Evening Star Newspaper, August 3, 1930, Page 66

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DOZEN YOUNGSTERS NOW BREAKING 75 Scores That Won 10 Years, Ago Now Fail to Make First Flights. HETHER It is the lively ball, better clubs, or just a general all around im- | provement in competi- tive play, the fact remains, never- theless, that the scoring pace of golf around Washington has moved far past the standard of play that was good enough to win tournaments 10 years ago. What with a dozen or more young- sters, all of whom are capable of breaking 75 on any man's golf course, and & group of veterans who can keep pnce with the youngsters, the scores of 80, 81 and 82 which used to win #olf matches in big time tournaments around the Capital, would not win a| match in the third flight today. Which is all by way of breaking the sad news that golf, as she is played about Wash- ington nowadays, is & far swifter game than it was a decade ago, and not alone because of the youngsters, either The veterans who were playing good golf 1 1920 are playing better golf to- day, even though they do not win as many tournaments because the com- Ppetition is keener. It may be the lively ball, or any other factor, but we believe the gen- eral aversge of scoring by amateur Mers around Washington has been E’wued lll_?'gly by reason of the com-| e man who used to win 'lt.h an 80 found he was losing with the same score and so he went out and improved his game to meet the chal lenge of the men who had come up and outscored h im s they improved with | Hare tition. practice and com t was not at all un- Ten years tournaments about the Capital to make the first flight with a score of 85 or even a stx favorable course Conditions. Today, un- der the same favorable course condi- tions, the man who shoots a 78 is not at all sure he will make the first flight, and several times there have been play-offs for the first flight at 77. Indeed once the play-off came at 76 and this over a course which was deemed good enough 10 years ago to serve as a test for the national open championship, All Courses Tough. In the three big tournaments held about Washington this year (and by bl; we mean rTepresentative of all the best goif there is about the Caj mn the scores qualifying at the wp first flight were as follows: Chevy Chase, 81, and columbu, m ‘means that the man who shot 70 nmnlum wu out of the first lu‘ht and 79 is any means & Wed score over '.hlt I.rl y course where | gy hole on the layout can prove to be ¢ score wrecker. Washington has no | thing spots where a man can loaf fiun.mmeuyplr They are all At Chevy Chase rain fell on the qualitying day—a rain so heavy that many of the contestants who started tourney plete the qualifying round. The scores were higher than at the other two cluhl, but this bly was caused by hevy Chase is hardly ‘ more difficult scoring proposition than ‘Washington or Columbia. And we dis- tinctly recall that Harry Pitt needed per from the sixteenth hole for a 70 in the final round, when he beat Miller Stevinson, even though Pitt missed a ecuple of putts-on the first nine. Over at Columbia, where no rain get in at Columbia, which is only seven | @irokes above par. And 71 tied for the | quilifying m-~dal. Not so many years ago, 85 quahl\ed‘ for the first filght in both these tour- naments and once in a while—a few years back—86 or 87 made the grade in the first flight at Washington. Tod.ly scores of 85 sometimes (-u‘ to make the fifth flight, and the lenl' who enters one of the big tournaments | knows before he starts that he must fiuuuufluheumumu of playing in the match play rounds. Standard Is Raised. ‘What is the reason for this change in the scoring in the mejor golf tour- aments about Washington? The ball not a great deal livelier, the clubs | mre about the same, and certainly | greens committees have not made the | courses easier. Rather. the trend has | been to make the courses harder, bv\ more sclentific placement of bunkers, | by rearranging holes