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March 29: The Bomber Below, The War Comes Home, The Shot Heard Round the Gym

Today, March 29th

March 29: The Bomber Below, The War Comes Home, The Shot Heard Round the Gym

March 29 is a date shaped by pressure — the pressure of grievance carried too long, of a war that could not end fast enough, and of a single moment when a teenager's nerves held steady while an entire nation watched. Across three distinct eras of American life, this date asks the same essential question in vastly different registers: what does a person — or a country — do when everything is on the line? The answers are as varied as the stories themselves, and together they trace an arc from the shadows of human darkness to the bright lights of human brilliance.
March 29: The Bomber Below, The War Comes Home, The Shot Heard Round the Gym
March 29: The Road Into Jerusalem

Today, March 29th

March 29: The Road Into Jerusalem

This morning in churches from Rome to Rio de Janeiro, from Lagos to Los Angeles, from Manila to Moscow, worshippers are filing into services carrying palm fronds — or, in climates where palm trees do not grow, willow branches, olive branches, or pussy willows. In the Philippines, the palms are woven into intricate crosses and flowers. In Russia and Ukraine, willow branches stand in for palms as a centuries-old local tradition. In Jerusalem itself, pilgrim processions descend the Mount of Olives along the same route that the Gospels describe. The scene is at once ancient and immediate: the same week, the same branches, the same word of acclaim — two thousand years of Holy Weeks converging on this Sunday morning in 2026.
March 29: The Road Into Jerusalem

28 March

March 28: A War's Last Breath, A General's Final Salute, An Atom's Warning

March 28: A War's Last Breath, A General's Final Salute, An Atom's Warning Three pivotal moments that tested the world's resolve and reshaped the course of history History does not always announce its turning points with trumpets. Sometimes they arrive quietly — in the surrender of a city, the passing of a soldier-statesman, the hiss of steam where silence should reign. March 28 is a date of reckoning: a day when wars ended, legacies were sealed, and the invisible dangers of a modern age announced themselves to a stunned nation. Each moment, separated by decades, shares the same haunting question: what do we do when the world we thought we controlled slips beyond our grasp? The City That Would Not Surrender — Until It Did On March 28, 1939, General Francisco Franco's Nationalist forces marched into Madrid, ending the Spanish Civil War with the fall of the Republic's most defiant stronghold. For nearly three years, since July 1936, Spain had torn itself apart in a brutal struggle between Franco's right-wing Nationalists — backed by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy — and the left-leaning Republican government supported by the Soviet Union and an international brigade of volunteers who believed they were fighting fascism at its earliest frontier. Madrid had held out with remarkable stubbornness, enduring sieges, bombardment, and starvation, its citizens famously declaring, No pasarán — "They shall not pass." In the end, they did. Franco's victory ushered in nearly four decades of authoritarian rule, silencing political opposition, suppressing regional cultures, and leaving Spain isolated from the democratic rebuilding that would transform Western Europe after World War II. But the war's consequences reached far beyond the Iberian Peninsula. It had been a rehearsal — for Luftwaffe bombing tactics, for ideological propaganda, for the total mobilization of civilian populations — that the coming world war would amplify to catastrophic scale. Writers like George Orwell and Ernest Hemingway had borne witness, and their accounts transformed the conflict into a moral crucible that would define a generation. The fall of Madrid was not simply the end of a civil war; it was a warning the world had not yet fully learned to read.   Franco's forces occupy a battered Madrid in March 1939, drawing the curtain on three years of devastating civil war. The General Who Kept the Peace Thirty years after Madrid fell, on March 28, 1969, Dwight D. Eisenhower died at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., at the age of 78. He had spent his final years quietly, writing his memoirs and tending his farm in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — a fitting retreat for a man whose life had been defined by the weight of command. As Supreme Allied Commander during World War II, Eisenhower had orchestrated the largest military operation in history with the D-Day invasion of Normandy in June 1944, navigating the competing egos of Churchill, de Gaulle, and Patton with a patience that bordered on the superhuman. The Kansas boy who had risen to five-star general was, by the end of the war, one of the most admired men on earth. His two presidential terms, from 1953 to 1961, were marked by a deceptive calm that historians would later recognize as anything but passive. Eisenhower ended the Korean War, resisted pressure to intervene militarily in Vietnam, oversaw the creation of the Interstate Highway System, and — in his farewell address — issued one of the most prescient warnings in American political history, cautioning the nation against the growing influence of what he called the "military-industrial complex." He governed not with drama but with discipline, believing that the truest measure of leadership was what catastrophes a steady hand had quietly prevented. His death closed a chapter of American life anchored in duty, sacrifice, and measured restraint — virtues that the turbulent year of 1969 seemed determined to test. Eisenhower in the Oval Office — the steady hand of a leader who understood the cost of war and the value of peace. ❦ The Island That Changed Everything On March 28, 1979, the most serious nuclear accident in American history began to unfold at the Three Mile Island power plant near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. In the early morning hours, a combination of mechanical failure and operator error triggered a partial meltdown in the plant's Unit 2 reactor. Coolant drained from the reactor core, temperatures spiked, and for several terrifying days, engineers and government officials struggled to assess whether a full meltdown — and a catastrophic release of radiation — was imminent. Pennsylvania Governor Richard Thornburgh urged pregnant women and young children within five miles of the plant to evacuate. More than 140,000 residents ultimately fled voluntarily. The nation, which had been promised that nuclear power was safe, clean, and virtually limitless, held its breath. The worst-case scenario was narrowly avoided, and the long-term health effects of the accident remain a matter of scientific debate. But the psychological and political fallout proved permanent. Public trust in nuclear energy collapsed almost overnight — a collapse accelerated by the eerie coincidence that The China Syndrome, a film dramatizing a fictional nuclear meltdown, had opened in theaters just twelve days earlier. No new nuclear power plants were ordered in the United States in the decades that followed. Three Mile Island became a symbol not of catastrophe, but of something perhaps more unsettling: the recognition that the systems we build to power our civilization carry within them the seeds of their own undoing, and that vigilance is not a luxury but a permanent obligation.   The cooling towers of Three Mile Island loom over the Susquehanna River — an industrial landmark that became a national symbol of nuclear anxiety.

