The USS Enterprise's bowling alley

Referred to as a “Kobayashi Maru” in his honor. :smiley:

I should have said he doesn’t believe in the “No 7-10 pickup” scenario, I belatedly realize, but no matter.

What pin setters? They just beam out the toppled pins and beam in a fresh set of pins for the next frame. :smiley:

There’s a local bowling alley that is constantly running commercials on TV. They advertise themselves as family-friendly and are always running special events. They seem to be doing pretty good business.

Well, he likes the ‘pickup’ part of it.

One of my favorite characters, albeit in Next Generation and DS9 was Miles O’Brien. He was always called Chief and the only rank in the water navy using ‘Chief’ would be a Chief Petty Officer. In fact, in the Wikipedia article on him they refer to him as a Senior Chief Petty Officer. That would make him (it the above quote is true) the only elisted man on the entire ship. Granted, he was not in TOS, however, there is little indication that there are any other enlisted personnel on any of the ships, so he would be a unique individual.

Bob

Haikeeba! — https://youtu.be/p2O5g6yYqB0

The “all officers” thing was only canon for the first little bit of Next Generation. It was never canon in TOS, and was never respected by Berman/Braga.

Riley may have been making a joke about holding a dance in the bowling alley because it would be a *small *bowling alley. But of course the pop culture reference is to dances/hops actually happening at bowling alleys in the 50s and early 60s and assuming they would still be that way in Earth of the mid-2200s.

Though never given explicit script exposition, it has been reported as Word Of G(od/ene) even in the TOS age, if we are to go by Making of Star Trek and World of Star Trek.

However, what it does say in the TOS “Show Bible” (writers’ guidelines)[pdf], on page 27 is: For example, we are not aware of “officers” and “enlisted men” categories. This could be interpreted as that in the TOS starfleet there is not the “class” distinction of commissioned/warrant/chiefs/ratings/nonrates of the 1960s with their segregated messes, prohibition against social fraternization, some being on fixed time contracts while others may resign at will, etc. though distinct career tracks and the hierarchy of authority still exist – maybe resembling more the structure in a police force, come to think of it.

Who’s to that that by the 23rd century bowling doesn’t come back into fashion as some highbrow activity. Look at all the weird crap popular with hipsters. Or it could be 3 dimensional bowling that makes use of variable artificial gravity generator settings.

Serious intellectuals in the 60s also liked bowling, if you can take the existing of a 14 lane setup at Stanford. They had a bowling alley in the student center that existed until they took the space to build the first computer cluster of WYSE terminals hooked up to the 4 mainframes (code named the Tragedies - Hamlet, Lear, Othello and one other I forget).

It makes total sense for the Enterprise to have a bowling alley.

It wasn’t just Stanford. Several of the universities I visited in the late 70’s had (still had?) bowling alleys in the basements of the student areas.

Cing from overseas may be the reason, but in the late 70’s it already seemed a bit surprising to me. I live in a much milder climate, so I wondered if there just wasn’t much to do outside in the winter.

If we go by The Animated Series, which is now canon, the Enterprise had a rec room that is basically a proto-holodeck. It only seemed to do locations and scenery, and not people. And it didn’t extend infinitely in any direction. But the objects in it did seem real.

Now, this may have been new to the ship in the fifth year, but it definitely suggests that the rec rooms were designed to repurposed for whatever was needed. I can’t imagine that bowling would be that hard to set up.

James Blish had intelligent dolphins being sent to a water world in ‘mission to the heart stars’. He did some work on novelising the star trek scripts, so that may be where it came from.

We had one in our student center in the 1980s, but then again, we were in Wisconsin. “Let’s go down to the sout side to da bowlero der hey and suck some brewskis.”

It’s not as popular as it was back in the 60s and 70s, but it’s still a $6 billion a year industry.

I gave up bowling for sex. The balls are lighter and you don’t have to change your shoes.

I’ll be here all week. Try the veal, and always remember to tip your waitress.

Is that like cow tipping?

because I don’t think the waitresses like it. At least, not in my experience.

You get no respect, I tell ya!

in one of the novels they have what would be called a fun center ala dave and busters style it even had a spacewar/combat simulator where one ship was federation and the other was klingon I think …me and the kid I borrowed the book from wondered where it would all fit and they still had Atari in the future? …

Oh, sure, the sport isn’t extinct. But sixty years ago, you might have had a half-dozen bowling alleys in your area doing pretty good business.

And Montana State University (another cold-climate school) still has a few lanes in the basement of the student union, or at least did as of 2013.