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  • The SLS (Space Launch System) launches with the Artemis II crew aboard the Orion spacecraft on April 1, 2026, at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls
  • Tram Tours every Saturday and Sunday at 2:00 p.m. Enjoy a 60 – 90-minute tour along Wildlife Drive at the Refuge. Enjoy learning about the history of the displaced town of Hagerman while watching for wildlife. Lots of stops for birdwatching and photography. Reservations required. Standbys are accepted if space permits.
  • First United Bank is pleased to announce that Justin Sanderson has been appointed Chief Transformation Officer, where he will lead the bank’s enterprise-wide transformation initiatives focused on growth, innovation, and customer experience.
  • The Lone Star Land Steward Award recognizes private landowners in Texas for their exemplary contributions to land, water and wildlife stewardship. With 95 percent of the land in Texas under private ownership, the conservation and stewardship efforts of private landowners are vital to the state.
  • Ivanhoe, Texas resident Sarah Richardson led a discussion regarding the need for the county's assistance in order for the Lake Fannin Volunteers to meet all the stipulations of the lease from the Forest Service. Fannin County resident Jarrett Tucker said it is unfortunate that a historical campsite and scenic 2,000 acres overlooking the Red River are going to waste. Fannin County resident David Keene stressed the need for representatives of the Army Corps of Engineers, Forest Service, North Texas Municipal Water District and Fannin County to sit down together and make sure everyone is on the same page. Fannin County Judge Newt Cunningham suggested that the initial steps would be to revitalize the Lake Fannin Board of Directors and examine the bylaws.
  • 1917 – American entry into World War I: President Wilson asks the U.S. Congress for a declaration of war on Germany. The United States entered into World War I on 6 April 1917, more than two and a half years after the war began in Austria-Hungary. Apart from an Anglophile element urging early support for the British and an anti-tsarist element sympathizing with Germany's war against Russia, American public opinion had generally reflected a desire to stay out of the war. Over time, especially after reports of German atrocities in Belgium in 1914 and after the sinking of the RMS Lusitania in a torpedo attack by a submarine of the Imperial German Navy off the southern coast of Ireland in May 1915, Americans increasingly came to see Imperial Germany as the aggressor in Europe. When the country was at peace, American banks made huge loans to the Entente powers (Allies), which were used mainly to buy munitions, raw materials, and food from across the Atlantic in North America from the United States and Canada. Although president Woodrow Wilson made minimal preparations for a land war before 1917, he did authorize a shipbuilding program for the United States Navy. Wilson was narrowly re-elected in 1916 on an anti-war platform. By 1917, with Belgium and northern France occupied by German troops, the Russian Empire experiencing turmoil and upheaval in the February Revolution overthrowing the tsar on the Eastern Front, and with the remaining Entente nations low on credit, the German empire appeared to have the upper hand in Europe. However, a British economic embargo and naval blockade were causing severe shortages of fuel and food in Germany. Berlin then decided to resume unrestricted submarine warfare. The aim was to break the trans-Atlantic supply chain to Britain from other nations to the West, although the German high command realized that sinking American-flagged ships would almost certainly bring the United States into the war. Imperial Germany also made a secret offer to help Mexico regain territories of the Mexican Cession of 1849, lost seven decades before in the Mexican–American War of 1846–1848, (now incorporated in the Southwestern United States) in an encoded diplomatic secret telegram known as the Zimmermann Telegram intercepted by British intelligence. Publication in the media of that communique outraged Americans just as German submarines started sinking American merchant ships in the North Atlantic in their U-boat campaign. President Wilson then asked Congress for "a war to end all wars" that would "make the world safe for democracy," and Congress voted to declare war on Germany on April 6, 1917. US troops began to arrive in Europe later that year, and served in major combat operations on the Western Front under the command of general John J. Pershing.