Yes, I agree with you here. And I find it depressing to think that Lynch, a 
high-
profile character who can get the attention of young people, then has to watch 
all the interest dissipate when the fee is mentioned.  I would set if for 
students 
at about $300-400. 

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, bbrigante <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "feste37" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > It's the headline in Global Good News that's misleading. The 
> article  itself is 
> > clearly a report ABOUT the NYT article. That's quite different. Of 
> > course they've mentioned the good bits and omitted the so-so bits. 
> There's 
> > nothing wrong in that.  But the headline shouldn't have been 
> chosen to  make 
> > it appear that it was a reprinted article from the NY Times. 
> Perhaps  this was 
> > just incompetence rather than a deliberate attempt to mislead, 
> since the 
> > article itself clearly indicates that it is GGN's report about the 
> NYT article, not 
> > the article itself. 
> > 
> 
> *****************
> 
> Nevertheless, I don't like this stuff at all, because it is not 
> useful for the TMO. Everybody who read the NYT article, a much 
> larger audience than GGN, saw that there were problems, like the 
> student who backed off because of the too-high instruction fee for  
> TM. So what this amounts too is one TMer telling the rest of the 
> choir that everything is coming up roses, but it ain't. There are 
> TMers who read GGN and won't go to the NYT article, and may think 
> that it accurately reflects the article -- this head in the sand 
> approach can't be useful, and I doubt if the NYT editors like this 
> stuff, either, because it amounts to altering the article to fit an 
> agenda. If you're going to have a NYT headline, you should 
> accurately reflect the content, or at least have a hot link to the 
> article: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/14/giving/14koppel.html
> 
> 
> Bob Brigante
> http://geocities.com/bbrigante
> 
> 
> 
> > 
> > FROM GLOBAL GOOD NEWS
> > Earth's future peacemakers just need a little TM
> > by Lily Koppel
> > The New York Times    Translate This Article
> > 14 November 2005
> > On 14 November 2005 The New York Times reported: Filmmaker David 
> > Lynch is raising money to make the Transcendental Meditation 
> Programme 
> > available to students from first grade through college. New York 
> Times 
> > reporter Lily Koppel said that Lynch wants to make the simple 
> mental 
> > technique 'a standard in every student's curriculum'. It is a joy 
> for Global Good 
> > News service to feature this news, which indicates the success of 
> the life-
> > supporting programmes Maharishi has designed to bring fulfilment 
> to the field 
> > of world-peace. 
> > Although often described as 'notoriously reclusive', Lynch has 
> stepped into 
> > the public spotlight by founding the David Lynch Foundation for 
> > Consciousness-Based Education and has embarked on a speaking tour 
> to 
> > universities on the East and West Coasts. His goal is clear: 'I 
> really think it will 
> > change the world,' Lynch was quoted as saying. 
> > The article said that the Lynch Foundation currently has assets of 
> about 
> > $410,000. To date seven schools have each been awarded $25,000 in 
> seed 
> > money to begin programmes using the TM Technique. Two of the 
> charter 
> > schools discussed their programmes with the New York Times 
> reporter. 
> > Dr George H. Rutherford, principal of the Ideal Academy Public 
> Charter 
> > School, an elementary and middle school in Washington, DC, said of 
> Lynch, 
> > 'He is going to revolutionize education in America.' 
> > Dr Rutherford said that while other foundations tend to focus on 
> providing 
> > learning tools (such as computers) to students, the Transcendental 
> Meditation 
> > Programme helps develop the students themselves. 'TM helps to 
> reduce the 
> > stress that creates problems,' he was quoted as saying. 
> > Researchers at Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, 
> Iowa, will 
> > measure the effects of the meditation programme on students. 
> > A second school to receive a $25,000 grant from the Lynch 
> Foundation was 
> > the Nataki Talibah Schoolhouse of Detroit, a public charter 
> school, which 
> > previously received TM financing from the DaimlerChrysler 
> Corporation Fund 
> > and the General Motors Foundation. 
> > According to the article, Nataki seventh- and eighth-grade 
> students who 
> > worked as a non-meditating control group in a 2002 study, tracking 
> the 
> > 'social-emotional competencies' of the meditating students, now 
> want to 
> > experience what their peers had. 
> > In addition, Koppel reported, the Lynch Foundation is partnering 
> with other 
> > philanthropists to grant another $25,000 each to the University of 
> Michigan, 
> > Yale, Emerson College and other colleges to help teach students 
> TM. The 
> > foundation is also partnering to support an American University 
> study on TM 
> > and college students. 
> > 
> > Every day Global Good News documents the rise of a better quality 
> of life 
> > dawning in the world and highlights the need for introducing 
> Natural Law 
> > based—Total Knowledge based—programmes to bring the support of 
> Nature 
> > to every individual, raise the quality of life of every society, 
> and create a 
> > lasting state of world peace.
> > 
> > Copyright © 2005 Global Good News(sm) Service. 
