I don't believe the "Alps-Punchbowl" #4 was created by a glacier. Raynor utilized as a defense a large rectangular hump to create a blind approach should one drive to the safe side of the fairway. If one has the game and the huevos to attempt to land the ball where there is a glimpse of the green, flirting with the bank which runs down to that pebbly beach, one is duly rewarded. Stategic golf at its best. When you finally arrive at the green you immediately feel as if you entered a giant egg carton. It has square line angles, linear humps all surrounded by a wall of grass that could just as easily be a stone wall and you wouldn't notice the difference - they both block the view of the sound and encompass the punchbowl in a very linear manner. No natural humps and bumps here. I don't believe I can think of a Raynor hole which looks more manufactured than this one does from approach to the green. #5 is, if not one of the greatest long par 3's in the world, surly one of the most spectacular. It has a giant SQUARE green which is guarded by an embankment which most assuredly WAS created by the glacier. The three-tierd green on #9 is similar to #12 at NGLA. They both have an engineered look with, again, the use of sharp line angles to define each pin placement. The back nine has more of a Banks influence with several greens and tees built up on a grander scale. As I stated before, these had to have been manufactured to protect against the ravages of a storm at high tide on holes 10 and 11. They were created not by nature, not with a natural look of swales etc, but by a man who had a degree in engineering (Raynor). And so on.