Fast facts


Arizona Daily Wildcat
Friday, April 1, 2005

  • In France, April Fool's Day is called "April Fish." Children paste paper fish on their friends' backs and on discovery of their tricks, they yell out "Poisson d'Avril."

  • In England, April Fool's Day tricks are carried out only in the morning. Fools are called "gobs" or "gobby," and the victim of a joke is called a "noodle."

  • In Scotland, the April Fool's celebration continues for two days. The person tricked is called an "April Gowk," which is another name for a cuckoo bird. The second day is called "Taily Day," where pranks are played on the "butt oxen." The origin of the "kick me" sign can be traced to this observance.

  • In Portugal, April Fool's is celebrated on the Sunday and Monday before Lent. The traditional trick there is to throw flour at one's friends.

  • Mark Twain once said, "The first of April is the day we remember what we are the other 364 days of the year."

  • There's a sign in the Harvill building that says, "Please stop putting dead birds in the microwave."

  • In 1996, the Taco Bell Corporation ran a full-page ad in several major newspapers claiming it had purchased the Liberty Bell and was renaming it the "Taco Liberty Bell."

  • Today is April Fool's Day. "Idiot" refers to a person of profound mental retardation having a mental age below 3 years and generally being unable to learn connected speech or guard against common dangers. The term, however, is now considered offensive.