The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 18, 1986 - Page 3 'U' student loses scholarship By MICHAEL LUSTIG married," but do not specify whether an applicant must be unmarried just Gary Sugarman, an LSA senior, filed during the selection process or during a complaint yesterday against the the two year scholarship. University with the Michigan Depar- After Sugarman's scholarship was tment of Civil Rights charging that he revoked, the University Honors was denied a scholarship because he Program, which administers the is going to be married this summer. scholarship at the University, sent a Sugarman criticized the University handout to prospective applicants for its role in the selection process of saying Power Foundation recipients the Power Foundation scholarship must "remain unmarried during the program. The program originally tenure of the scholarship." awarded him a two-year scholarship Sugarman's scholarship was at the Magdalene College of Cambridge revoked after he inquired about University. The awards are only housing for married students at available to University graduates Magdalene. In his court complaint, he through an interview and selection states that Eugene Power, president process done by University faculty of the Power Foundation, and members. Margaret Massiales, the foundation's THE scholarship application rules executive secretary, offered him the state that "Applicants must be un- scholarship if he delayed his marriage for one year and that he was prohibits public institutions from told of Power scholars who were discriminating on the basis of married in their second year of the "religion, race, color, national origin, program. age, sex, or marital status." It also says they later told him to withdraw from the program, calling him a "resentful scholar." Power refused to comment on the case last night. WHEN ASKED for a clarification as to why the scholarship was rescin- ded, Power responded in a letter to Sugarman that his marriage plans "disqualified" him and that the rule requiring the scholarship recipient to be single was one of "long standing." The complaint charges the Univer- sity with violating the Elliott-Larson Civil Rights Act of 1976, which Sugarman offered two possible solutions in his complaint:One is for $1 in compensatory damages, a letter from either the Power Foundation or the University saying that he was awarded the scholarship and that it was withdrawn because of his' marriage, or that the scholarship- program's rules are changed so that marital status will not be a factor in deciding the winner. He also asked that the University' dissociate itself from the Power Ex- change Program. Nurse anesthetist program may be canned By AMY MINDELL University officials are recommen- ding that a program which certifies nurses to administer anesthesia be discontinued when students presently enrolled finish their training. The Board of Regents will decide on the future of the program at its meeting today. The Certified Registered Nurse Anesthesia (CRNA) program is a two- year plan through the medical school's department of anesthesiology. There are currently 14 students enrolled. Dr. Thomas Dekornfeld, acting chairman of the department of anesthology, said faculty members unanimously agreed to kill the 67- year-old program because they wan- ted to spend more time doing resear- ch and teaching medical students. There is not a financial issue involved, officials say. The department curren- .tly consists of 20 students and 35 faculty members. , "THE program is not central to the department of anesthesiology. The purpose is to train medical students, and we feel the nursing program dilutes that effort. "Training nurses shouldn't be a part of the school of medicine...the faculty came here to teach doctors," he said. Both medical doctors and nurses can be trained to administer anesthetics. Nurses are called nurse anesthetists and have less training than the doctors, called anesthesiologists. AFTER the presentation, Mary Yablonky, assistant director of CR- NA, said members of the anesthesiology department may want to discontinue the program because they don't want the lower paid nurse anesthetists to compete with anesthesiologists for jobs. Marie Phillips, a student in the program, said the doctors want to discontinue the program because they don't want nurses to give anesthetics to patients. "They don't think nurses should give anesthesia. But nurses have been the ones to give anesthesia for 100 years. I have put about 525 patients to sleep as a part of my training," she said. OF 16 nurse anesthetists employed at the University hospital, 11 were trained at the University. There is a 2 percent unemployment rate of nurse anesthetists nationwide. Most hospitals use a team of nurse anesthetists and anestheologists, ac- cording to Barry Powell, director of the program and anesthesiology in- structor. Some hospitals use one or the other. George Zuidema, vice provost for medical affairs, said the hospital would continue to hire the same amount of nurse anesthetists. Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Lazy days Engineering sophomore Lisa Wood enjoys the sun in Regents Plaza yesterday. ANSWERS TO AUTO QUIZ 1) Yes! All You Need Is Your Diploma. 2) Livonia VW-Mazda. only 20 minutes from Ann Arbor via M=14 call us collect at 425-5400 COOKIES NIGHT OWLS TAKE A STUDY BREAK! Buy 2 or more of Mrs. Peabody's cookies or brownies after 9:00 p.m. and get ' a FREE beverage! M ' Opn tll 1 p~. dilyCOUPON MUST BE Opentill 1p.m. doily PRESENTED WITH PURCHASE 715 N. University OFFER VALID THROUGH 761 C HIP M YI,1 8 a . I__4f t appears in Weekend magazine every Friday. F M A