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1. International Institute For Sport And Olympic History
Nonprofit educational corporation, 501c3, IISOH, Library, Museum, olympic Games, history of Sport, Physical Education, Wrestling, Fencing, Gymnastics, Sports Athletics, Dance, Recreation Sportswriters the Media. squash. Stamps and Stamp Collecting (see Philately
http://www.harveyabramsbooks.com/501c3subjects.html
SUBJECT LIST
International Institute for Sport
and Olympic History
The following subject areas are suggested areas of interest for named endowments.
You can see the broad scope of the Institute's collecting goals from this list.
Additional subjects may be added at any time by the Board of Directors or suggested by Benefactors. Subjects in BOLD are on the program of the Modern Olympic Games and are the primary areas of interest in seeking endowments. Some subjects have links to a more detailed page on that subject to give you more information.
  • Adapted physical education
  • Air Sports
  • Alpine skiing (see skiing)
  • Ancient / Antiquities (Greece, Rome, etc)
  • Aquatics (see Water sports)
  • Archery
  • Architecture (sports stadiums and facilities)
  • Arts (see Sport in Art: coins, medals, posters)
  • Association football (see soccer)
  • Athletic injuries (see sports medicine)
  • Backgammon
  • Baseball
  • Badminton
  • Basketball
  • Biathlon
  • Bibliography
  • Bicycling (see cycling
  • Billiards
  • Biomechanics
  • Blacks in Sport
  • Canoeing, Rowing, Yachting
  • Bobsleigh (see Winter Sports)
  • Bowling
  • Boxing
  • Business (see Sport and Business)
  • Canoeing
  • Cars and car racing (See Automobiles)
  • Cards
  • Checkers
  • Cheerleading
  • Chess
  • Children and Physical Education
  • Coaching (19th century)
  • College Athletics
  • Cricket
  • Croquet
  • Curling
  • Cycling
  • Dance
  • Diving (See
  • Dressage (See Equestrian Sports
  • Drugs and sport (See Sports medicine)
  • Equestrian Sports
  • Exercise
  • Facilities (see sports stadiums and facilities)
  • Falconry
  • Fencing
  • Field Hockey
  • Figure skating (see Skating)
  • Fitness (See Physical Fitness)
  • Football (American)
  • Football (British, see Soccer)

2. International Institute For Sport And Olympic History
Nonprofit educational corporation, 501c3, IISOH, Library, Museum, olympic Games, history of Sport, Physical Education, Wrestling, Fencing, Gymnastics, Sports Athletics, Dance, Recreation. badminton, team handball, racquetball/handball/squash, basketball and other indoor sports
http://www.harveyabramsbooks.com/501c3buildingplans.html
BUILDING PLANS
International Institute for Sport
and Olympic History
Future spot for architect's drawing!
The search is on. We have begun looking for land in central Pennsylvania to build a campus for the Institute. Our plan is described in more detail below. Eventually we anticipate that this campus will be one of the largest sports facilities in Pennsylvania.
The IISOH effectively has two divisions the Library and the Museum. The Board of Directors are seeking benefactor(s) to endow each division with a $25 million donation. An endowment will also be sought for the theatre in the amount of $25 million. The benefactor(s) will then be offered the opportunity to name the Library, Museum or theatre, subject to the final approval of the Board of Directors.
Go to the ENDOWMENTS page.

Our plans are to construct facilities on a campus approximately 300 acres in size. This will allow us have room for expansion in the decades to come as we increase the endowment and add sports facilities to the educational program. Sports fields are desirable in order to teach through participation and play. If we have a baseball field we can teach the history of baseball by playing a game using 1860 rules for 3 innings, then playing by modern rules for 3 innings. In the basement of the Museum we could have a bowling alley from the 1800's where the pins have to be set by hand, and right next to it have a modern bowling alley that is fully automated. Our visitors can go bowling either way. Consider the possibilities for each and every sport this means a lot of space is needed.

