Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1999)
r Immediate full & part-time openings for experienced & beginning concrete finishers, form setters, construction workers & equipment operators. Valid drivers license & transportation required. • Flexible Hours • Tuition Assistance Program • Great Pay • Paid Holidays • Set-up, Pouring & • Paid Holidays • Great Work Groups Finishing Experience • 401K • Internships Available • Drug Free Weak: Environment -- _ EOE-Applications From All Ethnic Backgrounds Welcome! t Call Today! 441-3000 • 3421 S. 7th Suite A _ v > Work with a fast growing company in a friendly enviroment. We offer a super benefit plan and a secure future. ~ FT Meat Specialists FT /PT Meat W rapper — FT Asst Managers ^hwluleS — PT Checker/Stockers — FT Asst. Meat Specialists — FT/PT Meat Salespersons — FT Shift Managers < L-PT Courtesy Clerks 467-5505 Ask for Chris, Adam, Joe or ffick Dalai Lama ' draws crowds from across U.S. BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - Billie Dreyfuss shelled out $700 to get her old car in shape for a trek from Las Cruces, N.M., to Indiana to see the Dalai Lama. It was worth it, says Dreyfuss, who is among thousands who’ve descend ed on this city to watch the exiled Tibetan leader perform the Kalachakra, a Buddhist ceremony that means “cycles of time” and is intend ed to cleanse the Earth of violence. “My car’s been making some scary rumbling noises - and I still Have to get home. But right now I’m here, and it’s wonderful,” Dreyfuss, 47, said Monday as she sat with a friend munching dried figs and apricots under a shade tree near the Tibetan Cultural Center outside Bloomington. Since Dreyfuss arrived, she’s been living out of her car, making daily trips to the cultural center founded by the Dalai Lama’s older brother. The 100 acre park-like property, guarded now by watchful Secret Service agents, is where the 64-year-old Buddhist monk is hosting his “Kalachakra for World Peace 1999.” Dreyfuss attends daily prayer and meditation sessions in the retteat’s huge air-conditioned tent, with her newfound pal, Carolyn Matthews, 52, of Columbia, Mo., Who hitched a ride to Indiana The events cost $40 to $50 for daily admissions, but both wctaen say it’s money well-spent. |§- .r ; , . - The Dalai Lama dreWii Crowd of 40,000 at an appearance at New'V&k’is Central Park earlier this month. The Dalai Lama’s current trip to the United States is drawing more spectators and media interest than pre vious trips. His visiMo Central Park in Matthews and Dreyfuss say they are students - not followers - of the Dalai Lama, the exiled holy man who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989 for his work to liberate his native Tibet from Chinese control while opposing the use of violence. John Karrqvist, a 25-year-old Swede who works in Ithaca, N. Y., for a Swedish finance company, is on his third trek to see the Dalai Lama. Karrqvist, who along with three friends who booked hotel rooms six months ago, said seeing the Dalai Lama is enlightening. “He just brings me amazing happi ness,” Karrqvist said during a lunch break at the cultural center’s food court, where vendors hawk everything from sushi to roast beef sandwiches. The coming days will be die high light of the Dalai Lama’s 12-day Indiana stay at the center founded by his older brother, Thubten Norbu, a 79-year-old retired Indiana University professor. Up to 5,000 people a day are expected to converge on Bloomington to watch him perform the Kalachakra initiation, a series of Buddhist rituals and teachings intended to bring per sonal enlightenment and foster world peace. Actors Richard Gere, Steven Seagal and Harrison Ford are expected to be among fhe throngs participating. The ritual involves creating a man dala, a painting crafted from colored sand representing a four-faced god with 24 arms who subdues violence. At the end of the ceremony, the Dalai Lama will sweep up the sand and pour it into an as-yet undeter mined body of water. Believers say the sands’ healing qualities w||yi8ip|fc across the Earth. Watching the entire event unM|l from a distance is Jim Pullon, wl$jj lives across the street from the cufryiif center withhis^^^^^^g|^^|a|g yesterday in a Mack limousine,; waved at her,” Pullon said. “St ‘I saw the Lama.’ But yc was really hoping to see Steven Seagal.”