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April 3: Riders at Dawn, A Legend Betrayed, Rebuilding the World

Today, April 3rd

April 3: Riders at Dawn, A Legend Betrayed, Rebuilding the World

America has always defined itself by how far it is willing to ride — and what it chooses to carry. April 3 traces that restless, ambitious streak across three very different chapters: the founding of a mail service so audacious it sent lone riders galloping across a continent, the death of an outlaw whose legend proved more durable than the man himself, and the signing of a law that asked a war-weary nation to reach across the ocean and help rebuild the world it had just helped to save. Each story is, at its heart, about the same thing: the conviction that distance is not destiny, and that what divides people — whether mountains, betrayal, or the wreckage of history — can be crossed.
April 3: Riders at Dawn, A Legend Betrayed, Rebuilding the World
April 3: Why They Call It Good

Today, April 3rd

April 3: Why They Call It Good

Today, in cities across every inhabited continent, Christians observe what many consider the most theologically weighty day of the year. Streets in Kolkata, Nairobi, Jakarta, Manila, Rome, and Mexico City fall quiet. Churches dim their lights, strip their altars, and read aloud the Passion narrative — the account of Jesus's arrest, trial, and execution that appears in all four Gospels. Bells fall silent. Choirs set aside their music. In Jerusalem, pilgrims walk the Via Dolorosa, the traditional route Jesus traveled to the crucifixion. In the Philippines, some devout believers carry wooden crosses through the streets. Across the world, the tone is the same: this is not a day for celebration. It is a day for keeping still, and for sitting with something difficult. That it is called "Good" Friday is, at first glance, one of the stranger names in the history of religion.
April 3: Why They Call It Good

02 April

April 2: The War That Had to Come, Islands at the Edge of the World, A Shepherd Lays Down His Staff

April 2: The War That Had to Come, Islands at the Edge of the World, A Shepherd Lays Down His Staff Three moments when the course of nations turned — on the floor of Congress, in the cold South Atlantic, and in a quiet room in Rome Leadership announces itself differently across time — sometimes in the thunder of a congressional chamber, sometimes in the cold audacity of a military gamble, sometimes in the long, faithful endurance of a man who simply refused to step away from the work he believed he had been called to do. April 2 is a date that has asked a great deal of the world's leaders and of the people who followed them, a date on which words launched armies, an island dispute reshaped two nations, and one of the most consequential figures of the twentieth century finally rested. Each story is a study in what it costs to lead — and what it means to bear that cost with conviction. The Speech That Crossed the Ocean On April 2, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson stood before a joint session of Congress and asked the United States to go to war. For nearly three years, as the Great War consumed Europe, Wilson had kept the nation out of it — running for re-election in 1916 on the quiet pride of that neutrality. But Germany's resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare in early 1917, combined with the revelation of the Zimmermann Telegram — in which Germany secretly proposed a military alliance with Mexico against the United States — had made the calculus untenable. American ships were being sunk. American lives were being lost. Wilson, who had spent years believing the country could serve as a neutral peacemaker, arrived at the Capitol having concluded that peace, on terms worth having, could no longer be secured from the sidelines. His speech was extraordinary in its moral ambition. He did not frame the coming war as a matter of wounded national pride or commercial interest alone, but as a crusade for something larger — for the rights of nations, for democratic self-determination, for what he called "the ultimate peace of the world." "The world must be made safe for democracy," he told Congress, in a phrase that would echo through the century. Congress voted four days later to declare war, and two million American troops would eventually cross the Atlantic. Wilson's vision of a post-war order — embodied in his Fourteen Points and his dream of a League of Nations — would shape the Paris Peace Conference and haunt the decades that followed. The speech on April 2 did not merely take America into a war; it announced to the world a new kind of American ambition.   A president before Congress in 1917 — the moment America's long neutrality gave way to the weight of the world. A Gamble in the South Atlantic Sixty-five years later, on April 2, 1982, Argentine military forces landed on the Falkland Islands — a remote British overseas territory of roughly 1,800 inhabitants, sheep-covered hills, and bleak, windswept coastline lying three hundred miles off the Argentine coast — and seized them in a matter of hours. The Argentine junta, led by General Leopoldo Galtieri, had calculated that Britain would not fight for islands so far away and so sparsely populated, and that a quick, bloodless occupation would produce a diplomatic settlement — and a useful surge of nationalist fervor at home, where the regime was struggling. The calculation proved catastrophically wrong on every count. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher assembled a naval task force within days and dispatched it eight thousand miles across the Atlantic, to the astonishment of much of the world. The seventy-four-day war that followed was fought in conditions of extraordinary hardship — freezing temperatures, fierce terrain, and the logistical near-impossibility of projecting military power across such distance. Britain retook the islands on June 14, 1982, at the cost of 255 British and 649 Argentine lives. The political aftershocks ran deep in both countries. Galtieri's junta collapsed within weeks of the Argentine surrender, accelerating the return of democracy to Argentina. In Britain, Thatcher's already-rising political fortunes soared; her willingness to fight for the islands became a defining element of her political identity. The Falklands War settled nothing permanently — Argentina's claim to the islands, which it calls the Malvinas, remains official policy — but it demonstrated, in cold and unambiguous terms, that the age of easy imperial gambles had not entirely passed. Warships cutting through the South Atlantic — a naval task force dispatched eight thousand miles on a point of principle. ❦ The Pilgrim Pope Goes Home On April 2, 2005, Pope John Paul II died in his private apartment in the Vatican at the age of 84, after a long and increasingly public struggle with Parkinson's disease. He had served as pope for twenty-six years — the third-longest pontificate in history — and his passing drew one of the largest gatherings of human beings ever assembled in one place. An estimated four million pilgrims flooded Rome in the days that followed; more than two hundred heads of state attended his funeral. Karol Józef Wojtyła, who had grown up in occupied Poland, survived both Nazi and Soviet totalitarianism, and been shot by a Turkish gunman in St. Peter's Square in 1981, died as he had lived: refusing, even in the most diminished final months, to retreat from the world's sight. The scale of the mourning reflected the scale of the papacy. John Paul II had visited 129 countries — more than any pope before him — and his journeys were not diplomatic formalities but electric events that drew millions into the streets. He had played a widely credited role in the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe, lending moral authority and visible solidarity to Poland's Solidarity movement at critical moments in the 1980s. He had redefined the Catholic Church's relationship with Judaism, Islam, and other faiths through gestures of reconciliation that his predecessors had not made. He was, by any measure, one of the defining public figures of the twentieth century — a man whose influence stretched far beyond the one billion Catholics who looked to him as their spiritual leader, reaching into the hearts of people who shared none of his theology but recognized in him something rare: a person entirely unafraid of the world he had been asked to address.   Candlelight fills St. Peter's Square as the world gathers to mourn a pope who had spent twenty-six years refusing to stand still.