3. OLYMPIC DREAMS --> Contains Major Site Reviews And Olympic Links For 75 Great Si
This Page is dedicated to the a olympic book site on the "100 GREATEST MOMENTS IN olympic history" according to it's author Bud Greenspan voicing your support for squash as a olympic sport for the 2000
http://www.dreamwvr.com/olympic1.htm
THE LARGEST OLYMPIC RELATED SITE PERIOD - GET THE WHOLE DEAL INCLUDING "THE BOMB IN ATLANTA."
Contains Major Site Reviews and Olympic Links for 75 Great Sites
Olympic Games This site covers the hisotry of the Olympics and covers very well. From ancient times to the modern games. It also covers some notable Olympic atheletes who have excelled in Olympic competition.
Guide to 1996 Olympic Summer Games
Looking for a fast guide to the Olympic games in Atlanta, Georgia? This guide will give you a idea of what's going on.
THE IOC CENTENNIAL
Here one finds the history of the IOC better known as the "International Olympic Committee".
1996 OLYMPIC GAMES
Looking for information can become easier when you access this link to Games Info.
Nagano 1998 Olympic Winter Games
Planning to attend the 1998 Olympic Games in Nagano? Well here is a great place to look into the next one ahead of time.
2002 Olympic Winter Games
People big on planning their Olympic trips may find this site useful for 2002.
Official 1996 Olympic Web Site
When searching for answers to FAQ's, or wanting to learn more trivia about sporting events and Olympic firsts, check out this site.
Help Olympics
This site contains regularly updated facts, figures, pictures, video, and sound. A definate location to sniff around for up to date information.

4. History Of Women In Sports Timeline - Part 2 - 1900 - 1929
The St. Lawrence County Branch of the New York State of AAUW provides women's sports history resources on the Internet. Abbott is the first American woman to win an olympic gold medal Jeffersonborn in 1881) takes up squash, after excelling at polo (which she
http://www.northnet.org/stlawrenceaauw/timelne2.htm
to 1899
History of Women in Sports Timeline
Part 2 - 1900-1929
"People said women couldn't swim the Channel but I proved they could."
Gertrude Ederle
  • 1900-1920 - Physical Education instructors strongly oppose competition among women, fearing it will make them less feminine.
  • 1900 - The first 19 women to compete in the modern Olympics Games in Paris, France, play in just three sports: tennis, golf, and croquet. Margaret I. Abbott is the first American woman to win an Olympic gold medal. An art student in Paris, she won the nine-hole golf tournament by shooting a 47.
  • 1900 - May Sutton is America's first woman tennis player of international reknown. She wins the Pacific Southwest Championship at age 13.
  • 1900 The first women's ice hockey league is organized in Quebec with three teams from Montreal, one from Quebec City, and another from Trois-Rivieres.
  • 1901 - Field Hockey is introduced to women in the United State by Constance M. K. Applebee , a British physical education teacher. She presents a hockey exhibition at Harvard University.
  • 1901 - Annie Taylor, 43, becomes the first person to go over Naigara Falls in a custom-built barrel and live. She couldn't swim. Her comment on being retreieved: "Nobody ever ought to do that again."

5. SQUASH :: History
history of squash. is that one day soon it will be part of the olympic movement squashhas been played for over 130 years, grown sensationally in the last thirty
http://squash.sports-resource.com/squash_history.htm
squash.sports-resource.com Betting
Squash
Tips
Equipment
Site
History of Squash
130 years of squash Squash was invented in Harrow school around 1830, when the pupils discovered that a punctured Rackets ball, which "squashed" on impact with the wall, produced a game with a greater variety of shots and required much more effort on the part of the players, who could not simply wait for the ball to bounce back to them as with Rackets. The variant proved popular and in 1864 the first four Squash courts were constructed at the school and Squash was officially founded as a sport in its own right. In those early days Squash, as with all other sports, was without any form of international standardisation and it was inevitable that slight variations in the way it was played, and the equipment used, would occur. Luckily only two main streams of activity followed, one in England with its 21 feet wide courts and "soft" ball and the other in North America, with its 18.5 feet wide courts and "hard" ball and with both courts having the same length of 32 feet the universality of Squash was not seriously challenged. We will look at these two branches separately and also at the way in which Squash spread to almost every nation in the world. Early days in England As Squash play developed so did its administrative structure. The first discrete national associations to be formed were the United States Squash Racquets Association in 1907 and the Canadian Squash Racquets Association in 1911. In England the game was regulated by a Squash sub committee of the Tennis and Rackets Association from 1908 until it gained full status as the Squash Rackets Association in 1928.