and by stretching out the tees to their maximum length. | We believe the whole cycle of lower scoring has come about because five or | six years ago there were playing in golf ~tournaments about the Capital | three or four men who were able to win consistently and that in order to keep pace with them the rest of the field had to raise the game to their level or lose consistently. It is axiomatic that any high-class | competitor raises the whole level n(\ competition in his field to a mark near his own level, simply by reason of hLSn own skill. There isn't any doubt that| the level of scoring in the big natiol championships has been raised by rea- son of the surpassing supremacy of Bobby Jones The same thing came to pass around ‘Washington from 1922 through 1926 | ™! and beyond, when Chris Dunphy, Ro-| Jand MacKenzle, George Voigt and| Miller B. Stevenson were winning con- ll.lwnlly The balance of the field found could not go along and win with 7 and 80's llliml these men, so they | were forced to raise the standard of play to keep in the pace. That, it seems to us, is a sounder reason for the raising of the general standard play about Wachington than the livelier golf ball, any change in clubs or any other single factor. It is a somewhat intangi- ble_thing, but jt exists, nevertheless. ‘Today there are more men with han- dicaps of 6 and below than there were five years ago. Is this due to the lively b‘l or to a raising of the standard of y? And there are many men about umngwn who can play courses other than their own familiar terrain in 75 or better, which to show that fa- miliarity with & golf course is not the | lone reason for low scoring. li The crop of youngsters who have | come along within the past thice or four years have played their part in saising the standard of play, for these | “kids” around 20 years of age can knock 4he ball around any course well below l‘l. Such golfers as Everett Eynon, John Brawner, John O'cns o( calum- : J. Munro Hunter, jr., B) and Peacock of l.ndlan Spnnz H‘ Niehol.lon Tommy Webb. Evans ‘Washington: John 'l‘ilflll! and Luthtr Steward of Con- gressional; Pred Hitz and Beverly Ma- | son of Chevy Chese. and Bill Alexander and John Shorey of Bannockburn, all have had a part in raising the standard of play. And the and is not yet. We be- lieve that if such an intercily team match were arranged Washington could | girls’ doubles for white and colored. All matches will start at 10 am. unless| T | estimated that about 3,000 boys and 1and the fact ti or two more, this with | {i¢ .| Twin « THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, AUGUST 3 1930—PART FIVE. | TOTAL of 114 boy and girl tennis | champions are now ready for the city finals which will start tomorrow. These champlons | are divided in junior and senior boys' | singles for both white and colored and otherwise noted. Early in July every playground in the city having a tennis court started an_elimination tournament to select a champion and although a definite report is not ready at present it is girls took part in the prelliainaries, ‘The various groups have been divided into sections and the winner of the sec- tion championships will meet for the titles in their class. Mrs, Susie Root ber of champions was due to the grad- ual growth in gopullrny of the game t the playground di- rectors have encouraged the children to play and taught thousands of them the rudiments. The champlo; G Hoover—Grace Taylor Biisks. Garfield_—Elien B Burnham hel eto; s McKinley _Tenley—Nelda Waldecker and M: - geLakoma—Ellzabeth Mu. Kennedy. = lows Vox ¢ Donn "\nd Hnen mnu Mo and Rachel = Bell ‘Miller lnfl Betty Brooks. thard ~and_ Nellle N e Ejennor inson. Ch Davidson evy Chase—Bety an jon Nix. _Twin A0 wetand Alics sarior. ginia Early and Boad—Ereal Balley Apenie Rose: ke ’rhom Herson. Weller __and ggme Harris a ark—Roumain rd—Anni Willow n ¥ um Hey- oo x Sardora-Resina | t° peters. i:'a...z...c. Pract: Elizabeth Aramints Dale. Boys—Junior. Takoma Park—Walter Glockler. Virginia Avente—Lester Estes. New York Avenue— ol Redas, | Miichell Park—joe Sulll- m.