I admired the work, but I admit that when I saw it upon separation from the US Army in 1968, I was unnerved. If you went to the track everyday (that\'s how you get drafted) before that, and had a decent memory and were willing to relocate in the winter to FL or LA or SoCal, you had all the edge required. Binoculars and the willingness to make chart books put you over. Then Beyer, etc. Now elegant numbers that anyone can buy. I would never start now.
The lady that edited the book, Annie, loaned my wife and I her Trans Am one week end, and I bought one the following Monday. That was more fun that Mr. Carter educating the public - if I had known Native Americans and Governments were going to contest the wagering dollar, I might have been suicidal.
This endeavor has been made as difficult as \"adults\" said it was going to be, but when it was the only game in town, and you could go everyday, it was the nuts.
\"Tom Ainslie\" changed the game, that is for absolutely certain.