HAvlow/wORILD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 25, 1996 - 5A More people are believed to be reincarnated lamas AP PHOTO lines are changing no shop owner Phuc Thich, center, attends customers Monday at his shop, recently converted from a traditional silk store to a CD music shop. Revolutionaiy conditionin g sid to protect ozone layer Los Angeles Times SEATTLE - It is a cloudy after- noon, and when His Holiness Nawang Kunga Tegchen Chokyi Nyima reaches up and switches off the light, the kitchen at the back of the monastery settles into a dull twilight. "Don't be skeeered!" he advises, then erupts in a shriek of merriment at the mere idea. Who wouldn't be scared in such an evil light? He switches the over- head bulb on and off several more times, then takes a few fast laps around the room, trailing soft giggles behind him. This 4-year-old believed to be the reincarnation of the revered Deshung Rinpoche, one of the highest lamas of Tibetan Buddhism's Sakya tradition, is wearing the classic maroon garb required of his sacred position.But in this case, it is a pair of sweatpants and a matching sweatshirt that says "Lil Monster." "Lamas don't act that way!" pleads Caroline Lama, a widowed day care worker whose last name by marriage is also the name for a spiritually advanced person in Buddhism. She also, by luck or grace, gave birth to a boy seen as the next great teacher of Tibetan Buddhists in exile. Today, she will board a plane for Katmandu, Nepal, with her playful young son and leave him at a remote Sakya monastery outside the city. He will stay for the decade or more of studies that will prepare him to become a teacher and spiritual leader of his faith. She will come home and wait for him to grow up. It may seem odd that the eternal cycle of death and rebirth,learning and teach- ing, should have visited the middle of this north Seattle neighborhood, two blocks away from a Pizza Hut outlet and a Blockbuster video store. But with spiritualism everywhere on the rise, experts say, Buddhism in the in the form of an American young- ster in Seattle. The fictional story was loosely based on another case not in Seattle. The increase in North American and European in- carnations of Bud- dhist holy men - as well as the first incarnations of holy men in female form - "from the "Somel is a lama to ChOOs own rebi University doc point of view of United States has slipped outside old neighborhoods of Asian immigrants and the counterculture and is taking its place in the religious mainstream. There are hundreds of designated re- incarnations of lamas around the world - and a growing number, following Buddhism's widening reach, are occur- ring in the West. Bernardo Bertolucci's 1993 film "Little Buddha" depicted such a rein- carnation of a Tibetan lama, ironically, a 25-year-old Nova Scotia man, son of a hippie mother who lived in a tepee, .was designated a reincarnated holy man at age 8. Including Lama's son, there are believed to be four such "tulkus" in North America. Many of her non-Buddhist friends have expressed surprise and shock that she would give up her son to a monas- tery in Nepal for 10 years. But Lama says that is where he belongs. Lama already has taken her son for a visit to the mon- astery in Nepali One who stocking it with familiar toys from Mn iS abl home. His sleep- ing room has an e their urn with some of the ashes of rth. Deshung Rin- - Peter Moran poche. He has be- gun learning Ti- of Washington betan, which will toral candidate become his pri- mary language. And he met the monks who will be his teachers. One of them, Nawang Tyngure, has been as- signed as his primary companion. Now, when Lama asks: "Who loves you the most?" Tulku-la replies with- out hesitation: "Nawang Tyngure!" "When he's with his monks, you can just see the bliss on his face. You can see that's where he's supposed to be," Lama says. "He pretty much knows that he's going to go over there and live with Nawang Tyngure, and I'm going to come back here," said Lama, who will visit her son twice a year. She will stay two months before leaving him behind. She could stay in Nepal, but she could not live in the monas- tery and could not have any meaning- ful role in his life. BOSTON (AP) - Back around the turn ofthe century, they air-conditioned theaters by fanning air across giant blocks ofwinterice that hadbeen stored underground until the summer. Now ice conditioning - the high- tech variety - is back, and its promot- ers say it will save energy and help phase out ozone-depleting chemicals. ,Office buildings in Chicago's Loop ready are cooled by a central plant Tilled with 5 million pounds of giant ice cubes. Boston is next. Northwind Boston plans to build three downtown cooling plants at a cost of $60 million. The company was formed Tuesday by subsidiaries of Boston Edison Co. and Unicom Corp. of Chi- cago. The plants freeze large blocks of ice at night, when electricity demand is low , d the price cheap. During the day, as e ice melts, the cold water is pumped to the buildings. The process begins all over again after dark. The first plant, due to be hooked up next year, could cool up to 10 buildings the size of Boston's largest without using chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs. The manufacture of CFCs was discon- tinued this year because of concern over the shrinking ozone layer. "We're offering these owners an al- Polish head to resign from post WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Poland's prime minister, facing a mili- tary investigation into chargeshe spied for Moscow, said yesterday he would