Where is the documentary video 
 that was made of the meditating community building the Domes for group 
meditation in Fairfield back in the 1970’s ? It shows our people running 
excavating equipment, doing the concrete pours with that whole story of working 
the concrete in mid winter, erecting the wood beam superstructure, roofing, 
windows, woodwork. Interviews with those young bright eyed dedicated people 
then doing it then. 
  
 One morning a week or so ago this documentary was being shown on the Maharishi 
Channel TV monitor that sits near the exit doors of the men’s Dome.  Normally 
people stream by the TV there on their way out for their work of their day. 
That morning people would stop by and a small group of people would form 
watching moments of it and people would express a pride of ownership of it,  
‘they were there’, ‘they did that..’. 
  
 After the men’s Dome construction the women’s Dome got built in the same way.  
 A Lot of people still in the community here now were there then. It was a way 
Utopian sharing of resources and skills given to it. It still is in ways for 
those wanting to be there now for meditating and those who understand the moral 
implication of group meditation. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dickm...@lisco.com> wrote :

 Forwarded from: The Review <therev...@mum.edu mailto:therev...@mum.edu>
Subject: The Review, Vol. 34, #7, December 12, 2018, Maharishi U.

 The Review, Vol. 34, #7, December 12, 2018
Copyright 2018, Maharishi University of Management
 

 
 New Library Website Offers Maharishi Videos for Public
 Many Maharishi videos are now available to the public via the new MUM library 
website – one of several resources now being offered for the first time.
 The Maharishi Video Library page is available at mum.edu/videolibrary 
https://mum.us17.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0baef123e6d28ab4b21c9087a&id=91d95d22c8&e=97c4601d14.
 It has a number of collections by various speakers, including a collection 
called One Period a Day because Maharishi felt that every classroom at every 
level of education should include a short knowledge video each day. It contains 
450 Maharishi videos recorded during the period 2002–2007 that were originally 
shown on the Maharishi Channel.
 One Period a Day includes 120 videos available to the public for viewing 
online directly from the website. An additional 330 videos in this collection 
are available for viewing by anyone on request by going to the tape library 
booth in the library, asking to see the video, and then watching it in the 
public viewing room.
 One Period a Day includes a listing of categories. Clicking on a category 
brings up a page with two lists of videos: a list at left that’s viewable to 
anyone, and a list in the center that requires a student or faculty password, 
or that can be viewed in the public viewing room.
 Main points accompany each video in the collection.
 In addition, the publicly available collection of 120 videos is searchable by 
keyword. These videos have been transcribed, and keyword search results include 
an excerpt to show how the word is being used in context in the video.
 The right column on the Maharishi Video Library page includes an additional 
collection of videos that talk about each of the areas of knowledge introduced 
by Maharishi.
 The main page of the new library website can be found at library.mum.edu 
https://mum.us17.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0baef123e6d28ab4b21c9087a&id=77e649f50e&e=97c4601d14.
 The purpose of the new website is to educate students and the community, said 
Library Director Rouzanna Vardanyan.
 In addition to providing access to thousands of academic journals and to vast 
databases of news and information, as well as the MUM library catalog, the 
library website includes a Special Collections link that gives access to 
resources such as the International Journal of Mathematics and Consciousness 
and the Journal of Modern Science and Vedic Science.
 Other resources include a Search Engines link, which is a curated page of 
useful search engines such as Google Scholar and Google books. These search 
engines enable users to find materials that are often not available through a 
regular Google search.
 Additional resources are continuing to be added. The Special Collections link 
will eventually include access to a digital archive of historical materials 
such as photos, brochures, and posters.
 Ms. Vardanyan said that the new website is especially convenient for faculty.
 “Faculty will no longer need to phone the tape library to schedule a video to 
show their students in class. They can simply use their password and access the 
video via the new website.”
 Also new is BookMyne, a mobile app available on Google Play that can be used 
to access the MUM catalog. Patrons can also use it to see which items they have 
checked out, can renew items they’ve checked out, and can place holds on items 
checked out to another user.
 



Reply via email to