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         Bowling Team Sports:     more detail
  1. Bowling's Team Concept (Winning Edge of Sports Series (Unnumbered).) by Charles L. Martin, 1997-06
  2. Bowling nights bridge the generations.(Sports)(League nights at the Timber Bowl provide multi-generational play): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR) by Gale Reference Team, 2007-07-12
  3. The Wonder Team: The True Story of the Incomparable 1927 New York Yankees (Sports and Culture Series) by Leo Trachtenberg, 1995-07
  4. The Originals: The New York Celtics Invent Modern Basketball (Sports and Culture Publication) by Murry R. Nelson, 1999-06-01
  5. The Bowlers Team Record Book by Tech Data Publications, 1980-12

101. High School Teams Rediscover Bowling
More than 70 teams have sprung up at high schools in the Cincinnatiarea, although bowling isn ta sanctioned prep sport in Ohio.
http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2004/03/05/loc_bowling05.html
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Friday, March 5, 2004 High school teams rediscover bowling
By Reid Forgrave
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Everyone cheers
as the pins fall during a Seton-Mercy match-up at Stumps Lanes.

The Cincinnati Enquirer/CRAIG RUTTLE
BRIDGETOWN - Amy Corbin creeps five steps toward the right side of the lane, dips low near the foul line, drives through with her legs and whips her bowling ball down the lane. Her Seton High School teammates watch in a loose huddle. Nearly 100 spectators cheer her on at the cramped Stumps Lanes. Strike! Then she rolls another strike. Then another. "Corbin! Stop it!" an opponent from Mercy High School yells, smiling. "You're making us sick!" Bowling, a long-time west side favorite pastime, is enjoying a boost from high school teams. Worried that a new generation wasn't taking to bowling, bowling proprietors throughout Ohio launched a special effort five years ago to get high schoolers on the lanes. For the first three years, bowling lane owners gave the high school teams free lane time, free uniforms, even offered transportation. The alleys still give youth bowlers free lane time.

102. California Aggie
Although the women s program has been in existence as a sport club for over 30years, the team fielded just three bowlers at the beginning of the season.
http://www.californiaaggie.com/article/?id=3546

103. HickokSports.com - History - Lawn Bowls
public parks across the country, and the sport experienced a to US players, whilecompetitors and teams from other The lawn bowling green is a 120foot square
http://www.hickoksports.com/history/lawnbowl.shtml
Sports History
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Lawn Bowls
History
Lawn bowls, also known as lawn bowling or bowling on the green, is considered a quintessentially English sport. However, it probably originated in France. It may even have been brought over by the conquering Normans in 1066 or shortly thereafter, though there's no documentary evidence that it was. Like Italy's bocce and Provencal's petanque, lawn bowling originated in a game played by Roman soldiers, in which stones were tossed toward a target stone with the object of getting as close to the target as possible. Roman legions introduced the game to countries throughout the empire. Over time, the stones were replaced by balls that were usually rolled, rather than thrown. In France, the sport became known as boules , from the Latin word for ball, and the English world "bowl" came from that French root. The oldest known bowling green, in Southampton, England, dates at least to 1299, although other greens claim to be older than that. Henry VIII, himself a bowler, in 1511 banned the sport among the lower classes and levied a fee of 100 pounds on any private bowling green to ensure that only the wealthy could play. The main reason for the ban, as for similar bans on other sports, was that able-bodied men were supposed to spend their spare time practicing archery. The king's proclamation also noted that arrow-makers and bow-makers weren't being productive enough because of the time they wasted on bowling.

104. HickokSports.com - History - Bowling
The sport gradually spread through northern Europe. In 1926, the International BowlingAssociation was organized by teams from Denmark, Finland, Germany, the
http://www.hickoksports.com/history/bowling.shtml
Sports History
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Bowling
Table of Contents
Early History
Rolling a ball to knock down targets has been the object of a number of games, at various times and in various parts of the world. The implements for such a game have been found in an Egyptian tomb that's more than 7,000 years old, and a sort of bowling has been popular among Polynesian Islanders for at least several centuries. But the modern sport of bowling, which seems distinctly American and very secular, probably grew out of a German religious ceremony. In the 3rd century AD, every German peasant carried a Kegel, a club similar to the Irish shillelagh, for protection. It became a customary test of faith in many churches for the parishioner to set up his Kegel as a target, representing the heathen, and then roll a stone in an attempt to knock it down. If he succeeded, he was considered free of sin. Bowling eventually moved out of the church and became a popular secular sport, with a wooden ball replacing the stone and multiple pins (from as few as three to as many as seventeen) replacing the single Kegel. There are several references to bowling in Germany during the Middle Ages. Berlin and Cologne in 1325 set a limit on the amount that could be bet on a bowling match. A 1463 feast in Frankfurt featured bowling, along with a venison dinner. And the winner of a 1518 competition in Breslau was awarded an ox.

105. The Albert Lea Tribune
We have not fully restored our previously cut sports, he said. If the bowlingteam remains a club, there is no cost or liability to the school district.
http://www.albertleatribune.com/articles/2004/04/29/news/news3.txt
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Bowling as sport? By Ann Austin, Tribune staff writer Over 300 names of community members are on a petition to get bowling recognized as a school sport at Albert Lea High School. At the school board meeting last week, student Jennifer Brandt, a junior, brought her petition in front of the board. The team is willing to raise funds for bus fare and uniforms, she said, along with other expenses that would be accrued. In order for the sport to be acknowledged by the school, officials would need to provide coaches and transportation due to liability issues. This could pose an issue since other recognized sports have experienced loss of funds due to budget cuts from two years ago, Prescott said. "We have not fully restored our previously cut sports," he said. The school district would be hesitant to fund a new program until they are sure that an adequate job is being done in other areas.

106. SECTION VI STATE SCHOLAR ATHLETE CHAMPIONS
This achievement continues with the honors presented to the Boys and Girls Bowlingteams for having the highest academic averages in their sport for the winter
http://www.section6.wnyric.org/scholarathlete/SA0304.htm
SECTION VI STATE SCHOLAR ATHLETE CHAMPIONS SECTION VI PROUDLY CONGRATULATES ITS STATE CHAMPIONS FOR 2003-2004 FALL WINTER , SPRING For a complete listing of all Scholar Athlete Teams go to the state website or just click here FALL SPORTS CHAMPIONS 2003 Section VI had one team that achieved the State Scholar/Athlete Championship for Fall Sports! Cattaraugus/ Little Valley Girls Volleyball - State Champion with a team GPA of 96.283 The Cattaraugus-Little Valley Girls Volleyball team has received the title of Scholar Athlete State Championship. This honor was given to eight team members, who had a combined average of 96.3, the highest of all girls volleyball teams in New York State. The team was recognized at the January Board of Education Meeting and presented with a certificate and banner to Mr. Joseph Crandall, Athletic Director and Coach Jim Wojdan. The 2003 Varsity Volleyball team members that received this honor include: Emily Clark, Tiffany Perkins, Rachel Rhodes, Heather Smith, Amy Vasconcellos, Rachel Lees, Emily Sinn, and Beth Crandall. CLVCS is very proud of this team for their commitment to the sport and to their academics. Congratulations to the Cattaraugus-Little Valley !!!

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