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "dhamiltony2k5" 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > Jeez, so much for their credibility. Really, they don't need to 
> do 
> > > this kind of stuff.  What are they thinking when they do it?  It 
> is 
> > > sucho blatantly dishonest thinking.  Who would actually take the 
> > > time to edit like this and think they were going to pull 
> something 
> > > over?  Bobby?  Mario?  Craig?  Ken?  They do TMO PR, is it their 
> > > thinking and hands on it? This is just really bad.  Shame on 
> them 
> > > folks that they would think like that and do it.  It is so 
> twisted. 
> > > Is it such a cult?  Evidently.
> > > 
> > > 
> > > 
> > > 
> > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, bbrigante <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> > > wrote:
> > > >
> > > > In a typical move, Global Good News has simulated a reprint of 
> > > this 
> > > > article from the NYT, but all negative news has been deleted --
>  
> > > > specifically, the inconclusive research on TM at the U of 
> Michigan 
> > > > noted in paragraph 19, and the student who was interested in 
> > > > learning TM only until he found out it costs $2500 (next-to-
> last 
> > > > paragraph in original NYT article):
> > > > 
> > > > http://tinyurl.com/89ykj
> > > > 
> > > > 
> > > > http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/14/giving/14koppel.html
> > > > 
> > > > ********************
> > > > 
> > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ron F <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> wrote:
> > > > >
> > > > > 
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/14/giving/14koppel.html
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > Earth's Future Peacemakers Just Need a Little T.M.
> > > > > >      •     Sign In to E-Mail This
> > > > > >      •     Printer-Friendly
> > > > > >      •     Save Article
> > > > > > By LILY KOPPEL
> > > > > > Published: November 14, 2005
> > > > > > DAVID LYNCH, the filmmaker known for his distorted, 
> > > labyrinthine 
> > > > worlds, 
> > > > > > wants America's young people to clear their minds.
> > > > > > The David Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based 
> Education 
> > > and 
> > > > World Peace, 
> > > > > > formed in July, is raising money to bring Transcendental 
> > > > Meditation to 
> > > > > > students from first grade through college. Mr. Lynch's 
> vision 
> > > > involves raising $7 
> > > > > > billion and creating universities dedicated to earth's 
> future 
> > > > peacemakers.
> > > > > > "Diving within" to the "energy" and "bliss" is how Mr. 
> Lynch, 
> > > > who has been 
> > > > > > meditating for 30 of his 59 years, puts it. He 
> hopes "diving 
> > > > within" will be 
> > > > > > standard in every student's curriculum.
> > > > > > "Pouring water on this root, these kids," he 
> > > > said. "Enlightenment is the 
> > > > > > fulfillment of the most exquisite machine on earth. Any 
> human 
> > > > being can visit it. 
> > > > > > Anything that is a thing emerges from this thing."
> > > > > > Mr. Lynch's explanations are certainly imaginative, a film 
> of 
> > > > his mind: "The 
> > > > > > word transcending is the key to it, to the very deepest, 
> most 
> > > > profound eternal 
> > > > > > level"; "It's not a joke. It's a thing that works. Mankind 
> is 
> > > > not meant to 
> > > > > > suffer"; "This is an ocean of bliss. It's like grabbing 
> onto 
> > > the 
> > > > biggest elec
> > > > > > trical line filled with bliss."
> > > > > > Mr. Lynch, who is working on a film "Inland Empire," 
> practices 
> > > > T.M. 20 
> > > > > > minutes twice a day by sitting in a comfortable position, 
> > > > closing his eyes and 
> > > > > > repeating a mantra. He says it allows him to enjoy "the 
> doing 
> > > of 
> > > > things" more.
> > > > > > "If somebody is a filmmaker, they get rid of things like 
> deep 
> > > > fear, anxiety, 
> > > > > > frustration," he said of meditation's benefits. "It's the 
> real 
> > > > deal. The whole 
> > > > > > enchilada. You will fall deeper into the film."
> > > > > > Notoriously reclusive, Mr. Lynch has come on stage to 
> spread 
> > > > > > Consciousness-Based Education with fall speaking tours to 
> > > > universities on the East
> > > > > > and West 
> > > > > > coasts. "I really think it will change the world," he 
> > > > said. "It's all 
> > > > > > imagination."
> > > > > > The Lynch Foundation, with assets of about $410,000, has 
> > > awarded 
> > > > so far 
> > > > > > $25,000 each in seed money to seven schools, three public 
> > > > charter schools, three 
> > > > > > public schools and one private school for children with 
> > > learning 
> > > > disabilities, 
> > > > > > all of which requested help. Only two of the charter 
> schools 
> > > > agreed to discuss 
> > > > > > their meditation program publicly because the other five 
> > > schools 
> > > > were involved 
> > > > > > in research studies related to T.M., the foundation said.
> > > > > > "We have not gotten so much yet," Mr. Lynch said. "But 
> there 
> > > are 
> > > > indications 
> > > > > > that we are going to do really well."
