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f/k/a archives . . . real opinions & real haiku

June 9, 2008

the sad sky-diving suicide of a young schenectady man

Filed under: Haiku or Senryu,Schenectady Synecdoche — David Giacalone @ 6:13 pm

Sloan Carafello, a 29-year-old resident of Schenectady, died Saturday afternoon, June 7, 2008. May he rest in peace, after ending what must have been a very troubled life, by jumping out of a sky-diving plane without a parachute.

See “Man dies after leap from plane: Schenectady man hits house in jump without parachute” (Albany Times Union, June 8, 2008); “Police say jumper’s death suicide” (Albany Times Union, June 9, 2008); “Man leaps from plane, dies: City man didn’t wear parachute” (Schenectady Sunday Gazette, June 8, 2008); “Plane jumper called ‘quiet’ resident of Y” (Schenectady Daily Gazette, June 9, 2008); “Man jumps from plane with no parachute, dies” (Associated Press, June 8, 2008); “Jumper’s death ruled a suicide” (CapitalNews9, June 9, 2008).

Here’s a news video clip with a good summary, including an interview with Bob Rawlins, the owner/pilot of the plane and the Duanesburg Skydiving Club, from WNYT.com, Channel 13 in Albany, NY. “Skydiver jumps to his death,” June 8, 2008. [Frankly, I don’t much like the look on the anchor woman’s face at the end of this national FoxNews video of the event, called Bizarre Death. ]

update (June 10, 2008): “Probe of fatal leap from plane finds pilot issue: FAA says sky-diving club owner lacked required commercial license for carrying paid passengers ” (Albany Times Union, June 10, 2008) Bob Rawlins has a private pilot’s license and an FAA-approved license to pack parachutes, but not the commercial license needed to have paying passengers. The Federal Aviation Administration says it is unlikely that Rawlins’ lack of proper credentials contributed to the tragedy.

The basic facts of Sloan Carafello’s death:

  • Carafello had called a number of time and asked to be allowed to ride on the plan as an observer, saying he wanted to take photos for a school project. On Saturday, he rode his bicycle to the Duanesburg Airport, about a dozen miles from his home, a room at the Schenectady YMCA.
  • After the three skydivers jumped (a student, a videographer and the instructor), witnesses said Carafello followed with no diving gear, and the pilot was not able to grab him to stop him.
  • The videographer filmed as Carafello fell and Carafello took pictures of himself while falling through the air, according to the pilot. Police have the video.
  • He fell 10,000 feet onto a house near the Duanesburg Airport, and died of massive trauma. State Police have ruled the death a suicide.
  • Carafello’s co-workers, in the seafood department at the Eastern Parkway Price Chopper in Schenectady, told the Times Union that he asked them frequently in recent months, “If you had to die, would you rather jump off a building or jump out of a plane without a parachute?”

(Sch’dy Daily Gazette, photo by Bruce Squiers) This is the tar-covered damaged roof, where Sloan Carafello landed and met his death. The home is located on Duanesburg Road in the town of Dunanesburg, a mostly-rural town a few miles from Schenectady and about a dozen miles west of Albany.

Beyond the note of sadness that I would normally feel about a news item like this, I’m particularly touched by Sloan’s story, because I’ve learned that he lived in a single-occupancy room at our downtown YMCA, just a block and a half from my home. He was one the 182 men who stay on the fourth floor of the YMCA at 13 State St.

Unfortunately, many of my neighbors, and their Stockade Neighborhood Association, very much resent having the Y program located at the edge of our residential historic district (although no one ever points to actual crimes or disturbances caused by these down-on-their-luck men, who are trying to get their lives back together). The Association is very upset that the Y might not remove the program when it moves its gym and pool to a new, distant building.

I hope the struggling young man did not feel that hostility, as he rode his bike or strolled through the neighborhood, with his ever-present backpack and blue parka. It sounds like he bothered no one while living his solitary life.