|e~clbn. Smith, ‘Gazeld Gilber? Hunt, Schaef- fer. Happy Hollow—Henry Ollnllv George- m"n—Jfl‘" O'Connor. Park View—Harry ne, Benning—Andrew Oray. Corcoran— Alfred Oddone. lowa Avenue—Lee Ho;vfr No;‘nu;\ lchln};h 'l't:'\lryo '""n_' D. _Cook ha: Columbla Road Mitchell Pnrk—Key Jones. Georgetown— Anthon; Plaza—John Meehan. Iowa Avenue— Lewis ‘Chatlen Tv""fi_fln'é'z T Park I £ rrell, Montrose i eris Root. Robert A omson ot Avenuc—Howard. Wi Barnare id'ln Bunch, é Cook O—Wlllum Burke. Oaks—He, ardova. Takoma Park— David Dantzie. Junior—Colored. Garodza_James Youn Robert ~ West. (S0 B o e——Jlmel ‘Cotve: one " Paym Fericocharies " Waik Logan Biakey. Barry Parms Raymony Brooks. SENIOR—COLORED. Cardozs, Jack Robinson; Howard, Edward Pormley: | Willow | Tree, gl and Louis L hun(;n Dlwi: 'arms. Albert sched Tomorrow—Georgetown _ve, Corcoran. Georgetown; Tenley vs. Moniroge, at Che: o' dey—cgreoran v Montrose Tenley vs. Georgetown, Section 2. Tomorrow—Mitchell ve. Chevy Chase vs. Happy Hol Chase. STRAIGHT O AVE you ever heard of a pro- fessional golfer missing & putt at at at Plaza: | at Chevy ke, low, in serious competition of less I | Montrose Boy and Girl Playground Tennis Champs to Get Action ay—Happy Hollow vs. Mitchell, coone Shevy Cooke. nse va. Cooke, at Section 3. Tomorrow—Twin OAKS vs. Phillips, at Iowa Avenue; Tekoma vi. Iowa Avenue. at y—Takoms va. Twin Oaks, at Io T Enillips ve. Towa Avenue, Takoma. Wednesdas—Twin Onks va. lowa Avenue ik oma vs. Phillips, At at Section 4. Tomorrow—Park View _vs. Bloomingdale, ot Pace"Barnard Vs Colimble_ Road, Aé Section 5. Plaza T, —Columbia Rosd vs_ Pa e Barnard va! nm’.'{ odare; Tomorrow-—Ronedale 8. Rosgdale:; Thomson va. Now oA enit! at_Plaza. Tuesday—Rosedale va. New York Avenue, at. Rosedaje: Benning V8. Thomson, .Lfi'.‘... Wedneadpy ~Benning, v nue. at York Averiue; Thomscn, at Plai !rfllun u, ‘Tomorrow. over 'iry l ac Boover. Garheld va tl- bg\flv;mu, riieid: irginia Plaz Plasa: Vireinia Avende. "at"'virsinia BOYS' SINGLES, SENIOR CLASS. Section 1. Tuesday—Corcoran v Tenley at George- {gun, ‘Chevy Chase ve.” Montrose at Chevy Chase Wednesday—Georsetown va. Tenley at Georgetown, Corcoran va. Monirase at Monte “Thursday—Chevy Chase ve. Georsetown at Georgetown, Montrose vs. Tenley at Mont~ Corcoran _ vs. Georgetown at “Tenley vs. Chevy Chase at Chevy hase. August 11—Montrose vs. Georsetown at Montrose, Chevy Chase vs. Corcoran A&t Chevy Chase. SENIOR CLASS. Section 2. Wldnudly Mitchell vs. Cooll at Oool.. ‘Thom Happy Hollow at Happy Hellow. T’I\I day-—Mitehell vs. Hl!;{ )lallew at Cooke vl 'l'nolmnn at Plaza o, maon &t Plaza, Cooke vi H-nny Hollnw at cceke SENIOR CLASS. Section 3. W!fln’ldly~»!nll vs. Twin 01ll at lows, Rond aanua-y— Hoover vs. Garfleld vs. | Avenue. h - | Barnard vs. Golus Al Oaks vs. Barnard at Tow Bhturdny-. Columbia Road_vs. Takoma at vs. Towa &t Takom: " Cohimbia Road ‘ve. Twin Oaks rnard vs. TAkoma At Takoma. SENIOR CLASS. Section 4. Wednesday—Garfleld vs. Plaza at Oarfleld, Hoover vs. Virginia Avenue at Virginia Ave- 8. Plu\'al Plaza. O nia Avenue. sedal Roseknie, Hoover i, Garneid ‘At Fias August 13-Virginia Avenue vs. Plaza at Garfield, Hoover vs. Rosedale at Rosedale. GIRLS' DOUBLES, Section 1. Tomorrow—Mitchell vs. Montrose at Mont- rose, Tenley vs. Georgelown at Georgetown. Tuesday—Tenley Mitchell at Mitchell, Chevy Chase at Chevy Chase. ‘Wednesday. etown _vs. ~Mitchell at munzu cmvy ‘Chase ve. Teniey at Tenley, ponttose. Enevs Chase va. Mitehell st Ghety Chase. Section 2. orrow—Phillips vs. Takoma at Tako- Avenue vs. Happy Hollow at Hap- —Twin Oske vs, Phillips at Twin ppy Hollow oM 8t HAPDY Wednesday—Towa Avenue vs. Phillips at Iowa Avenue, Takoma Twin Oaks at Takoma Thursday—Happy Hollow ve. Phillips et Happy Hollow. Twin Oaks vs. Towa Avenue at lowa Avenue. Tof 2, Tow Section 3. Tomorrow—Thomson vs. Roedale at Rose. dale: Gojumpia Road ve. New: York Avenué at_New York Avenue. Tuesday - Thom New Yor) York Columbia Roscdate at Colambla: Road. Seetion 4. Tomorrow__Garfield vs. Plaza at Garfleld, Hoover vs. Virginia Avenue at Virginia Ave: nue Tuesday—Garfield toover at Hoover, Virginia Avente ve. % Plaza. FF THE TEE match next Wednesday will be awarded the W. W. Spaid 'rrophy to be kept for a year, and the runner-up will receive the trophy donated by a local firm of Avenue ad vs, Pl than a foot in length? It can be done, under certain conditions, when | the man is not keyed up to the making | | of the stroke, and perhaps has a little of the “I don't care” spirit about it. In the qualifying round for the| P. G. A. tourney at Indian Spring last | | Tuesday we saw two well known pro- | fessionals miss putts which were ridic- ulously short. On the eleventh hole Pred McLeod of Columbia, already played out by the enervating heat of the day, made a pass at & 3-inch.putt and missed it, and on another green Dave Thomson, the pro at the Wash- ington Golf and Country Club, ml.lled & putt of less than a foot in len which caused “Brick” Wood, his assi ant, to exclaim something like mu “Will miracles never cease?” Undoubtedly had McLeod and Thom- son stepped around to get in proper | position for the putt they would have | made both of them. But the heat of | the day had gotten to both of them. | |and they were a wee bit careless as they putted. And George Diffenbaugh, the Indian Spring assistant, tells of how Monro Hunter, who can putt with the best of them, blew a putt of less | than a foot, but not in competition, | for Hunter did not play in the P. G. A. qualifying round. A few years back Tommy Armour took 3 putts from a | foot away, the mistake costing him the | Caneadian open championship. Care- lessness on the short ones in medal play | | just doesn’t count—except in favor of the other fellow. OME on, Doc, knock it in the hole. The ball has to stop some- where, and I know you can do it.” The speaker was M. H. Maier, chair- man of the Beaver Dam Golf Com- mittee, as he exhorted Dr. D. G. Davis, his partner, in a four-ball match, to knock that ball in the hole on the fifteenth green, And Bill White, greens committee chairman, stood off and grinned as only Bill can grin, as he 2sked, “Under what rules can he knock that ball in the hole,” The lengthy thirteenth hole at Beaver | Dam has been shortened to s par 4 affair by use of a front tee. So many members complained that a good tee shot round the ditch about 185 yards away from the back tee, White explain- ed, that front tee was put into use. The new tee makes the hole a stiff par 4, where from th~ ' ““k tee, the hole was a fairly easv rov o, 'HOMAS J. Davidson and George P, Grau, jr., will meet next Wednes- day at the Manor Club in the final round of the second annual golf tourna- ment steged by the Washington Chap- ter, American Institute of Banking. Qualifving rounds in the tourney were played early in June at Bannockburn, and metch play rounds have been played at other coureses subsequently, leaving Davidson and Grau, the final- ists. The sixuen qualifiers were Nathan | Poole, W. inson, Donald Jones, Grau, Dnvm.wn Aubrey O. Dooley, Patrick T. Cook, T. Edwin Norris, H. P. Kimball, Kenneth Davis, Wilbur C. Dieter, Jeffrey A. Abel, Vincent A. Sheehy, L. J. Reddington, Norbert E. Norris and Prank Cook. From the qualifying round eight men wer chosen to rpresent the Washing- ‘hapter in a team match with the Bllumorv Chapter to be played later, Those who made the team were Robin- son, Cook, Poole, Grau, Jones, Davideon, Norris and Dooley. At the opening w 20-man team in the field which be ]!A! to hold its OT meeting of the wuhmgwn Chapter, to be hld ‘n T+ l-niber, the winner of the | Public Parks League. Jjewelers. HE fine course at Annapolis Roads is being played by a good many ‘Washington golfers these days. Amohg those who have played the > during the past week were A'bert R N'afK(-‘nflP J. E. Baines, Hugh H. Saum, H, King Cornwell, W. W. Griffith, Irwin Porter and Paul Lesh of