A Dangerous Sport Car racing drivers are vulnerable to dangers that other sportsmen seldom face. Drivers agree that controlling a car at top speeds on a winding course is a singularly awesome experience. There is a bedlam caused by the roaring motors which move a car from the standing start to 100 miles an hour in eight seconds. One is shaken by the cacophony of the brakes, larger than the wheels and producing on a course of 350 miles race enough heat to warm a 8-room house through a hard winter. The driver has to be on the alert to exploit any mistake by an opponent, he must be constantly aware the propinquity of sudden death. All of these makes car racing one of the most demanding games of all. a white elephant--when he discovered the 30-volume encyclopedia, dated 1895, in his attic, he knew he had a white elephant on his hands. (a costly and useless possession.)