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April 29: The Tapes That Told Too Much, Long Overdue on the Mall, Two Billion Witnesses

Today, April 29th

April 29: The Tapes That Told Too Much, Long Overdue on the Mall, Two Billion Witnesses

April 29 moves across the full register of what public life can be: the exposure of power abused in the shadows, the belated honoring of those who sacrificed everything in the open, and the global ceremony of a wedding that two billion people found reason enough to watch. These are not stories that would seem, at first glance, to belong together — a president cornered by his own recordings, a generation of veterans finally given their place on the National Mall, a royal couple making their vows in a cathedral that has witnessed eight centuries of English history. But they share a quality that April 29, in its particular way, seems to understand: the quality of a reckoning arrived at, of something that was owed finally being paid, of the world pausing to bear witness to something that mattered.
April 29: The Tapes That Told Too Much, Long Overdue on the Mall, Two Billion Witnesses

28 April

April 28: Born to Build the Impossible, The Champion Who Refused, Open Sky at 24,000 Feet

April 28: Born to Build the Impossible, The Champion Who Refused, Open Sky at 24,000 Feet Three stories of people who refused to accept the limits others placed on them — and what happened when the world pushed back Limits are, in the end, just suggestions — at least for the people who decide not to honor them. April 28 belongs to three of those people: an Italian farm boy who built tractors, had a fight with Enzo Ferrari, and decided to build a better sports car himself; a world heavyweight boxing champion who told a government he would not go to a war he believed was wrong, knowing exactly what it would cost him; and a Boeing 737 and its crew who, at 24,000 feet over the Pacific, found a third of the aircraft's fuselage suddenly gone and chose, in the most literal sense, not to let their passengers fall. Each story is about what people are capable of when they refuse the limits in front of them — whether those limits are set by a competitor's arrogance, a government's demand, or the sudden, terrifying proximity of the open sky. The Tractor Farmer Who Humiliated Ferrari On April 28, 1916, Ferruccio Lamborghini was born in Cento, in the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy, the son of grape farmers who could not have anticipated that the boy would grow up to attach his name to machines capable of traveling at two hundred miles per hour. Lamborghini trained as a mechanic, served in the Italian Air Force during World War II, and emerged from the war with the practical ingenuity and the entrepreneurial appetite that would define the next two decades of his life. He built a successful tractor manufacturing business — Lamborghini Trattori — using surplus military parts in the postwar years, then expanded into heating and air conditioning systems, accumulating enough wealth by the early 1960s to indulge his passion for high-performance cars. He bought a Ferrari. He found it unsatisfactory. He drove to Maranello, introduced himself to Enzo Ferrari, and had the temerity to explain what he thought was wrong with the clutch. Ferrari, famously, told him that a tractor farmer had no business offering opinions about sports cars. Lamborghini's response was to found Automobili Lamborghini in 1963 and build, within two years, the 350 GT — a grand tourer that immediately established itself as a genuine rival to Ferrari's finest. The car that secured the legend, however, was the Miura, introduced in 1966, which placed its V12 engine mid-mounted behind the passenger compartment in a configuration that had previously been used only in racing cars, producing a road car of such speed and visual drama that it is widely considered the world's first modern supercar. The Countach, the Diablo, the Murciélago, the Huracán — each successive generation of the raging bull has carried forward the original argument that Ferruccio made to Enzo Ferrari in that Maranello office: that a man who builds tractors can build something that makes your best work look timid. He sold the company in 1972, retired to his Umbrian estate, and died in 1993. The cars bearing his name have not slowed down.   A Lamborghini on the Italian road — the machine that a tractor farmer built to prove a point and never stopped proving. I Ain't Got No Quarrel On April 28, 1967, Muhammad Ali — born Cassius Clay, heavyweight champion of the world, and the most recognizable athlete on the planet — appeared at the Houston Military Entrance Processing Station and refused, three times, to step forward when his name was called for induction into the United States Army. His stated reasons were both religious and moral: as a minister of the Nation of Islam, he claimed conscientious objector status, and he had already stated publicly that he had no quarrel with the Viet Cong — the enemy America was fighting — while Black Americans were being denied basic civil rights at home. The military refused his conscientious objector claim. The consequences were immediate and severe: Ali was stripped of his heavyweight title by boxing's governing bodies, his boxing license was revoked in every state, and he was indicted on federal draft evasion charges that carried a potential five-year prison sentence. He was twenty-five years old. The three and a half years that followed were, professionally, a wasteland — the peak years of a fighter's career, gone. Ali lectured at colleges, spoke at anti-war rallies, and waited while his case wound through the courts. The Supreme Court reversed his conviction unanimously in 1971, ruling that the government had improperly denied his conscientious objector claim. He returned to boxing, recaptured the heavyweight title twice — once against George Foreman in the "Rumble in the Jungle" in 1974, once against Joe Frazier in the "Thrilla in Manila" in 1975 — and became, over the course of those years, something larger than a boxer. The man who had been vilified as a traitor and a coward in 1967 was chosen to light the Olympic flame at the 1996 Atlanta Games, his hand trembling with the Parkinson's disease that would claim him in 2016. The arc of his career is a study in what happens when a person of extraordinary gifts refuses, at enormous personal cost, to do what power demands of him — and turns out to be right. A champion in the gym — the discipline behind a man who was willing to give up everything he had built rather than compromise what he believed. ❦ Flight 243 On April 28, 1988, Aloha Airlines Flight 243 departed Hilo for Honolulu on what was scheduled to be a twenty-minute inter-island hop, carrying ninety passengers and a crew of five. At approximately 24,000 feet, a section of the fuselage roughly eighteen feet long tore away with explosive force, exposing the forward cabin to the open sky and 500-mile-per-hour winds. Flight attendant Clarabelle Lansing, who had been standing in the aisle, was swept out of the aircraft and was never found. Sixty-five passengers sustained injuries, many of them serious. The aircraft was now, in technical terms, structurally incompatible with continued flight — the kind of damage that the engineering of the Boeing 737 had not contemplated passengers surviving, let alone landing from. Captain Robert Schornstheimer and First Officer Madeline Tompkins flew it to the ground anyway. With no intercom, no communication with the cabin, and no way to assess the full extent of the structural damage, they executed an emergency descent and managed a landing at Kahului Airport on Maui — an airport that had not been their intended destination but that was closer. The aircraft touched down intact, and eighty-nine of the ninety passengers walked off it alive. The subsequent investigation found that the fuselage failure was the result of metal fatigue and corrosion — the aircraft had made approximately 89,000 flights over nineteen years, many of them short inter-island hops that subjected the fuselage to repeated pressurization cycles that accelerated structural wear. The disaster led directly to sweeping changes in aircraft maintenance protocols and inspection requirements worldwide, and it recalibrated the aviation industry's understanding of how metal fatigues under conditions of repeated stress. Flight 243 is studied in aviation safety programs to this day — not only as a near-catastrophe but as a case study in what extraordinary airmanship, applied with perfect composure in the most disorienting possible circumstances, can accomplish.   An aircraft on final approach over Hawaii — the flight that should not have been survivable, and the crew that refused to let it be otherwise.

