You'll gam valuable experience, and a lot of character references. The Walt Disney World® College Program offers ambitious students a unique opportunity to experience "the magical world of Disney" from the inside. You'll be part of a top-notch team all working toward the same goal of a spectacular guest experience! * Representatives will be dn campus to answer all your questions concerning the Walt Disney World® College Program. Interviewing: All Majors! Positions available throughout theme parks and resorts; attractions, food & beverage, merchandise, life guarding, and many others! Ask the Disney Representative about special opportunities for students fluent in Portuguese. Presentation Date: February 19, 1996 Time: 4:00 pm . Location: Nebraska Union Ballroom For More Information Contact: Marsha Phelps, (4ol§ 472-1452 Walt Disney World ® An Equal Opportunity Employer • Drawing Creativity from Diversity The Power Book-T Printer Payback • Macintosh PowerBook 520 4/240 $1,449 • Macintosh PowerBook 540c 12/320 $3,599 • Macintosh PowerBook Duo 2300c/100 8/750 $3,049 20/IGB $3,919 I • Macintosh PowerBook 5300/100 8/500 $1,860 • Macintosh PowerBook 5300/100cs 8/500 $2,351 16/750 $2,961 • Macintosh PowerBook 5300/100c 8/500 $3,132 16/750 $3,827 • Macintosh PowerBook 5300/117ce $5,568 a Macintosh PowerBook ’ < & an Apple Printer* Receive a $150 Rebate! i StyleWriter 1200 $238 Color StyleWriter 2400 $360 LaserWriter Select 360 $ 1,084 Color StyleWriter 2200 $370 Personal LaserWriter 300 $520 LaserWriter 4/600 PS (2 MB) $824 i---n 1 — r ^ Color LaserWriter 12/600 PS $5,755 LaserWriter 16/600 PS (8 MB) $2,096 •Only (he products listed in thus ad qualify lor this rebate. PpwerBook + Primer Payback ends Match 17,1996. Mail-in tvbaie Oder valid for qualify ing purchases made from January 6,1996, through March 17,1996, while supplies last. Rebate materials must be postmarked no later than April J7,1996. Cables lor Apple lascrWriter 16/600 PS & Color LaserWriter 12/600 PS must be puithased sepatately. Students, faculty and staff status must meet CRC Computer Shop educational purchase qualifications. University ID requited to order or putchace. _ r:-r5pm The CRC Computer Shop http://compshop.unl.edu/pub/compshop.htm 501 Bldg.-501 N. 10th St. University of Nebraska 472-5787 Scott Bruhn/DN Fire investigators think a gas leak in a kitchen range may have caused an explosion that severely burned a Lincoln resident and demolished a house at 3121 N. 47th St. Explosion Continued from Page 1 Jerry Nichols, a next-door neighbor, said that when he heard the explosion, his whole house shook. “It felt like something hit the house,” he said. Nichols said the blast split open the southeast comer of Walsh’s house. Walsh was on fire when he ran through the hole onto the front lawn, Nichols said. “Our immediate concern was Jim,” he said. That’s when Nichols noticed the front of the house. “I thought to myself,' If that wall is going to fall, we need to get him away,”’ Nichols said. “A minute later that wall came down.” Caucus Continued from Page 1 expected to take part in the cau cuses, voting in 2,150 precincts at 4,286 locations. Sittig said he saw Senate Major ity Leader Bob Dole as the front runner, but would not rule out sur prises from multimillionaire pub lisher Steve Forbes or commenta tor Pat Buchanan. “I expect Dole to be the leader,” he said. “But the field has certainly closed. A month ago, he looked like he would win in a cake walk.” He said Forbes remained a ques tion mark. Forbes, who is financing his own campaign, has spent millions of dol lars on a media blitz attacking Dole and his other rivals — a strategy Sittig said had not been used before in Iowa. “It remains to be seen if it will be effective or not,” Sittig said. “The conventional way is just to have ground troops bring out the sup paters and cash them in. He’ll have to stir some excitement.” “I didn’t expect him to establish himself,” Sittig said. Sittig said the large number of possible caucus attendees that re main undecided also did not sur prise him. “Twenty to 40 percent of them say they are undecided,” he said. “It’s difficult to pick one and reject all the others, especially when the candidates overwhelmingly stand for the same things.” Sewage Continued from Page 1 in the real world the question is actu ally detecting something,” he said. The discharge was approved by the Nebraska Department of Environmen tal Quality, which has the final say on such matters. Spokesman Brian McManus said plant officials must ex plain why the sewage cannot be treated somewhere else before it is dumped into the river. “In this case, an engineering firm looked at it, and the cost of putting in duplicate equipment to treat the water would have been in the millions,” McManus said. “Plus, there has never been a detectable effect on drinking water downstream.” Discharges into the Missouri from Omaha-area water treatment plants is not new. The Papillion plant and the Missouri River Wastewater Treatment Plant have dumped 721.9 million gal lons into the river since 1990, accord ing to state environmental records. It hasn’t mattered, officials say, be cause of the volume of water in the Missouri. As of Friday, 17.4 billion gallons of water flowed* past Omaha every 24 hours. That’s 322 times the amount of wastewater that will be put in the river each day by the Papillion plant. Corrections Clarification Due to a production and editing error, a story in Friday’s Daily Ne braskan was incomplete (“OFFICE candidate says party will cure cor ruption,” pages 1 and 6). The affected portion of the ar ticle should have read as follows. Chuck Isom, the OFFICE can didate for first vice president, said it was time promises were fulfilled. “We’ve heard a lot of talk about parking garages and residence halls being built or renovated, but we haven’t seen any progress,” he said. “It’s time those things are acted on.” Justin Firestone, the party’s presidential candidate, said OF FICE wanted positive changes made in the way the university was operated, and his party was willing to take the first step. One of the party’s measures was to limit campaign spending to $2,000, Firestone said. Firestone acknowledged that it probably would take considerably less money than that to run an ef fective campaign but said that was an issue the party would resolve if he was elected.