28 March

March 28: The American Tradition of Saying No

March 28: The American Tradition of Saying No Today, more than 3,000 protest events are planned across all 50 states under the banner "No Kings" — the third and largest installment of a growing national movement. Whatever one makes of the politics, the act itself is as American as the Constitution that protects it. Today, in city squares and town commons and courthouse steps from Maine to Hawaii, Americans will gather in organized public protest under a banner drawn directly from the republic's founding argument: No Kings. The "No Kings 3" demonstrations, organized by a coalition including Indivisible and the AFL-CIO, represent the third and largest mobilization of a movement that drew an estimated 4 million participants at its June 2025 debut and roughly 7 million last October. Organizers have described it as opposition to immigration enforcement policies, the war in Iran, and what they call authoritarian overreach. More than 3,100 events are confirmed nationwide. Whatever one makes of the underlying political disputes, the scene playing out today belongs to one of the oldest and most consequential traditions in American civic life: the organized, nonviolent public protest. From the Edmund Pettus Bridge to Every Courthouse Square The American protest movement is as old as the republic itself — the Boston Tea Party of 1773 was, at its core, a mass act of organized public defiance. But the tradition of peaceful, disciplined, nonviolent mass demonstration as a tool for political change was forged and refined most powerfully in the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. On March 7, 1965, a group of 600 marchers led by a 25-year-old activist named John Lewis crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, demanding the right to vote. State troopers met them with clubs, whips, and tear gas. The footage, aired that same evening on national television, interrupted a broadcast of "Judgment at Nuremberg" — a film about Nazi war crimes — and sent shockwaves across the country. Within days, hundreds of religious leaders, activists, and ordinary citizens flooded into Selma. Two weeks later, 25,000 people marched into Montgomery. That August, President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 into law. The march had moved Congress. The protest had changed the country. The decades since Selma have produced a continuous American tradition of mass public action. The March on Washington of August 28, 1963 — where a quarter of a million people gathered at the Lincoln Memorial and heard Dr. Martin Luther King deliver the "I Have a Dream" speech — remains perhaps the most iconic image of organized civic aspiration in American history. The anti-Vietnam War movement drew millions through the late 1960s and early 1970s. The 1969 Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam brought an estimated two million Americans into the streets in a single day. The 2003 protests against the invasion of Iraq saw an estimated ten to fifteen million people march globally on a single weekend — the largest coordinated protest in recorded history. In January 2017, the Women's March drew an estimated three to five million participants in the United States alone, the largest single-day demonstration in American history at the time. Each of these moments was contested, imperfect, and politically charged. Each was also, unmistakably, American.   The organized, nonviolent public protest is among the most enduring institutions in American civic life — a tradition that has shaped legislation, shifted presidencies, and, more than once, changed the course of history. The First Amendment to the Constitution guarantees the right to peaceably assemble and to petition the government for redress of grievances — rights that were written into the republic's founding document precisely because the founders understood that democratic self-government requires a mechanism for the governed to push back against the powerful. "No Kings" is not an incidental phrase. It is a direct reference to the argument that separated the American experiment from the monarchies of Europe and animated the revolution that preceded it. The protesters gathering today in more than 3,000 locations across the country are exercising a right that is, in the fullest sense of the word, foundational. History will assess their cause. What history has already assessed — repeatedly, across more than two centuries — is the tradition they are standing in.

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