Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1982 Students to study KU energy efficiency By BRET WALLACE Staff Reporter Some architecture students will have the opportunity to help the University of Kansas save money by recommending ways to improve energy efficiency, the associate executive vice chancellor said yesterday. William Hogan, the vice chancellor, said the School of Architecture would start a program next semester in which selected students would study campus buildings and make recommendations and plans to improve energy efficiency. Mix Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture, said the program probably would be for students who entered a design and energy competition. Senior architecture students enter the competition and can work on a building specified by the contest or one of their own choosing, Lucas said. THIS PROGRAM will give students the opportunity to meet the qualifications, completion and may help help you. Hogan said, "I would hope, with all the creative talent we have here, to make this even better." Lucas said student designs would be modifications that could be done at a low cost. Christopher Theis, associate director of the School of Architecture, who will be in charge of the program, said that he had taught the school worked on efficiency studies. HOGAN SAID recommendations by the students would go through a long set of approvals before they could be enacted. Lucas said the projects first would be reviewed by Theis and Thomas Dean, professor of architecture and urban design. They will collect the best projects and submit them to the University, he said. Not all of the projects will be feasible, he said. Sometimes students do not have the experience to design a project that can be constructed. HOGAN SAID the office of facilities and planning would review the projects and submit them to the Kansas Board of Regents if the plans were feasible and showed a high savings in energy use. Theis said students would work at different levels of analysis. If the Regents approve the plans, they will be submitted to the Kansas Law Enforcement Department. "We want to get as many students involved as possible." Thesis said. Some students may be involved in semester-long projects, but others will only spend a short amount of time on it, he said. large scale planning such as future development of new facilities at the University or the re-use of existing structures, he said. They also will study behavior patterns and how they affect energy consumption. GRADUATE STUDENTS will study The program will involve more cooperation between the University and the School of Architecture and Arts with critics within the school. Thesis said. Lucas said the School of Architecture would be careful not to repeat the work of other groups. The students will have access to all other studies done on energy. He said that although this project might open doors for students to become involved in other campus projects, they would have to be carefully monitored because students were not licensed to work as architects. Architecture graduates have to work in three or four years before they can be admitted. Lawyer's aide charged with plotting robbery By United Press International NEW YORK—An assistant to a lawyer representing a suspect in the bloody Brink's heist was charged yesterday with planning the robbery, driving a getaway car in other vehicles, putting to free suspects in the holdup Sylvia Baraldini, 34, is a legal assistant to Susan Tipograph, who represents Brink's suspect Judith Clark. Two police officers and a security guard were killed Oct. 20, 1981 in the $1.6 million holdup of a Brink's car in N.Y. The money was recovered. Baraldini was ordered held on $300,000 bail at arraignment in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. Tipograph called the bail "outrageous ransom," and said Baralidin was prosecuted because she belonged to a communist organization. Tipograph said her legal assistant was a member of the May 19th Coalition, a group with links to the radical Weather Underground. Authorities charged Baraldini with conspiring to commit a bank robbery. Prosecutor Robert Litt said papers found on the suspect also indicated the existence of a plot to kill the doctor, a awaiting trial in Rockland County. Indicted in the heist were Clark, Kathy Boudin, Donald Weems, David Gilbert, Samuel Brown, David LaBorde, and Nathanial Burns. SHANN And the SCAMS Saturday, Nov. 13th Dance — FREE BEER 8-9! 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