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HARPER WOODS LITTLE LEAGUE NEWS & INFO |
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The 2011 Season Will bring a change to the Minor Leagues. We will go to a 3 - 2 pitch count.
Click Here to check out an Awesome Article about Little Leaguers Andrew Nurmi & Trey Harville
Congratulations to the following teams :
HWLL - JUNIOR DISTRICT CHAMPIONS !!!!!!!!! CONGRATS !!!!!!!!
Anaheim Angels - Senior League City Champions
Washington Nationals - Junior Division City Champions
Chicago Cubs - Major League City Champions (NL Regular Season & Playoff Champs)
Detroit Tigers - Major League City Runner Up (AL Regular Season & Playoff Champs)
Dieterle Bulls - Minor League City Champions
Penszynski Red Wings - Minor League City Runner Up
Johnston Mets - Minor League Regular Season Champions
Cilluffo Canadians -Pacific Coast City Champions (Regular Season Champs)
Rhodes Rainiers - Pacific Coast City Runner Up
Please check out our Zero Tolerance policy by Clicking Right Here
A Vintage Photo Section has been added if you have any older Pics and would like to add them to the website
just email them to us and I will post.
It is very important that anyone who wishes to volunteer fill out a Volunteer application ( available on our forms page)
and turn it in at the start of tryouts. To comply with International LL, there can be no exceptions.
Parents can also be assured that anyone
involved with HWLL has been checked by Nexus/Checkpoint.
Upcoming Exhibit at the Harper Woods Library
(Coming October, 2010!)
Pride & Passion: The African American Baseball Experience

This exhibit details the history of African-Americans in baseball from the Civil
War through the Major League integration of players, managers, and executives,
including pioneers such as Fleet Walker, Rube Foster, Jackie Robinson, Larry
Doby, Buck O’Neil, and the Cuban Giants. The 1,000 sq. ft. exhibit is arranged
in six thematic sections.
Pride and Passion: The African-American Baseball Experience, a traveling exhibition for libraries, was organized by the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, Cooperstown, New York, and the American Library Association Public Programs Office, Chicago. The traveling exhibition has been made possible by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: great ideas brought to life.
The traveling exhibition is based on an exhibition of the same name on permanent display at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.