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         Coolidge Clark:     more books (100)
  1. LOWELL CONNECTOR: Lines and Shots from Kerouac's Town by Clark, Michael Gizzi, John Yau, Bill Barrette and Celia Coolidge. COOLIDGE, 1993
  2. United Artists One by Bernadette & Lewis Warsh (eds.); Clark Coolidge; Paul Metcalf Mayer, 1977-01-01
  3. Human Means Volume 1 Number 2 by Clark, Mayer, Bernadette, North, Charles, et al Coolidge, 1986
  4. THIS 10 - Winter 1979-1980 by Barrett (Editor); Bob Perelman, Lyn Hejinian, Charles Bernstein, Clark Coolidge, et al. (Contributors) WATTEN, 1980
  5. The book of during by Clark Coolidge, 1991
  6. Columbia Poetry Review Number 7 (Columbia College/Chicago, Spring 1994) by Ray DiPalma, Clark Coolidge, et all 1994
  7. THE POETRY PROJECT NEWSLETTER. by Pat Nolan Christopher Isherwood. Clark Coolidge, 1982
  8. The Crystal Text by Clark Coolidge, 1985
  9. Space by Clark Coolidge, 1970
  10. SPACE by Clark COOLIDGE, 1970
  11. Quartz Hearts by Clark Coolidge, 1978
  12. Alien Tatters by Clark Coolidge, 2000-01-01
  13. Odes of Roba by Clark Coolidge, 1991-01-01
  14. American Ones: Noise and Presentiments by Clark Coolidge, 1981-11

41. MIT Program In Writing And Humanistic Studies: Poetry@MIT Presents Clark Coolidg
. An Evening with clark coolidge. April 20, 2000 700 pm MIT Room 6-120 77Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA. clark coolidge UNDER A PORCELAIN SYMPATHY.
http://web.mit.edu/afs/athena.mit.edu/org/h/humanistic/www/poetry/coolidge.shtml
MIT Program in
Writing and Humanistic Studies
MIT, Room 14E-303
Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
Telephone: 617-253-7894
FAX: 617-253-6910
Poetry@MIT presents . . .
An Evening with
Clark Coolidge April 20, 2000 - 7:00 p.m.
MIT Room 6-120
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA
Clark Coolidge UNDER A PORCELAIN SYMPATHY The rule of tommyrot is in place
every indicator red nose on the planet lit the rap of a timpani skin head failure in the real studio too much grey space starts nailed to a blue plate no hope a crucial hand cut short admits complicity dry grass in tin cylinders activity null who exactly is abroad the USS CreaseFire? the medal at the end of its tassle says God Bless Hysteria noted in notebook at midnight on national roof will the chosen beast have the final say? each citizen to receive a personalized burial pie this is the fabled blank in citizenship a pod with half-speed advance warning thus the places taken a froth is built there is no incoming nationality the illuminated portions are small citizenry doomed latches in place Free and open to the public Sponsored by the Program in Writing and Humanistic Studies For more information, call 617/253-7894

42. Newsletter
Review of MINE The One That enters the Stories by clark coolidge (The Figures,1982). by Bernadette Mayer. What s the risk in writing of everything?
http://www.poetryproject.com/newsletter/mayerrev.html

Review of MINE: The One That enters the Stories
by Clark Coolidge
(The Figures, 1982)
by Bernadette Mayer
What's the risk in writing of everything? Mine 's a kind of novel or musings on one. Though the words were written and printed, Mine is a set of meditations that hovers about an unwritten book: "The plot would be prehensile barbells. Or the man who attached his fingers to his wife's nipple for the rest of their days. For belief is useless at the razor, the hailing quotation of mind's lining." (p.34) Should the book being thought about be written, it would be by the readers of Mine , a little joke about the work perpetrated by (the) Mine author whose words collect and fly over the unwritten texts of others with a didactic message about language and the human brain, or, layers of the earth's surfaces, whatever is between thought and fiction, art and science, the hovering kinds of flying and outright outer space and the caves and mineral centers below. The analogy too is to the stance of the upright human body or to a house or home like the heads of the miners in the cover photo, the bodies of their confreres above them, their implacably unmoving hands which will work and soon be moving as expression but not now, a reflection of the problem of meaning as language stands in a stanza or room or paragraph or moment.

