"another time
savor time
time together
time apart
universal time
big time
small time
on time
off time
friendly time
time killer
there is never enough time
till the end of time
time table
lifetime
time of year
reckoning time
the same time
time and again
keep time
record time
beat time
time and a half"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Last time
time structure
time dimension
astral time
another time
savor time
time together
time apart
universal time
big time
small time
on time
off time
friendly time
time killer
there is never enough time
till the end of time "
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Horrible time
Dreadful time
Funny time
Fewer time
Time sensitive
Time teller
Time to go
Time to stay
More time
Less time
Fine time
Pay for time
Buy time
Biding my time
Begging for time
True time
Time will tell
Time heals all wounds
Can you tell me the times"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Present time
Kill time
Waste time
Amount of time
I don’t have time
Check the time
Watch the time
Run out of time
Time’s up
Old time
New time
Olden time
Terrible time
Horrible time
Dreadful time
Funny time
Fewer time
Time sensitive
Time teller
Time to go
Time to stay
More time"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Long time no see
Several times
Time signatures
Metrical time
Organic time
Multiple time
Organiae time
Divide time
Time traveler
Pass time
Future time
Past time
Present time
Kill time
Waste time
Amount of time
I don’t have time
Check the time
Watch the time
Run out of time
Time’s up
Old time
New time
Olden time
Terrible time"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Show time
Any time
Some time
Starting time
Finishing time
Found time
Play in time
For all time
Dream time
Schedule time
Time saver
One time
Once upon a time
Long time
A long time ago
Long time no see
Several times
Time signatures
Metrical time
Organic time
Multiple time
Organiae time
Divide time
Time traveler
Pass time
Future time"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Global time
Your time
From this time forward
The time of her life
Many times
Show time
Any time
Some time
Starting time
Finishing time
Found time
Play in time
For all time
Dream time
Schedule time
Time saver
One time
Once upon a time
Long time
A long time ago"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Like the present
Time relations
Time card
Time frame
Punch time
Timer
Working time
Playing time
My time
Father time
Space time
Excellent time
Running time
Free time
Day time
Night time
Time schedule
Two time
Tea time
Tell time
Global time
Your time"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Bad time
Favorable time
There is no time
Like the present
Time relations
Time card
Time frame
Punch time
Timer
Working time
Playing time
My time
Father time
Space time
Excellent time
Running time
Free time
Day time
Night time
Time schedule
Two time
Tea time
Tell time
Global time
Your time"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Your time has come
Working over time
Time sheet
Run out of time
Time warp
Clock time
Give yourself time
Every time
Often time
so little time
Whole time
Time keeper
Find time
Have time
Give time
All the time
I have all the time in the world
No time
Sad time
Good time
Bad time
Favorable time "
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Time over
Time out
For the time being
Time telling
Time clock
From time to time
Time after time
Take your time
Out of time
Time was
What time is it
Do you have time
Your time has come
Working over time
Time sheet
Run out of time
Time warp
Clock time
Give yourself time
Every time
Often time
so little time
Whole time
Time keeper
Find time
Have time
Give time
All the time"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
"Time place
Time bending
Time stretching
Time fleeting
Time and again
Time tells
Time ending
Time over
Time out
For the time being
Time telling
Time clock
From time to time
Time after time
Take your time
Out of time
Time was
What time is it
Do you have time
Your time has come
Working over time
Time sheet
Run out of time
Time warp
Clock time"
Oliveros, Pauline. “Time Piece.” The Roots of the Moment. New York, NY: Drogue Press, 1998. p. 53.
Catalog Record
WorldCat
“We should take on the task of freeing as many of our sisters and brothers as possible. And at the same time we must demand the ultimate abolition of the prison system along with the revolutionary transformation of this society.”
Davis, Angela. "The Gates to Freedom." Speech Delivered at the Embassy Auditorium, Embassy Auditorium, June 9, 1972 Los Angeles, CA.
American RadioWorks
“Although climate clearly varies with the latitude and elevation and with physical and ecological features, such as deserts and forests, it once was considered to be constant over time. We now know, however, that weather does vary on long time scales and, therefore, that climate is variable.”
Keeling, Charles D. "Climate Change and Carbon Dioxide: An Introduction." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 94, no. 16 (1997): 8273.
Catalog Record
JSTOR
“Without risk one can comment dispassionately on sociological, political, and religious perspectives of the global warming issue, for example, as an historian might, beginning with the first hints of man-made global change and progressing toward the time, not yet arrived, when there may be convincing proof of global warming. (Perhaps convincing proof will be acknowledged to have arrived when a substantial number of US Congressman are discovered to have secretly purchased real estate in northern Canada.)”
Keeling, Charles D. "Rewards and Penalties of Monitoring the Earth." Annual Review of Energy and the Environment 23, no. 1 (1998): 76. doi:10.1146/annurev.energy.23.1.25.
Catalog Record
Annual Reviews
“At Mauna Loa the regular seasonal pattern almost exactly repeated itself during the second year of measurements (Figure 2). We were witnessing for the first time nature’s withdrawing CO2 from the air for plant growth during the summer and returning it each succeeding winter.”
Keeling, Charles D. " Rewards and Penalties of Monitoring the Earth." Annual Review of Energy and the Environment 23, no. 1 (1998): 41. doi:10.1146/annurev.energy.23.1.25.
Catalog Record
Annual Reviews
“Sunset knocks the edge from the
day's heat, filling the Valley
with shadows: time for coming
in getting on; lapping field s
lapping orchards like greyhounds
racing darkness to mountain
rims, land's last meeting with still
lighted sky.”