According to today’s Gazette:

  • YMCA Residence Director Louis Magliocca, described Carafello as “Real quiet. . . . His name never came across my desk as an issue there.” And, Carafello never missed a rent payment since his arrival at the YMCA. Carafello, unlike many of the residents, did not come to the YMCA because of a substance abuse problem.
  • The Y staff reported no issues involving Carafello on Friday or Saturday. Magliocca said state police told him they searched Carafello’s room and did not find a suicide note.
  • According to Sloan’s former landlord, who also runs the boxing gym where he frequently worked out, he was a loner and did not have any friends. Although he may have family in the Troy area, none have been mentioned in any news report so far. update (June 10, 2008): Today’s Albany Times Union reports: “Ryan Carafello, Carafello’s twin, on Monday said the family does not blame Rawlins in any way for his brother’s death. He said his brother was an ‘independent individual’ and that no one else could be held accountable for his suicide.” Ryan also said his family had always loved Carafello and opened their arms to him, but his brother chose to be a loner.

In today’s Times Union, we are told that “Sloan Carafello didn’t talk much. Not when he was at work stocking fish at Price Chopper, and not as a passenger in the sky-diving plane from which he leaped to his death in what State Police are calling an apparent suicide.” The story adds:

“The people who had contact with Carafello in his final moments were still shocked by his death on Sunday. They struggled to understand the silent guy whose life ended when he hit the roof of a house on Duanesburg Road. . . .

” . . . He boxed at a gym nearby and worked out frequently, said James Commarto, the gym’s owner and Carafello’s landlord in Schenectady before he moved to the YMCA. Commarto said Carafello never had parties and kept an immaculate apartment. . .

“Commarto said Carafello previously told him he hadn’t talked to his family in years.”

window I have no answers and nothing profound to add. I wish Sloan had not decided to kill himself. If he was determined to do so, I wish he had done it in a way that did not traumatize so many others. But, most of all, as I said at the head of this posting, I hope Sloan Carafello will rest in peace. May we improve our ability and our willingness to help other troubled souls like Sloan Carafello.

update (June 10, 1 PM): An obituary in today’s Albany Times Union tells a story of a young man with many interests (e.g., hiking, travel, photography, oil painting, Bob Marley music, reading biographies) and many loving family members. He was born in 1979, in Catskill, NY; was the son of Jerry E. and Orlinda Reid Carafallo; and had three siblings, including a twin brother, Ryan. Funeral and burial information are included in the obituary.

Personal note: As a twin myself, my heart goes out to Ryan, as I try to imagine what the loss of my brother in any manner — but especially in this manner — would feel like.

afterwords (June 145, 2008):  “Long Story Short” (Life Obscure, June 13, 2008) is a particularly thoughtful weblog posting about Sloan by a young woman called Waven.

summer’s end—
riding a borrowed bicycle
past the graveyard

……………….. by paul m. – from finding the way

staring
back up the open eyes
of the suicide

….. by George Swede – Taboo Haiku (2006) – TabooHaikuCover

autumn evening –
yellow leaves cover
the plot reserved for me

An obituary
circled in the newspaper–
pale winter moon

My small family gone–
ants crawl on their graves
in the pale autumn sun

window neg …… by Rebecca Lilly
“cold autumn dusk” – Shadwell Hills (Birch Press, 2002)
“autumn evening” – A New Resonance 2; Modern Haiku XXX:2

news of his death
the cigarette smoke rises
straight up

……… by DeVar Dahl – New Resonance 3 gullsFN

June 8, 2008

commission & communion

Filed under: Haiku or Senryu,q.s. quickies — David Giacalone @ 10:04 pm

There’s no obvious link (other than lexical proximity) between the two topics covered in this posting, and none was meant — the anti-phone-scam campaign of the Federal Trade Commission and Douglas Kmiec, the conservative lawyer denied communion at a Catholic mass because he had endorsed Barack Obama for President.

Of course, Prof. Yabut (our Inner Contrarian and Designated Devil’s Advocate) has suggested that the topic of religion-and-politics and the topic of fraud and scams might indeed be metaphysically connected. He also pointed out that I’m writing about my Former Faith and my Former Employer. Nonetheless, sitting in front of a fan, this steamy Sunday, Your Editor is merely pounding out a few pixels to keep himself from actually thinking hard about any thing. Please lower your expectations.

the street-corner preacher
points the way
with his Bible

……. by Michael Dylan Welch – Modern Haiku (Issue 38:3, Autumn 2007)

Scam Avoidance Tips from the FTC: If the hot weather has you staying indoors more, you’re more likely to be assaulted by telephone or online scammers. Or, the heat might have merely shortened your attention span and increased your procrastination reflex — setting you on the search for arguably educational video diversion. Either way, you’re in luck, because the Federal Trade Commission has been cranking out some nifty, little videos to help keep you safe from telemarketing scams.