02 April

April 2: They're Going to the Moon

April 2: They're Going to the Moon At 6:35 p.m. EDT on April 1, 2026 — beneath a Full Pink Moon, on April Fools' Day — NASA's Artemis II lifted off from Kennedy Space Center. Four astronauts are now en route to the Moon. The promise Gene Cernan made in 1972 has been kept. It happened. At 6:35 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, NASA's Space Launch System generated 8.8 million pounds of thrust and lifted four human beings off the surface of the Earth for the first time in the direction of the Moon in 54 years. Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen are now aboard the Orion spacecraft — which the crew named Integrity — arcing through the darkness toward the lunar flyby planned for Monday, April 6. The Full Pink Moon hung in the sky as the rocket cleared the tower. The launch went, in the words of one journalist at the Cape, "with barely a hitch." Gene Cernan's promise is, at last, being kept. What Happens Next — and Why It Matters The crew spent their first day in a high Earth orbit — a safety hold designed to verify that Orion's life support systems are working flawlessly with human beings aboard before committing to the translunar burn. The spacecraft's four solar array wings deployed as planned, giving Integrity a wingspan of roughly 63 feet. Mission controllers in Houston confirmed all systems nominal. Commander Wiseman, waking to look out the window, reported a spectacular view of Earth. On Monday, April 6 — the sixth day of the mission — the crew will reach the Moon. They will fly around the far side, becoming the first human beings ever to see the complete disc of the lunar far side with the naked eye. During their closest approach, the Moon will appear the size of a basketball held at arm's length. They will photograph everything, sending images back to scientists on Earth that could help determine future landing sites near the lunar south pole. Then the Moon's gravity will slingshot them back toward home, and on April 10, they will splash down in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego — covering more than half a million miles in ten days. The crew makes history in ways both technical and human. Victor Glover becomes the first person of color to travel to the Moon's vicinity. Christina Koch becomes the first woman. Jeremy Hansen becomes the first non-American to fly on a lunar mission — representing not just Canada but the entire international coalition that the Artemis program is designed to embody. If the crew reaches the distance projected for an April 1 launch, they will travel 252,799 miles from Earth — surpassing the record set under emergency conditions by the crew of Apollo 13 in 1970, and going farther from home than any living human being has ever been. As NASA Associate Administrator Amit Kshatriya said at launch: "Over the next 10 days, Reid, Victor, Christina, and Jeremy will put Orion through its paces so the crews who follow them can go to the Moon's surface with confidence. We are one mission into a long campaign."   Artemis II lifts off from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center on April 1, 2026, at 6:35 p.m. EDT — beneath a Full Pink Moon, on April Fools' Day, for the first crewed lunar mission in 54 years. In December 1972, as Gene Cernan prepared to take humanity's last steps on the Moon, he said: "We leave as we came and, God willing, as we shall return, with peace and hope for all mankind." He was the last human being to stand on the lunar surface — and when he climbed back into the lunar module, he scratched his daughter Tracy's initials in the dust: T D C. Those initials are still there. The Moon does not have weather. Nothing moves on its surface unless something comes from somewhere else and moves it. For 54 years, Tracy's initials have waited. On Monday, April 6, four human beings will fly over the Moon. They won't land. But they will see it — all of it, the near side and the far side, in one breathtaking frame — and they will be the first of a new generation of explorers keeping Cernan's promise. The long wait, as of 6:35 last night, is over.

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