28 April

April 28: The Workers Who Don't Come Home

The Workers Who Don't Come Home Today is Workers Memorial Day — observed every April 28th since 1989 — honoring the more than 5,000 Americans who die on the job each year, and the long, hard fight that made those numbers any better than they were. Every 99 minutes, approximately one American worker suffers a fatal injury on the job and does not return home. That figure — roughly 15 deaths per working day, more than 5,000 per year — is both a tragedy and, viewed against the full sweep of American labor history, a hard-won improvement. When the nation first observed Workers Memorial Day on April 28, 1970, an estimated 38 workers died on the job every single day. The reduction represents decades of struggle, legislation, and the accumulated sacrifice of workers and advocates who refused to accept that dying at work was simply the cost of doing business. Today, on April 28, 2026 — the 55th anniversary of OSHA's founding — America pauses to remember those the numbers represent, and to reckon with how far the country has come, and how far it has yet to go. From the Asch Building to the OSH Act The story of worker safety in America has always moved the same way: catastrophe, outrage, reform. On March 25, 1911, a fire broke out on the eighth floor of the Asch Building in Manhattan's Greenwich Village, where the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory occupied the top three floors. The workrooms were packed with sewing machines, tables, and piles of highly flammable fabric. Young immigrant women — many of them teenagers, most of them earning $6 a week for shifts of twelve hours or more — ran for the exits and found the stairwell doors locked. Some fell into the flames. Others leaped from the windows in twos and threes, falling nine stories to the pavement below. In less than thirty minutes, 146 workers were dead. It remains one of the deadliest industrial disasters in American history, and it shocked the conscience of the country in ways that earlier disasters had not. Within three years, New York had passed more than 30 new labor laws — mandatory sprinkler systems, fire drills, improved ventilation, child labor restrictions. Frances Perkins, who witnessed the fire from the street and never forgot the sight of the falling bodies, would go on to become Franklin Roosevelt's Secretary of Labor and the principal architect of the New Deal's worker protections. She later said the New Deal began at the corner of Washington Place and Greene Street, the moment the Triangle factory burned. The national framework that Triangle demanded took another six decades to fully arrive. In December 1970, with American industry still claiming 38 workers a day, President Richard Nixon signed the Occupational Safety and Health Act into law. OSHA opened its doors on April 28, 1971 — the date now commemorated as Workers Memorial Day — with a mandate to assure safe and healthful working conditions for every American worker. The agency immediately adopted hundreds of existing safety standards and began setting exposure limits for toxic chemicals. It was not a perfect law and it was not a perfect agency, but it was the first time the federal government had made workplace safety a national, enforceable obligation rather than a matter of individual employer conscience. In the 55 years since, workplace fatality rates have fallen by more than 60 percent. The work has never been finished — construction sites, warehouses, farms, and healthcare settings still claim lives every week — but the direction of travel, measured in the right units, has always been toward fewer families receiving the call that their person is not coming home.   The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of March 25, 1911, killed 146 workers — most of them young immigrant women — in less than thirty minutes. The catastrophe galvanized the American worker safety movement and set in motion the laws that would eventually become OSHA, founded 60 years later on the date now observed as Workers Memorial Day. The slogan of Workers Memorial Day is simple and has not changed since the AFL-CIO first declared the observance in 1989: Remember the dead — fight for the living. It is a charge that carries particular weight in a year when the United States is navigating the economic disruptions of the Iran war, when supply chains are strained and industries are under pressure and the temptation to cut corners — on safety, on oversight, on the unglamorous work of inspection and enforcement — is always greatest precisely when times are hardest. The 146 workers who died at the Triangle factory had no federal agency looking out for them. The 38 workers who died every day in 1970 had very little. Today's 15 are protected — imperfectly, incompletely, but measurably — by the generations who came before them and refused to accept that going to work should mean risking your life. Workers Memorial Day is not only a day of mourning. It is a day of reckoning with what was built, what was lost, and what still must be done.

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