6. History
The history of squash. and is currently working with the IOC towards the target ofhaving squash included as a sport on the program of the olympic Games in
http://www.squash.co.uk/Main Topics/history.htm
SRA History
The History of squash

Work of the SRA

Early days
...
SRA office staff - Who do you need to contact
SRA The SRA is responsible for the organization and promotion of squash in England. It supervises the most successful sport in the country. The Association also contributes to the work of the World Squash Federation in the overall regulation of the world game. Click on the headings in the bar above for more information about its management, organization, how it carries out its role and where it sees its future. The organization of the SRA has two key components, the Board and the Office. The Board of Directors has the overall responsibility. The counties and other people appoint them. In due course we will have more information for you on the profiles of the people concerned and their roles. The office organization is show diagrammatically under the tab above. Pictures are being prepared of all the staff; you will then be able to know whom you are talking to. There are also important organization links between the SRA and Sport England and all the associated sports administration bodies, each of which has a say in how the SRA is run. HISTORY OF THE SQUASH RACKETS ASSOCIATION The Squash Rackets Association was founded in 1928 to take over the administration of the game in Britain from the Tennis and Rackets Association.It was the recognized world authority for squash until the formation in 1967 of the International Squash Rackets Federation (now called the World Squash Federation). In 1928 the SRA had a membership of just 25 clubs which compares with over 2,500 today and an individual membership of over 5,000.

7. Harvard University Athletics: History
The victory makes Paul the oldest American gold medal winner in olympic history. Harvard men's squash finishes with an undefeated record and wins the national championship
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~athletic/history.html
Harvard Athletics Timeline
Circa 1780-The Tradition Begins

Athletic competition among Harvard students begins when a group of sophomores issue a challenge to members of the freshman class for a wrestling match. Afterward, the winners are treated to dinner by the vanquished.
Fall 1827-Football Forerunner
A poem entitled "The Battle of the Delta" is published. It refers to an annual "football" contest between the college's freshmen and sophomores played on the Delta, where Memorial Hall now stands. Though extremely popular, these games become increasingly brutal and are finally banned by the Faculty in 1860.
Fall 1844-Boat Club Organized
The first Harvard boat club is organized by Horace Cunningham '46 and his classmates when they purchase an eight-oared boat, the Star, and re-christen it the Oneida.
Fall 1846-Crew Wins First Race
Harvard crew holds its first race against an outside opponent. Members of the Class of 1847, competing in the Huron, defeat the Wave of Boston over an approximate two-mile course on the Charles River.

8. Olympic 2008 Quest
WSF Targets Paris, Beijing, Toronto. squash BIDS FOR olympic GAMES 2008 IN PARIS Player of the month. Videos. history. Pakistan squash. School squash. Camp Index
http://www.squashtalk.com/html/news/wsfpr387.htm
SquashTalk News SQUASHTALK TODAY
Bright Lights

US Doubles

Windy City Open

TOC New York
...
CSA Mens Teams

RECENT EVENTS
PSA Swedish Open
WISPA Vassar

NAO Doubles

WISPA Greenwich CT
CURRENT CONTENT Hall of Fame News Index Club Links Gear Links ... (sign up now free) WSF Targets Paris, Beijing, Toronto SQUASH BIDS FOR OLYMPIC GAMES 2008 IN PARIS
With one month to go before the International Olympic Committee selects the host city for the 2008 Games, Squash continued its campaign for a place on the Programme. World Squash Federation (WSF) President Susie Simcock led a delegation which met with M. Noel de Saint Pulgent, Chief Executive Officer of the Paris 2008 Bid Committee. The WSF committee included 10-times World Champion Jahangir Khan and the President of the French Squash Federation, Jacques Fontaine, together with WSF Vice Presidents Mike Corby and Joyce Buckley. M. de Saint Pulgent confirmed that Squash would be a welcome addition to the Olympic Programme as, in France, it is seen as an attractive, athletic and dynamic sport which is growing at a rate of over 20% per annum. Although the decision on inclusion of new sports rests exclusively with the IOC, he believed that the proposed 5-day programme consisting of the top 32 men and women players would fit comfortably into the schedule and add value to the Games. Susie Simcock commented: "The reception we received from Paris 2008 was the most positive and friendly we have encountered. Paris, Beijing and Toronto are all building up to the IOC decision on 15th July, but whichever is chosen we know that Squash can bring an extra dimension to the World's greatest sporting event."