Who’s Calling?” Go to the YouTube FTC Videos Page for the complete list of Commission videos, or head over to the FTC’s Telemarketing Fraud webpage for video and written advice. E.g., the FTC has two videos to help avoid Phone Scams:

FTC video on fraudulent telemarketing

FTC phone fraud video

You’ll also find informational clips on protecting personal information and avoiding identity theft online, at the office, and out at the mall.

summer day
a seat in the movies
away from others

……….. by John Stevenson – Upstate Dim Sum (2004/II)

Those of us who like our information in print, can peruse the FTC alert on “How to Recognize Phone Fraud.” It reminds us: “Criminals use the phone to commit many different types of fraud, including sweepstakes and lottery frauds, loan fraud, buying club memberships, and credit card scams.” And,

“Telephone scammers are good at what they do. They say anything and target everyone to try to cheat people out of money. They may call you and imply that they work for a company you trust, or they may send direct mail or place ads to convince you to call them.”

The Commission also wants to hear from you, if you’ve been contacted or victimized by phone-scammers. You can use the FTC Internet Complaint Form. Or contact your State Attorney General.

Want more? Click this logo.

You’ll find information from OnGuardOnline.gov, which “provides practical tips from the federal government and the technology industry to help you be on guard against Internet fraud, secure your computer, and protect your personal information.”

Debt Settlement Scams Targeted, too: A recent press release also noted that the FTC is going to Host a Debt Settlement Workshop on September 25, 2008, in Washington, D.C., which will examine the industry trend toward For-Profit Consumer Debt Relief Services. I’m very happy to hear this, but wish it had happened years ago.

A decade ago, I tried to get the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection to look into the debt-reduction tactics of New York lawyer Andrew Capoccia (at a time when neither the State AG nor Bar Counsel would act). The FTC staff took no action. If they had, “the Capoccia scandal” might have been nipped in the bud, instead of blossoming into a monstrous case of consumer fraud.

Intel Investigation: Speaking of the FTC and former employers, I got an email a couple days ago from my two-time FTC boss, Bert Foer and his American Antitrust Institute, saying “AAI Congratulates FTC on Opening of Intel Investigation” (American Antitrust Institute, June 6, 2008). As the New York Times reported on June 7th, “In Turnaround Anti-trust Unit Looks at Intel.” The Times explained (via Antitrust Review, “Kovacic reverses Majoras“): “The Federal Trade Commission has opened a formal antitrust investigation of Intel, the world’s largest maker of computer microprocessors, for anticompetitive conduct.” The investigation will look into accusations — believed by antitrust authorities in several other countries — “that Intel’s pricing policies have been designed to maintain a near-monopoly on the microprocessor market.” AAI had been urging the Commission to act for several years. The FTC owes it to the American consumer to investigate whether Intel has been abusing its market position in order to unfairly eliminate competition from competitors (such as AMD), thereby reducing consumer options and denying them the benefits of robust marketplace rivalry.

fisherman’s icebox
the look on her face
when she opens the chip dip

. . . . . …………………………. by Ed Markowski Modern Haiku (Vol. 37.2, Autumn 2006)

Kmiec Denied Communion for backing Barack: The last time I wrote about Douglas Kmiec, I thought the high-profile conservative-Catholic lawyer and academic was guilty of glossing over the role of Catholic teachings in the decision-making of Supreme Court justices. See “what if Justice Roberts is a ‘serious Catholicl’?” (Aug. 1, 2005). I was quite surprised to learn a few days ago, therefore, that Kmiec had endorsed Barack Obama back on Easter Sunday, March 23, 2008. The endorsement apparently shook up “conservative” Catholics, because Kmiec has always been a stalwart member of the pro-life movement and Obama supports “a woman’s right to choose.”

