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April 7: The Last Voyage of the Yamato, A Legend Finally Recognized, When the World Looked Away

Today, April 7th

April 7: The Last Voyage of the Yamato, A Legend Finally Recognized, When the World Looked Away

April 7 is a date that asks us to sit with complexity — to hold loss and honor together, to weigh the cost of war and the weight of recognition, and to reckon honestly with what happens when history's worst impulses go unchecked. The sinking of the Yamato in 1945 closed a chapter of naval warfare even as it opened another in the long agony of the Pacific War. John Wayne's Oscar in 1970 was a Hollywood moment, yes, but also a rare instance of an industry pausing to honor what it had built. And the beginning of the Rwandan genocide in 1994 stands as one of the twentieth century's most searing failures — a reminder that bearing witness to history carries its own obligations.
April 7: The Last Voyage of the Yamato, A Legend Finally Recognized, When the World Looked Away
April 7: Coming Home From the Moon

Today, April 7th

April 7: Coming Home From the Moon

Yesterday, for the first time in 54 years, human beings looked down on the full disc of the Moon. For seven hours, Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen photographed 30 geological targets on the lunar surface, narrated what they saw to scientists at Mission Control in real time, and went places — around the far side, behind the Moon, out of all contact with Earth — that no one alive had ever been. At 7:02 p.m. EDT, they reached closest approach: 4,067 miles from the surface, the Moon appearing the size of a basketball held at arm's length. At 7:07 p.m., they traveled 252,757 miles from Earth — farther than any human beings in history, breaking a record that had stood since the emergency return of Apollo 13 in 1970. The Moon's gravity caught them and turned them, and now the Orion spacecraft — named Integrity by the crew — is on a free-return trajectory home. Splashdown is scheduled for Friday, April 10, at 8:07 p.m. EDT, in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego.
April 7: Coming Home From the Moon

06 April

April 6: An Accidental President, The Games Begin Again, The War Becomes Ours

April 6: An Accidental President, The Games Begin Again, The War Becomes Ours A day on which power shifted, the world gathered in competition, and a nation crossed a threshold it could not uncross Not all turning points are planned. Some arrive in the form of a death that no one saw coming, an invitation extended across borders, or a declaration that ends one kind of world and begins another. April 6 is a date that has repeatedly demanded that institutions — a young democracy, a fractured international community, a nation clinging to neutrality — step up and make a decision that would define them. In each case, the decision was consequential far beyond the moment. A vice president assumed powers that no one had clearly assigned him, setting a precedent that would govern the American presidency for more than a century. Athletes from fourteen nations gathered on the plain of Attica to compete under a flag the world had not yet seen. And a republic that had watched a European war from the sidelines finally stepped onto the field. His Accidency Takes Charge On April 6, 1841, John Tyler was formally sworn in as the tenth President of the United States — not because he had been elected to the office, but because the man who had been elected to it was dead. William Henry Harrison, the ninth president, had delivered the longest inaugural address in American history on a cold, wet March day, refused to wear a hat, developed pneumonia, and died on April 4 after just thirty-one days in office. Tyler, a Virginia Democrat who had been placed on the Whig ticket as a political concession, suddenly found himself the most powerful man in the country, without a mandate, without a party that trusted him, and without a clear constitutional answer to the most urgent question of the moment: was he the president, or merely the acting president? Tyler answered the question himself, and answered it decisively. He took the full oath of office, moved into the White House, and made clear that he considered himself president in every sense — not a caretaker, not an interim figure, not "His Accidency," as his critics derisively called him. The Whig establishment was furious; they had expected a figurehead they could manage. Instead, Tyler vetoed the party's signature banking legislation, was expelled from the Whig Party, and governed essentially as an independent for the remainder of his term. His presidency was turbulent and largely lonely — but his insistence on the full assumption of presidential power established the precedent of succession that would govern the office for the next 106 years, until the 25th Amendment finally codified it in 1967. Every vice president who has ever stepped up to fill a vacancy has done so in the constitutional space that John Tyler carved out by sheer force of will.   A vice president assumes an office no one had fully prepared for him — and in doing so, rewrites the rules of American succession. When the World Came to Athens Fifty-five years later, on April 6, 1896, King George I of Greece stood in the newly restored Panathenaic Stadium in Athens and declared open the first modern Olympic Games — a moment that French educator Baron Pierre de Coubertin had spent years engineering against considerable skepticism and institutional resistance. Coubertin had been captivated by the educational philosophy of the ancient games and convinced that a modern revival could do something the world sorely needed: bring nations together in structured competition rather than armed conflict. The Athens Games attracted 241 athletes from fourteen countries — all of them men — competing in forty-three events across nine sports, including track and field, gymnastics, wrestling, cycling, and the newly invented marathon, whose distance was chosen to honor the legendary Greek messenger who had run from Marathon to Athens to announce a military victory and then, reportedly, collapsed and died. The Athens Games were, by most measures, a triumph — and a genuine surprise to those who had doubted them. The marathon became an instant legend: a Greek water carrier named Spyridon Louis ran the course in just under three hours, winning to delirious national celebration, and was reportedly offered any gift in the kingdom by a grateful prince. The games drew crowds the organizers had not planned for and produced moments of cross-national sportsmanship that Coubertin had dreamed of and half-expected would not materialize. They were not perfect — the organization was improvised, the participation uneven, the facilities incomplete — but they established something durable: the idea that the world's nations could meet on a field, agree on rules, and honor the results. That idea, tested and complicated by more than a century of politics, war, boycotts, and scandal, has never entirely been abandoned. The Panathenaic Stadium in Athens, 1896 — ancient marble filled again with the sound of a world choosing competition over conflict. ❦ The Vote That Crossed the Atlantic On April 6, 1917 — four days after President Woodrow Wilson had asked Congress to act — the United States Senate and House of Representatives voted to declare war on Germany, formally bringing America into the First World War. The decision had been years in the making. Germany's policy of unrestricted submarine warfare had been sinking ships indiscriminately since early 1917, and American merchant vessels and their crews had paid the price. The sinking of the British ocean liner Lusitania in 1915, which killed nearly 1,200 people including 128 Americans, had already turned public sentiment, and the interception of the Zimmermann Telegram — in which Germany proposed a secret military alliance with Mexico and the promise of returning Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona in exchange — had made the prospect of continued neutrality politically untenable. The Senate voted 82 to 6 in favor; the House followed, 373 to 50. The entry of the United States transformed the war. American troops, industrial capacity, and material support began flowing to the Allied powers at a scale that helped tip the military balance decisively toward the Entente after years of catastrophic stalemate. More than two million American soldiers served in France; more than 116,000 died. But the consequences of April 6, 1917 extended far beyond the battlefield. Wilson's insistence on fighting not merely for national interest but for a new international order — embodied in the League of Nations — redefined America's sense of its own role in the world. The League ultimately failed, strangled by isolationist resistance in the Senate, and the peace it was meant to guarantee collapsed within twenty years. But the argument Wilson made on April 2 and that Congress ratified on April 6 — that American power carried with it a global responsibility — would echo in every foreign policy debate the nation would have for the rest of the century.   American troops embark for France in 1917 — a nation that had watched from the sidelines for three years finally crossing the threshold.

