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Authors: Tim Cahill

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Nearly three years later, in August of 1954, the argument arose again, this time in relation to grouse. Sir Hugh was the managing director of Guinness, the makers of a black and ambrosial stout bearing that name. In this capacity, he was familiar with social interactions in the 81,400 pubs of Britain and Ireland. These were places where people sometimes disagreed about the velocity of bird flight and other subjects of note. There was, however, no book with which to settle arguments about records. Guinness, Sir Hugh decided, might publish such a book in the interest of public relations.

On September 12, 1954, Sir Hugh asked Norris and Ross McWhirter to produce the first
Guinness Book of World Records
. The brothers were former track-and-field athletes who had published a sports magazine. The first
Guinness Book
had a plastic cover to protect it from the sort of spills that happen frequently in pubs, especially toward closing time. The 198-page edition was a number-one best-seller in six months. By 1986, worldwide sales amounted to fifty-three million, which, the
Guinness Book
itself proclaims, is equivalent to 118 stacks of books, each as high as Mount Everest.

Ross McWhirter died in 1974, and Norris edited the book until 1986, when Alan Russell, who had been producing a TV series based on the book, took over. In the course of his work at Guinness, Alan Russell has had reason to celebrate the honesty of people worldwide. “Very few try to cheat their way into the book,” he said.

“You mean it never happens?” I asked.

“Oh, occasionally,” he said. “I suppose the biggest group of fakes are people claiming to own old cats. You have someone who tells you that she owns a cat that is fifty-seven years old. But she has no documentation to back up the claim. Well, I’m not an expert on cats, but I’m an expert on experts, and the ones I consulted in this matter told me they would not accept a fifty-seven-year-old cat, no matter what.”

Those who cheat are so few and far between that Mr. Russell remembers them well. There was, for instance, an individual in Spain who claimed to be 120 years old, which would make him the world’s oldest man. In an attempt to authenticate the record, Russell discovered that the man was using his father’s birth certificate: an eighty-five-year-old geezer who, to his shame, thought he could put one over on the world.

Russell said that those who would like to legitimately break a record should check the rules very carefully. If they have an idea for a new record, or if the rules aren’t clear, prospective record breakers can write for clarification.

“Well,” I said, “that’s what I wanted to talk to you about. Clarification.”

“You know, then, I have told Garry that two people have now completed the Pan-American trip.”

“Right. The prince. I think we can beat him.”

“The documents on his trip seem to be in good order.”

“What about the Canadian, Adamuszek?”

“I’m still not certain whether he obeyed the rules.”

“The news report we read in Argentina had him coming in twenty-four days. Later we tried to figure it out.”

Garry recalled that the note Adamuszek had sent to Guinness was dated the day he left: November 2. The tourist magazine said he arrived in Ushuaia on November 27, at 7:45
P.M
. to be exact. That was twenty-five days, no matter how you cut it.

In Ushuaia, we talked to Veronica at Turismo, and she sent us to see the man Adamuszek had stayed with when he reached the end of the world.

Miguel Zaprucki, an Argentine of Polish descent, lived in a neat, newly painted wood-frame house in a neighborhood of neat, newly painted frame houses set on a rise above the main street of Ushuaia. A gentleman in his sixties, Zaprucki wore a comfortable-looking cardigan and stood on his front porch, chatting with us. He said Adamuszek was thirty-two, that he left from Prudhoe Bay, and that he had been stopped for two days at some border. Nicaragua or Colombia. Finally a soldier had accompanied him through the country. (Had to be Nicaragua, I thought, an afternoon’s drive, as opposed to Colombia, which would take several days.) Zaprucki said he couldn’t be more specific because Adamuszek didn’t speak Spanish.

I asked how a man who didn’t speak Spanish could possibly talk his way through borders in at least ten Spanish-speaking countries. Zaprucki said that Adamuszek was very determined, and that determination seemed to amuse him in some secret way.

How long had the trip taken?

Zaprucki said that Adamuszek was claiming twenty-six days.

“Twenty-six days exactly?” I asked.

“Más o menos,” Zaprucki said. More or less? This phrase, in most of Latin America, is often a throat-clearing exercise, like saying, “you
know.” More or less? How much more? How much less? Zaprucki didn’t know. “Twenty-six days, and then a little more,” he said finally.