resign his post and fight to clear his name. Jozef Oleksy, the first former Com- munist to become premier, was visibly nervous as he announced his decision n national television. The propaganda against me and my party and the coalition continues, but the running of the nation must be put first," Oleksy said. The announcement came just hours after the military prosecutor's office opened an investigation into charges Oleksy passed classified information to Moscow from the early 1980s un- til he became prime minister in arch. Oleksy vigorously denied the alle- gations. "I am not afraid of the investiga- tion," he said. "Only that can show the truth and clear my name." Oleksy acknowledged previously that he was friends with a man who later proved to be a top Soviet spy in Poland, but claimed he had only social contacts with him and did not know he as an agent. It was not clear exactly when Oleksy would step down. When he does, Presi- dent Aleksander Kwasniewski must name a new prime minister within two weeks. The charges that he passed classified documents and other information to ?l4ncrsvirra firt md. tac imo. nnth~l hu ternative to changing refrigerants or replacing their whole chiller system," said Rick Zimbone, president of the Boston Energies Technology Group, the Boston Edison subsidiary partici- pating in Northwind. By eliminating their own air condi- tioning units, building owners could save on maintenance. Northwind's cost would be comparable to installing a new system. A four-story plant in Chicago owned by Unicom Thermal Technologies be- gan pumping cooled water to Chicago office buildings in the spring, just in time for a killer heat wave during the summer. "It worked great for us. It kept up all summer long," said Rich Penner, who works in one of those buildings as a supervisor at Inland Steel Co. "It was a very smooth transition." The 19-story building is one of nine connected by underground pipes to the Adams Street plant. Two more plants are under construction. The Adams Street cooling plant cov- ers half a city block. Above the Osco Drug store on the ground floor, a net- workofchillersandpumpsgives wayto two stories of ice tanks. Each tank is the size of a tractor trailer and contains four miles of tubing that freezes the water. "If you were to cut off the roof of the building and look down from the top, it wouldn't look a whole lot differentthan an ice cube tray," said Joe King, a spokesman for Unicom, which also owns Commonwealth Edison. The 34-degree water from the plant is piped to a heat-transfer station in each building. The heat-transfer station, the size ofa couple of desks, draws cold out of the water. The warm water is then looped back to the cooling plant. The system planned for Boston would use hydro-chlorofluorocarbons, or HCFCs, as a coolant. That means it would still emit chlo- rine into the air, although less than if it used CFCs, according to Gerald Wil- son, a professor of electrical engineer- ing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "It's not fundamentally different. So the claim that it's better for the ozone layer is debatable," Wilson said. "They're not out of the woods yet on the ozone." Wilson said the biggest advantage to the plant is that it uses nearly all of its electricity during off-peak hours. Power produced off-peak is cleaner and cheaper. "The downside here is that they are still using electricity," he said. Tibetans is not really a problem, in fact in a way it makes sense," said Peter Moran, a University of Washington doctoral candidate. He has been track- ingthe growth of Buddhism in the West and the inevitable Westernization of the ancient faith as its followers move to new lands. "Someone who is a lama, a spiritu- ally advanced person, is able to choose their own rebirth, and they choose a rebirth that will be of greatest benefit to other people," he said. "Because there are more Westerners and more Western women interested in Buddhism, for Ti- betan teachers to take rebirth in those forms sort of makes perfect sense." A Spanish boy was recently desig- nated a reincarnated lama, ortulku, and Government recalls infant car seats- WASHINGTON (AP)-Thegovern- ment announced yesterday that 15,370 infant car seats are being recalled as pos- sible safety hazards in car crashes. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said the rear-facing Dreamride Ultra infant seats failed a gov- ernment crash test by tipping toward the front of the car by more than 70 degrees. Federal safety standards require that rear-facing seats stay almost upright during impact in a crash at 30 mph. The recall is for 15,370 Dreamride Ultra car seats, model 02-179, manu- factured from April 8, 1994, through June 15, 1995. Carole Dingledy, spokeswoman for Cosco Inc., the manufacturer, said the company had no immediate comment. Dr. Ricardo Martinez, NHTSA's ad- ministrator, urged parents with the seat to contact Cosco to receive a reinforce- ment kit. Until the kit is in hand, Martinez advised parents without a suitable replacement seat to continue using the Cosco model. "Properly used, child safety seats are lifesavers," Martinez said. "An unre- strained child is at a much greater risk of injury in a crash than a child in a restraint system." NHTSA officials have warned par- ents, however, never to use a rear- facing infant seat in the front passenger seat if the car is equipped with a right- side air bag. F. I I ADAPTEC TO THE RESCUE I /LL SEE YOUON JANAAR30f-3!! i i ii:~~~~~ ~ tt:,}'>::3?; s.xii t".:.-Y-"": " ! ""-.... ..r........: f....;:.a.::v?.f:.-...:. .-'4:-~:? ::i"''r'"?:.;} : i:v: ::