06 April

April 6: Humans at the Moon

April 6: Humans at the Moon Today, for the first time in 54 years, human beings are in the vicinity of the Moon. The Artemis II crew reaches their closest approach at 7:02 p.m. EDT — 4,070 miles from the lunar surface — before the Moon's gravity slings them home. Today is the day the mission has been building toward since April 1. At 12:37 a.m. this morning, the Orion spacecraft crossed into the lunar sphere of influence — the zone where the Moon's gravity exerts a stronger pull on the vehicle than the Earth's. It was a threshold no human being had crossed since December 1972. From that moment forward, the crew of Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen has been, technically, in lunar space. Today's flyby runs from 2:45 p.m. EDT, when Orion's windows will be trained on the Moon, through 9:20 p.m., when the crew swings past and begins the long arc home. The most dramatic moments come in the early evening: at 6:44 p.m., Mission Control will lose all contact with the crew as the spacecraft passes behind the Moon — roughly 40 minutes of silence during which the most historic part of the mission takes place entirely beyond the reach of Earth. At 7:02 p.m., still out of contact, the crew will reach closest approach. At 7:05, they will travel farther from Earth than any human beings in history. Then the Moon's gravity will throw them home, and the signal will return. What They Are Seeing That No One Has Seen Before The nine Apollo missions that flew to the Moon were designed around landing — their trajectories prioritized the illuminated near side where the astronauts would touch down. The far side was largely in darkness during those missions. Artemis II flies a different path entirely: a trajectory that gives the crew a view of the entire lunar disc at once, including the poles and parts of the far side that no human eye has ever observed. From 4,070 miles — "the size of a basketball held at arm's length," in NASA's description — the crew will look down on 3.8-billion-year-old impact craters, ancient lava flows, and surface features that have been waiting since the formation of the Solar System for someone to describe them. NASA scientists identified 35 specific geological targets for the crew to photograph and narrate in real time to Mission Control, including the vast Orientale Basin — a nearly 600-mile-wide crater straddling the near and far sides — and the Hertzsprung Basin, a 400-mile crater on the far side that has never been observed by humans at this resolution. "That period of our planet's history that we can no longer get here, even if we go to the deepest parts of the ocean," said NASA's Artemis II Lunar Science lead Kelsey Young, "is there on the Moon." Christina Koch, already seeing the far side for the first time earlier in the approach, said simply: "It is absolutely phenomenal." As the crew prepared for today's flyby, they received a recorded message from Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie Duke — one of only twelve people in history to have walked on the Moon, a man who last stood on the lunar surface 54 years ago. The gesture connected the two eras of lunar exploration across half a century in the most personal way imaginable: someone who has been there, speaking to the people who are going back. The crew has also experienced what Mission Control described as "moon joy" in the days since launch — that particular euphoria that comes from seeing the Moon grow from a distant disc into something real, close, and fully dimensional. Pilot Victor Glover, watching the approach, described it: "That we can do this right now means we could do so much more."   Today, for the first time since Apollo, four human beings look down on the entire disc of the Moon at once — including parts of the far side that no person has ever seen with the unaided eye. Somewhere on the Moon's surface tonight, in the Taurus-Littrow Valley, Gene Cernan's daughter's initials are still in the dust. T D C. Untouched. The crew of Artemis II will not land — this is a test flight, not a landing mission — but they will see the Moon as no one alive has seen it, and what they photograph today will help determine where humans land in 2028. At 7:25 p.m., as the spacecraft emerges from behind the Moon's far side and communications are restored, the crew will see something that has no formal name but a very famous history: Earthrise. The blue planet will come back into view over the horizon of the Moon — a sight that, when the Apollo 8 crew first photographed it in December 1968, changed how humanity understood its place in the universe. Today it rises again, for four new witnesses, 252,757 miles from home.

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