Txbowler,
You have one object rolling over another object, neither is 100% smooth. This creates friction. Friction creates heat. Heat will make the lubricant (oil) dissipate. Also, since the ball surface is not smooth, it will move the oil as it rolls, and lastly the new balls absorb the oil as the roll down the lane. That is Physics.
If this STP thing is the solution, why isn't it being used everywhere?!? What impact does it have on the bowling lanes themselves? What is it's long term effects on the lanes, balls, machinery? This isn't one time thing, the USBC would have to apply it 6 times a day every day for 180 days. I am sure people could find lots of things that make this happen, that long term damage the lane, damage the equipment and damage the bowling balls. You get away with it on a one time usage like your tournament, but not when it comes to something like the USBC Open.
And lastly, bowlers will always have advantages over other bowlers. Whether it be god given skill, the resources to practice more (dollars, time, lane availability), the resources to get the best equipment (balls, shoes), etc.. What can anyone do to make something like that even for all bowlers? This is one of the most ridiculous statements I have ever heard. It will never be equal, ever. You can have 10 amazing bowlers, living in the same area, and they are at the same disadvantage as the team separated by thousands of miles. Or you can have that team separated who practice separately, share video, share information who have more of an advantage than the team of 10 living close together because those 10 don't have the time or money to practice together. You can go on and on with every scenario under the sun....bottom-line is the better bowlers and better teams will always be at the top. They have the resources and the drive to be the best and they use those to the best of their abilities. Teams like that will always have an advantage, even if they don't all live in the same area, and nothing will ever change that. And nothing should change that. These bowlers dedicate themselves to being the best, they practice, get coaching, and bowl in tournaments on the toughest of conditions against the best competition in order to be the best. Why should everyone else use lane condition tricks to try to bring them down (or themselves up) to the same level as the THS bowler who bowls 3 games a week and thinks he is a good as his 200+ average???