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This depends on the league or sanctioning rules. NSA and ASA have approved bat lists on their sites.
A pretty vague question. Organized baseball usually refers to an agreed upon league of teams that play each other over the course of a year or season. You can organize a single game like an old timers game, a tournament of games or an entire season. There are agreed upon rules and usually a rule book, a schedule, impartial umpires, ground rules and even specific rules for mercy such as in little league and Knothole baseball. Unorganized baseball is referred to as sandlot baseball where there are no set rules, no umpires, there doesn't even have to be 9 players on each team.
Not yet. They'll be out in May, 2010. Try this as it came from the office of NCAA's Mr. Ty Halpin. He was very responsive and informative in his reply to me. Mr. Halpin is the guy who MAKES the rules. Beware of other dudes on the internets who interpret rules or sell bats. Read the official rules (and BBCOR approved bat list in the link below, under "Bat Listings").
whole30 approved is a label that lets you know that a product is compliant with the rules and regulations of a whole30 program
Go on line to MLB.com and search for rules, or google baseball rules.
The answer depends on the context. There are rules for sequences, rules for regression, rules for scientific laws to name a few examples.
Do not cycle on the road
after the bill has been approved by a committee
after the bill has been approved by a committee
don't cheat and that's all the rules
many baseball rules have changed over the years. this includes new rules such as no steroids in baseball and rule changes (atone time it was 7 ball for a walk not 4)
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