I think Garry and I amused Mr. Zaprucki as much as Jerzy Adamuszek had.

“So,” I told Alan Russell in London, “we aren’t certain whether Adamuszek is claiming twenty-four, twenty-five, or twenty-six days.”

“It’s twenty-six and a few hours,” Alan Russell said.

“You’re sure?”

“I’m sure. Though, as I said, I’m not certain he obeyed the rules. For instance, when Garry came to me and said he’d like to do this drive I researched backwards through our files to see how his concept compared with other long drives. I decided that this was something very comparable. You see, it’s very nice for people to come to us in advance and say, ‘What will you accept?’ ”

M
Y
$120-
A-NIGHT HOTEL ROOM
was clean enough, and there was a view of the crenelated roofs of Covent Garden, but it was small. Eurosmall. I took one of my dirty shirts, measured out what I supposed was the length of a cat, tip of the nose to tip of the tail, and swung it about. I could find no position at all in which the shirt did not hit at least one wall. Yep, not enough room to swing a cat.

Everything was white, hard plastic Eurowhite, and there was a gadget in the corner that would press your pants for you, and a teapot. There were three television channels, and one of them consistently featured endless ceremonial events: guys in florid Elizabethan uniforms walking around stiffly, and commentators who elucidated the action in the hushed reverence usually reserved for golf.

For an American, the room was claustrophobic. Worse, the hotel catered to the theater crowd, a well-dressed group, so that occasionally a house detective, noticing a man in a leather jacket and jeans, saw fit to check my room key. Who would want to break into the place: it was like a prison.

So I sat at a café called the Pelican, eating venison with a tangy raspberry sauce—the Pelican saw itself as a French bistro—and perused the British version of the
Guinness Book
, which Alan Russell, not surprisingly, thought superior to the American edition.

My impression was that Russell was inclined to not accept Jerzy Adamuszek’s claim. I, on the other hand, was fairly certain that Jerzy Adamuszek, a Polish Canadian from Montreal who didn’t speak Spanish, had driven a black 1981 Cadillac from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, to Ushuaia, Argentina, alone, in twenty-six days. More or less.

It seemed wise to set that as the time to beat. Jerzy probably wasn’t going to get the record, but as Garry had pointed out in Argentina, if he did it—if he really did it—we were honor bound to consider his time the standing record.

No forty days, no thirty-five days: didn’t matter if those times would give us the record. “It’s a matter of morality,” Garry had said.

And just in case, just to cover all possibilities, I thought, privately, that it would be nice to bring it all in under twenty-four days.

No questions that way.

Those would be our rules.

I studied the book for a time and worked on my bottle of wine.

“Many people,” Mr. Russell had said, “think some of these records are trivial.”

Hmmm?

The duration record for continuous clapping (sustaining an average of 160 claps per minute audible at 120 yards) is 54 hours by V. Jeyaraman of Tamil Nadu, India from the 13th to the 15th of December 1985.

“We cannot consider anything trivial,” Mr. Russell had said. “The person actually doing it is likely to be someone who will never be the fastest runner, never be Mark Spitz or Billie Jean King. Nevertheless, they are deadly serious in their endeavors and for this reason, we must treat them seriously.”

It occurred to me, over my second glass of Beaujolais, that what Alan Russell was saying is that while certain records may seem a little silly—duration drumming, cucumber slicing, prolonged sermonizing, continuous showering, billiard-table jumping—the person attempting the feat is motivated by the same soaring human desire for excellence that puts a man on the moon or creates a da Vinci. Over the third glass of wine, I began to imagine that the
Guinness Book of World Records
is about striving and desire, about courage, nobility, and the human soul.

The record distances in the country sport of throwing dried cow chips depends on whether or not the projectile may or may not be molded in a spherical shape. The greatest distance achieved under the “nonsphericalization and 100 percent organic” rule (established 1970) is 266 feet by Steve Urner at the Mountain Festival at Tehachapi, California, on August 14, 1981.