43. PomPom
clark coolidge. Traces Where Things Would Do. Movies used to be aboutpeople in rooms the detectives go in peoples’ houses portrait
http://www.pompompress.com/Coolidge.htm
Clark Coolidge Traces
Where Things Would Do
Movies used to be about people in rooms
the detectives go in peoples’ houses
portrait of a palm tree tied to the sea
Mirrors in films don’t belong to the same space
movies show bodies in empty space
what’s not inside the machine that is
All of the letters never work
stretch of water tacked to the top of the lawn
the police in such places are usually late
Someone looking for something would have to look inside a strip of lemon across a plastered landscape there is the story of a man who ran out of ink People at the same film report great differences distances want you to cover them a photo of a nebula taken through a red veil The detective shrinks in his own estimation there is just no end to these interior lands a man in a costume leans against his costume The person who looks takes his own portion one who’ll stay in motion with no further mention an impression of glass against the bent sky Issue #1

44. Recent Readings/NY--Volume 09: Clark Coolidge/John Giorno VHS
Recent Readings/NYVolume 09 clark coolidge/John Giorno !File not found@urlplot . Recent Readings/NYVolume 09 clark coolidge/John Giorno.
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45. Giorno Poetry Systems - The Dial-A-Poem Poets
18. clark coolidge Small Inventions Suite V (plurals) secanate, SuiteIV (207, Recorded Mills College, Calif., Jan 1969) mp3. 19.
http://www.ubu.com/sound/dial.html

sound

ubuweb
UbuWeb Sound Poetry
(2:00, Recorded at Western Illinois University, April 15, 1972)

(7:07, Recorded GPS, New York, March 21, 1969)

(6:53, Recorded Duke Street, London, Nov. 19, 1971)

(4:00, Recorded GPS, New York, June 9, 1972)
...
(4:30, Recorded Corning Community College, NY, Nov. 1971)

From the LP The Dial-A-Poem Poets , Giorno Poetry Systems (GPS-001), 1972
DIAL-A-POEM HYPE
In the middle of the Dial-A-Poem experience wqas the giant self-consuming media machine choosing you as some of its food, which also lets you get your hands on the controls because you've made a new system of communicating poetry. The newspaper, magazine, TV and radio coverage had the effect of making everyone want to call the Dial-A-Poem. We got up to the maximum limit of the equipment and stayed there. 60,000 calls a week and it was totally great. The busiest time was 9 AM to 5 PM, so one figured that all those people sitting at desks in New York office buildings spend a lot of time on the telephone, then the second busiest time was 8:30 PM to 11:30 PM was the after-dinner crowd, then the California calls and those tripping on acid or couldn't sleep 2 AM to 6 PM. So using an existing communications system we established a new poet-audience relationship. Dial-A-Poem began at the Architectural League of New York in January 1969 with 10 telephone lines and ran for 5 months, during which time 1,112,337 calls were received. It continuted at MOMA in July 1970 with 12 telephone lines and ran for 2 and a half months and 200,087 calls were received. It was at The Musuem of Contemporary Art, Chicago for 6 weeks in November 1969 and since then has cropped up everywhere. This was with equipment working at maximum capacity and sometimes jamming the entire exchange. At MOMA, the 12 lines were each connected to an automatic answering set, which holds a pre-recorded message. Someone calling got randomly one of 12 different poems, which were changed daily. There were around 700 selections of 55 poets.