9. Squash
squash Search for books at sport-books-online.net. Price $13.95. squash A history of the Game NCAAFootball.net. International olympic Commitee - olympic Games. ActiveUSA
http://sport-books-online.net/Squash.html

Home
Search High Volume Orders Links ... Windsurfing Additional Subjects Big Beyond Belief Faye Resnick Ken Wakefield Biography Autobiography Miller ... Westco Marketing Featured Books Squash: Steps to Success
Both beginners and more advanced players should be able to get a lot out of this quality reference work as it offers detailed (yet practical) text, illustrationa and diagrams covering all aspects of the game. The book is considered by most experts in the sport to be among the top two or three instructionals ever published on Squash. It won't make you a championship quality player, but it should help your game no matter what skill level you are currently at.
Written by Philip Yarrow
Published by Human Kinetics Pub (June 1997)
ISBN 0880115416
Price $17.95
Mr. Bear Squash-You-All-Flat

This is my husband's favorite book from his childhood. It's such a nice story, and the soft illustrations are so 50's, so PERFECT! Mr. Bear likes to squash everything all flat, so the other forest animals don't want him around. They work together to solve the problem. Kids love the ending.
Written by Morrell Gipson Gary Larson Angela
Published by Purple House Press (November 2000) ISBN 193090004X Price $15.00

10. History Of Squash
No history of squash can be complete without an account the IOC towards the targetof having squash included as sport on the programme of the olympic Games in
http://www.squashplayer.co.uk/history_of_squash.htm
History of Squash The World of Squash
at Your Fingertips HOME NEWS RESULTS COLUMNS ...
where to get it all
130 Years of Squash

by Ted Wallbutton of the WSF
For over 1,000 years man has invented and enjoyed a variety of games played by hitting a ball with either a closed fist - as in “fives” or “bunch of fingers” - or with some form of bat or racket. Around the year 1148 the French played “le Paume”, meaning “the palm of the hand”, which developed into Jeu de Paume, Real Tennis, Royal Tennis or, if you play the sport, simply Tennis. At sometime in the early 19th century this obsession with rackets and balls spawned another variety of the sport in the unlikely birthplace of the Fleet Prison in London. The prisoners in “The Fleet”, mainly debtors, took their exercise by hitting a ball against walls, of which there were many, with rackets and so started the game of “Rackets”. Rackets progressed, by some strange route, to Harrow and other select English schools about 1820 and it was from this source that our own sport of Squash, or Squash Rackets, developed.
Squash was invented in Harrow school around 1830, when the pupils discovered that a punctured Rackets ball, which "squashed" on impact with the wall, produced a game with a greater variety of shots and required much more effort on the part of the players, who could not simply wait for the ball to bounce back to them as with Rackets. The variant proved popular and in 1864 the first four Squash courts were constructed at the school and Squash was officially founded as a sport in its own right.

11. Brattleboro RacquetSports Inc-History Of BRI
Racquetball, squash and Fitness center located in Brattleboro, VT. history of Racquetball. history of squash. squash in America Springs, Colorado, is recognized by the United States olympic
http://www.brattlebororacquetsports.com/history.html
History of Racquetball History of Squash Squash in America History of Brattleboro RacquetSports, Inc. History of Racquetball- Racquetball is a fast game played on an enclosed indoor court, with a racquet and ball, popular in North America since the early 1970s. The game was developed in 1949 in the United States from a combination of squash and handball. The racquetball racquet is a shorter, lighter version of the one used in tennis. The lively, hollow rubber ball is about the size of a tennis ball. The rules are basically similar to handball rules, and versions exist for two players (as in singles), four players (as in doubles), and three players (as in cutthroat). The first side to score 15 points wins a game. In a match, two games are played. If each player or team wins one game, an 11-point tiebreaker is played to decide the winner of the match. The United States Racquetball Association, located in Colorado Springs, Colorado, is recognized by the United States Olympic Committee as the U.S. national governing body for the sport. Racquetball has it's roots from two other sports:squash and handball.

