Page 4-Saturday, August , 1981-The Michigan Daily Rumors circulate about shower in new dean's office 4 By JOHN ADAM Daily staff writer College of Engineering Dean James Duderstadt doesn't have one. Neither does School of Public Health Dean Richard Remington, or Dean Joan Stark of the School of-Education. But the new LSA dean, Peter Steiner, will have one this Monday if things proceed on schedule. A shower is being installed in the dean's office on the second floor of the LSA Building. THIS LUXURY - paid for entirely by the dean himself - and the gaping hole in the ceiling of the Registrar's Of- fice directly beneath the dean's work- place, has many first floor staffers boiling. However, it seems most of their complaints - those concerning finan- cing - are unfounded. Steiner, not the University, is paying for the in- stallation of the shower, §aid LSA Ad- ministrative Manager Bland Leverette. "We don't want anyone saying that University or state money is being used for the shower," he said. Dean Steiner has been out of the office this week and could not be reached for comment. THE NEW DEAN is an avid jogger and wishes to run the two miles to and from work each day, Leverette said, therefore he needs a shower. "I feel confident that it will keep him in good health," said Leverette, a veteran of four LSA deans. The position of dean is extremely demanding he said, "certainly not a forty hour a week job," and it requirea a healthy person. According to Leverette, there was no effort made to contact the people on the floor beneath the dean's office about the shower installation. Consequently, vicious rumors circulated on the lower floor of the LSA Building. The seven or eight staffers of the Registrar's office, all requesting anonymity, said they thought the shower installation was "ridiculous." TONIGHT SECOND CHA Not FE ATURES A NNEX BAND 516 E. Liborty M9-5350 They brought up other grievances as well. "HE SHOVLDN'T have those kind of luxuries on University money," said one staffer, who said she thought such luxury was probably one of the con- ditions on which Steiner accepted the' job. Another staffer, who has been working at the office over five years, said the installation of the shower sent the wrong messages. "You should ask him (Dean Steiner) if they're going to install a private in- door track for him to go along with his shower." Ann Arbor woman assaulted A 22-year-old Ann Arbor woman was apparently raped early yesterday mor- ning, according to the Washtenaw County sheriff's department. Details are unclear, they said, because the woman was so drunk when she was found, that she had trouble relating what had happened to her. The woman claims she was picked up while walking down a street in Ann Ar- bor by two black-males in a light blue car. She was then taken to an unknown dirt road where she was raped and sexually assaulted. They then aban- doned her at Nickels Arboretum where she was found by University security officers, she told police. She was treated at University Hospital and released. Reporters thot go where the story is. Read the Daily today! In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Toll rises in Iranian quake ANKARA, Turkey-The confirmed death toll in the earthquake that struck southeastern Iran's Kerman Province rose to 1,300 yesterday with rescue workers recovering another 100 bdies, Tehran radio said. The radio also reported thatanother quake measpring 5.1 on the open- ended Richter scale hit the area 525 miles southeast of Tehran Thursday af- ternoon, toppling some structures still standing after the stronger ear- thquake Tuesday. The United Nations Disaster Relief Organization in Geneva said "'unof- ficial estimates" put the death toll at 8,000 and that most buildings in the stricken region were damaged or destroyed. House votes to keep minimum benefit; Senate does not WASHINGTON-The House voted once again yesterday to save the minimum Social Security benefit from elimination but the rescue attempt failed as expected in the Republican-controlled Senate. "What they got is one more shot before they go home, with a BB gun," Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kan.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said of House Democrats' success in getting another vote on the matter. The 404-20 vote in the House was on a bill that would remove from President Reagan's budget-cutting package a provision eliminating the $122- a-month minimum benefit Sen.ronald W. Riegle Jr. (D-Mich.) tried to get a vote on the measure in the Senate, but Majority Leader Howard Baker blocked it-with'an objection which left it in the Senate Finance Committee until after the August recess. His objection was sustained in a 56-30 vote. Baker said the minimum benefit would be considered again after the August recess as part of an overhaul of the entire Social Security system. Another hunger striker dead BELFAST-Hunger striker Kevin Lynch, 25, died this morning in the 71st day of his protest fast in the Maze Prison, Britain's Northern Ireland office said. He was the seventh hunger striker to die since May 5. Relatives were at the bedside of Lynch, a member of the Irish National Liberation Army from Dungiven, when he died. They had maintained a vigil for a week before his death. Meanwhile, Kieran Doherty, also 25, went into the 72nd day of his fast today and also was described as near death. The family-ofstriker Paddy Quinn, 29, authorized doctors to intervene in his case. He had been given the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church yesterday, the 47th day of his fast, Five other Irish nationalists are on hunger strike in the Maze. Polish workers protest rations WARSAW, Poland-Hundreds of Polish workers descended on Parliament yesterday to protest food shortages and the government announced that the overseer of the nation's battered economy will be replaced. About 300 workers in blue coveralls and red hard hats left the Sejm, or Parliament, after their two-hour peaceful protest. A 30-man delegation carried in a resolution and met key deputies who promised to review their complaint. "The workers do not agree with the decision to reduce meat rations for August and want an immediate return to the old norms," said-one -of the workers, Seweryn Jaworski. I - Protests over food shortages, soaring prices and a 20 percent cut in meat rations that goes into effect today were staged in at least four other cities to exert pressure on the government. Daylight' may be extended WASHINGTON-A House subcommittee yesterday approved a bill to ex- tend daylight-saving time for'two months in order to save energy. Reps. Rieherd Ottinger, (D-N.Y.) and Carlos Moorhead (R-Calif.), the sponsors, said the bill could save 100,000 barrels of oil a day in reduced elec- trical power needs, spark the economy by increasing retail store business and cut down on violent crime and traffic deaths. The bill would start daylight-saving time on the first Sunday in March, in- stead of the last Sunday in April. It would expire on the last Sunday in Oc- tober, as it does now. tormme o he n1a t SAp hc Visa, Master Charge, MESSA. PCS, Blue Cross, Travelers, MediMet 1112 South University .,663-5533