46. Powell's Books - Bomb By Clark/wald Coolidge
Bomb by clark/wald coolidge. Available at Catacombs Warehouse. Free Shipping!This title ships for free on qualified orders! Find out how.
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?show=Trade Paper:Sale:1887123326:5.98

47. Powell's Books - Bomb By Clark/wald Coolidge
Bomb by clark/wald coolidge. Available at Beaverton, Burnside, Hawthorne. FreeShipping! This title ships for free on qualified orders! Find out how.
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=1-1887123326-2

48. Herbert Clark Hoover
Herbert clark Hoover was born at West Branch, Iowa, on Aug or Democratic nominationin 1920, but after the election he served Harding and coolidge as secretary
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0760615.html
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    History and Government
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    Herbert Clark Hoover Born: Birthplace:
    West Branch, Iowa Herbert Clark Hoover was born at West Branch, Iowa, on Aug. 10, 1874, the first president to be born west of the Mississippi. A Stanford graduate, he worked from 1895 to 1913 as a mining engineer and consultant throughout the world. In 1899, he married Lou Henry. During World War I, he served with distinction as chairman of the American Relief Committee in London, as chairman of the Commission for Relief in Belgium, and as U.S. Food Administrator. His political affiliations were still too indeterminate for him to be mentioned as a possibility for either the Republican or Democratic nomination in 1920, but after the election he served Harding and Coolidge as secretary of commerce. In the election of 1928, Hoover overwhelmed Gov. Alfred E. Smith of New York, the Democratic candidate and the first Roman Catholic to run for the presidency. He soon faced the worst depression in the nation's history, but his attacks upon it were hampered by his devotion to the theory that the forces that brought the crisis would soon bring the revival and then by his belief that there were too many areas in which the federal government had no power to act. In a succession of vetoes, he struck down measures proposing a national employment system or national relief, he reduced income tax rates, and only at the end of his term did he yield to popular pressure and set up agencies such as the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to make emergency loans to assist business.

49. ARRAS..::new Media Poetry And Poetics::.....little Reviews
Coleman, Wanda, Bathwater Wine. coolidge, clark, Alien Tatters. coolidge, clark,On The Nameways Volume One. Coover, Robert, The Grand Hotels (of Joseph Cornell).
http://www.arras.net/little_reviews.htm
arras: e-books sites with legs gallery offsite .pdfs bks stuff: web poetry writing eye candy free space comix: the blog
little reviews (page in progress)
Introduction
Armantrout, Rae Pretext Ashbery, John As Umbrellas Follow Rain Berg, Stephen Halo and Porno Diva Numero Uno Bernstein, Charles My Way Bernstein, Charles Republics of Reality Bernstein, Charles With Strings Berrigan, Edmund Disarming Matter Eunoia Brown, Lee Ann Polyverse Brownstein, Michael World On Fire Caddel, Quartermain, eds. Other: British and Irish Poetry Since 1970 Caples, Garrett The Garrett Caples Reader Caws, Mary Ann Manifesto Champion, Miles Three Bell Zero Clark, Jeff The Little Door Slides Back Cole, Norma Spinoza In Her Youth Coleman, Wanda Bathwater Wine Coolidge, Clark Alien Tatters Coolidge, Clark On The Nameways: Volume One Coover, Robert The Grand Hotels (of Joseph Cornell) Davies, Kevin Comp. Deniz, Gerardo Poemas/Poems Doris, Stacy Paramour Farrell, Dan Last Instance Fitterman, Rob Metropolis 1-15 Gladman, Renee Juice Godfrey, John Push the Mule Goldman, Judith Vocoder Harryman, Carla Gardener of Stars Hejinian, Lyn

50. On-This-Day.com - U.S. Presidents
coolidge Rank Thirtieth Served 19231929 Born July 4, 1872 Born in Plymouth,VT Died January 5, 1933 Books about Calvin coolidge. Herbert clark Hoover Rank
http://www.on-this-day.com/topics/uspresidents/uspresidents.htm
The Presidents of the United States
George Washington
Rank: First
Served: 1789-1797
Born: February 22, 1732
Born in: Wakefield, Wetmoreland County, VA
Died: December 14, 1799
Books about George Washington

