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March 31: Iron Dreams, A Voice Silenced, The World Unplugged

Today, March 31st

March 31: Iron Dreams, A Voice Silenced, The World Unplugged

Some dates arrive carrying the full weight of human imagination — the audacity to build something the world has never seen, the grief of losing a voice before its time, and the unsettling thrill of a story that makes us question what is real. March 31 is one of those dates. Across three separate centuries, it gave us a tower that skeptics called a monstrosity and the world came to adore, a singer whose light was extinguished at the very moment it burned brightest, and a film that rewired the way a generation thought about reality itself. The thread connecting them is wonder — and the sometimes painful cost of things that matter.
March 31: Iron Dreams, A Voice Silenced, The World Unplugged
March 31: Tomorrow, We Go to the Moon

Today, March 31st

March 31: Tomorrow, We Go to the Moon

On Friday, March 27, four astronauts flew their T-38 jets into Kennedy Space Center from Houston and stepped onto the tarmac at the Launch and Landing Facility. Commander Reid Wiseman looked up at the waiting crowd and said exactly what the moment called for: "Hey, let's go to the Moon!" The countdown began Monday afternoon, a 48-hour sequence of fueling, systems checks, and final verification that will culminate Wednesday evening. The crew — Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen — remains in medical quarantine, following a controlled sleep schedule, eating carefully, completing final medical checks. Forecasters are giving an 80 percent chance of favorable weather. Everything, at last, appears ready. "We are ready to go," Wiseman said Sunday from quarantine. "But not for one second do we have an expectation that we are going. We will go when this vehicle tells us it's ready."
March 31: Tomorrow, We Go to the Moon

30 March

March 30: A Lens on History, A Cup of Ambition, A Nation Holds Its Breath

March 30: A Lens on History, A Cup of Ambition, A Nation Holds Its Breath Three moments that captured the American spirit — its hunger for recognition, its gift for reinvention, and its capacity for resilience under fire America has always been a country of arrivals — of people who show up, stake a claim, and refuse to be turned away. March 30 is a date that honors that stubborn, forward-leaning spirit across three very different stages: the gilded podium of Hollywood, the sawdust-floored stalls of a Seattle market, and the rain-slicked sidewalk outside a Washington hotel where history nearly veered off course. Together, they tell a story about what it means to break through, to build something lasting, and to endure. The Man Behind the Camera On March 30, 1955, James Wong Howe stepped onto the Academy Awards stage to accept the Oscar for Best Cinematography for his luminous work on The Rose Tattoo, becoming the first Asian American to win in that category. Born Wong Tung Jim in Guangdong, China, in 1899 and raised in Washington State, Howe had spent decades mastering the art of light and shadow in an industry that routinely cast Asian faces as caricatures — and rarely allowed Asian artists behind the camera at all. He had broken in through sheer ingenuity, famously discovering that he could shoot dark-eyed actresses more expressively by photographing them against a black velvet backdrop, a technique that made him one of Hollywood's most sought-after cinematographers before many studios knew his name. His Oscar win was both a personal triumph and a crack in a very old wall. Howe had already demonstrated his genius across decades of landmark films — from The Thin Man to Body and Soul, where he strapped on roller skates to shoot the boxing sequences from the ring floor — but recognition at Hollywood's highest level had eluded him. In winning, he quietly made history in a room that often preferred not to notice it was being made. He would go on to win a second Academy Award in 1963 for Hud, cementing a legacy that transcends any single trophy: proof that artistry, pursued with enough patience and precision, eventually cannot be ignored.   A master cinematographer frames his shot — the art of light and shadow that earned Hollywood's highest honor. A Small Shop With Enormous Dreams Sixteen years after Howe's Oscar moment, on March 30, 1971, three friends — Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl, and Gordon Bowker — opened a modest shop in Seattle's historic Pike Place Market and called it Starbucks. Named after the first mate in Herman Melville's Moby-Dick and outfitted with a twin-tailed siren logo, the store did not serve lattes or cappuccinos in those early days. It sold whole coffee beans, roasting equipment, and the then-radical idea that coffee was worth caring about. The founders had been inspired by Alfred Peet, the Dutch-born coffee visionary who had opened his first Berkeley shop in 1966, and they were determined to bring that same reverence for quality to the Pacific Northwest. What Baldwin, Siegl, and Bowker built from that single Pike Place stall would eventually become one of the most recognizable brands in human history — though the transformation required a second act. It was a young entrepreneur named Howard Schultz who, inspired by the espresso bars of Milan, joined the company in 1982 and pressed the founders to begin serving brewed drinks. When they declined, he left to build his own coffee bar chain — and then bought Starbucks outright in 1987. By the early 2000s, the green siren was ubiquitous on six continents. The original Pike Place location still operates today, a pilgrim's destination for coffee lovers who want to stand where the empire began, in a cramped and glorious little shop that simply believed good coffee deserved better company. Pike Place Market, Seattle — where three coffee enthusiasts opened a small shop that would one day caffeinate the world. ❦ Sixty-Nine Days That Shook the Nation On March 30, 1981, just 69 days into his presidency, Ronald Reagan walked out of the Washington Hilton Hotel following a speech to a labor union and was shot by 25-year-old John Hinckley Jr. A .22-caliber bullet struck the president in the chest, ricocheting off his seventh rib and coming to rest an inch from his heart. Press Secretary James Brady was critically wounded and left permanently disabled. A Secret Service agent and a Washington police officer were also shot. Reagan, who was 70 years old, was rushed to George Washington University Hospital, where surgeons spent hours removing the bullet. The attack exposed the terrifying vulnerability of even the most protected man in the world and sent the country into a state of suspended, collective dread. What followed was as remarkable as the shooting itself. Reagan's composure in the hospital — reportedly telling surgeons, "I hope you're all Republicans," and quipping to his wife Nancy, "Honey, I forgot to duck" — transformed a moment of national crisis into something close to reassurance. He recovered and returned to the White House on April 11, his approval ratings having surged in the aftermath. Historians have noted that the attempted assassination may have been a turning point in his presidency, cementing a public image of toughness and good humor under pressure that would define his political identity for years to come. For the nation, March 30, 1981, became one of those dates everyone who lived through it can place precisely — a sudden, violent interruption that, against all odds, the country managed to step past.   The Washington Hilton Hotel — the site where, in a matter of seconds, a presidency and a nation were shaken to their core.