Aside from cow chips, there was a lot more nobility in the book. Arthur Rank was sixty-nine in August of 1984 when he set the stone-skipping record (“fourteen plinkers and fifteen pitty-pats”); Chris Riggio completed a 28.5-mile marathon in four hours and thirty-four minutes while carrying a fresh egg on a dessert spoon for the official egg-and-spoon-racing record; a Mr. Shriv Ravi stood on one foot for thirty-four hours—the rules in this one require that the disengaged foot not be rested on the standing foot and that no object be used for support. Mr. Ravi is from Tamil Nadu, India, and would have been able to hire his neighbor, Mr. V. Jeyaraman, the human applause machine, to give him a hand for a couple of days.

I
BOUGHT A TICKET
for that night’s performance of
Starlight Express
. In the final scenes, the railroad engines, who were actually actors on roller skates, massed for one last final race, and, as I recall, the old rusty steam engine (named, of course, Rusty) was inspired by a song sung by his old coal car, now sadly deceased but alive in soul and memory. The part of the dead coal car was sung by a black man, whose soaring and spiritual voice seemed, in a spectacular effect, to light up the backdrop night sky with brilliant and glittering stars.

“Only you have the power within you
Just believe in yourself,
The sea will part before you
Stop the rain
And turn back the tide.”

I had a vision of human striving and the dignity of trivial pursuit: a vision of Mr. Ravi swaying on one sore leg, of Mr. Jeyaraman clapping hysterically. A tingling sensation shot up my spine and ran along the tops of my forearms.

So: twenty-three days, más o menos.

A matter of morality, más o menos.

THE ADVENTURE-
DRIVING BUSINESS
[FEATURING AN AMBUSH IN AFRICA]
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
July 1987 • Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada

I
WAS EN ROUTE
from my home in Montana to Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada, to work out the final details of the drive with Garry Sowerby. I made some notes about pursuing a phantom Caddy propelled by the spiritual advice of a defunct musical coal car and tried not to think about the flight. Airline travel fractures my equanimity. Delays. Lost baggage. Overworked and consequently curt personnel.

I have lost my temper in airports. It’s embarrassing. People staring at you as you scream and gibber, hands in the air. People moving away from you in the lounge as you fulminate. It is, I am sure, merely a personal quirk.

I wasn’t going to lose it again. This falling onto the ground and pounding my fists on the cold tiles simply wouldn’t do. Time to put myself in a defensive mode. I jotted down some notes for an imaginary book about an airline crash in the wilderness. Everyone survives, but a large grizzly bear, as if directed by the hand of God, singles out and savages airline employees only. Call it
Furry Fury
.

Flights out of Montana serve what are called “snacks.” A stewardess tossed a bag of nuts on my tray, like peanuts at the ballpark. She was very busy, flinging nuts, this stewardess, but my companion, Karen, took the opportunity to ask a question.

“Could you arrange for one of those carts to meet us at the gate? We have a tight connection and I’m on crutches.”

Karen had been experiencing pain standing for any length of time. She could outrun me for a mile or so before her feet began to hurt, hurt badly, and the doctors said it would only get worse. They told her that
they could fix her up in two simple operations. It was a painful matter of breaking and rearranging a single bone in each foot. Karen opted to get it all over with at once: the same operation on both feet and then six weeks on crutches. We imagined that the decision would be an exercise in the conservation of misery.

Our flight attendant said she would make the call later, after she had finished tossing out the rest of her nuts. It looked, I thought, like dinner in the monkey house. There were, by actual count, eight nuts in my bag. Was I supposed to eat them all myself?

The flight into Minneapolis was late, no great surprise. Seasoned travelers, in 1987, had begun referring to the airline as Northworst. Passengers suspected that the company routinely delayed flights—sometimes claiming mechanical difficulties—when in fact they were waiting for delayed connecting flights in order to fill all seats on any given flight. Disgruntled ex-Northwest employees insisted that this was the case.

Indeed, most of Northworst’s current employees seemed disgruntled. Flight attendants worked planes full of passengers who had been kept waiting for hours and who were certain to miss connecting flights. There was a feeling of antagonism that pervaded most flights. The attendants themselves had some labor-related gripes with the company, and were not inclined to simple pleasantries. They had begun to develop a kind of homeroom high-school-teacher attitude toward their passengers.

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