John Adams
Rank: Second
Served: 1797-1801 Born: October 30, 1735 Born in: Braintree (now Quincy), MA Died: July 4, 1826 Books about John Adams Thomas Jefferson Rank: Third Served: 1801-1809 Born: April 13, 1743 Born in: Shadwell, Goochland (now Albemarle) County, VA Died: July 4, 1826 Books about Thomas Jefferson James Madison Rank: Fourth Served: 1809-1817 Born: March 16, 1751 Born in: Port Conway, King George County, VA Died: June 28, 1836 Books about James Madison James Monroe Rank: Fifth Served: 1817-1825 Born: April 28, 1758 Born in: Westmoreland County, VA Died: July 4, 1831 Books about James Monroe John Quincy Adams Rank: Sixth Served: 1825-1829 Born: July 11, 1767 Born in: Braintree (now Quincy), MA Died: February 23, 1848 Books about John Quincy Adams Andrew Jackson Rank: Seventh Served: 1829-1837 Born: March 15, 1767

51. Clark Coolidge: At Egypt
clark coolidge At Egypt ISBN 0935724-35-4 1988 $7.50. Ralph WaldoEmerson said that when we travel, we take ourselves along, (I
http://www.durationpress.com/thefigures/egypt.htm
home catalog ordering
Clark Coolidge
At Egypt
ISBN 0-935724-35-4
At Egypt
Philip Whalen
It is hard to imagine a more generative writer than Clark Coolidge, nor one whose range and influence is more total. At Egypt, a major poem in eleven sections, is a series of "gestures in rock," and like the leaving of stones on a desertsee Tanguymarks time and place, a monument and an alphabet, monadic and nomadic. Monads are complex, and offer a certain resistance to the mental traveler; but stone is also crystalline. There is complexion , light diffused and reflected on sand. Egypt is the darkness (swallowed shadows "near a rodent throne") in which Coolidge moves his verbal flashlight. Signing is singing on a bed of Nileside strawtravel: trave: rave: ave. It is a pleasure to encounter such largeness, benignity, shrewdness, and joy.
Paul Hoover

52. Clark Coolidge: Registers / (People In All)
Registers / (People in All) clark coolidge 88 pages ISBN 0939691-10-8$9.95 Cover by Alvin Curran. Written between May 89 and August
http://www.durationpress.com/avenueb/registers.html
Registers / (People in All)
Clark Coolidge
88 pages
ISBN 0-939691-10-8
Cover by Alvin Curran Written between May '89 and August '92, these fifty sections of three-line stanza/chords continue Coolidge's fast-forward drive to explore how sheets of sound can be made to echo literally to REGISTER (PEOPLE IN ALL)thought itself:
. . . . Off where
syllable. Lit as if sound, a cascade to a bell.

Susan Smith Nash

53. BeatBooks: Now It's Jazz: Writings On Kerouac & The Sounds. COOLIDGE, Clark.
Albuquerque, NM Living Batch Press, 1999. First edition. Wrps.......Title Now It s Jazz Writings on Kerouac The Sounds. Author coolidge, clark.
http://www.beatbooks.com/cgi-bin/beatbooks/04822.html
Title:
Author:
COOLIDGE, Clark.
Description: Albuquerque, NM: Living Batch Press, 1999. First edition. Wrps. (no h/c issued), 136pp. Cover illustration by David Stone Martin. Essays on Kerouac and jazz. Fine.
Price: Sold site map terms security powered by booksellersolutions.com