Williams, Sherley Anne. “The Green-Eyed Monsters of the Valley Dusk.” Some One Sweet Angel Chile. New York: W. Morrow, 1982. p. 92.
Catalog Record
“What the circle does real and without contrary taking charge from one to another side of the fiery day is what the time of one thing and another together does taking itself unreaching from hour to hour while the reaching things change”
Hejinian, Lyn. Happily. Sausalito, CA: Post-Apollo Press, 2000. p. 34.
Catalog Record
Litmus Press
“One might look at the clock and see hands turning in the air in a room quiet only in anticipation of some secret satisfaction that time cannot bring as a bell to a boat or a trope
to the image in thought of a person in real or this life or the thought of an image or of an iceberg green in vernal half-light”
Hejinian, Lyn. Happily. Sausalito, CA: Post-Apollo Press, 2000. p. 32.
Catalog Record
Litmus Press
“…If the core formed during geological time, a substantial amount of gravitational energy was converted to heat, a point which has been neglected.
Urey has estimated that energy of formation of the earth with its present core from a primitive earth of uniform composition without a core.”
Urey, Harold C. "On the Origin of Continents and Mountains." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 39, no. 9 (1953): 937.
Catalog Record
JSTOR
“But the rule of impermanence means that nothing is repeated for long. The ephemerality of all our acts puts us into a kind of wilderness-in-time. We live within the nets of inorganic and biological processes that nourish everything, bumping down underground rivers or glinting as spiderwebs in the sky.”
Snyder, Gary. The Practice of the Wild. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1990. p. 154.
Catalog Record
BeWild ReWild
“… But she had given me entry to the dance, and I had with astonishing luck passed a barrier of fear and trembling before the warmth of a grown woman. I had been in on adult society and its moment.
Each dance and its music belong to a time and place. It can be borrowed elsewhere, or later in time, but it will never be in its moment again.”
Snyder, Gary. The Practice of the Wild. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1990. p. 49.
Catalog Record
BeWild ReWild
“Speech, in other words, is physically present in the world—it occurs as an event in space and time—while texts hang in an unworldly suspension, awaiting a reader who may draw them into relationship with one another through the act of reading.”
Lansing, J. Stephen. From “The Sounding of the Text.” In, Symposium of the Whole: A Range of Discourse toward an Ethnopoetics, edited by Jerome and Diane Rothenberg, 242. Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1983.
Catalog Record
University of California Press
“The particulars vary from one religion to the next but the ingredients are stable: paradise is that which existed before the beginning of time, before life and death, before light and darkness. Here animals and man lived in a state of easy companionship, speaking the same language, untroubled by thirst, hunger, pain, weariness, loneliness, struggle, or appetite.”
Myerhoff, Barbara G. From "The Reversible World: Symbolic Inversion in Art and Society". In, Symposium of the Whole: A Range of Discourse toward an Ethnopoetics, edited by Jerome and Diane Rothenberg, 230. Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1983.
Catalog Record
University of California Press
“After long and careful study and analysis, the Hopi language is seen to contain no words, grammatical forms, constructions or expressions that refer directly to what we call ‘time,’ or to past, present, or future, or to enduring or lasting, or to motion as kinematic rather than dynamic (i.e., as a continuous translation in space and time rather than as an exhibition of dynamic effort in a certain process), or that even refer to space in such a way as to exclude that element of extension or existence that we call ‘time,’ and so by implication leave a residue that could be referred to as ‘time.’”
Whorf, Benjamin Lee. From "Language, Thought, and Reality". In Symposium of the Whole: A Range of Discourse toward an Ethnopoetics, edited by Jerome and Diane Rothenberg, 192. Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1983.
Catalog Record
University of California Press
“In what sense can verse, written in terms of visible hieroglyphics, be reckoned true poetry? It might seem that poetry, which like music is a time art, weaving its unities out of successive impressions of sound, could with difficulty assimilate a verbal medium consisting largely of semipictorial appeals to the eye.”
Fenollosa, Ernest. From "The Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry". In Symposium of the Whole: A Range of Discourse toward an Ethnopoetics, edited by. J. Rothenberg and D. Rothenberg, 19. Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1983.
Catalog Record
University of California Press
“To summarize rapidly what we elsewhere present in extended form, the oral recovery involves a poetics deeply rooted in the powers of song and speech, breath and body, as brought forward across time by the living presence of poet-performers, with or without the existence of a visible/literal text.”
Rothenberg, Jerome, and Diane Rothenberg. Symposium of the Whole: A Range of Discourse toward an Ethnopoetics. Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1983. p. xiii.
Catalog Record
University of California Press
“We cannot tell from day to day what may come. This is no ordinary time. No time for weighing anything, except what we can best do for the country as a whole. And that rests, that responsibility on each and every one of us as individuals.”
Roosevelt, Eleanor. "Eleanor Roosevelt Speeches: Speech to the 1940 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, July 18, 1940," The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers (2019), accessed 4/26/2021
George Washington University
“Do not mourn the dandelions—
that their golden heads become grey
in no time at all
and are blown about in the wind;
each season shall bring them again to the lawns;
but how long the seeds of justice
stay underground,
how much blood and ashes of precious things
to manure so rare and brief a growth.”
Reznikoff, Charles, edited by Seamus Cooney. “New Nation.” The Poems of Charles Reznikoff 1918-1975. Boston: David R. Godine, 2005. pp. 168-9.
Catalog Record
WorldCat