Kmiec came roaring back into the news last week, when it was reported by E. J. Dionne in his column for the The Washington Post that a priest had refused to give Kmiec communion because of his public endorsement of Obama. And see, “Priest Snubs Lawyer over Obama Endorsement” (National Public Radio, by Nina Totenberg, June 2, 2008); “Conservative lawyer denied communion for supporting Obama” (LA Legal Pad, June 5, 2008); “Law Prof Denied Communion for Supporting Obama” (ABA Journal News, June 6, 2008); and (attacking Kmiec) “Not fooling anyone” (The Cranky Conservative, June 6, 2008)

As Kmiec explained (“Doug Kmiec on ‘The Politics of Apostasy’,” Catholic Online, May 15, 2008):

“Having been drawn to Senator Obama’s remarkable “love thy neighbor” style of campaigning, his express aim to transcend partisan divide, and specifically, his appreciation for faith (“secularists are wrong when they ask believers to leave their religion at the door before entering into the public square”), I did not expect to be clobbered by co-religionists.

“On the blogs, I have been declared “self-excommunicated,” and recently at a Mass before a dinner speech to Catholic business leaders, a very angry college chaplain excoriated my Obama-heresy from the pulpit at length and then denied my receipt of communion.”

Nina Totenberg’s 5-minute report on npr is worth a listen, if this issue interests you. I was pleased to hear that the un-named (at Kmiec’s request to spare him the backlash) priest’s archbishop immediately stated that the priest had no authority to deny communion in this instance. Kmiec’s piece has a good explanation of the Church’s position:

“The American bishops have put it this way: ‘A Catholic cannot vote for a candidate who takes a position in favor of an intrinsic evil, such as abortion. . ., if the voter’s intent is to support that position. In such cases a Catholic would be guilty of formal cooperation in grave evil. At the same time, a voter should not use a candidate’s opposition to an intrinsic evil to justify indifference or inattentiveness to other important moral issues involving human life and dignity’.”

“Are there ‘other important moral issues involving human life and dignity’? The list is long: the death and economic waste associated with an unjustified war in Iraq; failure to be good stewards of the environment; promoting a tax code that favors the wealthy and undermines a family wage; perpetuating an immigration system that divides families and overlooks the exploitation of labor and more.”

prayingHandsS Having written the post “Catholic conservatives ignore Benedict on political ‘caritas‘” (June 4, 2006), I’m glad to see a respected conservative Catholic layman arguing that single-issue voters are doing a disservice to their Church’s traditional teaching. Doug Kmiec told Totenberg that he endorsed Obama because “he’s representing our better selves.” As an acknowledged apostate, who nonetheless respects the Church’s broad tradition of “politcal caritas,” I applaud Kmiec’s warning against “the politics of apostasy”:

“Whether an Obama presidency would readily improve relations with the Muslim world or not, whether or not you think me less pro-life (which I’m not) by my endorsement, it is important to both reaffirm civility and the related principles of religious freedom that refute gleeful crusades, at home or abroad, to single out supposed apostasy where none exists.”

I better quit now, before I break my pledge not to think too hard on this sultry Sunday. As usual, we’ll leave you with a few haiku.

 

 

umbrella after the abortion
she weeds
the garden

……… by George Swede – collected at Terebess Asia Online

spring sun-
high in his arms
the newborn is shown

… by Tom Clausen, from Homework (Snapshot Press 2000)

evening breezes
stir the cherry blossoms—
a newborn’s sweet breath

…… by DeVar Dahl

morning fog
a midwife wipes the eyes
of a newborn

….. by Andrew RiuttaTinywords.com

 

 

 

a fresh breeze from Modern Haiku

Filed under: Haiku or Senryu — David Giacalone @ 8:37 am

Blame it on our first spate of hazy-hot-humid weather. The f/k/a Gang has been too listless, restless, and breathless to concentrate on punditry the past couple of days. We might do some commentary later today but, until then, here are a few haiku from our Honored Guest poets that appeared in the still-refreshing Spring 2008 issue of Modern Haiku. (Vol. 39:1, Spring 2008).

flurries
telling her headstone
he cheated

…………….. by Roberta Beary – Modern Haiku, Volume 39.1 Spring 2008

girls in halter tops—
chewing my ice
with a vengeance

…………….. by David G. Lanoue – Modern Haiku, Volume 39.1 Spring

solitaire
my widowed father
lost in the shuffle

…………….. by Tom Painting

first
love
a rain-soaked raspberry
on
your
tongue

…………….. by Lee Gurga – Modern Haiku, Volume 39.1 Spring

Modern Haiku is a journal not a genre. We wish this much-respected source of haiku poetry and essays were fully-available online. It isn’t, but you can see a sample of the haiku, senryu, and haibun from each edition at its website, plus a featured essay. Any day now, the Summer issue of Modern Haiku should be out, and available by subscription; with samples online.

