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- GRAPEVINE, Page 17Just Kidding, Folks!
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- By DAVID ELLIS/Reported by Georgia Harbison
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- April really brought out the practical jokers this year,
- and not just on the first day. Hoaxes, fakes and phonies kept
- cropping up all month long:
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- The Great Pretender. London's respected Independent
- newspaper reported April 1 that Arthur Wynd, a farmer claiming
- to be the illegitimate son of Edward VIII's "forgotten" twin
- brother, was challenging Queen Elizabeth II's right to be
- monarch. As outrage grew over the prospect of a royal DNA test,
- the paper admitted that it had made up the whole thing.
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- Murder, They Said. Three disk jockeys at Los Angeles radio
- station KROQ admitted that they had faked an on-air murder
- confession last June in a bid to boost ratings. The deejays
- watched police conduct a fruitless 10-month investigation before
- fessing up. Their minor penalty: a week off the air.
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- Eye It Carefully. A press release from "CBS News"
- trumpeted a 60 Minutes investigation: Japanese conglomerates now
- have the technology to duplicate U.S. currency and produce
- credit cards that allow "unlimited charges without having to pay
- the resulting bill." A network spokesman called the fake
- release the product of a "warped mind."
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- A Boy Named Oprah. Jecquin Stitt triumphed in a Ladies'
- Home Journal Oprah Winfrey look-alike contest and won an
- invitation to appear on the celebrity's talk show next week.
- Embarrassed editors later discovered Stitt was a man (albeit one
- undergoing a sex-change procedure) but didn't revoke the prize.
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- Creative Writing. The manuscript for Derek Goodwin's first
- novel, Just Killing Time, was sent to publishers adorned with
- endorsements by John le Carre and Joseph Wambaugh. Simon &
- Schuster was willing to pay $920,000 for the thriller but found
- out the blurbs had been faked and withdrew its offer. Goodwin
- insists the bogus testimonials are the work of an unidentified
- enemy.
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- Staying in Congress. Cicciolina, the porn star elected to
- the Italian Parliament in 1987, surprised fellow lawmakers by
- quitting office. Although her letter of resignation acknowledged
- she was an "unwelcome presence" in the legislature, Cicciolina
- was only pulling a pesce d'Aprile, an April fish tale.
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