Co- lumbia; Walter P, Skinker of Columbia, T. P. Noyes and 8. H. Kauffmann of Chevy Chase; Watson B. Miller of ‘Washington and a number of Baltimore and Annapolis golfers, 'OHN 8. BLICK, well known golfer of Indian lprin, has J\uc returned to the Capital from & to At- lanta, where he played 'ltg !obby Jones, who represented Blick a legal capacity in Atlanta. Blick ua he played the Eastlake course in 82 strokes, which he says is_considerable golf for that layout, but he recalls with envy how he watched Jones, “just breezing around” and playing the wrong club occasionally, romp around the Eastlake layout in 68 strokes. Blick says Jones was careless about his shots, but they all seemed to go just right and the “Emperor” scored a 68 just the same. Blick declares that Jones fully in- tends to stop off in Washington on his way to the amateur championship in September and play in the proposed exhibition match for the benefit of Bobby Mcwau BALTIMORE NETMEN WILL INVADE TODAY Leading Washington public parks tennis players will engage a select team of Baltimore municipal netmen in an intercity match this afternoon on the Rock Creek courts, starting at 3 o'clock. There will bs six singles and three doubles encounters. It will be the first engagement of the season for Washington in the Washington - Baltimore - Philadelphia Baltimore won the loop title last year. Washington's team will be picked | from Bob Considine, Dooly Mitchell, Eddie Yeomans, Bud Markey, Maurice O'Nelll, Frank Shore, Hugh Trigg and Omrgf Shoemaker. Baitimore's line-up will be selected from Alex Keiles, Eimer Rudy, Bob Elliott, Edward LaFleur, William Wel- mon, Aaron Miller, Lawrence Brockman and Ralph Robinson. D PR L A TAILER DEFEATS TOLLEY TO TAKE GOLF TOURNEY NEWPORT, R. I, August 2 (#).—~T. | Suffern Tailer, jr. Rhode hland"’!tlw amateur golf Lhflmpion, defeated Cyril | Tolley, former British amateur cham- |plon and member of the l;nllhh ‘Walker Cup team, 3 and 1, today to | the (ourth annual invitation vmmm- ment of the Newport Country Club. Taller defeated Dick ’hapman, Greenwich, Conn., 1 up, and Tolley de- feated James Boblfllu New York, 3 and 2, in the leml-fl.nl HINES IS TENNIS VICTOB. ASHEVILLE, N. C.. August 2 (#)— Wiimer Hines today lueanlully de- fended his crown as North Carolina open tennis champion. He won in straight sets, 6—3, 10—8, 8—6, after a gruelling final match with Ralph . Demott of Atianta. { TILDEN GIVES HER EDGE ON 3 OTHERS Eliza.beth Ryan, Mrs. Watson | and Helen Jacobs Crowd German Player. BY WILLIAM T. TILDEN, 24. ARIS, August 2—On the eve of the women’s cham lon- ship of the United Si the climax of the womml tennis year, I offer my ideas of the ranking of the lndln( play- ers following Wimbled onu . Ci Elhtbeth Ryan, U. 8. 4 Phoebl:n Holeroft = Watson, Eng| u. Helen Jacobs, U. 8. A. 6. Simone Mnmneu. France. 7. Lill Alvarez, Spa 8. Betty Nuthall, England. 9. Joan Ridley, llnnd‘ 10. Phyllis Mudfor g ‘There is no need to say more than Helen Wills Moody is champion of mnee. of mhnd or of the world ,wu, position at once, so I leween Mhl Aussem, Miss Ryan, Mrs. Watson and even Miss Jacobs there is mot much to choose or record, but whlt little there is seems to favor Mhl An unfortunate !oreed Miss Aussem’s default at 4 lll in the final set against Miss Ryan, at a time when it was any one’s match |in the semi-finals at Wimbledon. Miss Ryan Follows. ‘The previous day Miss Aussem had cmhed Miss Jacobs 6—1, 6—2. Miss Aussem beat Miss Ryan decisively at Paris in the Prench championship, tak- ing precedence over Miss Ryan’s two victories on the Riviera. Miss Aussem Watson, whose unfor- ept her out of Wimble- match. On this great performance, the best made against Mn, Moody in three years, I give Mrs. Wi son fourth place. Closely following her and clearly deserving it, comes M Jacobs, who was finalist in m mnch Miss .meon Mile. fhlfllmonlhlp. d ez ln Paris {ss | Mallory has been {ll and is not playing. . Golf Standard Hereabout Lifted :. Cecile Aussem Ranked Next to