update (June 8, 2008): We hate to drop names, but yet another haiku luminary stopped by this week, leaving a thoughtful and positive Comment. This time, it’s Charles Trumbull, the Editor of Modern Haiku., who recently produced A Guide to Haiku Publications, 2008 (pdf). Charlie offers some useful information about his publication, and correctly points out that Modern Haiku posts a lot more of its contents online than other print-based haiku journals and publications.

time out
the setting sun
takes center field

….. by Peggy Willis Lyles – Modern Haiku (Vol. 38.1 Spring 2007)

rising gas prices—
an attendant changing numbers
in a pouring rain

…… by Michael Dylan Welch – Modern Haiku (Vol. 36:1, Spring 2005)

June 5, 2008

ed markowski strolls basho’s road

Filed under: haijin-haikai news,Haiku or Senryu — David Giacalone @ 11:32 am

Author-poet Norbert Blei discovered f/k/a‘s Honored Guest and Friend Ed Markowski at Tinywords.com in 2006, and has admired and sought out Ed’s work ever since. Yesterday, Blei helped to bring Ed Markowski to a broader group of poetry lovers — beyond regular readers of haiku — with an extended posting at his Basho’s Road website (which Blei created to focus on “the small poem and the quiet voice within”). Please see and enjoy Ed Markowski at Basho’s Road (June 4, 2008). [For more on the spirit of Japan’s master haikuist Basho, check out his classic book, and this commentary.]

Blei says this was probably the first of Ed’s poems he ever read:

dad’s grave . . .
all the flowers
he wouldn’t let mother plant

… by ed markowski – from Haiku Harvest (Fall/Winter 2005)

His reaction: “And, that’s it. Right there. He ‘nailed it‘ , so to speak. That what we’re after. That’s what Basho’s Road is all about.”

After seeing more Markowski, Blei concluded:

“He’s got it, I said to myself. The Scene. The eye to see inside. To simply lay the words on the line and let you see/feel for yourself.

In my humble estimation, my own small world of small poetry, he’s on his way to haiku master — if not already there.

. . . Basho’s Road in mind, he seemed a perfect stranger/poet to meet along the way and share with others.”

In addition to showcasing a few of Ed’s poems (you can find several hundred more here at f/k/a, by starting at his archive page), Blei let’s Ed speak. And his words are as pithy and sharp as his poetry. For instance:

. . . i don’t look for haiku moments, i think it’s more a matter of learning the craft, and placing things within that framework . . .

 . . . “i think the ‘haiku moment’ is basically a mirage perpetrated by people who like to think they see the world in some special sort of way, or that they’re tuned into some higher frequency.”

I especially enjoyed seeing online Ed’s insistence that this poem “is about raking leaves & nothing else” — despite an admiring critic who read much more into it:

fog . . .
i’ve got to begin
somewhere

– from Roadrunner Haiku Journal (Feb. 2006)

When we first posted Ed’s above poem about “dad’s grave” at f/k/a, I said:

While the rest of us sleep, eat, and work, Ed Markowski does all of those, gets in a lot of gardening and ESPN, and “finds” more haiku and senryu than a dozen other haijin combined.

I continue to be amazed by the ability of Ed-da-Prolific to “find” so many quality haiku so quickly (despite his recent decision to cut back, after judging a book contest for HSA last year “burned me out completely”). He’s especially impressive on frantic, short-deadline requests from me, when I want a few poems to go with a topic here at this weblog. Although he pooh-poohed to me Blei’s notion of Ed “being on his way to haiku master,” I reminded him that “master” has so many meanings, one is sure to stick.

If “haiku master” means achieving a high degree of skill and being worthy of teaching others (directly or by example), I am going to embarrass my friend Ed Markowski by agreeing with Norbert Blei, that “he’s on his way to haiku master — if not already there.” [Of course, as I’ve mentioned before to Ed (as to other haijin friends), I hope he’ll stay away from too much fooling around with spacing and line dispersion, and from those darn tell-ems — and stick to the simple, insightful presentation and juxtaposition of sensory images, which he does so well.]

Many thanks to Norbert Blei for sharing Ed Markowski with a broad audience of poetry lovers, at his lovely website, Basho’s Road.