30 March

March 30: The Price of War, Measured in Barrels

March 30: The Price of War, Measured in Barrels As March ends, Brent crude oil has surged more than 50% this month alone — surpassing the previous record monthly spike set during the Gulf War in 1990, making this the largest single-month oil price increase in recorded history. The head of the International Energy Agency has called it the greatest global energy security challenge the world has ever faced. On February 28, 2026 — the day U.S. and Israeli forces launched strikes on Iran — Brent crude oil was trading at roughly $72 per barrel. Thirty days later, as March draws to a close, it is trading above $115. The math is staggering: a monthly surge exceeding 50 percent, surpassing the previous record of 46 percent set during the Gulf War in September 1990 and making this the largest single-month oil price increase in recorded history. The International Energy Agency has described the current disruption as the largest supply shock in the history of the global oil market — worse, by its own assessment, than 1973, worse than 1979, worse than anything that has come before. The Strait of Hormuz, through which 20 percent of the world's oil ordinarily flows, has been effectively closed since early March. Nearly 200 tankers are stranded in the region. Fuel prices at American pumps have surged past $5 per gallon in some states. Economists are uttering a word not heard since the 1970s: stagflation. The Long History of Oil and War The modern world has experienced three previous oil shocks severe enough to reshape geopolitics, trigger global recessions, and permanently alter how nations think about energy. The first came in October 1973, when OPEC's Arab members declared an oil embargo against the United States and its allies for supporting Israel in the Yom Kippur War. The price of oil quadrupled almost overnight — from roughly $3 per barrel to nearly $12 — triggering fuel shortages, gas station lines stretching for miles, and a recession that cost millions of Americans their jobs. Unemployment climbed to 9 percent. The Federal Reserve raised interest rates to 12 percent to fight inflation. The crisis produced lasting structural change: speed limits were lowered to 55 mph, the Strategic Petroleum Reserve was created, and the Department of Energy was established. The age of cheap American oil was over. The second shock came in 1979, in the aftermath of the Iranian Revolution that toppled the Shah and brought Ayatollah Khomeini to power. Iranian oil production collapsed by nearly 5 million barrels per day — about 7 percent of world supply at the time. Prices doubled over the following year, from $13 per barrel to nearly $35. Long gas lines returned. President Carter declared energy policy "the moral equivalent of war" and installed solar panels on the White House roof. The crisis accelerated the shift toward fuel-efficient Japanese cars, accelerated North Sea oil development, and ultimately contributed to Carter's defeat in 1980. A third, briefer shock struck in 1990 when Iraq invaded Kuwait, briefly disrupting Gulf supply and sending prices sharply higher — though that crisis resolved quickly once the Gulf War began. Each of these episodes sent shockwaves through the global economy that lasted years.   The 1973 Arab oil embargo produced gas station lines that stretched for miles across America. Fifty-three years later, the world faces what the IEA has called the largest oil supply shock in recorded history. What distinguishes 2026 from all three previous crises is the nature of the disruption. In 1973 and 1979, the shocks were driven by embargoes and production cuts — painful, but ultimately reversible through diplomacy and rerouting. In 2026, the mechanism is a physical chokepoint: the Strait of Hormuz, a 21-mile passage that cannot be bypassed by pipeline or political negotiation. Gulf producers including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, and the UAE have nowhere else to send their oil. The IEA estimates that at least 10 million barrels per day of Gulf production has been cut, stranded with no exit. Analysts who have noted that "every significant spike in oil prices has been followed, in some form, by a global recession" are watching the economic data with gathering alarm. For now, the tankers wait. The price climbs. And the world, as it has three times before in living memory, is learning again just how much of everything depends on what moves through a narrow strip of water in the Persian Gulf.

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