Word: foolsã
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Plimpton exhibited his Lampoon-cultivated humor when, as an April Fools?? joke in 1985, he wrote an article for Sports Illustrated profiling Sidd Finch, a fictitious Harvard dropout who learned to throw a 168-mile-per-hour fastball while studying yoga at a Tibetan monastery...
...ascribing unduly harsh motives to a simple April Fools?? joke? Again, context is necessary for an accurate answer. In both the news article and the editorial published when the most recent endowment figures were released in the fall, the YDN did not fail to mention Yale’s success as compared with Harvard; in fact, the title of the editorial was “Recession? What Recession? Ask Harvard...
...April Fools?? came a day late this year for Fletcher University Professor Cornel R. West...
...Yeah, right, April Fools??,” came an all-too-appropriate retort from a cynical fan who had probably endured too many disappointing seasons to realistically continue to root and keep the dream alive...
...Americans.” It’s a lot like “Street Smarts,” except that every American—from Cletus to Clinton—is prey for the interviewer, and every Canadian is banking on their ignorance. In their one-hour April Fools?? Day special, the host flew to various cities, asking Americans about phony issues that any Canadian—or American with common sense—would easily rebuff. Example: “What do you think about the illegal rhinoceros hunt in Saskatchewan...