL offers our community a wonderful opportunity for us all to come together and strengthen our mind, body, and soul by way of an energetic and lively sporting event dedicated to our Lord and Savior.
 
The Chaldean Diocese league includes:

  • Sacred Heart Saints
  • Mar Addai Healers
  • Mother of God Guardian Angels
  • St. George Dragon Slayers
  • St. Joseph Protectors
  • St. Thomas Twin Tigers

(The below files require a PDF reader)

 

  1. CCSL Guidelines
  2. CCSL Code of Conduct
  3. CCSL Player Permission Form 
  4. CCSL 08 Summer Season Game Rules

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