-Thursday, November 9, 1978-The Michigan Daily ro 'l7r a 4'\VERIYTHIN IG YOU NEVER EXPECTED FROM AN APPLIANCE STORE. Your system is not really complete without a deck. Choose from these and many others at incredibly low prices. Choose from a large selection of cassette, 8-track or reel-to-reel models. Buy it at Highland with the confidence that you are paying the lowest price: If you see the same item for less anywhere within 30 days of purchase we'll refund the difference, plus 10% of the difference. If your system is missing a deck -- you'll find it at Highland. 4 days only. Today thru Sunday. NAME BRAND FRONT-LOAD CASSETTE Phase locked loop circuitry. Bias & equalizer tape select switch. 3 peak-indicating LED lights. Digital tape counter. Full auto-stop. DC motor. Save! Insurance woes stop trampoline production By ELLEN FUTTERMAN This time, it seems the Nissen Com- pany, the world's largest trampoline manufacturer, cannot bounce back. The company is no longer manufac- turing trampolines in North America because the "dangerous apparatus" is too expensive to insure. Insurance, companies are wary of the trampoline because of the increase in serious injuries coupled with the public's readiness to sue. The National Federation of State High School Associations was forced to drop the trampoline as an interscholastic com- petition sport this year because mem- ber schools were having difficulty ob- taining insurance. JOHN NORDLINGER, co-chairman of Physical Education at Huron High School, in Ann Arbor, said "Safety was the underlying factor for dropping the trampoline from gymnastic com- petition. University gymnastics coach Newt Loken continues to use the trampline, though only under "strict supervision." "Safety belts and harnesses are used for difficult stunts," said Loken. "There are spotting platforms around the trampoline as well as watching spotters." THERE HAVE been no serious trampoline injuries reported at the University or any Ann Arbor public schools. A 1977 survey by the Consumer Product Safety Commission estimated there were 18,200 trampoline accidents requiring emergency room treatment. Last September, the American Academy of Pediatrics drafted a policy statement reading in part, "That tram- polines be banned from use as a part of the physical education programs in grammar schools, high schools and colleges, and also be abolished as a competitive sport." CITING A two-year study by the National Athletic Injury-Illness Repor- ting System, the academy said, "Spinal cord injuries with permanent paralysis resulted more frequently from tram polines than any other gymnastic sport. Next to football, trampolines were found to be the highest cause of per- manent paralysis in this survey. According to the national study, the highest annual incidence of permanent paralysis on the trampoline is at a four- year college level - about one case in every 5,000 athletes, about twice as high as football. The National Collegiate Athletic Association (yCAA) banned trampline competition from gymnastic meets in 1971, saying it was unsafe. However, an August NCAA newsletter said, "that while trampolines are dangerous they are optional to athletes as a training device for other sports." COACHES Nordlinger and Loken contend trampoline accidents are a result of poor supervision and training, not because the apparatus is inherently dangerous. "There is no longer competition on the tramp but I use it for training in other gymnastic events," said Nor- dlinger. "It's a good learning device." Yet in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the Nissen Corporation is worried about the future of trampolines. "Since colleges and high schools are dropping trampolines and insurance premiums are so high on the apparatus, it doesn't pay to manufacture them in the U.S. anymore," said Norman Barns of the Nissen Corp. "Everyone is suing. Most of the suits involve accidents from somersaulting." Now Nissen must start over. With stringent guidelines and an instructor certification program to be set up this year by the United States Gymnastic Safety Association, Nissen believes the trampoline can be revived. Use Daily Class ifieds Bies FdaNoeber 17 1978 Frwer Center: 8:O0pn PIONEER CT-F9191 FRONT-LOAD CASSETTE Electronically-controlled DC motor. Soft-touch solenoid function controls. Automatic tape selector. VU-meters. Tape counter with memory. PIONEER CT-F900 FRONT-LOAD CASSETTE Microprocessor for record/playback ilevel display on digitron tube., LED, digital tape counter has memory/repeat. Soft-touch controls. Timer start. REEL-TO-REEL DECKS $418 PIONEER RT-701 rack-mount. Sole- noid controls. Direct-drive. AC servo- motor. Pitch control. Save $91 .......... $459 AKAI GX-230D 3-head automatic reverse playback. AC servo direct-drive. Solenoid controls. Save $62 ............. $649 TEAC A-3300SX 10-1/2" 3-head deck. Solenoid controls. Cueing. 3 mo- tors. Sound-on-sound. Save $127....... . $327 $397 $522