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Whole Lotta Shaking Going On
Tufts
graduate Bill Richardson set a new Guinness Record for handshaking,
while on the campaign trail in New Mexico.
Albuquerque,
N.M. [09.16.02] -- With seven
weeks remaining before New Mexico's gubernatorial elections, Tufts
graduate Bill Richardson
made news - and Guinness Book of World Records history
-- while campaigning in Albuquerque this weekend. Over an eight-hour
period, the former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations shattered
President Theodore Roosevelt's record for the most handshakes
by a politician.
"Richardson's
new mark of 13,392 for an eight-hour period, with a Guinness World
Records official standing by, went well beyond the Roosevelt record
of 8,513 handshakes set at the White House," reported the
Los Angeles Times. "Richardson divided his handshaking
between the New Mexico State Fair and a tailgate party outside
the University of New Mexico."
According
to the newspaper, the candidate sunk his hand into ice after breaking
the 1907 record, which Roosevelt set while greeting visitors to
the White House. "It's stiff and it's sore," Richardson
-- who holds undergraduate and Fletcher degrees from Tufts --
told the Associated Press following the events.
But this
isn't the first time Richardson has set a record for "pressing
the flesh." While campaigning for Congress, he set another
Guinness Book record for the most handshakes in one day.
Ahead in
the polls by 14 points, the political veteran remains highly favored
to win election as New Mexico's governor in November, which would
add to his already impressive career in office.
A four-time
nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, the Tufts
graduate served in Congress for more than 14 years and was
the first Hispanic to hold two Cabinet positions - U.S. Ambassador
to the U.N. and Secretary of Energy.
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