no sign
where two roads meet
iris blooms
spring rain
a bruise on my arm
from donating blood
evening walk
a merry-go-round turning
in the fog
cherry blossoms
today the courage
to speak to her
paul m from the heron’s nest — a haikai journal “THNLogoG”
– find three more haiku from paul m. in the newest Roadrunner (V:2) –
by dagosan:
rainy Saturday —
the chirping robin
needs a date, too
[April 22, 2005]
potluck
Thanks to Marshall Camp at jd2b for pointing to the f/k/a piece on
law school promotional tactics and standards.
jd2b also pointed to a recent Washington Post Career Track column
that is a must-read for college students thinking about going to law
school. In a review of the book Should You Really Be a Lawyer?,
by D. Schneider and G. Belsky (2004), Mary Ellen Slayter lists some of
the most common traps that applicants fall into as they march mindlessly
toward law schools without figuring out their own motivations, adding up
the true cost, assessing realistic job options if saddled with large debt, or
seeking out unbiased and experienced opinions about law practice. “First,
Make a Case: Is Law School for You?” (Wash. Post, April 17, 2005)
one senryu…
steroids
my grandson asks
“are they kinda like wheaties?”
Comment by ed markowski — April 23, 2005 @ 11:20 pm
one senryu…
steroids
my grandson asks
“are they kinda like wheaties?”
Comment by ed markowski — April 23, 2005 @ 11:20 pm
I’m hosting a live online chat with the author of the book on Friday, May 6. It’d be very cool if you could stop by and contribute to the discussion. It doesn’t even have to be in the form of haiku.
Comment by Mary Ellen — April 29, 2005 @ 1:54 am
I’m hosting a live online chat with the author of the book on Friday, May 6. It’d be very cool if you could stop by and contribute to the discussion. It doesn’t even have to be in the form of haiku.
Comment by Mary Ellen — April 29, 2005 @ 1:54 am