The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com * 'U' defends training policy, promises to 'cooperate fully' Monday, September 13, 2010 - 5A From Page 1A gation. Guillermo said that though the organization filed the com- plaint to protect the rights of ani- mals, she also believes the course doesn't provide nurses with the best training available. Students would receive better training by using simulators instead of other tactics like "thrusting" a tube down a cat's trachea, she said. "Unlike deadly animal labs, simulators replicate human anat- omy and simulators allow train- ees to repeat procedures until they get good at them," Guillermo said. "This is about a choice to provide sub-standard training for the nurses in this course." According to its statement, the University aims to provide the nurses with adequate training through the use of both human patient simulators and training sessions involving animals. In addition, officials have decreased the number of training sessions with animals and increased the use of simulators, the statement says. "The procedures used on the $TAPLETON From Page 1A that they'll start a diet tomorrow. They keep on saying they'll start it tomorrow but when tomor- row comes that jelly doughnut looks extra tasty and they suc- cumb. Rodriguez may be saying he doesn't want to run Robinson more than 25 times every week until the end of the season, but f these results continue to be so delicious, you can bet Robinson will get the ball as many times as it takes to win. And maybe, just maybe, that will pay off. Maybe Robinson will keep playing the way he's playing. Maybe when teams make Rob- inson beat him with his arm, he will. Maybe he'll stay healthy. All of that could very well happen (the jury's still out, in my opinion, on whether or not it's actually possible to game- p1an around his speed). But that last point remains a real con- rern. We're two weeks into the college football season, and Rob- nson has taken two trips to the gideline with apparent injury. Each time, it hasn't been serious, but the law of averages says that if he continues to run the ball as animals during training are the same as ones that are per- formed on human patients, such as inserting a breathing tube or accessing blood vessels and body cavities for life support and other therapeutic purposes," the state- ment reads. "Some of these proce- dures are the very same ones used routinely by veterinarians when treating animals at their clinics - for example, intubation of cats for spaying." The statement also states that most of the "small number of cats" used in the course are adopted afterward. Despite the defense, Guillermo said PETA is still moving for- ward with the complaint and is waiting to hear the results of the USDA investigation. She added that since filing the complaint, the organization has heard from anumber of concerned University alumni. "We will be talking to them about how they can object to this and we will probably move forward with a campaign," she said. Guillermo added that the Uni- versity's course is "an anomaly" many times as he has the first two games, it will be eventually. And that's a possibility most Michigan fans have blocked out of their psyches in much the same way they blocked out that one time they walked in on their parents. But this goes beyond injury. Even through passing, simply relying on Robinson as much as this team has is extremely dan- gerous. One-man teams can only go so far. It's true in any sport. One of the arguments for depending on Robinson so much is that, should he get injured, there are two very qualified quarterbacks on the sideline ready to step in. While that may be true, there aren't two Robin- sons. And this team simply relies on him too much to proceed without a hitch when he leaves the game. If he accounted for maybe half of his team's total yards on Saturday, it would be different. But not 94 percent. It's essential to get the run- ning backs involved. I realize they weren't running very well early on in the game Saturday, but allowing them to take some of the punishment and carry some of the load will be invalu- able toward alleviating some of and that other institutions offer- ing flight survival courses don't use similar training methods involving animals. "The University of Michigan is in the dark ages on this one," she said. However last December, a Uni- versity team won a competition assessing flight survival skills for the third year in a row, according to a UMHS press release. In January 2009, a different UMHS course came under fire for using dogs to practice life-saving procedures, when The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medi- cine - an organization funded by PETA - filed acomplaintwiththe USDA alleging that the profes- sor of the Advanced Trauma Life Support course lied to a Univer- sity committee to get permission to use the dogs for the course. The complaint also alleged that the use of dogs as training dummies was in violation of the Animal Welfare Act. Shortly after the complaint was filed, University officials announced that the class would stop using dogs and only use sim- ulators for training instead. the immense pressure they are currently putting on Robinson. Winning a football game by yourself ain't easy, andhe's had to do essentially that two weeks in a row. Once again, I don't mean to take anything away from Robin- son's performance - calling his game-winning drive a "Heisman moment" would be an under- statement on par with calling the Big House the "Pretty Good- Sized" House. But Michigan has relied on Robinson as much as the Cleveland Cavaliers used to rely on LeBron James, and that's not a good thing. Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly had this to say regarding Robin- son's workload: "You run a quarterback 25 times, you have to have tough- ness," Kelly said. "I'll let Coach figure out if that's the case for ten games. Coach Rodriguez knows his team better than I do. We hit him pretty hard today, but he's a good, tough kid." He is indeed a good, tough kid. But even a kid as good and tough as Robinson has his limits. But then again ... does he? - Stapleton can be reached atjstap' -@umich.edu. ' WANT TO WRITE/DESIGN/TAKE PHOTOGRAPHS FOR THE MICHIGAN DAILY? Come to one of our mass meetings at 420 Maynard Street: TUESDAY SEPT.14 @ 7 P.M. 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