A strange near-silence to your inquiry, Nate. I grew up in Okie City and even in the late '50s and early '60s archery was extremely lively there. By age 8 I was shooting in weekend tournaments. At 16 when I could drive, I joined the local club and we had both an early 3D range (paper targets on hay bales, but arranged in a roving course like today) and a winter indoor range. Betty Grubbs was the female national champion and shot paper plates out of the air at football game halftimes. How did we do so well and have so much social interaction way back then, when the highest communication technology was the rotary-dial telephone? Some things gained, some things lost, as with all of life and what we call "progress." ex-Okie dave