54. BeatBooks: Jack\ Kerouac
The Beat Generation. coolidge, clark. Now It s Jazz Writings on Kerouac The Sounds.EATON, VJ (ed.). Catching Up With Kerouac Getting Boulder On The Road.
http://www.beatbooks.com/cgi-bin/beatbooks/scan/mp=keywords/se=Jack Kerouac/st=s
179 matches found for
"W M Byrd" (4pp.), in NEW DEPARTURES #2/3 (London: 1960).
ATOP AN UNDERWORLD: Early Stories and Other Writings. AWAKENING FROM A DREAM OF ROBERT FOURNIER. AWAKENING FROM A DREAM OF ROBERT FOURNIER. ... WORD VIRUS: The William S. Burroughs Reader. (BOOKSELLER'S CATALOGUE). Walter Reuben Collection of Jack Kerouac. (Contributes). BIG TABLE #1-5 (all published). (Contributes). DROGI KARMY I SCIEZKA DHARMY: Antologia Poezji Buddyjskiej Ameryki. (Contributes). ESCAPADE Vol.IV, #1 (Derby, CT: Aug. 1959). (Contributes). ESCAPADE Vol.V, #5 (Derby, CT: Aug. 1960). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #11 (NY: Jan./Feb. 1960). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #2 (1957). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #31 (Oct./Nov. 1963). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #33 (Aug.-Sept. 1964). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #39-41 (Feb./April/June 1966). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #5 (Summer 1958). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #51 (NY: Feb. 1968). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #74 (Jan. 1970). (Contributes). EVERGREEN REVIEW #8 (Spring 1959). (Contributes). FLOATING BEAR. A Newsletter #1-37, 1961-1969.

55. Herbert Hoover - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Herbert Hoover. (Redirected from Herbert clark Hoover). Herbert Hoover.Herbert Hoover. Order 31st President. Predecessor Calvin coolidge.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_Clark_Hoover
Sorry! The wiki is experiencing some technical difficulties, and cannot contact the database server. Editors may use OpenFacts as a backup wiki. There is also an active IRC channel on irc.freenode.net called #wikipedia

56. Project Gutenberg - Author Index: C
clarke, Michael, 1844?1916. Story Of Aeneas. clarke, Mrs. Henry. Miss Merivale sMistake. clark, Felicia Buttz. Cook, Richard B. The Grand Old Man. coolidge, Susan.
http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/IA_C
H ome P ersonalize
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A uthor: T itle Word(s): How To F ind Advanced ... ecent Books
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Author Index: C
Authors: A B C D ... other Titles: A B C D ... other Languages: Bulgarian Chinese Danish Dutch ... Yiddish
C, A and F T Gregory
Cabell, James Branch
Cabell, James Branch et al
Cable, Boyd (Ernest Andrew Ewart)
Cable, George W.
Cable, George Washington
Caesar, Caius Julius
Caesar, Gaius Julius, ca. 100-44 BC
Cahan, Abraham
Caine, Hall
Caine, Hall, Sir
Cairns, John
Calamity Jane
Caldecott, Randolph

57. Chain: 4
London Ferry Press, 1966. coolidge, clark. Flag Flutter US Electric. New YorkLines, 1966. coolidge, clark. clark coolidge. New York Lines, 1967.
http://www.temple.edu/chain/4_gizzi.htm

contents

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4: Procedures
Excerpts Peter Gizzi ODE: SALUTE TO THE NEW YORK SCHOOL 1950-1970 (A LIBRETTO) A car roars over a conversation A dish of Irish setters A little horse trots up with a letter in its mouth, which is read with eagerness as we gallop into the flame. A man signs a shovel and so he digs. And the nerve-ends evolved to cope with instant danger do not know what to tell the brain so they think about it As if nobody believes what anybody tells them, gray in the cafe and the shiny rain Bloom, flare, blink open Born eaves clump bounce But do we really need anything more to be sorry about But Ned is lazy, the monkey has to do it all. By day I sleep, an obscurantist, lost in dreams of lists. Did you ever read the wet page of the earth? File prayer tines Glee a short road across my face. Goodbye, Father! Goodbye, pupils. Goodbye, my master and my dame. Have I worn out my distracting powers to doze witless into the scape of night, empty of detail and excuse He has banged into your wall of air, your hubris His substance utters a sun above the stoves of our discourse History, what did the Rose do?

