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Technically the summer was over although school wouldn’t start for another day. As luck would have it, the first day of autumn was a Friday and so we had the day off. It hadn’t gotten cold yet but it was clearly not as warm as the previous weeks. I walked around our pool wondering when we would be emptying it as I removed leaves and branches from the water. Just in case I need to reach or waddle further in, I had my bathing suit on. The pool finally looked clean enough by my standards. As I pondered hanging out in the backyard a bit more or going inside and having lunch, a thought occurred to me. At first I tried to ignore it but it was too tempting. I realized I could be bragging about it for years. If I were to do it, now at high noon would be the time because as time ticked away it would be more difficult and painful to implement. I contemplated the situation for a bit before finally peeling my shirt off and diving into our pool. I didn’t swim for much, probably just a few laps be...
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Zara Chavoshi is a professional soccer player who plays as a defender for the Orlando Pride of the National Women's Soccer League. Chavoshi is one of three children born to Soheil and Cindy Tran-Chavoshi. Her father is originally from Kermanshah, Iran; her mother from Cần Thơ, Vietnam. Both of her parents immigrated to Canada, where they met and became citizens, before moving to the United States, where Chavoshi was born. Chavoshi played collegiate soccer at Wake Forest, has dual Canadian and U.S. citizenship. Chavoshi made club history as the first player Orlando signed directly out of college since the NWSL removed its annual draft as a player acquisition mechanism. 
Ethan walked towards Victoria's office, almost positive about what his boss wanted to say to him. He took a deep breath and entered. Victoria got up from her seat. "Ethan, thank you for coming in. I wanted to talk somewhere private. It’s about us. I don’t regret what happened between us. But I don’t want it to stay undefined either. "Victoria, you’re my boss." "I know exactly what that means. That’s why I’m bringing this up instead of pretending it doesn’t matter. People always talk. What matters is whether we handle it with integrity. This can work with full disclosure to HR. Then I step back from directly supervising your performance reviews. We restructure reporting lines if necessary. I don’t want you to ever feel pressured. If you say no right now, nothing changes professionally. I mean that. Power dynamics are complicated. I need to know this isn’t just excitement or convenience." "You always wanted a lover. I only wanted a job." "I res...
Former Bundesliga coach Alexander Nouri is no longer working in football - but McDonald's. The 46-year-old former attacking midfielder, who featured for the likes of Werder Bremen and Holstein Kiel in his playing career, did his coaches badges in 2016 with current Germany boss Julian Nagelsmann, but has now opted to drop out of the sport. After retiring from playing in 2011, he coached at the likes of VfB Oldenburg and also had a brief period as Bremen manager, last coaching at Kavala, which he left in 2022. He is now a manager of two McDonald's restaurants; one in Herzogenrath, a small town in North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany, and one in Kohlscheid nearby. 'Ultimately, both worlds are about bringing people together. In football, it's the players; here, it's the employees,' he told German publication Suddeutsche Zeitung. He added: 'The basic principle is the same: you have to understand who is in front of you, what motivates him, what he needs to perform....
Similar to last year the school bus would handle that and after asking around I found the bus that catered to our neighborhood. Unfortunately I failed to inform the driver of my presence, perhaps thinking he already knew, and so the first day back from school after all students had been dropped off, with much amazement he spotted me and turned around asking, “Who are you?” “I’m new at school. They told me this is the bus I should take.” “Where do you live?” “On Mirdamad Boulevard.” He was beside himself. “Mirdamad? I already covered that area. Why didn’t you say something when we were there?” I fumbled for an answer. “I thought you were gonna circle around back.” The ride back to Mirdamad was by no means spent in silence. The entire drive the driver went on and on complaining about my failure to speak up the first time we were in the neighborhood. When we finally arrived at my door step he got out with me, spotted a few random people on the sidewalk and began sharing his sob story with...
On Wheel of Fortune there was a girl that initially when I saw her judging by her looks I thought she was Iranian. But then when I saw her name was Helena Asherian I figured she's not. In her introduction she mentioned that she is a Georgia State University alum who tries to get on the Jumbotron every time she goes to a sporting event (whether it’s on the dance cam or hanging out with the mascots), and also does Persian dancing (her dance appears on the entrance video screen).  
Monday mornings are the worst. When my alarm went off at 6:00am today I was in the middle of a nightmare in which I was kissing Valentino by a crystal blue Italian stream. I wish it were Sunday.  
Born to Iranian parents, Ashkan Karbasfrooshan spent some of his childhood in Spain before arriving in Montreal age six.  "Not losing sight of our privilege, we left Tehran somewhat comfortably in 1983 thanks to my father’s occupation for the Spanish embassy. We moved to Madrid, Spain. A year later, we settled in Montreal. I grew up in Canada from the age of 6. While my Nurture vs Nature manifest traits of Persian culture, I grew up as Canadian as someone who’d move to the country at such a young age." He grew up and lived all across Montreal. He ended up enrolling in Concordia’s business program, though he said he also had a keen interest in humanities. For work, he imagined becoming an investment banker. “I was really good at finance, but because of the dot.com crash and being ‘Ashkan Karbasfrooshan from Montreal,’ it wasn’t like Goldman Sachs from Wall Street was going to go: ‘Oh, let’s hire this kid.’ But I said: ‘The internet is the future. Just go work at a startup.’” A...
Tehran Von Ghasri, is a comedian, actor, writer, host with a personality and charm that’s larger than life.  Tehran is a Washington DC native and Los Angeles transplant, born to an Iranian immigrant father and an African-American mother.  Adding to his eclectic roots is the mixture of Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and Zoroastrian grandparents. Tehran and his comedy are as international, inclusive, and culturally diverse as they come.  Armed with degrees in Politics & Communications, a Masters in Econ, and a Law Degree, Tehran combines academics with street smarts to bring comedy, social commentary, and social activism alive on stage in the most fun and humorous of ways.   "I've heard the 'What are you' question my whole life. So my father is Iranian and my mother is African American. I am born and raised in Washington, DC. My father originally did not teach me Farsi. He was practicing his English. He wanted to learn English and so he spoke to me in English. And...
In the 9th grade Ali Shahbazyar brought me an English text and asked me if I could translate the poem. I took it home and went over it and translated it as best as I could. Others at home also heard it and commented on it particularly the line "Run, rabbit, run, dig that hole, forget the sun, when, at last, the work is done, don't sit down, it's time to dig another one". The next day after I returned it to him he gave me another poem that seemed to be about time.  Almost 40 years later I remembered part of the lyrics and decided to google the poems. I discovered that neither one was a poem but rather they were two Pink Floyd songs (Breathe and Time). Furthermore I realized the instrumental opening part of Time was used in the radio show تقویم تاریخ although that I also didn't discover until recently.