June 4, 2008

HALT focuses on Fred Rodell — you should, too

Filed under: Haiku or Senryu,lawyer news or ethics — David Giacalone @ 8:11 pm

Last February, the legal reform group HALT unveiled a wonderful project to revive “the visionary legal reform lessons of Fred Rodell.” At that time, HALT launched the FredRodell.com website, along with its blandly-named The Law Blog. Former Yale Law Professor Rodell, who died in 1980 at 73 years of age, spent decades trying to demystify the legal profession, which he compared to medicine men and high priests, and is considered the Father of the Plain English Movement.

Steve Elias of Nolo.com posted HALT’s announcement in February at The Law Reform Soapbox (Feb. 20, 2008); and Laura Orr pointed to it from her Oregon Legal Research weblog at the end of March. Otherwise, the blawgisphere — including this weblog, which did not know about the Rodell Project until yesterday — has basically been mum about this fascinating legal gadfly. That’s too bad, because blawgers should feel a special kinship with Fred Rodell. As an obituary noted, Rodell “prided himself on writing for lay audiences and teaching others to do so. . . . Many of his students are the leading legal journalists of today.”

Here’s how the HALT announcement introduces Fred Rodell:

“Sixty-nine years ago, a young Yale law professor rocked the legal establishment with a scathing indictment of the American civil justice system entitled Woe unto You, Lawyers! Almost overnight Fred Rodell became the nation’s leading debunker of legal myths, and the target of untold ire from thin-skinned lawyers. And his provocative observations are as accurate today as they were seven decades ago.”

They go on to say that “Rodell was a true pioneer of the legal reform movement, one of the first to identify the structural failures of our civil justice system and to stridently challenge the legal establishment. But since his death in 1980, his thinking has not received the serious consideration that it deserves, and his key writings have disappeared from print.” Thus,

“That is why we at HALT were so excited to begin working with San Francisco legal reform advocate Alex Kline and Fred Rodell’s family to revive these visionary legal reform lessons on the Internet.”

That’s right: You could pay $45 to $93 dollars today for a used hard copy of Rodell’s out-of-print masterpiece at the Amazon.com Marketplace. But, thanks to HALT and Rodell’s family, you can now download “Woe Unto You, Lawyers” and read it for free in a 115-page PDF File. Likewise, Fred’s site offers access to his infamous law review article “Goodbye to Law Reviews” 48 Va. L. Rev. 279 (1962). You will especially appreciate Rodell on law journals, if you’ve been enmeshed in the recent tiff over Harvard Law Review standards; see, e.g., Bernstein at Volokh; Lat at Above the Law; and Greenfield at Simply Justice). For a law review article about Rodell, see Prof. Ken Vinson’s “FRED RODELL’S CASE AGAINST THE LAW” (Florida State Univ. Law Review, 1996)

Even if you somehow believe there is absolutely no need for legal reform (or you’re too busy milking the present system to improve it), you have to admit Rodell is on target with insights such as:

  • “There are two things wrong with all legal writing. One is its style. The other is its content” And “The average law review writer is peculiarly able to say nothing with an air of great importance.”
  • “[L]aw deals almost exclusively with the ordinary facts and occurrences of everyday business and government and living. But it deals with them in a jargon which completely baffles and befoozles the ordinary literate man.” And,
  • “[I]t is pretty hard to find a group less concerned with serving society and more concerned with serving themselves than the lawyers.”

Sadly, HALT has only had one post since February at The Law Blog — a reprint of an op/ed piece by HALT’s Executive Director Jim Turner, about the anti-consumer power grab by the legal profession in Wisconsin to greatly expand the definition of “the practice of law.” I’m hoping this posting will nudge some of our readers to get over to FredRodell.com and to The Law Reform weblog, and to let HALT know you would indeed love to see much more commentary in the spirit of Fred Rodell.