58. HERBERT CLARK HOOVER: A Biographical Sketch
Tad, 1871) was followed on August 10, 1874 by another boy, Herbert clark Hoover (Bert). In1923, President Harding died, and Calvin coolidge became president.
http://hoover.archives.gov/education/hooverbio.html
Home Page Welcome Research Visiting the Library ... Gift Shop Education Programs West Branch Membership Related Sites ... Mailbox
HERBERT CLARK HOOVER: A Biographical Sketch
An Iowa Boyhood
Jesse Hoover moved from Ohio with his father Eli in 1854. They traveled by river boat and covered wagon to a farm outside West Branch, Iowa, a small town founded by Quakers. In 1870, Jesse, now the town blacksmith, married Hulda Minthorn, a teacher from Ontario, Canada. The Hoovers began a family in a small cottage by the Wapsinonoc Creek. Their first son Theodore (Tad, 1871) was followed on August 10, 1874 by another boy, Herbert Clark Hoover (Bert). On the occasion of his son's birth Jesse went through town declaring, "We have another General Grant in our house." Herbert's birth was followed in 1876 by the birth of a sister, Mary (May). The Hoover children spent their early years growing up in West Branch, Iowa. West Branch provided both joys and hazards of life. The children could hike, explore, and swim as well as hunt for fossils and agate in the glacial gravel along the railroad tracks. Their Quaker upbringing forbade the Hoover boys from carrying a gun, so they learned to hunt for rabbit and prairie chickens with bow and arrow. They learned these skills from young Indian boys who were attending a local government training school. Willow poles, butcher string lines and hooks that cost a penny apiece provided Herbert Hoover with sunfish and catfish. There was also Cook's Hill for sledding on home-made sleds.

59. Cool3.sex
Mike Figgis, 1995). clark coolidge s The Book of During investigates a fundamentalarea of human experience fucking. coolidge, clark. The Crystal Text.
http://www.towson.edu/users/baker/cool3.htm
Coolidge's Sex Book mal Given Time [Someone once asked in my presence what was the greatest pleasure in love. Someone naturally responded to receive, and another, to give oneself. This one says: pleasure of pride that one: pleasure of humility! All these shithogs sounded exactly like The Imitation of Christ . Finally there was an impudent dreamer who claimed that the greatest pleasure in love was to create citizens for one's country. As for me, I say: the unique and supreme pleasure of love consists in the certainty of doing evil . Men and women alike know from the day they are born that in evil lies all pleasure.] (my trans.) Ben I suppose sooner or later we ought to fuck. Sera Whatever that means. Leaving Las Vegas , dir. Mike Figgis, 1995) Clark Coolidge's The Book of During investigates a fundamental area of human experience: fucking. We could say instead, sex, but that would involve certain choices. "And of course they immediately get down to the fucking" In looking at the notes I wrote when I first read During I see that I crossed out the original title I had thought of

60. Internet Public Library: POTUS
Henry (18751944), on February 10, 1899 Children Herbert clark Hoover (1903 Secretaryof Commerce, 1923-28 (under coolidge). Presidential Salary $75,000/year.
http://www.ipl.org/div/potus/hchoover.html
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... POTUS This collection All of the IPL Advanced Links immediately following the image of the American Flag ( ) are links to other POTUS sites. All other links lead to sites elsewhere on the Web. Jump to: Presidential Election Results Cabinet Members Notable Events Internet Biographies ... Points of Interest
Herbert Clark Hoover
31st President of the United States
(March 4, 1929 to March 3, 1933) Nickname: None Born: August 10, 1874, in West Branch, Iowa
Died: October 20, 1964, in New York, New York Father: Jesse Clark Hoover
Mother: Hulda Randall Minthorn Hoover
Married: Lou Henry (1875-1944) , on February 10, 1899
Children: Herbert Clark Hoover (1903-69) ; Allan Henry Hoover (1907-93) Religion: Society of Friends (Quaker)
Education: Graduated from Stanford University (1895). Occupation: Engineer Political Party: Republican Other Government Positions:
  • Secretary of Commerce, 1921-23 (under Harding
  • Secretary of Commerce, 1923-28 (under Coolidge
Presidential Salary: $75,000/year

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