2 Thursday, January 25, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Weather Seattle 48/24 TODAY Sunny HI: 40' LO: 33' Denver 50/26 Los Angeles 73/36 Chicago 37/14 Dallas 50/28 KEY Rain Snow Ice T-Storms Kansas Forecast A few high clouds, windy and cooler across the state. Highs in the low to mid-40s. Lows in the 20s. Salina 40/20 KC Dodge 40/20 City Wichita 43/20 43/22 Forecast by Rick Katzey Temperatures are today's highs and tightens to lows. 5-day Forecast Friday - Sunny and windy. High: 47'. Low: 33'. Saturday - Chance for daytime rain changing to snow tonight. High: 40'. Low: 20'. Sunday - Clearing and colder High: 34°. Low: 21°. KU Weather Service: 864-3300 Monday - Clear throughout the day. High: 40'. Low: 25'. Ray-Ban® BAMBINO & LOMBIE the world's top brand Find Your Style at MILLWORKS 714 New Hampshire 842-9754 Custom Imprinted Sportswear RINGS sized, repaired, cleaned Kizer Cummings jewelers 800 Mass. 749-4333 Get your two cents in. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Opinion Page 50¢ wash Archeology 9th & Mississippi (on the corner) open 24 hours 1990 Tune up for a dream-come-true summer of opportunity! We will be in the following locations seeking instrumentalists for the 1990 EPCOT Conservatory and the Disneyland and Walt Disney World All-American College Marching Bands. You must be at least 18 years old. Please visit www.disneyworld.com. Daily performances and career workshops (11 or 14 weeks): early June thru mid-August. Salary and housing provided: 9AM-5PM AUDITION SITE AND DATE KANSAS CITY Jan. 26 Univ. of MO) Kansas City The University Center For specific information, write or call DISNEYLAND ARTISTS AUCTIONS 90 212-765-4800 Lake Buena Vista, FL 35280-1000 Buenos Aires (744) 916-1000 | lordaid.com | pkmst@lordaid.com (714) 843-7238 | www.lordaid.com Disneyland Walt Disney World On campus A geography department colloquium will be at 3:30 p.m. today at 317 Lindley Hall, Raymond Wood of the University of Missouri anthropology department will speak on "Repeat Photography and Karl Bodmer's Paintings of the Upper Mississippi River." A meeting of the Champions Club will be at 7 p.m. today at Alcoves G,H.I,and J in the Kansas Union. A meeting of the KU Navigators will be at 7 p.m. today at Parlor C in the Kansas Union. Mike Jordahl will speak on "Being a Disciple of Jesus Christ." A meeting of KU Students Against Alleges for the National Convention, at Alleghey F. in the Kansas Union, A Latin American Solidarity rice and beans dinner will be at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Minstrels, 1204 Oread, Anne Cowan (803) 755-9122, anecardguan.com and will give an eyewitness report on Nicaraguan conditions. A meeting of KU on Capitol Hill will be at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. Anyone interested in seeking an internship in Washington, D.C., in summer 1990 is encouraged to attend. KU College Republicans will meet at 7 p.m. today at Aderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. The Douglas County Republican Party chairman will speak. A forum with Carolyn Carlson, national president of the Society of Professional Journalists, will be at 7:30 p.m. today at 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The topic will be "Cultural Diversity and the News." Creamer trial date will be scheduled Police report late Tuesday night in Strong Hall, KU police reported. Mark Creater, who faces a misdeanor charge for lighting a marijuana cigarette in the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, was ordered yesterday at a hearing to reappear in court at 1:30 p.m. on Feb. 9 to set a date for his trial. A student's pursuit containing items valued together at $21 was stolen By a Kansan reporter Creamer, 42, charged with first-time possession of marijuana, is fighting to legalize the drug. He said he believed that legalization would permit those who use drugs to use marjuana rather than a more harmful drug such as cocaine. Creamer's attorney, Jerry Harper, said he would attempt to file a motion next week to get the charges against Creamer dismissed. After the hearing, Creamer, 312 Indiana St., predicted that the government's crackdown on drugs in urban areas would increase an increase in domestic production. The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045; daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Burned boy fears paroled father Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045. LOS ANGELES — David Rothenberg will never forgive his father for setting him on fire, saying yesterday's release of the man who disfigured him leaves him terrified despite unprecedented measures to keep the felon away. The Associated Press "Obviously, he is very concerned and he has every reason to be," said Tipton Kindel, spokesman for the department of Corrections in Sacramento. "He is out on parole, and he has reached his destination," the spokesman said, declining to even disclose whether Rothenberg was paroled within the United States. Rothenberg, 49, wearing blue jeans, a blue chambray shirt and an electronic leash to monitor his movements during his three-year probation, was escorted out of the prison by motor vehicle at 12:40 a.m., Kindel said. The older Rothenberg "said he was afraid and upset, but he didn't elaborate. Kindel said." David Rothenberg, who is now 13, said he keeps a BB gun by his bed just in case. "I'd shoot his eye out if he tries to hit him," he said in a recent interview. David lives in Orange County with his mother, Marie, and stepfather, Buena Park Police Lt. Richard Hafdahl, who helped investigate the fire. He also nightmares that his dad is chasing him down the street," Hafdahl said. When asked what is being done to protect David, Kindel said that if Rothenberg is ever "not where he's supposed to be," then the family, David, will be notified immediately." Hafdahl said he had also taken security measures. "He's under the most restrictive parole ever for a California parole," Kindel said. "He will be accompanied by a parole officer 24 hours a day. We want to make sure that he is where he is supposed to be and that he has no opportunity to come into contact with his son." Rothberg's parable will cost California taxpayers $18,000 a month. Rothenberg set fire to his 6-year-old son in a Buena Park motel room in 1838 after a telephone argument in which his estranged wife said Rothenberg would not be able to see David again. with his mother. "If I can't have him, nobody else can," Rothenberg said when arrested six days later. Wearing a lapel pin reading "Kids are the nicest people," he told arresting officers that he was going to kill himself but that he was too much of a coward. Rothenberg had taken the boy on a holiday to Southern California from New York, where the boy was living David, dragged from the inferno by motel guests, suffered third-degree burns on 90 percent of his body. Rothenberg was convicted of attempted murder, arson and other charges and got the maximum penalty, a 13-year prison term. The sentence was cut in half because of good behavior. If convicted today, Rothenberg would have faced up to life in prison. But sentencing laws at the time required his release after less than seven years. 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