Meanwhile, woe unto me, if I don’t get some new haiku up here at f/k/a. To wit, another bunch by our Honored Guest Poets that were honored by inclusion in the latest edition of The Heron’s Nest (Vol. X, No. 2, June 2008):

a new light
on the dashboard
evening rain

…. by Alice Frampton

the first bare trees
a flock of blackbirds
turns back the clock

storage closet
the dead spider
as fine as its web

. . . by George Swede

snowed in . . .
opening the lid
of my breadmaker

. . . by Laryalee Fraser

the cat
right where I left him
haloed moon

. . . by Carolyn Hall

enough sunrise —
a small window
in an old hotel

. . . by Gary Hotham

p.s. In case you missed the story of the drunken teens who vandalized Robert Frost’s former home and were sentenced to a lecture on poetry, here are some links (all dated June 3, 2008): “Vandals Forced to Study Poetry of Frost” (npr, June 3, 2008, interviewing the professor who gave the class); “Poetic sentencing justice” (Prof. Berman at Sentencing Law & Policy weblog); “Reading Justice: Vandalize a Home, Read a Poem” (Deven Desai, at Concurring Opinions); “After a wild party, justice is metered out” (AP/Boston Globe).

I must confess: As I have virtually no interest in poems longer than 17 syllables (and prefer them even shorter), and even less interest in any lecture on poetry, this sentence would indeed deter me from getting drunk and rowdy at the home of any famous poet. So, the residences of Yu Chang and Roberta Beary are safe. Of course, as much as I like Fred Rodell, I might get a little rambunctious, if you make me sit through a reading of his Haverford College Commencement Address (1962), which is done all in free verse.

June 3, 2008

good haiku by kids

Filed under: haijin-haikai news,Haiku or Senryu — David Giacalone @ 4:56 pm

Yesterday, we talked about an infant who fell unnoticed out of his baby stroller (and under a bus). Today, I want to spotlight children who have apparently never been dropped on their heads, and who — more importantly — have been nurturing their inner poetic muses. These kids have been writing some pretty darn good haiku.

The Haiku Society of America has just announced the 2008 Winners of the Nicholas A. Virgilio Memorial Haiku Competition. The Virgilio Competition was founded in 1990 and is for students in Grades 7-12. It is sponsored and administered by the Nick Virgilio Haiku Association in memory of Nicholas A. Virgilio, a charter member of the Haiku Society of America, who died in 1989. [See the Nick Virgilio Poetry Project Website for more about Nick.] HSA cosponsors the contest, provides judges, and publishes the contest results in its journal, Frogpond, and at the HSA Website.

Tony Pupello and f/k/a Honored Guest Pamela Miller Ness were the judges for the 2008 Nicholas A. Virgilio Haiku Contest — which attracted 85 entries. Click to see their Judges Commentary, which notes:

“We would like to express our appreciation to all the young poets who submitted to this year’s contest and to the teachers who instructed them in the craft and special characteristics of haiku. It was a privilege to be invited to enter their haiku moments and a pleasure to share their imagery and language. . . . Many of the entries were sophisticated in their use of imagery and juxtaposition, and were very proficiently crafted. As with very fine haiku and senryu, many were layered and functioned on multiple levels. . . .”

In the Virgilio Winners Circle you will once again find students of poet-teacher Tom Painting — one of our very first Honored Guest Poets (since May 27, 2004). Indeed, five of the six winning poems were written by students at the School for the Arts, in Rochester, NY. (my birthplace), where Tom teaches Creative Writing. Three 12th graders from the School of the Arts had winning haiku: Asha Bishi (with two poems), Alexa Navarez and Desire Collier. In addition, 7th grader Gracie Elliot had a winner. Somehow, one non-Rochesterian — Lauren Fresch, grade 12, Sandusky, OH — had a winner, too. [Since 2003, the Virgilio Contest winners have been unranked; don’t get me started.]

f/k/a does not publish poems without the author’s permission, so we urge you to click here for the 2008 Virgilio Contest Winners to see what the fuss is all about. Of course, if any of the winners leaves a comment or sends an email granting permission, we’d be most pleased to add them right here.

We also want to remind you about the website Two Dragonflies, which features haiku and music for children, and is presented by award-winning children’s song-writer and haiku poet, Johnette Downing. The site has information about haiku, including an Educator’s Packet, and lots of links.

On its Haiku by Children page, Two Dragonflies has four poems by another young Rochesterian, who is still too young to enter the Virgilio Contest — Sarah Painting, who we’ve told you about here and there, and who is a 4th-grader and the daughter of Tom Painting. Two of those poems can be found in our “introduction to Sarah Painting” (Sept. 16, 2007). Here are the other two from Two Dragonflies:

watching a bee
skim the flowers-
summer’s end

November 11th
cemetery flags
Old and tattered

……………… by Sarah Painting – Two Dragonflies

You will find more poems by kids at Two Dragonflies — along with inspiration and instruction to help nurture more young haijin. Also, every day, you can click on the HSA Virgilio Contest Collection page to see the annual winners since 1990. I’m inspired by all the young haiku talent I’ve seen demonstrated today. After a nap, I hope to write a celebratory haiku, too, with beginner’s mind.