Mrs. Moody and Miss Fry in the Wightman Cup, but was crushed by Miss Aussem at ‘Wimbledon. Mme. Simone Matthieu of France, nnl finalist at Wimbledon, has a bril- ance there in beating flleen Bennett and Joan Ridley and playing a fine match against Mrs. Moody. At Paris she lut to Senorita Alvarez in a close match, but her play at Wimbledon, when Miss Alvarez was unable to play. owing to illness, must give the French star the call over the | Spanish girl. Certainly Miss Alvarez must follow Mme. Matthieu, for she has a record that is almost equal. Only her unfor- tunate iliness that kept. her out of Wimbledon keeps her so low in the list. Betty Nuthall, after a bad early season, reached the last eight at Wimbledon and took a set from Miss Ryan. On this performance I am giving her the eighth position. Joan Ridley Included. For much the same reason, reaching the Wimbledon last eight, I include Joan Ridley and the little star, Miss Mudford. Miss Ridley beat Sarah Pal- frey on her way, while Miss Mudford had_a good match with Mrs. Moody. In Paris Miss Mudford carried Mrs. Moody to her closest score, so I feel she must go in the charmed circle. One finds many names that one expects missing from the list. Elleen Bennett has done little this year. Mrs. Edith Cross and Sarah Palfrey did not quite_show enough to get in. Baroness | Von Tezniclk of Germany has been ill | Tune I|n and out of the game for some time. Joan Fry played Iittle except the Wightman Cup. It has not been a great year in women's tennis. Helen Fiis Moody has overshadowed the field even more than in the past. Only Mrs. Wat- son’s great play in the Wightman Cup has extended her at all. Miss Jacobs, Miss Nuthall and Miss Bennett have been disappointing all the year. The remarkable improvement of Miss Aussem and the great comeback of Miss Ryan are the two most heartening fea- | tures. The sudden iliness of Miss varez has robbed the year of one of most delightful personalities. How- ever, the American season will find | Miss Aussem, Miss Nuthall, Miss Mud- ford and others of the younger talent playing on our courts, so the coming months may see several changes in the ranking. | Twenty-nine Deciding Whal to Do Makes Drive Difficult Putting always has appeared to be a simple matter. All a golfer has to do is to worry the ball about the green until it becomes exhausted and faints in the cup. Driving is much more difficuit Here is where that much discussed mental strain comes in. When driv- ing & man must decide whether to top the ball into the trap, pull it into the rough or slice it out of 'U. 5. GOLFERS ENTER CANADIAN AMATEUR LONDON, Ontarlo, August 2 (Py— | One of the strongest fields in the his- | tory of the tournament will take part in the Canadian amateur golf cham- | pionship, starting with a 36-hole aull- ifying round over the London Hunt Club's course Monday. S| Headed by Eddie Held, New York, | the defending champion, the fleld of 118 entrants includes six other former winners—George S. Lyon, who won in | 1908 and is now 72 years old: Dan Car- )rlck 1925 and 1927; Frank Thflm son, 1921 and 1924; C. Ross Somerville, 1926 and 1928; W. J. Thompson, 1923, and C. C. Fraser, 1922. players, _constituting nearly a quarter of the field, are from | the United States, givisg that country | the largest representation ever. IPRESIbENT OF MEXICO HAS SOLDIER CADDIES For the first time in her history, Mexico has a golfing President, Pascual | Ortiz_Rubio. He can be seen every | morning on the links of the Chrubusco | Country Club, in the environs of the ‘cny of Mexico. When the President | appears on the links he is'attended by | soldiers of his bodyguard, who act as | caddies. Robt. Burns Panatela for Smoking Guy Lombardo’s Orch, 2/\ for Rhbythm LCISTEN INfany‘Monday night—9 o'clock—WMAL Zto_the Ace ‘Orchenfi. of the Alr—Guy Loms bardo’s Rcyd Cana dians on'the Robt. Burns' ‘Panatela Programs | Robt. 2 IBunres For YOUNG MEN...and MEN with YOUNG IDEAS

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