The First Pool Day of the Season Day
The cover comes off. The water is cold. The kids dive in. You watch.
United States Edition
The First Pool Day of the Season Day leads today's complete edition for United States.
Daily Edition
Official observances, world days, local context, and everyday celebrations for people who need something worth reading, sharing, or talking about today.
The cover comes off. The water is cold. The kids dive in. You watch.
The year ends. The summer waits. The kids count down. You prepare.
The summer begins. The BBQ is ready. The family gathers. You honor.
The cards are bought. The brunch is booked. The love is expressed. You celebrate.
You recognize the gray wolf, Eurasian brown bear, and European badger as France's distinctive native wildlife. You observe that French households most commonly keep dogs, cats, and rabbits as beloved domestic pets. ACADA celebrates the world's pets, and helps assure better care.
You drink terere, a cold herbal beverage served in gourds, and you consume products like Tereré brands and Paraguayan yerba mate from companies like Establecimiento Las Marías. You know that yerba mate culture defines daily social rituals and represents Paraguay's indigenous and colonial heritage.
On May 15, 1940, nylon stockings went on sale for the first time. Four million pairs sold in four days. Women lined up around city blocks. DuPont had invented nylon in 1938, and the stocking rollout was one of the most successful product launches in American history. During WWII, nylon was diverted to the war effort for parachutes and ropes, and women drew seams on their legs with makeup to simulate stockings. This is one of those facts that sounds like trivia but is actually about how a single material changed the daily experience of half the population.
In Damascus, Virginia, this is the largest Appalachian Trail festival in the country. Damascus sits at the intersection of four trails, and every June, thousands of hikers converge on a town of 800 people. There are hiker talent shows, hiker games, gear swaps, and a parade where thru-hikers walk down Main Street in the same clothes they have been wearing for five months. The smell is indescribable. The camaraderie is real. If you have hiked the AT, Trail Days is a reunion. If you have not, it is a window into a subculture where trail names matter more than real names and the distance between Springer Mountain and Katahdin is measured in blisters.