June 2, 2008

the evolution of baby strollers

Filed under: Haiku or Senryu,q.s. quickies,Schenectady Synecdoche — David Giacalone @ 10:16 am

Do you remember when you could easily see a baby in its stroller — and could tell whether a baby was actually in a stroller without getting a search warrant? [The little cutie on the far right below is my big sister Linda, in 1949. I don’t know the two other kids.]

. . . . . . . . . . .

A news story with a happy ending over the weekend out of nearby Abany, NY, reminded me of those days and of my occasional bemusement as baby strollers have been super-sized over the past few decades — turning into vehicles that their owners could only transport with vans or min-wagons, or buses. See “Teen saves baby who fell under bus” (Schenectady Daily Gazette, May 31, 2008); and “Teen: ‘I don’t feel like a hero’: Boy who grabbed baby from beneath bus receives thanks” (Albany Times Union, June 1, 2008); plus a video from CBS-6-Albany). As the TU reported yesterday:

“Amanda Hoffman of Bertha Street was trying to get Anthony, her 5-day-old baby, and a stroller on the bus by pulling the stroller up the stairs of the bus.

“Unknown to her, the baby fell out of the stroller, hit the blacktop and rolled underneath the bus tire, police spokesman Detective James Miller said.”

Luckily, fourteen-year old Tyler Purvis-Mitchell, “saw the baby underneath the bus in front of a wheel. He quickly grabbed the baby as the bus was about to take off.” The infant received only a cut on his forehead and some scrapes, and was released from Albany Medical Center Hospital later that afternoon.

. . . . . . . .

How did this happen? According to the Times Union:

“During an interview at her home Saturday evening, Hoffman said she knew something had dropped out of the stroller, but thought maybe it was a bottle. A strap on a car seat inside the stroller may have been loose or not snapped, she said. She said the teen acted quickly to save Anthony, a dark-haired, 7-pound baby born just May 25.”

Well, I have nothing particularly deep to add to the reactions you are probably having to this tale. One more example of bigger not necessarily being better — and of the importance of an ounce of prevention. Best wishes to Anthony Hoffman for a long and interesting life. And, thanks to Tyler Purvis-Mitchell for his quick thinking and action.

update (June 17, 2008): Tyler Purvis-Mitchell was honored today in a ceremony at our NYS Assembly in Albany. See “Teen hero honored by state Assembly” (CBS6Albany.com/WRGB, June 17, 2008), which notes that “A resolution was presented on the floor of the State Assembly this morning to celebrate Purvis-Mitchell’s heroism.”  And concludes, “Tyler humbly said he did not expect to be a hero, nor did he ever imagine he would be recognized for saving a life.”

sleepless . . .
the baby’s age
in days

children’s ICU–
a tissue box beside
the pay phone

I smile at her
smiling at the baby
smiling

… by John Stevenson from Some of the Silence (Red Moon Press,1999)

June 1, 2008

our guests at the nest

Filed under: Haiku or Senryu — David Giacalone @ 5:29 pm

 Forget the punditry (or just scroll down this page for plenty of it).  Here are a half dozen (of the 15) poems written by our family of Honored Guest Poets, and selected for the new edition of The Heron’s Nest (Vol. X, No. 2, June 2008), which went up early this morning.  You’ll find 115 never-before-published haiku in the latest edition of THN.

broken clouds —
he rearranges
the squirrel shield

snowmelt
a raspberry cane
springs back

………… by Yu ChangThe Heron’s Nest (Vol. X, No. 2, June 2008)

the sidewalk ends
at a high stone wall
dandelions

…. by Billie WilsonThe Heron’s Nest (Vol. X, No. 2, June 2008)

alone at the beach —
cones of bent pines
so low to the ground

……… by Carolyn HallThe Heron’s Nest (Vol. X, No. 2, June 2008)

sketch pad
no color
for snow

still morning
birds on the roof ridge
every which way

…….. by Hilary TannThe Heron’s Nest (Vol. X, No. 2, June 2008)

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