> > > > > > Several of the seven schools received matching grants from 
> > > other 
> > > > foundations 
> > > > > > and philanthropists who partnered with the Lynch 
> Foundation.
> > > > > > "He is going to revolutionize education in America," said 
> Dr. 
> > > > George H. 
> > > > > > Rutherford, principal of the Ideal Academy Public Charter 
> > > > School, an elementary
> > > > > > and 
> > > > > > middle school in Washington.
> > > > > > Dr. Rutherford said that many foundations call to donate 
> > > > computers, but what 
> > > > > > he needs is Transcendental Meditation so that the students 
> can 
> > > > concentrate 
> > > > > > better to use the equipment. "T.M. helps to reduce the 
> stress 
> > > > that creates 
> > > > > > problems," he said.
> > > > > > A meditation component is written into Ideal's charter, 
> which 
> > > > was approved by 
> > > > > > the Board of Education and the Charter Association, both 
> in 
> > > > Washington. 
> > > > > > Researchers at the Maharishi University of Management in 
> > > > Fairfield, Iowa, will 
> > > > > > measure the effects.
> > > > > > To train teachers and fifth- and sixth-grade students, 
> Ideal 
> > > > received $75,000 
> > > > > > - $25,000 from the Lynch Foundation and a larger 
> partnering 
> > > gift 
> > > > from Jeffrey 
> > > > > > F. Abramson, a principal in a Washington real estate 
> company 
> > > and 
> > > > the Abramson 
> > > > > > Family Foundation, a founder of the United States 
> Holocaust 
> > > > Memorial Museum.
> > > > > > After completing training, homeroom teachers will lead 
> > > > meditation, a new age 
> > > > > > variation on the Pledge of Allegiance.
> > > > > > Training is led by instructors from the Maharishi Vedic 
> > > > Education Development 
> > > > > > Corporation, also in Fairfield, Iowa. The seven-step 
> program 
> > > > costs $2,500 a 
> > > > > > student.
> > > > > > Last month, a Lynch Foundation's gift of $25,000 went to 
> the 
> > > > Nataki Talibah 
> > > > > > Schoolhouse of Detroit, a public charter school, which 
> > > > previously received T.M. 
> > > > > > financing from the DaimlerChrysler Corporation Fund and 
> the 
> > > > General Motors 
> > > > > > Foundation.
> > > > > > The Lynch gift of meditation was for Nataki seventh- and 
> > > eighth-
> > > > grade 
> > > > > > students who worked as a nonmeditating control group in a 
> 2002 
> > > > study tracking the 
> > > > > > "social-emotional competencies" of the meditating students 
> > > > conducted by Rita 
> > > > > > Benn, director of the Education Center of the Center for 
> > > > Complementary and 
> > > > > > Alternative Medicine at the University of Michigan and a 
> > > > clinical psychologist.
> > > > > > The 
> > > > > > study was inconclusive, but the students in the group 
> wanted 
> > > to 
> > > > experience what 
> > > > > > their peers had felt.
> > > > > > Carmen N'Namdi, a co-founder and the principal of Nataki 
> and 
> > > > vice chairwoman 
> > > > > > of the board of the National Charter Schools Institute, 
> said 
> > > > that just a few 
> > > > > > of her parents connected T.M., a secular practice, with 
> > > > religion, and she 
> > > > > > anticipated none would question Mr. Lynch's artistic work.
> > > > > > The Lynch Foundation is partnering with other 
> philanthropists 
> > > to 
> > > > grant 
> > > > > > another $25,000 to the University of Michigan, Yale, 
> Emerson 
> > > > College and other 
> > > > > > colleges to help train students in meditation. On Mr. 
> Lynch's 
> > > > recent visit to East
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > Coast schools, he was a draw for film students and seekers 
> > > > alike. Mr. Lynch, 
> > > > > > Mr. Abramson and others are also supporting an American 
> > > > University study on 
> > > > > > T.M. on college students.
> > > > > > David Jacobson, 22 , a senior film student, attended Mr. 
> > > Lynch's 
> > > > T.M. lecture 
> > > > > > at New York University. He said he was there because he 
> > > admired 
> > > > Mr. Lynch's 
> > > > > > films. After hearing that two of his biggest heroes, Mr. 
> Lynch 
> > > > and Roy Orbison, 
> > > > > > once meditated together, he said he got curious about T.M. 
> > > until 
> > > > he learned 
> > > > > > from the Maharishi Institute that the full training cost 
> > > $2,500.
> > > > > > "I feel like this is part of something big he is doing," 
> said 
> > > > Mr. Jacobson, 
> > > > > > to friends who were discussing their awe of Mr. Lynch 
> while 
> > > > questioning his 
> > > > > > eccentric role in education. "Like taking over the world."
> > > > > > 
> > > > > 
> > > > > 
> > > > > 
> > > > >               
> > > > > __________________________________ 
> > > > > Yahoo! FareChase: Search multiple travel sites in one click.
> > > > > http://farechase.yahoo.com
> > > > >
> > > >
> > >
> >
>






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