12. Olympic Games - History
For the second time in Malaysian olympic history, the Hockey Contingent to the 1988Seoul olympic Games was Contingent was HRH Prince Imran (squash) and the
http://www.olympic.org.my/gamesrecords/olympicg/history.htm

13. Active Australia - Programs - Women And Sport - History Of Women In Sport In Aus
of Australian sportswomen have a strong and long history. women have comprised 23%of Australian olympic teams from 1970 were tennis, golf and squash, seen to
http://www.activeaustralia.org/women/history.htm
History of Women in Sport in Australia
National Policy

History

Sporting Attire

Osteoporosis
...
Links

Australia was founded on pioneering spirit that encouraged a flourishing masculine culture while social etiquette supposedly restricted women to parlour games. The reality however, was that the physical demands of pioneering life meant colonial women became proficient shooters, rowers, archers, swimmers and equestrians. th The largely unsung efforts of Australian sportswomen have a strong and long history. The Sportswoman , was published. World War II signalled the end of many of these dedicated publications and columns. Women did not truly re-enter sports journalism in any numbers until the 1980s ushered in anti-discrimination legislation. In the late 1980s Government moves helped open the door for more women to participate. In 1984 the Commonwealth Sex Discrimination Act was passed followed by several state equal opportunity acts. It made it unlawful to discriminate against a person on the grounds of sex, marital status or pregnancy. Sporting clubs were forced to open an option of full membership to women. A major initiative came the following year with the establishment of the federal government working group on women in sport whose report in 1985 titled Women, Sport and the Media

14. A History Of Squash By Ted Wallbutton
development of the sport and is currently working with the IOC towards the targetof having squash included as a sport on the programme of the olympic Games in
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Lofts/6566/histted.htm
130 YEARS OF WORLD SQUASH By Ted Wallbutton (Executive Director of the World Squash Federation)
Squash was invented in Harrow school around 1830, when the pupils discovered that a punctured Rackets ball, which "squashed" on impact with the wall, produced a game with a greater variety of shots and required much more effort on the part of the players, who could not simply wait for the ball to bounce back to them as with Rackets. The variant proved popular and in 1864 the first four Squash courts were constructed at the school and Squash was officially founded as a sport in its own right.
In those early days Squash, as with all other sports, was without any form of international standardisation and it was inevitable that slight variations in the way it was played, and the equipment used, would occur. Luckily only two main streams of activity followed, one in England with its 21 feet wide courts and "soft" ball and the other in North America, with its 18.5 feet wide courts and "hard" ball and with both courts having the same length of 32 feet the universality of Squash was not seriously challenged. We will look at these two branches separately and also at the way in which Squash spread to almost every nation in the world.
EARLY DAYS IN ENGLAND
The first recorded reference to "Squash", other than in Harrow school, appeared in 1890 in the English book "The Badminton Library of Sports and Pastimes" written by the Duke of Beaufort. Eustace Miles, a world champion at both Tennis and Rackets, wrote the first book on Squash in 1901; stating that the sport was enjoyed by thousands of players in various parts of the world. By that time there were courts in schools and universities in England and some also in private houses. The first professional Squash Championship was held in 1920 in England, when C.R. Read (Queens Club) beat A.W.B. Johnson (RAC Club).

15. SEA Games History
a regional sports event, similar to the Asian Games or the olympic Games, will Todownload a .pdf copy of the SEA Games squash Championship Regulations (in zip
http://www.geocities.com/asfsquash/seaghist.htm
LATEST NEWS THE ASF ADDRESSES CONSTITUTION ... WEBMASTER
Click on the heading to return to the opening page Games in the past. The SEA Games originated from the SEAP (South East Asian Peninsular) Games which were held first in Thailand in 1959. When the first SEAP Games was held in Bangkok in 1959, only six countries participated, namely Laos, Malaysia, Burma (Myanmar), Singapore, Vietnam and Thailand.
Luang Sukhumnaipradit, the then Vice President of the Thai Olympic Committee, had been trying to begin a SEAP Games since 1957. He believed that a regional sports event, similar to the Asian Games or the Olympic Games, will help promote cooperation, understanding and relations among countries in the region. His efforts were rewarded after two years.
The name SEAP Games was used up to 1975. Thailand had by then been the host country three times. Later on Indonesia, the Philippines and Brunei joined the Games which was then renamed SEA Games at its 9th meet in Malaysia in 1977. The name has since been officially adopted and the Games has become the most important sports event of the region. Memberships of SEA Games has now increased to ten with Cambodia being the last member. To download a .pdf copy of the SEA Games Squash Championship Regulations (in zip format)

16. Herts Squash - Club Websites, County Websites And Best Squash Links
GB Vets live March 2002. history of squash ***. olympic history of squash. Guideto-squashvideo squash. British Racketball. squash Court WSF Building Specs.
http://www.herts-squash.org.uk/links.htm
Herts SQUASH Links
Does your club need new squash members? Promote your club here.
For info Email squashherts@hotmail.com
425 Watling Street, Radlett, Herts WD7 7JG
Click here for Broxbourne Squash Club
"Welcome to one of the most successful clubs in the country" General Websites SQ UASH .net new site * Squashgame.info new site SquashNow Squash USA magazine The Squash Referee CANADA Hertfordshire.com Virtual Library of Squash Herts Youth Games 9th May 2004 SQUASH talk Super Squash Best squash links Squash news Squash.start4all.com Squash Player Magazine ... GB Vets live March 2002 History of Squash Olympic History of Squash Guide-to-squash video squash British Racketball Squash Court WSF Building Specs Watching Sport Herts Badminton Back Herts Club Websites
Ashridge, Berkhamstead

17. INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE - ORGANISATION - STRUCTURES
SPORTS PRACTISED Judo, soccer, squash, tennis, golf, Executive Board of the Associationof National olympic Committees (ANOC HOBBIES Travelling, history, music,
http://www.olympic.org/uk/organisation/ioc/members/bio_uk.asp?id=76

18. MSN Encarta - Related Items - History And Historiography
primary source historical documents. quotations. science, history of. sports andrecreation. motorcycles. olympic games. Paralympics. polo. softball. squash. swimming.
http://encarta.msn.com/related_761555707_31.59/squash.html
var fSendSelectEvents = true; var fSendExpandCollapseEvents = true; var fCallDisplayUAText = false; MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Related Items from Encarta History and Historiography how to make a timeline all articles about history all articles about history all articles about history ... , generic name for two similar games, squash racquets and squash tennis, played on a four-walled court with a racket and ball. Both games... View article Exclusively for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers Try MSN Internet Software for FREE! MSN Home My MSN ... Feedback

19. The History Of Squash
The history of squash 130 Years of World squash By the the IOC towards the targetof having squash included as a sport on the programme of the olympic Games in
http://www3.sympatico.ca/jay.julie/history.htm
The History of Squash
130 Years of World Squash
By the WSF's Ted Wallbutton
For over 1000 years man has invented and enjoyed a variety of games played by hitting
a ball with either a closed fist - as in "fives" or "bunch of fingers" - or with some form of
bat or racket. Around the year 1148 the French played "le Paume", meaning "the palm
of the hand", which developed into Jeu de Paume, Real Tennis, Royal Tennis or, if you
play the sport, simply Tennis. At sometime in the early 19th century this obsession with
rackets and balls spawned another variety of the sport in the unlikely birthplace of the
Fleet Prison in London. The prisoners in "The Fleet", mainly debtors, took their exercise
by hitting a ball against walls, of which there were many, with rackets and so started the game of "Rackets". Rackets progressed, by some strange route, to Harrow and other select English schools about 1820 and it was from this source that our own sport of Squash, or Squash Rackets, developed.

20. In Olympic Footsteps: An International Tour
a climb up the Glockenturm rewards history buffs with a Hakon Hall, the town s formerOlympic ice hockey squash, handball, volleyball, and badminton are played
http://away.com/features/olympicsintl_1.html
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